American Zinc Co. v. Vecera

88 N.E.2d 116, 338 Ill. App. 523, 1949 Ill. App. LEXIS 351
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 27, 1949
DocketTerm No. 49M17
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 88 N.E.2d 116 (American Zinc Co. v. Vecera) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Zinc Co. v. Vecera, 88 N.E.2d 116, 338 Ill. App. 523, 1949 Ill. App. LEXIS 351 (Ill. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scheineman

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant, Local Union Number 82 of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (hereafter called the Union), and five individual members of said Union, including its president, appeal from an order of the "circuit court of St. Clair county which adjudged them in contempt of court for violating an injunction issued by said court, and which fined the Union $1,000 and each of the individuals $100.

The appellants contend that the petitions for rule to show cause, which resulted in the order, were defective in form, that some of the individual defendants were not named as parties in the original complaint, that the evidence does not show they “had that knowledge of the injunction which is a requisite for a finding of contempt,” that the Union is an unincorporated association and not subject to legal proceedings as an entity, that no wrongful intent was proved against the Union “acting either through the totality of its membership or through any official action, ’ ’ and that the fines levied were excessive.

The procedure and principal facts relevant to this inquiry are as follows: American Zinc Company filed a complaint for injunction on September 8, 1948, alleging that its employees were on strike and its plant was picketed; that it owned equipment which required constant attention to prevent serious damage and destruction, including furnaces which had to be supplied with fuel and kept at high temperature or they would be ruined, that it had on hand valuable supplies belonging to government agencies, that the Union and its members and officers were barring access to the plant and equipment; and prayed for a temporary and permanent injunction to enjoin such acts. Named as defendants were the Union and a number of persons, described as officers and members thereof, both individually and as representatives of the members. Of the individuals appearing in this appeal, the complaint specifically named Vecera and Fernandez; among others named was one Mike Starr, hereafter mentioned.

A motion for temporary injunction was filed on the same day, and notice of hearing thereon was given the Union and some of its members and officers. Pursuant thereto, a hearing was held, at which the Union was represented by counsel, and some of the members attended in person, and testified in opposition to the motion.

The appellant, Fernandez, there testified that he was a member of the strike committee of the Union, ■ which had set np headquarters near the company’s plant, and had provided a tent at the plant gates for the convenience of members on picket duty. Another • witness was Mike Starr, who stated that he was vice president of the Union and acting as president in the absence of Vecera who was president. Vecera was temporarily absent, attending a meeting of the International Union.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the court ordered a writ of injunction to issue. The sheriff’s return shows personal service of the writ September 10, upon the vice president, the recording secretary and. the financial secretary of the Union, also upon two persons called International representatives, also upon a number of individual members of the Union, including Fernandez. Copies were also posted on the various gates to company property.

On September 14 the injunction was violated. On September 20 a copy of the injunction and order was mailed by the company to each of its 800 employees. On September 22 the injunction was again violated. These are the undisputed facts:

On the 14th, a locomotive operated by railroad officials approached to a point fifty feet from the company’s gates. Three of the appellants, Fernandez, Marvich and Weber, stood between the rails. Railroad officials requested them to move, but they declined. The engine advanced to their position, but they sat upon the rails and refused to permit entrance to the company’s property. On September 22 the locomotive was admitted to the property, but when it pulled a string of cars to the gate, the appellants, Vecera and Rangel, sat upon the rails and declined to permit removal of the cars, and the engine departed without them. It is not denied that the acts occurred, nor that they were violations of the injunction; but it is asserted the acts were not wilful nor made with knowledge of, and intent to violate, the injunction.

Other evidence of knowledge and intent (which is the only factual issue presented) includes the following: There is testimony by railroad and company officials that, on the 14th, Fernandez, Marvich and Weber were told, in the presence of other striking employees, that they were violating the injunction; that their replies were loud, angry and profane; that for about two hours thereafter, they continued to bar progress of the locomotive, and it was then withdrawn.

It was also shown that some of the copies of the writ and order mailed on the 20th, were sent by registered mail, and return receipts appear in evidence, from defendants ’ attorneys, also from Fernandez, Weber and Marvich, also from Robert Hollowwa, a representative of the International Union, who was present with Vecera and Rangel on the 22nd when removal of cars was prevented. There is also testimony that, on this second occasion, Vecera and Rangel were warned by an official of the railroad, that penalties could accrue for violation of the court order, that Vecera replied it didn’t matter about that, and refused to permit removal of railroad cars.

There is evidence that the Union, immediately after the first violation, called for a mass meeting of strikers and citizens. A notice was issued calling for a meeting and parade, to be held in the evening of the 17th, to protest “Cold-Blooded Murder Attempts.” In connection therewith, there was a mimeographed letter, purporting to be signed by the three appellants involved in the first violation, mentioning that the company tried to move cars “over our bodies” and stating that citizens and the Union were calling a meeting the 17th to “protest this brutal treatment.” The Union’s news report states that the meeting was held on the 17th and was attended by a crowd of 2,000. The wide distribution of Union literature is thus attested.

Other publications of the Union were introduced in evidence, some of them containing references to TaftHartley Law, scabs, injunctions, strike breaking, etc. There are indications that news of the injunction must, of necessity, have been common knowledge.

The first contempt hearing was initiated by the filing of a sworn petition, which referred to applicable provisions of the injunction, recited the acts of Fernandez, Marvich and Weber, in detail, and specified time and place, alleged the acts were in violation of the injunction, and prayed that the Union and the named individuals be ruled to show cause why they should not be held in contempt of court for violating its injunction. The court ruled the defendants to appear September 20. On that date the defendants appeared by counsel, and the three individuals were personally present. Counsel moved for a continuance to October 1. The court allowed the motion upon the express condition that there should be no further violations.

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.E.2d 116, 338 Ill. App. 523, 1949 Ill. App. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-zinc-co-v-vecera-illappct-1949.