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

169 Misc. 854, 9 N.Y.S.2d 167, 3 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 762, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1456
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 Misc. 854 (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, 169 Misc. 854, 9 N.Y.S.2d 167, 3 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 762, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1456 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Cotillo, J.

An application has been brought to extend, for a further period of six months, an injunction against the defendants, Local 830 and Local 208 of the C. I. 0., which I granted to the petitioners on June 28, 1938 (168 Misc. 224).

The Busch strike, with its many ramifications, has occupied much of my best attention since June of last year. I have sat on one aspect or other of this litigation during the past summer and also for a time during the recent Christmas vacation. On a number of occasions I have tried to bring the parties to a settlement of their [855]*855dispute through compromise. In some respects it has been a drain on human endurance to keep up with its difficult and varying phases. A multiplicity of suits have occurred in connection therewith. Some of these were distinctly novel; a trial by jury was had on two separate occasions, one such trial involving a violation of the first all-picketing ban issued in this State since the passage of section 876-a of the Civil Practice Act, and the other affecting the conviction of five professional pickets upon similar charges through aiding and abetting in a conspiracy, members of the defendant locals and establishing that the basis of such charges was not a real labor dispute.

The present litigation involves an entirely new aspect of our present labor injunction law, calling as it does this first time for an interpretation of subdivision 8 of section 876-a of the Civil Practice Act.

The June, 1938, anti-picketing injunction brought up not only questions involving breach of the peace, violence, fraud, the instigation of class and race feeling, the use of professional pickets, but it also involved the question of free speech in labor disputes and, more fundamentally, what constitutes lawful and peaceful picketing.

There has been little, if any, let-up on the time and energy required of lawyers, litigants and the court itself. Despite the fact that the Appellate Division has affirmed that original injunction, appeals still continue. The question of the propriety and correctness of the conviction of twelve pickets under that injunction in chief, and under the jury trial had thereby, remains still a subject of future appellate adjudication.

I have in the instant litigation before me caused the taking of the entire evidence in the case on the issues involved. That has required two court days. Time was saved by the introduction into evidence of completed records of prior trials. During this last trial it was testified to and conceded by both sides that the parties to this litigation have themselves conferred repeatedly in an endeavor to find a peaceful solution of their differences. No less than thirty of such conferences have been had since the injunction issued and at such conferences there have sat labor leaders and trusted representatives on both sides.

Since December twenty-ninth, when the original injunction expired under the applicable Civil Practice section, new pickets have appeared, the defendants apparently satisfied that the injunction in chief does no longer forbid them from so doing.

It has also been testified that the president of the Busch stores has a substantial interest in stores located in Buffalo and in Pitts-burg; that this litigation has brought into being criminal libel [856]*856suits in Pittsburg; that it also has been the generating cause of picketing carried on against those stores; that charges of assault have likewise been preferred in that far-away city; and that here in New York a criminal charge has been brought against one of these defendants and a member of the defendant Local 830, alleging a violation of the Sanitary Code and of our misdemeanor law, and that such trial has been repeatedly postponed pending the outcome of this court’s decision in this case.

In this very case I am informed that if I decide adversely to the petitioners they will want to appeal to protect their interests and their property as well. If, on-the other hand, I decide against the unions, I am likewise assured that they will see in such decision the imperative necessity for a fight to the finish, because vital social and economic interests are involved.

Thus I am persuaded that the court’s mandate or decree of coercion or compulsion will settle nothing; that the bitterness already involved here will increase and not decrease; that victory will be striven for by each side with renewed and even redoubled efforts. Thus does otherwise commendable effort seeking legitimate goals when embittered by emotion, raise no inconsiderable rancor.

It seems a travesty upon justice that we can almost know in advance that my decree can and will settle nothing. And this is the very kind of dispute where differences are least desirable because the injurious effects so far as social and human costs are concerned will be most devastating in their consequences. A continuation of this dispute is deplorable; it is destructive; no good can come of it; everyone whom it touches is hurt by it, including the public.

In the calmness induced by a period of reflection while in my study, I am reinforcedJn my conviction that in these labor disputes there are too often less legal problems to be solved than social, economic and even political ones. Thus it appears to me that the employment of expert, fact-finding devices rather than judicial acumen can do more to repair the already too great social and economic injury which has been done here.

If we had in this State a specialized labor court, acting in conjunction with our other courts as presently constituted, much of the present difficulty should disappear. But considering our present set-up of courts, any purely legal evaluation of social and economic factors raises dissension and creates disagreement.

By virtue of this conviction, I have decided that this dispute can and should be settled by conciliation and arbitration. Such thought grew out of testimony given at this last trial and is based on the knowledge that the sole difference preventing the harmonious [857]*857settlement of this dispute is the question of an open shop, lay-offs and an arbitration clause. Surely a modus operandi culminating in a peaceful solution of these not insoluble differences should be possible. To this thought, so expressed by me in open court, both sides have expressed a willingness to give the matter consideration. If such a solution materializes, there would be opened, if not a new, at least a pragmatic adaption of combined judicial and lay common sense.

Our courts in the past have appointed committees to hold elections, in order to determine with what bargaining agency the employer must deal; and to otherwise indulge in fact-finding activities, all operating as essential judicial aids. But in no case that I know has there been by voluntary act of the court a judicial divesting of authority after a full taking of testimony has taken place.

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Related

Busch Jewelry Co. v. United RetaIl Employees' Union, Local 830
170 Misc. 482 (New York Supreme Court, 1939)

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169 Misc. 854, 9 N.Y.S.2d 167, 3 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 762, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busch-jewelry-co-v-united-retail-employees-union-local-830-nysupct-1939.