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Telephone Employees Organization, Local 1100, Communications Workers of America v. Woods

Civil Court of the City of New York
MISSING

CompFox AI Summary

This case concerns a plaintiff union, Telephone Employees Organization, Local 1100, Communications Workers of America, attempting to convert a disciplinary financial sanction of $4,939.20 into a judgment against defendant John Woods. The sanction was imposed for Woods crossing a picket line during a strike, violating the union's constitution. Woods defended by claiming he was not a member of the union at the time. The court first determined it had jurisdiction over the nonmembership defense, rejecting the union's preemption argument. Subsequently, the court found that the plaintiff union failed to demonstrate Woods was formally admitted to membership in Local 1100 as required by its constitution and bylaws, lacking proof of an application or initiation fee payment. Consequently, as a nonmember, Woods was not bound by the union's rules prohibiting picket line crossing, rendering the fine unenforceable. The court dismissed the union's complaint and the defendant's counterclaim.

Telephone Employees Organization, Local 1100, Communications Workers of America v. Woods is a workers' compensation case decided in Civil Court of the City of New York. This case addresses legal issues related to compensation claims, benefits, and court rulings.

It is commonly referenced in legal research involving workers' compensation laws in Civil Court of the City of New York.

Full Decision Text1 Pages

This case concerns a plaintiff union, Telephone Employees Organization, Local 1100, Communications Workers of America, attempting to convert a disciplinary financial sanction of $4,939.20 into a judgment against defendant John Woods. The sanction was imposed for Woods crossing a picket line during a strike, violating the union's constitution. Woods defended by claiming he was not a member of the union at the time. The court first determined it had jurisdiction over the nonmembership defense, rejecting the union's preemption argument. Subsequently, the court found that the plaintiff union failed to demonstrate Woods was formally admitted to membership in Local 1100 as required by its constitution and bylaws, lacking proof of an application or initiation fee payment. Consequently, as a nonmember, Woods was not bound by the union's rules prohibiting picket line crossing, rendering the fine unenforceable. The court dismissed the union's complaint and the defendant's counterclaim.

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Telephone Employees Organization, Local 1100, Communications Workers of America v. Woods workers compensation case in Civil Court of the City of New York. Legal case summary, ruling, and analysis for attorneys and legal research.

Telephone Employees Organization, Local 1100, Communications Workers of America v. Woods case law summary from Civil Court of the City of New York. Workers compensation legal decision, case analysis, and court ruling details.

Telephone Employees Organization, Local 1100, Communications Workers of America v. Woods Case Analysis

Telephone Employees Organization, Local 1100, Communications Workers of America v. Woods is a legal case related to workers' compensation in Civil Court of the City of New York. This case explains important rulings, legal interpretations, and claim decisions.

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