Anderson & Lind Manufacturing Co. v. Carpenters' District Council

226 Ill. App. 505, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 83
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 29, 1922
DocketGen. No. 27,151
StatusPublished

This text of 226 Ill. App. 505 (Anderson & Lind Manufacturing Co. v. Carpenters' District Council) 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
Anderson & Lind Manufacturing Co. v. Carpenters' District Council, 226 Ill. App. 505, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 83 (Ill. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Thomson

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal the respondent Brims seeks to reverse a judgment of the circuit court of Cook county, by which he was fined in the sum of $500, having been adjudged in contempt of court, by reason of certain' acts committed in violation of the terms of a final injunction decree, previously entered in favor of the petitioner, Anderson & Lind Manufacturing Company.

It, appears from the record that the injunction decree which is the basis of the present proceedings was entered in favor of the petitioner in 1914. It restrained Thomas F. Church and the Carpenters’ District Council of Chicago and all their agents or representatives from (so far as the present controversy is concerned)

“directly or indirectly threatening, coercing or intimidating any person or persons whomsoever from buying, selling or otherwise dealing in the product of the complainant;
threatening, coercing or intimidating any person or persons from buying, selling or otherwise dealing in the product of the complainant, in the furtherance of any conspiracy or boycott against complainant’s business or product; * * # interfering with, hindering, obstructing or stopping, by threats, coercion or intimidation, the work on any buildings to which said complainant is furnishing material; * * *
attempting, by threats, coercion or intimidation, to prevent any person from freely contracting with * * * the complainant; * * *
organizing or maintaining a boycott against said complainant by threats, coercion or intimidation, to induce customers * * * to abstain from accepting * * * material from said complainant;
attempting to prevent, by threats of injury or by threats of calling a strike against such person, any person from * * * purchasing material from * * * said complainant;
attempting to institute, or from instituting or main-taming, by threats, intimidation or coercion, for the purpose of preventing such persons from * * * purchasing material from * * * said complainant, any such strike against such person;
doing any other aot or thing in the furtherance of said conspiracy, unlawfully to injure the complainant. ’ ’

Although Church and the Carpenters’ District Council were both parties in the original proceedings, the respondent Brims was not. But, at the time of all the acts complained of in the present proceedings, Brims was president of the Carpenters ’ District Council and the record shows that he received actual notice of the injunction, together with a copy thereof, on or about October 1, 1919.

The record shows that the Anderson & Lind Manufacturing Company is a corporation, manufacturing and dealing in millwork and other building material. It has always operated its plant on an open shop1 basis. The United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners of America was a defendant in the original proceedings brought by Anderson & Lind Manufacturing Company which culminated in the entering of the permanent injunction decree in 1914. It is a voluntary association made up of many subdivisions known as local unions, of which there are a considerable number in what is known as the Chicago District. The Carpenters’ District Council of Chicago is made up of about 100 delegates, elected annually by the different local unions of the Brotherhood of Carpenters in the Chicago District. It is in the nature of a local governing body with such powers as are indicated in the constitution and by-laws of the brotherhood.

The Brotherhood of Carpenters made a number of attempts to induce the Anderson & Lind Manufacturing Company to change its policy from an open shop basis to a closed shop basis, and employ only union men, but the company declined to do so. Ultimately, the District Council and certain of its officials, as appears from the record in the original proceedings, for an injunction, formed a conspiracy to boycott the Anderson & Lind Manufacturing Company for the purpose of so injuring its business as to compel it to unionize its factory and adopt the closed shop basis, and, in furtherance of such conspiracy, picket lines were established in the vicinity of the company’s factory, and more or less physical violence was threatened or resorted to both as against the company’s employees and as against the contractors who were purchasing millwork from the company, and numerous strikes were called on the jobs of such contractors, for the purpose of injuring the company’s business, and not because of any controversy existing between such contractors and the carpenters. This led to the filing of the original bill and the entering of the injunction decree containing the provisions above set forth. No appeal was .taken and no writ of error was sued out to reverse that decree by any of the defendants involved.

On November 8, 1919, and again on December 29, 1919, and again on August 18, 1920, complainant, Anderson & Lind Manufacturing Company, filed petitions praying for a rule against certain respondents, to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt of court, by reason of their conduct which is set forth in the various petitions and which was alleged to be in violation of the terms of the injunction decree above referred to. The first petition involved Brims and others. The second one involved Church, the District Council and others; and the third one involved Church, Brims and the District Council. These petitions were referred to a master in chancery, with directions to hear the evidence and report back to the court his findings of fact and his conclusions. After hearings duly had by the master, a report was returned to the court setting forth the facts and the conclusions of the master, to the effect that Brims, Church and the District Council had committed such acts as were in violation of the court’s decree, and recommending that they he punished for contempt of court. The court overruled exceptions duly filed to the master’s report in behalf of Brims and Church, and fined each of them $500,' and sustained exceptions filed to the master’s report in behalf of the District Council and entered an order discharging the rule as against it. The appeal involved here is the one perfected by the respondent Brims from the order of the court, so far as it affected him.

The only question involved on this appeal has to do with the question of whether the acts committed by Brims were in violation of the original injunction decree. It appears from the evidence that one Pottinger, who had been engaged in the real estate and building business for many years, made a contract with the Anderson & Lind Manufacturing Company early in 1919 for the millwork required for a large building containing stores and apartments, which he was to erect "at 4032 Irving Park boulevard in the City of Chicago.

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226 Ill. App. 505, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-lind-manufacturing-co-v-carpenters-district-council-illappct-1922.