Continental Slip Form Builders, Inc. v. Brotherhood of Construction & General Labor, Local 1290

393 P.2d 1004, 193 Kan. 459, 1964 Kan. LEXIS 390, 56 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3001
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 14, 1964
Docket43,752
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 393 P.2d 1004 (Continental Slip Form Builders, Inc. v. Brotherhood of Construction & General Labor, Local 1290) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Slip Form Builders, Inc. v. Brotherhood of Construction & General Labor, Local 1290, 393 P.2d 1004, 193 Kan. 459, 1964 Kan. LEXIS 390, 56 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3001 (kan 1964).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Robb, J.:

This an appeal from the trial court’s judgment of May 29, 1963, granting a permanent injunction against defendants and all members of the unions and locals in the class represented by defendants, or any of them, from doing any act, directly or indirectly, individually or in concert, which would interfere with plaintiff’s business operations at the Johnson County Co-op Grain Storage Elevator at Edgerton, Kansas, and from the further order of the court on July 15, 1963, overruling defendants’ motion for new trial.

*460 On March 25, 1963, plaintiff, a Kansas corporation which had been engaged in construction since its organization on December 26, 1962, was under contract and had begun construction of the $137,000 above-mentioned Johnson County Grange Co-op Grain Elevator, at which time plaintiff was also constructing an elevator at Miami, Missouri, at a contract price of $140,000 to $150,000, making the total gross contract price for the two projects from $277,000 to $287,000. A $19,800 steel frame, sheet iron building was being constructed as a part of the elevator on the Edgerton, Kansas, project including approximately $7,000 worth of elevator reinforcing steel already on hand from outside the state of Kansas. Other items consisting of lumber $6,000, machinery $25,000, and ready-mixed concrete $22,000, w'ere purchased in Kansas. Not more than $108,000 worth of labor was to be used on the job.

On March 26, 1963, defendants placed a picket on or near the Edgerton elevator construction site. He carried a banner reading,

“Continental Slip Form Builders, Inc., does not pay the prevailing union wage scale for this area. Construction and General Laborers Union Local 1290, A. F. of L.-C. I. O.”

Related effects of the picketing were interference with the truck deliveries of concrete by the Olathe Ready-Mix Concrete Company (doing a gross annual business of $700,000 to $800,000) and interference with completion of the grain elevator, the manager of which testified an annual business of from $300,000 to $500,000 was anticipated, all of which might go into interstate commerce.

Plaintiff paid laborers $1.25 per hour while defendants’ scale in the area called for $2,855 per hour, plus ten cents an hour paid into a health and welfare fund. Although one of defendants’ representatives stated he hoped they could organize plaintiff and its employees by the use of the banner, defendants claimed the picketing was only to give publicity to plaintiff’s wage scale and that no direct attempt was made to organize its employees.

Plaintiff’s evidence was the truck drivers of Olathe Ready-Mix Concrete stopped at the picket line because their general practice was not to cross a picket line.

On May 15, 1963, the trial court found it had jurisdiction of defendants; that plaintiff’s business was local in character and the National Labor Relations Board would not assume jurisdiction; that on May 25, 1963, there was no dispute between plaintiff and its employees, nor had there been in the past, and plaintiff had *461 no bargaining or contract relationship with any of the defendants; the effect of the picketing placed on or about the construction site by defendants was to stop concrete deliveries, whereby work ceased, and such interference and hindrance delayed construction; the picketing violated the law because it was designed to coerce and compel plaintiff to recognize defendants as the exclusive bargaining agent for its employees when defendants did not represent any of such employees.

A $1,000 bond was required of plaintiff and, as previously stated, defendants were temporarily restrained and enjoined from doing any act directly or indirectly, individually or in concert, which would interfere with plaintiff’s elevator construction at Edgerton.

On May 22, 1963, the trial court set May 27, 1963, as the posting date for the bond, which was done, and on May 29, 1963, a permanent injunction was issued.

On July 15, 1963, defendants’ motions for new trial was overruled. Hence this appeal.

The first error complained of by defendants is that the trial court did not have jurisdiction hereof because there was sufficient interstate commerce, the requirement was admitted to be $50,000, to place the original jurisdiction of the case in the National Labor Relations Board.

Although the record discloses evidence that all materials except about $7,000 worth of structural steel came from within the state of Kansas, defendants in their argument in their brief state:

“Assuming the following items were shipped in interstate commerce, lumber $6,600.00, steel rods, $7,000.00, machinery $25,000.00, and steel and iron for the warehouse, estimate $8,000.00, the total of these items is $51,600.00. Double this total to cover the elevator at Miami, Missouri, the total items received in interstate commerce by the employer would be $108,200.00.”

We cannot make such an assumption as defendants suggest nor do they direct our attention to any authority justifying such an assumption in order to place jurisdiction in the National Labor Relations Board.

It should be borne in mind that none of plaintiff’s employees was a member of this union, that plaintiff had never negotiated with the union or recognized it as the exclusive bargaining agent of its employees, and further, there was no dispute between plaintiff’s employees and their employer or between the employer and the union. The banner, above set out in the statement of facts, spoke *462 the truth, but the trial court’s finding, based on our well-reasoned opinion in Binder v. Local Union No. 685, 181 Kan. 799, 317 P. 2d 371, was that the picket in this case was illegal. This matter will be discussed further herein but in view of the above, the result was an unlawful use of the banner and the trial court was correct in so holding.

The construction site was the only possible place where defendants could picket plaintiff under G. S. 1961 Supp., 44-809 (13) which makes it unlawful:

“To picket beyond tbe area of the industry within which a labor dispute arises.”

The site was located near Edgerton in Johnson county and the picket had to walk up and down a country gravel road. Plaintiff’s original place of business was Hutchinson, Reno county, Kansas, where it engaged in the construction of commercial and residential buildings.

In Binder v. Local Union No. 685, supra, the controversy was between nonunion employees of an employer against the union, its officers as individuals and members, etc., and the picketing was there held to be organizational rather than purely informational and, therefore, unlawful under Kansas law. Reliance therein was placed upon the opinion in Teamsters Union v. Vogt, Inc., 354 U. S. 284, 77 S. Ct. 1166, 1 L. ed. 2d 1347, where certiorari was originally denied by the Supreme Court of the United States but was later granted. The opinion of the Supreme Court of the State of Wisconsin

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393 P.2d 1004, 193 Kan. 459, 1964 Kan. LEXIS 390, 56 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-slip-form-builders-inc-v-brotherhood-of-construction-kan-1964.