Burgess v. Daniel Plumbing & Gas Co.

285 S.W.2d 517, 225 Ark. 792
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1956
Docket5-771
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 285 S.W.2d 517 (Burgess v. Daniel Plumbing & Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgess v. Daniel Plumbing & Gas Co., 285 S.W.2d 517, 225 Ark. 792 (Ark. 1956).

Opinions

Paul Ward, Associate Justice.

This appeal challenges the permanent order of the Chancery Court of Sebastian County, Fort Smith District, which restrained Local Union No. 29 of Fort Smith from picketing the place of business of the Daniel Plumbing & Gas Company, Inc., while it was engaged, as a sub-contractor, in installing plumbing and pipe fittings for a new factory building being erected in Fort Smith for the Eastern Metal Products Corporation.

On March 16, 1955 the Daniel Company filed a complaint containing, in substance, the following material allegations: The Daniel Company is a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of this state with its principal place of business at Beebe, Arkansas; The appellants are officers and representatives of the United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Industry of the United States and Canada, Local Union No. 29; On or about February 8, 1955 the Daniel Company was awarded the contract for the installation of the necessary plumbing in the factory building above mentioned; On March 10, 1955 one of appellants, W. C. Atwell, placed a picket at said building site and continues to picket said site; On said date the Daniel Company was employing both union and nonunion employees, and there is and has been no dispute between the Daniel Company and any of its employees over wages, hours or working conditions; The Daniel Company has not refused to negotiate with the union and has not discriminated against organized labor or said union; Said picketing is unlawful and is intended to obtain a closed shop, either contractually or non-eontractually, in violation of the constitution of this state, and is intended to coerce the Daniel Company into unlawful discrimination against its employees who are not members of said union; As a result of the picketing all union employees of the Daniel Company and other contractors engaged in erecting said factory building have ceased working, and; Unless said picketing is restrained the Daniel Company will suffer irreparable damage. The prayer was for a temporary restraining order.

After a temporary restraining order -was issued on March 18, 1955, the union, on April 9, 1955, answered that said temporary restraining order denies to them their right of free speech as guaranteed by the Federal Constitution; and the issuance of a permanent restraining order would likewise deprive them of the right of free speech.

The general factual background out of which this controversy arises is, summarily stated, as follows: The Daniel Company is a corporation located at Beebe. Its president is John B. Thurman of Little Rock and its active manager or superintendent is E. B. Daniel who lives at Beebe. Merl Daniel, the 28 year old son of E. B. Daniel, acts as superintendent on specific jobs. The Daniel Company obtained a contract from J. S. Davis & Sons who in turn had the general contract for building a new factory building for the Eastern Metal Products Corporation at Fort Smith. The latter part of February 1955 young Daniel, as field superintendent of the Daniel Company, went to Fort Smith for the purpose of installing the plumbing equipment in said building, and had unloaded some material at the construction site. He got the job under way about the first of March 1955 and soon thereafter employed a Mr. Rice who was a union plumber living in Fort Smith and one other non-union plumber who lived at Beebe. Young Daniel was himself a plumber and did manual labor on the job as such.

After Rice had been working on the job for two days an agent of the union, Mr. Atwell, came on the job and stated to young Daniel that he wanted to negotiate to have Rice’s Avages raised to the extent of $1.00 an hour. While Rice had been working he Avas paid at the rate of $2.75 per hour which was the prevailing union Avage scale for plumbers in Fort Smith, and Rice had made no demand for a wage increase. When Young Daniel told Atwell that he had no authority to negotiate for wage raises, AtAvell immediately left and Rice walked off the job promptly thereafter. About an hour and twenty minutes later Rice Avas back picketing Daniel’s place of operation. As a result of this all union men working for appellee and the general contractor Avalked off the job.

Set out below is a summary of the pertinent testimony of the witnesses.

Felix Vosel, a witness for appellee, is an employee of the J. S. Davis & Sons Construction Company which has the general contract for erecting the building in question. I have been such employee for 17 years. The Daniel Company started assembling its material about the 23rd or 24th of February 1955 but had not at that time started work on the job. About that time I saw Mr. Atwell, an agent for Local 29, at the construction site and he asked me who had unloaded the materials for the Daniel Company, and I told him I did not know. I asked him what he was going to do about it and he replied that they were going to close the job down for 90 days.

Lee Davis a witness for appellee. I have lived in Port Smith for 50 years and am a member and senior partner of the J. S. Davis Lumber Company, Construction Division, and we have a contract to erect the factory building in question. Our contract amounting to approximately $400,000 was awarded last fall. I am a member of and a contributor to the Port Smith Industrial Foundation which promoted the securing of the Eastern Metal plant for Port Smith, and as such attended a meeting of the Foundation Committee at the Chamber of Commerce building the latter part of February 1955. This meeting was called at the request of Mr. Folsom and Mr. Atwell [members of Local 29]. Besides those men at this meeting there were presidents of three local banks, Mr. Frank Shaw [an attorney] and Mr. Jack Rose [attorney for the union], and possibly some others. When Mr. Folsom was asked to state the purpose of the meeting he objected to my having a lawyer and a stenographer present. Mr. Folsom was informed that I had as much right to have an attorney there as he and his friend had, hut he refused to talk because the stenographer was there to take notes on the meeting. I finally agreed to dismiss the stenographer. He then stated that “they were there in the interest of securing the work for Fort Smith Men.” Mr. Atwell stated that he wanted to see Fort Smith men get the work, and I said you mean union men and, he said no, I don’t mean union men; Mr. At-well made a sign (pointing with his thumb) and said “Well we will take care of him over there.” I inferred that he was pointing to the court house since things have happened as they did and because all of the men Daniel brought in here were turned down on getting a license. Daniel had 11 men take the examination for license and all of them failed. Mr. Atwell is the business manager of Local 29 of the Plumbers and Steam Fitters Union. Mr: Daniel was not present at the meeting and had not come on the job at that time, and neither was any representative of the Daniel Company present. Under our general contract we have been employing nnion common labor and paying the nnion scale of wages. When the picketing started all my union men quit work and walked out. As far as I know the Daniel Company was employing both union and non-union plumbers and common laborers. None of our union employees have returned to work since the picket line was established, and our work is down and has been down since the 10th of March. The Daniel Company’s contract amounts to about 10% of the entire construction cost of the building.

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Related

Halliman v. Stiles
464 S.W.2d 573 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1971)
Mitcham v. Ark-La. Construction Co.
397 S.W.2d 789 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1965)
Burgess v. Daniel Plumbing & Gas Co.
285 S.W.2d 517 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W.2d 517, 225 Ark. 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-v-daniel-plumbing-gas-co-ark-1956.