Cooks', Waiters' & Waitresses' Local Union v. Papageorge

230 S.W. 1086, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 327
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 1921
DocketNo. 6558.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 1086 (Cooks', Waiters' & Waitresses' Local Union v. Papageorge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooks', Waiters' & Waitresses' Local Union v. Papageorge, 230 S.W. 1086, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 327 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

FLY, C. J.

Appellees, four in number, owners of a certain restaurant or café in Fort Worth, known as the Mecca Café, instituted this action against the Cooks’, Waiters’, and Waitresses’ Local Union No. 748, a voluntary association of persons forming what is commonly known as a labor union, and Jap L. Nolen, its president, A. R. Jenkins, its business agent and walking delegate, and Bonny Childs, its secretary and treasurer, and all the associates, agents, em'ployés, and members of said union, being about 300 in number, to restrain them from picketing said restaurant and interfering with its business by certain unlawful acts set out in detail, in the petition, by which they were seeking to destroy its patronage and cause great financial damage to its owners. Appellants filed a number of exceptions to the petition, which were overruled, and sought to defend on the ground that appellees were seeking to destroy the union, and that a conspiracy had been formed for that purpose, and sought to dissolve a temporary injunction granted by the court. The court overruled the motion to dissolve and enjoined appellants from doing certain specified acts and from boycotting appel-lees’ place of business and from going into and near said place of business for the purpose of interfering with the business and intimidating its employés or assaulting or threatening them.

[1] The facts show that appellees were conducting the Mecca Café in Fort Worth, and had been operating under a contract .with appellants known as a “closed shop” agreement by which appellees bound themselves to employ only members of the local union and to pay the scale of wages named in the contract and to work the employés only the number of hours a day and per week specified therein; that such contract expired on June 21, 1920, and at its expiration appellants demanded that a new contract containing the same stipulations as the old one be signed and executed, and when appellees refused to sign such contract they were told by appellants that they would call a strike, would take the union card out of the place of business, and that the union employés would walk out. Upon appellees refusing to accede to the demands made .by appellants, the union card was taken from the restaurant, and ap-pellees’ employés who were members of the local union, walked out about 12 o’clock noon on June 24, 1920. Appellants agreed to and did place pickets about the place of business of appellees for the avowed purpose of coercing and forcing appellees to sign the contract they desired to have executed. The pickets were stationed and maintained throughout the hours of business, from the opening of the restaurant in the early morning until about 9 o’clock at night, being -continued until such acts were restrained by the court. The pickets carried what were denominated “sandwich signs,” which had printed in red letters on them “Patronize a Union House,” underneath which was a union card and the inscription, “Look for this label when you eat,” and other inscriptions. The pickets also distributed union newspapers, in which veiled threats were made against appellees. Efforts were constantly made to prevent people from entering and eating in the restaurant of ap-pellees, such language being used to passersby as, “Pass it up, brothers,” “This is a nonunion place of business,” “Help the union and they will help you,” “Don’t eat in there; this place is unfair to union labor,” and, “This is an unfair place.” All of these acts were done and words spoken to injure the business of appellees by deterring persons from patronizing the restaurant, and they caused an actual loss to appellees of from $400 to $500 but appellants are insolvent. The whole testimony tends to show that a conspiracy had been formed and was being carried into execution by appellants to either force appellees to sign a contract prepared and presented by appellants, requiring appellees to employ only *1088 members of the union, at certain prices and for certain working hours, or, in the event they refused to sign the contract which was dictated by appellants, then to destroy the business of appellees. Injury and damage to the property and business of appellees, or its destruction, if the arbitrary demands of appellants were not complied with, could have been the only motives actuating the picketing and other overt actions of appellants. The uncontroverted evidence shows the unlawful interference upon the part of appellants with the property rights of others, because those others did not agree with the proposition that appellees should relinquish the employment of their servants to appellants, and felt disposed to claim the right to fix the wages of those employed by them. Not only were the acts of appellants an attack upon the rights of men engaged in a lawful business, with an utter disregard of those rights, but were in absolute contempt of the law as applied to them directly by the court of last resort in Texas.

[2] In the case of Webb v. Cooks’, Waiters’ and Waitresses’ Union No. 748, 205 S. W. 465, this identical organization and its officers and members were enjoined from doing almost the identical act of which they were guilty in this instance. Every point made in this case was made in that by these same appellants, and each was decided against them in a very able and exhaustive opinion by Chief Justice Conner of the Fort Worth Court of Civil Appeals, and by a refusal of a writ of error the Supreme Court put the stamp of its approval upon the decision. The courts of the different states are fully reviewed in that decision, and with remarkable unanimity they sustain the Texas decision. Not only are appellants in direct contempt of the law as stated in the decision cited, but have acted in the face of direct statutes on the subject of trusts in this state. Articles 7796-7799.

[3] Those statutes cover the acts of appellants and declare that they are in restraint of trade and illegal. As shown in the cited opinion, article 5245, which declares that it shall not be unlawful for members of trades unions and other organizations to induce by peaceable means any person to accept or relinquish any certain employment, does not apply to cases like the one now under consideration.. That statute evidently refers to the ordinary strike where employSs leave the employment pf another, with whom they are at disagreement. No law can destroy or impair the right of men to quit their employment, and any impairment of that right is denied by the statute. But, as in the Webb Case, a different state of facts appears in this case. As said by the court in the Webb Case:

“Appellant has discharged no employe nor retained one objectionable to the other employes. Nor does it appear that any one or more of appellant’s employes are dissatisfied with appellant’s government, with the wages paid, or hours of service required. So that the question is narrowed to the simple one of whether in enacting article 5245 it was the legislative purpose to authorize any character of coercion or intimidation to compel a person in business necessitating the employment of servants to employ such persons only as shall be designated by another person or association of persons, and to permit such other person or association to dictate the rate of wages to be paid, the number of hours to serve, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 1086, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooks-waiters-waitresses-local-union-v-papageorge-texapp-1921.