Busch Jewelry Co. v. Silvers

169 Misc. 305, 8 N.Y.S.2d 592, 3 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 768, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2220
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 169 Misc. 305 (Busch Jewelry Co. v. Silvers) 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
Busch Jewelry Co. v. Silvers, 169 Misc. 305, 8 N.Y.S.2d 592, 3 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 768, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2220 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

Cotillo, J.

You eleven defendants before me stand convicted by an American jury of your own selection of a criminal contempt in that you have been charged with violating an injunction issued out of this court on June 28, 1938 (Busch Jewelry Co., Inc., v. United Retail, etc., Union, 168 Misc. 224). This is a special proceeding, its interpretation being made under sections 876-a and 882-a of the Civil Practice Act. Interpretation of the former section prescribes that an injunction may be granted in a labor dispute by a court having jurisdiction if there are involved elements of fraud, violence and breach of the peace. The latter section declares it to be essential that before any sentence of judgment is imposed upon any one accused of such misconduct, he first be tried by a jury of his peers.

The injunction which this jury has found that you defendants have violated arose in a case between the Busch Jewelry Company, as plaintiffs, against Locals 830 and 208, which are labor locals affiliated with C. I. O. The facts which were brought out at that trial showed a course of conduct desperately conceived and stubbornly enacted to the end that the adjudication of this court was that it could not be permitted to continue, else further irreparable damage would be done to these plaintiffs.

Among other things it was brought out that since the commencement of the strike against the Busch Company on May 17, 1938, the defendants’ conduct therein had been characterized by such [307]*307flagrant, unlawful and illegal activities as would be difficult to believe were it not so convincingly proved. Intimidation, coercion, molestation and annoyance of employees of plaintiff remaining on their jobs — persons who exercised merely their inalienable legal right to remain at work — the use of violent, abusive language, epithets and threats directed not only at such employees but to the plaintiff’s customers and to the public generally, mass picketing, demonstrations, continuous dissemination of deliberately false statements, the issuance of circulars confined solely .to Harlem stores of plaintiff wherein maliciously false statements with respect to the company’s attitude towards negroes were made and for the sole purpose of appealing to racial prejudice, the use of the United States mails in an effort to hold employees of the Busch Company in contempt in the eyes of their neighbors, loud and boisterous language causing crowds to collect, invasion of the privacy of the homes of plaintiff’s customers for the purpose of inducing those persons by means of false statements to commit breaches of contract, picketing and repeated threats to picket the homes of employees and members of their famihes, the shouting of vicious statements such as “ Busch’s are making prostitutes of their women,” They sell only cracked diamonds,” They’ll double-cross you,” and finally an actual instance where a striking employee went to a customer, received money to be applied against the customer’s account and converted such money to his own use and never accounted to the company.' These were merely some of the acts complained of and likewise proved at the trial.

The defendants there through their official bulletins, published and distributed by both Locals 830 and 208, gloated over the illegal acts being committed by them, boasted of their defiance of police authority. One of their bulletins referred with pride to the fact that a crowd of over five hundred persons had gathered in front of one of Busch’s stores and refused to disperse at the direction of the police and greeted the employees with a torrent of insulting language. Other bulletins encouraged the strikers to conduct mass picketing demonstrations, to shout as loudly as possible, to hinder customers from entering the stores in order to make payments, to engage in any antics, however illegal that might be, to draw crowds in front of the premises of the Busch stores.

It is, therefore, for a violation of that order which had been issued because of elements of fraud, irreparable damage, violence and breach of the peace, and which restrained all picketing before Buscn’s stores was issued.

Thereafter followed a course of conduct which amazed the citizenry of this community. I say this advisedly and in a spirit [308]*308devoid of any personal feeling with respect to the persons concerned here before me.

It was brought to this court’s attention that the picketing prohibited by the injunction was continued thereafter, in fact the day following, barefacedly and with a reckless abandon of consequences that brooked ill for the respect of our courts and the system of justice under which we operate. Unfortunately, much of this misconduct admitted by you convicted pickets took place under and by the advice of counsel; thus what was done in the way of straight picketing was deliberately planned, consciously directed, and purposely conceived under the notion that the same was in no wise an affront to this court and indeed not even a violation of its decree.

Beyond straight picketing there occurred a series of other incredible happenings directly bearing upon the injunction itself. It was called to the court’s attention that by means of skywriting and at numerous gatherings held at public beaches and by the wide household distribution of handbills criticizing the terms of this injunction, a contemptuous and sneering attitude was being introduced. Significantly lacking were all the usual qualities of respect and obedience ordinarily attributable to court decrees.

Going even beyond those particularities just described, there occurred additional acts, such as the holding of mass meetings to produce and inspire a feeling of rebelliousness against living up to the terms of the injunction. Not that this court feels public discussion of court decrees is to be prohibited, but the public press carried notices pointing directly at criticisms of this court’s conduct in deciding in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant locals. Paraphrasing, if not reporting precisely, the criticism attributed to the counsel for these defendants, which explains defendants’ presence here now before me, was the statement that judicial defiance should be met by labor defiance. Both rebelliousness and affront to the dignity of this court and the respect normally due and owing our institutions are clearly what is at stake.

At such gatherings, instead of hearing substantial, dignified i plans whereby the merits of the controversy could be made plain to the rank and file of labor, or instead of seeking to avoid repetition of illegal acts, the remarks printed relating to what happened after such injunction was issued, concerned the political career of this court and the actual words printed in the newspapers were that the court issuing the decree had written its political obituary and last will and testament. Such derogatory remarks bore less on the f rights behind the actual dispute than that they personalized an issue in an improper and perhaps criminally libelous manner.

[309]*309Fortunately, none of these rash statements, of historical value here only, were introduced in evidence, so that the jury’s verdict was in no wise influenced by such an exhibition of petty, if not vicious, spleen. Nevertheless, the picture, including the tonal quality relating to the character of opposition which this court’s order has met from these pickets, arose from the very first day of its emission from within this forum.

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Related

Busch Jewelry Co. v. United Retail Employees' Union, Local 830
168 Misc. 224 (New York Supreme Court, 1938)
Busch Jewelry Co. v. United Retail Employees' Union, Local 830
169 Misc. 156 (New York Supreme Court, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
169 Misc. 305, 8 N.Y.S.2d 592, 3 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 768, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busch-jewelry-co-v-silvers-nysupct-1938.