Burgess Bros. v. Stewart

112 Misc. 347
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 112 Misc. 347 (Burgess Bros. v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgess Bros. v. Stewart, 112 Misc. 347 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1920).

Opinion

Fawcett, J.

This is a motion for a preliminary injunction in an action for an injunction and damages.

The plaintiff is a foreign corporation engaged in business as a dealer in lumber, with its principal offices in Brooklyn. It has over $200,000 invested in its business and its annual sales exceed $600,000, of which over $500,000 are made in export trade to consignees in foreign countries. The plaintiff in all its sales contracts to deliver lumber at a point designated by the purchaser and trucks the lumber by its regularly employed chauffeurs and teamsters. Plaintiff, in its export trade, either acts as shipper in securing water transportation or the purchaser acts as the direct shipper, but in either case the plaintiff’s chauffeurs and teamsters haul said lumber to the pier of the steamship line. Plaintiff selects its help regardless of union affiliations and adheres to the open shop policy.

The defendant steamship lines are all common carriers engaged in transporting general freight, including lumber, between the United States and foreign countries. The other defendants are Truck Drivers and Chauffeurs Local Union No. 807, Greater New York Lumber Handlers’ Union No. 17122, Steamship Clerks’ Union of Brooklyn and Staten Island, Local 975, I. L. A., Transportation Trades Council of the Port of New York and Vicinity, the last of which is a federation of unions of employees engaged in and [350]*350about the piers and steamers and certain officers and members of said unions. The clerks, checkers, etc., employed at the steamship piers, including the members of Local 975, perform necessary service incidental to actual transportations and goods cannot be transported without such service.

The relief sought in the action is that the defendants, their agents, servants and employees and all persons acting in aid of or in conjunction with them be perpetually enjoined and restrained from combining and conspiring together in any manner to injure and destroy the plaintiff’s good will, trade and business and from taking any steps whatsoever to interfere with the rights of the plaintiff, to have its goods received, receipted for, handled, weighed and transported by common carriers without discrimination, by refusing to accept, receipt for, handle, weigh or transport said goods, or by causing, threatening or participating in any strike of the employees of said common carriers because said common carriers accept, receive or transport or are about to transport or to accept and receive or transport merchandise delivered by the plaintiff or by its employees; and from inducing others to do any of the acts forbidden by the injunction; and that the defendant steamship lines, their officers, servants and employees be perpetually enjoined and restrained from refusing to perform their duties as common carriers in connection with the merchandise delivered by plaintiff or its employees and from discriminating against goods delivered by the plaintiff for transportation by common carriers; that plaintiff also seeks to recover money damages in its action.

The plaintiff claims the defendants have formed a conspiracy in violation of the state and federal laws and the common law, to deprive the plaintiff of its right to have merchandise delivered or shipped by it, transported by these common carriers without dis[351]*351crimination. And in furtherance of the conspiracy the defendant unions have induced the defendant carriers to refuse to perform their duties as common carriers, and have threatened them with strikes if they do perform their duties, and have induced them to violate contracts for the transportation of plaintiff’s merchandise ; that the defendant carriers have refused and agreed to refuse to transport plaintiff’s merchandise and have broken their contracts for such transportation and that it is generally advertised that these things have happened and that plaintiff’s goods are untransp or table.

It is charged in the complaint that the plaintiff and certain other lumber dealers suffered a strike of its teamsters, chauffeurs and lumber handlers in January, 1920, which strike was called respectively by Truck Drivers’ and Chauffeurs’ Local 807 and the Lumber Handlers’ Union No. 17122. The strike was for the closed shop and union conditions which the plaintiff was unwilling to grant. Since the strike it is impossible for the plaintiff to secure any union truck-men to work for it or to handle its material when employed by anybody else until such time as it will consent to the closed shop and union regulations. The plaintiff reorganized its force and proceeded to do business as usual, but the Lumber Handlers’ Union and Truck Drivers’ Union No. 807 made arrangements with Steamship Clerks’ Union and the Transportation Trades Council, whereby the merchandise delivered by the plaintiff, whether plaintiff was acting as shipper or whether the purchaser was acting as shipper, would not be received at the piers and transported, until such time as the plaintiff unionized its trackmen and lumber handlers and proceeded to do business under union conditions.

The plaintiff’s affidavits submitted herein set forth [352]*352many specific instances of the refusal of the employees of the common carriers to carry out their contracts or to transport plaintiff’s merchandise and their threats of strike to the carriers if the carriers attempt to transport such merchandise; the refusal of the carriers to carry out their contracts for the transportation of said merchandise, and to furnish space in the future for its transportation, whether offered by the plaintiff as shipper or by the plaintiff’s customer as shipper, and the general understanding upon the part of the carriers that such merchandise will not be accepted. And in six cases of refusal to accept and transport the merchandise, the space had already been contracted for and there was a refusal to carry out the contract, and an inducement by the employees to cause a breach of said contract, and that transportation is refused plaintiff as a shipper; that it appears a representative of a union defendant, Clerks’ Local No. 975, delivered in each instance to a steamship line defendant or its agent at the pier a list of concerns whose lumber should not be handled, which included the name of the plaintiff. Defendants refused to accept the lumber of plaintiff for fear of a strike by the checkers and longshoremen, which would prevent the ship’s- sailing. Orders had been issued by the defendant, the Transportation Trades Council, to refuse all lumber cklivered by plaintiff through non-union truckmen; that lumber offered by delivery to steamship lines where space had been secured was refused. Steamship lines would refuse to sell space to this plaintiff and subsequently sell it to other shippers. In short, that no more of plaintiff’s liimber would be handled by any of the steamship lines until the difficulties were adjusted between the plaintiff and the unions.

The moving papers herein show that all of the parties are engaged in a combination having- for its object the exclusion of plaintiff’s merchandise from trails[353]*353portation by defendant carriers, both where plaintiff is the shipper and where its customers are the shippers. The continuance of this condition makes it impossible for plaintiff to carry on export trade in any form.

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Bluebook (online)
112 Misc. 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-bros-v-stewart-nysupct-1920.