A. R. Barnes & Co. v. Berry

157 F. 883, 16 Ohio F. Dec. 107, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4944
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio
DecidedFebruary 1, 1908
DocketNo. 6,295
StatusPublished

This text of 157 F. 883 (A. R. Barnes & Co. v. Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. R. Barnes & Co. v. Berry, 157 F. 883, 16 Ohio F. Dec. 107, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4944 (circtsdoh 1908).

Opinion

THOMPSON, District Judge.

This suit was brought to prevent the violation of, and practically to enforce, the specific performance of an alleged agreement between two voluntary associations, namely, the United Typothetse of America and the International Printing [884]*884Pressmen and Assistants’ Union of North America. The complainants are members of the Typothetse, and bring the suit on behalf of themselves and as representatives of the Typothetse, and the defendants are sued as representatives of the union; Berry being the president and McMullen the secretary-treasurer of the union. The purpose of the agreement as therein set forth is to establish “between the employing printers of the United States and their pressmen and feeders uniform shop practices and fair scales of wages, settlement of all questions arising between them, and the abolition of strikes, sympathetic or otherwise, lockouts and boycotts”; and, among other things, it provides that:

“It is expressly agreed that until January 1st, 1909, fifty-four hours shall constitute a week’s work; and that thereafter during the life of this contract forty-eight hours of eight hours a day shall constitute a week’s work; arrangements, however, can be made locally to bring the forty-eight hours so that a Saturday half holiday can be enjoyed without over-time cost to the employer, it being distinctly understood that the employer is entitled to a forty-eight hour week fifty-two weeks in the year, except where legal holidays intervene.”

The contract was drawn up and signed by committees of the two associations, and was ratified by a special convention of the Typothetse, but was repudiated by the nineteenth annual convention of the union, held at- Brighton Beach, N. Y., in June, 1907, which action of the •convention was afterwards approved by the men of the union upon a referendum vote directing that the “eight-hour day” be inaugurated by the union on the 18th day of November, 1907.

The complainants claim, and the defendants deny, that the committee of the union was authorized by the convention of 1906 to make the contract without'ratification by a convention of the union; and the questions to be considered in determining the controversy are: (1) Had the committee of the union full and final authority to make the contract? (2) If so, can performance thereof be enforced indirectly by enjoining the officers of the union from paying strike benefits, and from doing anything in furtherance of strikes ?

First. The seventeenth annual convention of the union, held at San .Francisco in June, 1905, adopted the following report of the committee on officers’ reports, namely:

“We recommend, that the board of directors be instructed to secure a conference with a committee of the National Typothetse with a view of arranging, if possible, a workday of eight hours. Failing to make a satisfactory agreement, we recommend the board to be constituted a shorter workday committee to begin a campaign with a view of demanding the eight-hour day at the expiration of our agreement on May 1, 1907, and the board being instructed to report to the next convention.”

In obedience to this instruction, the board of directors of the union for the year 1905 attended the convention of the Typothetse at Niagara Falls, in September of that year, and met its executive committee, and, as stated in the president’s report to the convention of 1906, every argument possible on the union side was presented in trying to have the Typothetse agree on the date of its going into effect, but ¡were met with the answer “that it was an inopportune time to present it on account of conditions existing that they were not able to have chang[885]*885ed.” Thereafter there was some correspondence between Higgins, the president of the union and chairman of its board of directors, and Macintyre, the secretary of the Typothetae, concerning the matter, which ended on the part of the Typothetae by the following letter from its secretary:

“New York, April 28, 1906.
“Mr. Martin P. Higgins, Charlestown, Mass. — My Hear Mr. Higgins:
“Answering your favor of April 11th, I am instructed by our National Executive Committee to state that the Committee decline to take up the consideration of an eight-hour workday, but will be pleased to appoint a Committee to confer with a similar Committee from the Pressmen’s Union to consider the renewal, at its expiration of the agreement which now exists between our respective organizations.
“Sincerely yours, John Macintyre.”

Thereafter Higgins, on behalf of the board of directors, made the following report to the eighteenth annual convention of the union, held at Pittsburgh in June, 1906, to wit:

“As the last convention delegated the question of the shorter workday to the board of directors, and with the correspondence as above, and their knowledge of affairs before them, they beg leave to report to the convention the following plan whereby some tangible method or course may be arrived at that will result in the adoption of the eight-hour day by the I. P. P. and A. U.
“(1) That this convention instruct the incoming board of directors to meet as a committee with a like committee on the part of the United Typothet® of America, as explained in the letter to Mr. Macintyre under date of April 28th, herein mentioned, the committee on our part to strive with all power possible to have some concessions made by the Typothet® towards having the eight-hour day established within reasonable time, in a manner that will warrant its adoption on mutual grounds as a finality, and an agreement with that intent be entered into; the committee on our part having power to sign up such an agreement, if the eight-hour day can be brought, within a reasonable time of attainment, if not, the committee to report back to our next convention, as provided in section 6 of this report.
“(2) That an assessment of 50 cents per month be levied upon all pressmen members monthly from January 1, 1906, until July 1, 1907.
“(3) That an assessment of 25 cents per month be levied upon all feeder or assistant members monthly during the same period.
“(4) That this fund be sent to lie international secretary-treasurer monthly by the secretary of each local union, the same to be deposited in a different bank from that in which we deposit our regular funds, and the same to be known as the ‘Shorter Workday Fund.’
“(5) The question of what year and date the eight-hour day shall be adopted, shall remain within the keeping of the incoming board of directors, they to report to the next convention in full their observations and judgments as to what our future course should be in setting a date for the adoption of the eight-hour day.

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Bluebook (online)
157 F. 883, 16 Ohio F. Dec. 107, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-r-barnes-co-v-berry-circtsdoh-1908.