Badger Brass Manufacturing Co. v. Daly

119 N.W. 328, 137 Wis. 601, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 28
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 119 N.W. 328 (Badger Brass Manufacturing Co. v. Daly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Badger Brass Manufacturing Co. v. Daly, 119 N.W. 328, 137 Wis. 601, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 28 (Wis. 1909).

Opinion

TimxiN, J.

The complaint in this action averred the corporate character of the plaintiff, the nature of its business, its ownership and possession of real estate constituting its factory plant, and the value thereof, and the number of men employed by it when running at its full capacity. It then averred the existence of a voluntary association called the Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, Brass Moulders, Brass and Silver Workers’ Union of North America, composed of [603]*603many thousand members of workmen in the lines indicated and operating through a central organization and district and subordinate organizations called lodges, some of the latter being in the city of Kenosha, where the plaintiff’s plant was located, and that the membership of such association was so numerous as to- make it impracticable to cause all members to be parties to this action. Some of the defendants were formerly employed by the plaintiff, but were not so employed at the commencement of the action. It is then averred:

“That all of the defendants named in the title of this complaint have conspired, combined, and confederated together and with each other, and with many hundred other persons-who are unknown to this plaintiff, to maliciously injure this plaintiff, and to cripple, injure, and destroy its said business, and-that all of .the members of the said Metal Polishers, etc., Union of North America have combined, conspired, and confederated together and with many other persons unknown to. this plaintiff, through the machinery of the said association and its said locals, and otherwise, to injure, cripple, impede, and obstruct the business of this plaintiff, for the purpose of' maliciously compelling this plaintiff to do and perform many acts against its will, as hereinafter more particularly set out,, and to maliciously prevent and hinder this plaintiff from doing and performing lawful acts — that is to say, operating its factory according to the wish and judgment of this plaintiff and its officers in a lawful way; that the said defendants have-so conspired, confederated, and combined, and are now conspiring and undertaking and concerting together, and with many other persons within and without said city, through said association, its said local and otherwise: (a) to compel this plaintiff against its will and their will, to pay, etc., (b) to compel this plaintiff, etc., (c) to prevent this plaintiff, etc., (d) to .prevent this plaintiff, etc., (e) to prevent this plaintiff, etc., (f) to prevent this plaintiff, etc., (g) to drive away by intimidation and threats such of the workmen of this plaintiff as are susceptible of intimidation and to entice away others, and to induce, by intimidation or other improper and unlawful methods, customers of this plaintiff to abandon [604]*604this plaintiff and place their trade elsewhere, (h) to persuade, ' etc.”

The allegations of conspiracy for each of the separate purposes aforesaid are reiterated, and the pleader proceeds:

“And this plaintiff shows that, in furtherance of the said conspiracy, the said defendants have stationed and now keep upon the streets and places in front of and adjoining and adjacent to the said factory of this plaintiff many of their number, who are called by the said defendants ‘pickets/ and keep said pickets to the varying number of from three to forty constantly 'during the day upon the said streets in the said locality, and in view of the entrance of the said premises of this plaintiff, and at the railroad depots and electric car station and stopping places in said city of Kenosha, and cause the said pickets constantly to loiter about the premises of this plaintiff and patrol the streets in front of and about said premises and about said depot, stations, and stopping places, in squads and crowds, and to threaten violence to workmen ■employed or seeking employment in the said plant of this plaintiff, or coming thereto in search of such employment; that the said pickets are constantly about and in the neighborhood of the said premises, and that every time that any workman leaves or approaches the said premises, or that any workman endeavors to approach said premises, or comes thereto for the purpose of seeking employment from this plaintiff, said pickets, by the use of violence, threats of violence, intimidation and abusive language, attempt, and endeavor to •seduce or drive away said workmen and applicants from such employment, and stop such workmen and by physical force ■compel them to listen to the arguments and persuasions or threats and slanderous words of said pickets. . . . The plaintiff further alleges that the said defendants, by themselves and their co-conspirators, have on several occasions assaulted, beaten, bruised, and otherwise maltreated the employees of this plaintiff, and more especially on the 21st day of November, 1901, in furtherance of said conspiracy and for the purpose of preventing said employees from remaining in the employment of this plaintiff, and for the purpose of carrying out the said conspiracy and for the purpose of preventing this plaintiff from operating its said factory and business.”

[605]*605It is then averred, that defendants, by themselves and through said pickets who are members of the said association, have on many occasions driven away men from the employment of the plaintiff, and that they are constantly by the use of violence and intimidation driving off such workmen, and that they give out and threaten that they will continue this course of action and will continue to boycott this plaintiff and its employees and operatives, and will, by use of the means aforesaid, prevent plaintiff from securing or retaining workmen and from securing or performing contracts in and about its business, and will so destroy the trade of the plaintiff and force the abandonment of its factory unless the plaintiff shall against its will do or refrain from the acts mentioned as the objects and purposes of the conspiracy. Then follows a substantial repetition characterizing the acts of the defendants as a nuisance in and obstructions to the highways adjacent to plaintiff’s property, and that each of the defendants is a man of small means and unable to respond in damages to the plaintiff. A perpetual injunction is prayed for;. also an injunction 'pendente lite.

The remarkable thing about this complaint is the generality of its averments — the lack of dates, instances, facts, or circumstances. It is made up almost wholly of conclusions, of the pleader. The nearest approach to fixing time is that averment that the defendants and their co-conspirators on several occasions assaulted, beat, and otherwise maltreated employees of the plaintiff and more especially on the 21st day of November, 1907. There is nothing to show the relation of the beaten and maltreated employees to the plaintiff except the mere statement that they were employees.

When one laboring man is prevented from soliciting work,, engaging in a contract to work, or continuing in his work by one or more of his fellow laborers,' the more direct wrong is that done to the laboring man so coerced, and he ordinarily should bring the action to redress that wrong. At the same [606]*606time a right of action of a different nature sometimes ac•crues to the employer of such

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Bluebook (online)
119 N.W. 328, 137 Wis. 601, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/badger-brass-manufacturing-co-v-daly-wis-1909.