Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp. v. United Steelworkers

45 A.2d 857, 353 Pa. 420
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 11, 1946
DocketAppeal, 54
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 45 A.2d 857 (Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp. v. United Steelworkers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp. v. United Steelworkers, 45 A.2d 857, 353 Pa. 420 (Pa. 1946).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Maxey,

Tbe plaintiff filed a bill in equity against tbe defendants, making certain allegations as to. the commission of acts of force and violence against employes of the plaintiff and interfering with tbe ingress of such employes to the plaintiff’s property, an extensive’ steel works situated at Homestead. These employes who were allegedly barred from plaintiff’s plant were not engaged in tbe work of producing steel and were in no sense of tbe term “strike-breaker's”. None of the manufacturing and. productive facilities at tbe Homestead Steel Works have been in operation at any time during tbe strike. Thése barred-out employes were assigned to tbe work of maintaining tbe power-houses, tbe boilers, tbe pumps, tbe steam lines and the sprinkler system, and to guard against tbe constant hdzard of fire and to prevent tbe freezing of water lines essential to water cooling systems in tbe plant. Tbe steam lines and water lines in tbe plant total several hundred miles in length. The work of these maintenance men was essential to tbe keeping of tbe steel plant in condition to resttme tbe production of steel as soon as tbe steel strike should come to an end. Tbe maintenance employes are membefs of tbe labor union which is conducting tbe strike. Tbe maintenance of tbe plant also required the presence inside of'the plant of superintendents and foremen and their assistants to supervise tbe work of tbe maintenance men. That tbe property of the plaintiff, which represents an original investment of over $60,000,00.0 and which is now valued at approximately $120,000,000 must be protected and maintained at all times, even when production is stopped by strikes, is, self-evident. Eleven of the fifty-eight open hearth, furnaces at tbe Homestead Works of tbe steel corporation are tbe property of tbe Reconstruction Finance Corporation, that is, they belong to. the. American people.. The cost *423 of the Government owned facilities of this plant is.said, to be $90,000,000.

The complaint alleged that from the commencement of the steel strike until 12:01 A. M. January 26, 1946 the union pickets at the gates of the plaintiff’s steel plant at Homestead “permitted free access to said properties of the plaintiff for all personnel scheduled by plaintiff to perform such essential maintenance of said properties” but “on January 25,1946, said International Union and Local Union 1397 advised plaintiff that commencing with the hour of 12:01 A. M., January 26, 1946, it would no longer permit access to the Homestead Steel Works, of any of the supervisory personnel of the plaintiff below the level of department superintendents and has since that date uniformly denied access to said properties of all assistant foremen, foremen, assistant general foremen, and general foremen and assistant department superintendents and other employes of plaintiff”.. The complaint further sets forth that “pickets have continued to congregate at said gates [leading to th.e plaintiff’s steel plant] in larger groups numbering up to two hundred (200) persons, and through mass picketing, standing.shoulder to shoulder several deep, have refused entrance and access to said Works to all supervisory and other personnel employed by the plaintiff who have sought to enter said Works, excepting only the Works Superintendent and the Department Superintendents.” .

The bill alleges that the unlawful acts of the defendant Local Union “have caused and are causing . . . great and irreparable loss, damage and injury” to the plaintiff corporation. It is further alleged in the bill that “defendants have seized, held the plants, equipment, machinery and property of the plaintiff hereinbefore described as the Homestead. Steel Works and. have deprived plaintiff of the use.” . .

The plaintiff asked for an injunction preliminary until final hearing and perpetual thereafter to restrain *424 and enjoin the defendants from “(a) Interfering with, hindering or obstructing the agents, servants and employes of the plaintiff engaged in the performance of their work assignments for the plaintiff at the Homestead Steel Works or in the operation and maintenance of plaintiff’s properties;

“(b) Preventing or attempting to prevent any person or persons, whether employes of the plaintiff or others, from freely entering or leaving the plaintiff’s plants and properties at said Homestead Steel Works;

“(c) Conspiring, combining, confederating, agreeing or arranging with each other or with any other person or persons, organizations or associations, to interfere with or injure the plaintiff in the conduct of its lawful operations at the Homestead Steel Works,” by massed picketing, threats or acts of violence, force or show of force, or other means of intimidation or coercion.

In support of plaintiff’s bill there were filed fourteen injunction affidavits. The general superintendent of the Homestead Steel Mill of plaintiff corporation filed an injunction affidavit stating that on January 25, 1946 he was notified in a telephone conversation with Frank Casper, President of the United Steel Workers of America, Local 1397, that “the Union had decided that ... no supervision below the level of Department Superintendent would be admitted to the plant, and that the agreement which we had made permitting free access to and from the plant by all supervisors was at an end.”

Other injunction affidavits make allegations as follows:

On January 25, 1946, a large group of pickets, estimated to be from one hundred to two hundred in number, standing three deep, extended across the gate and blocked the entrance to plaintiff’s Homestead plant and thus denied access to the plant to individuals below the rank of superintendent. On January 29, 1946, at *425 8:30 in the evening (after suit had been instituted in the instant proceeding), Arthur H. McGurk, who desired to enter the Homestead Plant for the purpose of securing some equipment from his locker, was grabbed by pickets at the 48" mill gate and forcibly detained within the boundaries of the plant. He was escorted from company property by pickets, across the tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and up a bank to a point on a driveway near Eighth Avenue. He was placed, against his will, in the seat of a red open-body truck, between the driver and another picket, and taken to a point in front of and across from the Union headquarters at Eighth and Dickson Streets. Upon alighting from the truck he attempted to make a break, stumbled and fell— one of the pickets falling on top of him, injuring his left knee and left breast and tearing his clothes. He was then forcibly taken into custody, escorted into the Union hall, where a great number of individuals were present, and was then taken into a private office and the door locked. The door was later opened by a man identified as John Bresko. McGurk was then released and went directly to his home, arriving there about 9:30 P. M. E. J. Horgan was on the night of January 29, 1946 admitted by the pickets to the plant and was told by one of the pickets, James R. Conroy, that any supervisors who used the 48" mill gate would be taken out of the plant; that threats were made by others in the group “that there would be bloodshed if management did not stop making use of the 48" Mill Gate.” William E. Crouch, Jr., in his injunction affidavit, states that on the 26th day of January, 1946, at 2:15 A.

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Bluebook (online)
45 A.2d 857, 353 Pa. 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carnegie-illinois-steel-corp-v-united-steelworkers-pa-1946.