Busch Jewelry Co. v. United Retail Employees' Union, Local 830

168 Misc. 224, 5 N.Y.S.2d 575, 2 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 866, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1718
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 168 Misc. 224 (Busch Jewelry Co. v. United Retail Employees' Union, Local 830) 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. United Retail Employees' Union, Local 830, 168 Misc. 224, 5 N.Y.S.2d 575, 2 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 866, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1718 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

Cotillo, J.

In this action, brought by three plaintiffs against the defendant union local and its officers, approximately one [225]*225hundred specific instances (some repetitious) of illegal, unwarranted and socially improper conduct are claimed to have been established upon the trial as the basis for the permanent injunction demanded. The plaintiff Busch Kredit Jewelry Co., Inc., operates five stores in the borough of Manhattan and Bronx; the plaintiff Busch Jewelry Co., Inc., operates five stores in the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens; and the plaintiff Klark Kredit Klothes, Inc., operates two stores in Manhattan. Substantially all sales made by plaintiffs are paid for by the customer in weekly installments, approximately eighty-five per cent of which payments are made by the customer personally at plaintiffs’ stores, ten per cent through the mails, and the balance, five per cent, through outside collectors, employed by plaintiffs, who call at the homes of the customers.

The defendant local is, as its name implies, an organization of employees of retail merchants, the individual defendants being officers of said local. Prior to May 15, 1938, a contract covering wages, hours and working conditions had been entered into between the local and plaintiffs, which by its terms expired on that date. One of the questions which was litigated here concerns the events which transpired upon the expiration of the agreement. Plaintiffs contend that prior to such expiration negotiations for a new contract had been instituted and while in progress were arbitrarily broken off by the defendants. At one stage of the conferences defendants refused to negotiate with a stenographer present and withdrew from the proceedings for that reason, but later did accept the presence of a stenographer. On the other hand, defendants assert that plaintiffs locked out ” its former employees. Persuasive proof was offered, however, that the managers of the various stores were instructed by plaintiffs to permit all employees involved in the dispute to return to work forthwith if they presented themselves for that purpose, but that this offer was not taken advantage of by the employees and the strike was instituted. Plaintiffs endeavored to negotiate the differences and the parties did meet on various dates in May and June for this purpose, the last meeting being held at the office of the New York State Mediation Board in the presence of one of the members of such Board, at which plaintiffs submitted a written offer covering wages and hours. The evidence fully establishes that plaintiffs were willing to and did endeavor to settle the dispute by arbitration and mediation.

The strike, however, was called on May seventeenth, and the picketing complained of here began shortly thereafter. The sole question presented by this action is whether the numerous acts shown by the evidence to have accompanied the strike and picketing [226]*226are legal or illegal. The grant or refusal of the permanent injunction sought by plaintiffs depends upon the answer to that question. The right to strike and the right to picket has been repeatedly upheld by the courts, and in this day and age requires no discussion. Neither right, however, justifies or excuses acts which are illegal per se.

Actions involving labor disputes seldom present such clear cut factual data upon which to base a judicial decision as is disclosed by the proof in this case. Too often there are twilight zones between economic necessity and strict legal rights and between social justice and individual rights presenting a bailing if not insoluble situation for disentanglement. The voluminous proof submitted here conclusively establishes a plethora of acts which clearly protray the atmosphere or setting of this dispute and which focus judicial and public attention upon an important aspect of labor privileges and immunities and their concomitant obligations and responsibilities.

Numerous acts of misconduct were established by the proof, some of which are violative of law and order and distinctly conducive to a breakdown of the public peace. They may be classified as (1) acts of physical and forcible obstruction to the proper and orderly conduct of plaintiffs’ business; (2) threats, intimidation and coercion inducing a breach of the public peace and tending to constitute a violation of constitutional rights of others; (3) promulgation of false, deceitful and misleading statements calculated to deceive the public as to the true state of affairs, for which purpose the facilities of the post office were used along with other means; and (4) false propaganda and appeals to class hatreds circulated to build up an esprit de corps among the strikers and their sympathizers, based upon unsound social economics tending to cheapen the intelligence of the workers and foment organized opposition to orderly processes and the administration of the law.

In view of the great number of acts complained of and which are established by the proofs, it will suffice for the purposes of this opinion and to keep it within proper bounds to generalize such acts and their effect and influence upon plaintiffs, their employees and customers and the public. Illustrative of the first class of acts above mentioned is the case of a customer who was stopped by two pickets as she was about to enter one of plaintiffs’ stores and threatened with physical violence if she went in. The threat had its intended effect and the customer left without entering. A day or two later a prospective customer was stopped by another picket as he was about to enter another store of one of the plaintiffs. The picket referred the intending buyer to a store belonging [227]*227to the picket’s father and furnished him with a card bearing that store’s address. At least two members of the defendant local admitted that during the strike they called at homes of plaintiffs’ customers to prevent payment by the latter of installments due to plaintiffs, one of defendant’s members actually collecting an installment from one customer and pocketing the money. Another member of the local, accompanied by two other men not identified, entered the home of a female relative of one of plaintiffs’ employees and threatened to picket her home and that of the employee if the relative did not compel the employee to leave his job and join the strikers. Many other similar instances were established by satisfactory proof.

While strikers may use any and all peaceful and lawful efforts to induce workers to join their ranks, the evidence shows many instances of threats, intimidation and coercion exceeding legal bounds. A female employee was followed by several members of the local from the store where she was employed to the restaurant where she lunched and there denounced by them as a scab and a strikebreaker and otherwise vilified. Their manner and language was such as to cause her to fear for her physical safety. Another young lady was seized by a negro picket as she was about to enter plaintiffs’ store where she was employed. Aided by a co-employee, she gained the safety of the store, but was subjected to a torrent of abusive language from the picket, who applied to her the vilest term known to our language. On another occasion a different member of the defendant local accosted this same employee in vulgar terms and threatened to spit in her face. Other employees were warned by members of the local that they would “ get ” them.

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Bluebook (online)
168 Misc. 224, 5 N.Y.S.2d 575, 2 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 866, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busch-jewelry-co-v-united-retail-employees-union-local-830-nysupct-1938.