Beckerman v. Bakery & Confectionery Workers International Union

28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 550, 1931 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1594
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 550 (Beckerman v. Bakery & Confectionery Workers International Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beckerman v. Bakery & Confectionery Workers International Union, 28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 550, 1931 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1594 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

Kennedy, J.

This action was commenced by Charles Beckerman and Abraham Beckerman who are engaged in the bakery business, at 895 East 105th Street, Cleveland, under the firm name of Beckerman Brothers. For many years they have employed Union labor in their bakery, and for the last three and a half years their relations with their employes and the Union seemed to have been cordial.

Charles Beckerman, the senior brother, who is the executive member of the partnership, began work at his trade when he was eleven years of age, and by im dustry has built up an extensive business and valuable good will, and has erected his own building in which he conducts his business.

The Bakery & Confectionery International Union of America, Local 56, is a labor union composed of about sixty, members, mostly Jewish bakers, and for a number of years has had a written agreement with Beckerman Brothers, the last agreement having taken effect May 1, 1930, and which by its terms would, except for the matters set forth herein, expire May 1, 1931.

There is in Cleveland an organization known as The Jewish Master Bakers Association composed of about twenty firms who manufacture baked goods, of which association Beckerman Brothers is a member.

The Union prepared a printed form of agreement which was signed by the business agent of the Union on behalf of Local 56, and signed by the individual firms of the Master Bakers Association who would agree to the terms imposed by the Union.

There were three firms who belonged to the Association who had refused to sign the agreement with the Union, one of them, Hyman Dembovitz, being a charter member of the Association which was incorporated under the laws of Ohio.

Until 1930 no complaint had been made against the Master Bakers’ firms which signed the Union agreement, [552]*552either because Dembovitz belonged to the Association, or because the Union Master Bakers were members of the Association of which there were nonunion shop members.

Peace had reigned in the industry for about three years, and employers and employes enjoyed amicable and prosperous relations. In spite of the fact that the Jewish bakers made bread by hand and hence was more expensive than machine-made bread used by Gentiles, the trade had grown in importance and wages were maintained at $70.00 per week of seven and a half hours a day.

Trouble and discord resulting in a strike occurred im the year 1927 which was finally composed by the efforts of Mr. Goldstone, an international organizer of New York, who succeeded in bringing peace into the disturbed relations by inducing the Business Agent of the Union, Charles Miller, to resign and- the bakery firms to renew their agreement. There is credible evidence that the’ peace was celebrated at a banquet at which masters and laborers were entertained, and at which the promise was made that “Miller should never again be elected to office in the Union.”

' Following this banquet, Harvey Friedman, one of the defendants, was elected business agent, and he was followed by others from time to time, until December 3, 1930, when Charles Miller was again elected business agent, a strong minority of the union dissenting, and his salary was fixed at $76.00 per week.

Trouble began almost immediately in the industry. On December 12th a full page advertisement was published in the Jewish newspapers stating that the Union demanded the observance of its contract with the Association and cheaper bread. No specific breach' of the contract was detailed. The article was inflammatory and declared that the public should no longer be robbed by high priced bread, etc. The Master Bakers held its weekly meeting the afternoon on which the advertisement appeared, and a committee composed of Union National Organizer Schmidt and two other unionists called at the meeting place and requested to speak to Mr. Meyer Rosen, the business manager of the Association. They demanded • that Rosen and the other masters “keep their agreement” with the Union. Mr. Rosen requested them to [553]*553come into the meeting and state their grievances, which they refused to do, giving as their reason that Dembovitz Kronenberg and Pessin, three non-union shop members of the association, were in attendance at the meeting. Mr. Rosen then requested the committee to have the Union appoint a grievance committee to meet with the grievance committee of the Master’s Association, which they also refused to do.

The Union working agreement provided, among other ■cnings, that all disputes should be settled by grievance committees to be appointed by each party, and then if failure of agreement resulted, the matters in dispute should be arbitrated as provided in the agreement.

The Union refused to appoint any grievance committee or any arbitrators, and on Friday night, December 12, 1930, a strike was called against all Master Baker shops except three. No complaint was made of Beckerman Brothers’ conduct; no notice was given of the intention to strike other than the newspaper notice which appeared the day the strike was called. The Union also had no notice that it would be precipitated into a strike until the meeting of December 12th. National Organizer Schmidt of Chicago was present at the meeting ready to conduct the strike, and it thus appears that the strike was fomented and arranged without knowledge of the Union when the members were asked to vote to sustain Miller’s action.

The minutes of the Union meeting of December 12th states that “the strike is being called because the bosses do not carry through the agreement they have with the Union, and the price of- bread should be cheaper”. No statement of any more explicit reason' for calling the strike was given, and the price of bread was not a part of nor mentioned in the agreement, and therefore could not be a lawful cause of the strike.

Beckerman Brothers did not know that their employees had struck until, having failed to come to work as usual, Charles Beckerman called up and learned a strike had been called. No complaint had ever been made against Beckerman Brothers by the Union, its officers, nor by their employees, before the strike' was called, nor did [554]*554Charles Beckerman know why the strike had been called against his firm.

The International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Stablemen and Helpers Local No. 334, known as the drivers’ union, simultaneously called a strike of its members at the request of the bakers union, and the drivers union has been actively assisting the bakers by picketing and assistance in other manner.

Union Labor may be a powerful force for good in any community. Labor has the right to combine and improve its conditions, to increase wages, to enforce sanitary conditions, to shorten hours of labor, or to accomplish any other benefit to the men and women who toil. The courts of Ohio have repeatedly recognized this right and are always quick to protect the workers in the full enjoyment of its well established rights. Except for the unselfish efforts to ameliorate the condition of the worker, he would not have advanced to the proud position which he occupies in the civilized world today. In America, more than in any other land, and in Ohio especially, labor is respected and admired for its large contribution to the economic advancement of the human race. The leaders who have fought the battles of labor with a far seeing and intelligent unselfishness may well claim a debt of gratitude from our citizens.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 550, 1931 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beckerman-v-bakery-confectionery-workers-international-union-ohctcomplcuyaho-1931.