Title: Chapter 3 Part A
1Chapter 3 Part A
- Collective Industrial Relations Law
2Introduction
- Sources of law
- Common law
- Legislation
- Bunreacht na hÉireann 1937 (the Irish
Constitution) - International law
- EU Treaties, EU Directives, etc.
- European Council European Convention on Human
Rights and Fundamental Freedom - UN International Labour Organisation
3Common Law
- Common Law
- Is judge-made law
- Key principle
- restraint of trade is illegal
- Collective nature of trade unions
- Has conflicted with individually based common-law
system.
4Pre 1825
- Series of anti-combinations acts passed by Irish
legislature - Failed for a number of reasons
- Difficult to enforce due to secrecy of
combinations - Social pressure on employers
- Scarce skills possessed by craftsmen made
employers reluctant to use the law.
5Repeal of Anti-combination Acts
- 1824/1825 Combinations Acts 17991800 repealed
and new legislation enacted - Reasons for repeal
- Ineffectiveness of the acts said to have
worsened relations between master and workmen. - Argued that, if removed, the combinations would
die out. - Resulted in trade unions being quasi-legal bodies
- Still subject to laws restraining activities
(negotiating, striking) and the taking of oaths.
6After repeal of 1799/1800 Acts
- The Tolpuddle Martyrs, 1834
- Six Dorset farm labourers joined the
short-lived Grand National Consolidated Union - Union for the unskilled
- Transported to Australia for 7 years for taking
an oath of secrecy - Found to be illegal and seditious
- Eventually pardoned and repatriated, 1838.
7Criminal Law and Collective IR
- Unions still subject to common law of criminal
conspiracy - Any action undertaken in a trade dispute with
another person was illegal, even if the act done
by one person was not - Pickets, strikes and other activities were
subject to the criminal law.
8Campaign for reform
- Liberal Party under Gladstone introduced (1871)
Trade Union Act in return for electoral support - Legalised existence of trade unions, but did not
give status of corporate entities (right to sue
and be sued). - As amended, governs the legal position of trade
unions in Ireland today. - Early seeds of voluntarist system
- Allowed trade unions to exist within the law, but
prevented legal regulation of their affairs.
9Criminal Law and Collective IR (contd)
- Conservative Party under Disraeli introduced
amended legislation in return for electoral
support. - Removed law of criminal conspiracy from trade
disputes. - Conspiracy and Protection of Property Act (1875)
- Activities of unions immune from Law of Criminal
Conspiracy - Met demand of unions
- They wanted nothing from the law other than that
it leave them alone.
10The Civil Law
- Employers resorted to civil conspiracy
- under law of tort (a civil wrong)
- Quinn v. Leatham 1901 (Belfast)
- Workers association persuaded other workers not
to supply Quinn during a trade dispute - Combination to injure unlawful conspiracy
- Judgement against Quinn
- Treasurer of the Association, not the
Association itself.
11Taff Vale v. Amalgamated Society of Railway
Servants (ASR) 1901
- Strike protesting dismissal of a signalman on the
Taff Vale Railway Company by members of ASR - Workers brought in to replace striking workers
- Richard Bell (unions general secretary)
persuaded them to breach a third-party employment
contract - Company sought injunction and damages against
union. - Judgement
- Union was a legal entity and could be sued in its
own name - Potentially detrimental to unions
- They turned to the political process to overturn
precedents set.
12Trade Disputes Act 1906
- Amended civil law
- Introduced by Liberals in return for electoral
support - Gave immunity from tort of civil conspiracy
- Protected peaceful picketing
- Applied to union members
- Where they were acting in contemplation or
furtherance of a trade dispute (The Golden
Formula) - Blanket protection to unions as an organisation
- Could not be sued under law of tort
- Not limited by Golden Formula.
13Collective IR Law, post-1906
- Voluntarist
- Did not confer rights
- Employers
- Did not have to recognise or negotiate with trade
unions - Injunctions
- Introduced a degree of legalism.
14Union Funds and Political Activity
- Osborne v. Amalgamated Society of Railway
Servants 1911 - Unions could not use funds for political
purposes. - Trade Union Act 1913
- Trade union funds allowed to be used for
political purposes - There must be an easy opt-out option for union
members.
15Collective Legislation after 1922
16Collective Legislation after 1922 (contd)
17Collective Legislation after 1922 (contd)
18Collective Legislation after 1922 (contd)
19Collective Legislation after 1922