Corpuz v. Hotel & Restaurant Employees' International Alliance & Bartenders' International League of America Local No. 631

151 P.2d 705, 61 Ariz. 483, 1944 Ariz. LEXIS 148, 15 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 606
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1944
DocketCivil No. 4531.
StatusPublished

This text of 151 P.2d 705 (Corpuz v. Hotel & Restaurant Employees' International Alliance & Bartenders' International League of America Local No. 631) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corpuz v. Hotel & Restaurant Employees' International Alliance & Bartenders' International League of America Local No. 631, 151 P.2d 705, 61 Ariz. 483, 1944 Ariz. LEXIS 148, 15 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 606 (Ark. 1944).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

Local Union No. 631, claiming it has an agreement with the Westward Ho Hotel Company in which the latter agreed and bound itself on January 2, 1942 to employ and retain only members of the union in good standing, brought this action to enjoin the hotel company from violating its agreement by employing nonunion members in carrying on its business.

The hotel company admits in its answer the contract, but states that the union’s agent D. A. Baldwin, at the time of its execution, represented to the hotel company that ninety-five per cent of its employees were members or desirous of becoming members of the union, and that all employees of defendant would immediately become members upon the execution of the agreement; that the hotel company believed said representations and relied thereon, and accordingly executed the agreement; that the representations were false and untrue to Baldwin’s knowledge, and were made to deceive the hotel company and to induce it to execute the agreement.

Another reason for executing the agreement, the hotel company alleges, was a threat of the said Baldwin to call a strike of all of the hotel employees if it failed to execute the agreement.

After hearing the evidence on the issues thus formed the trial court entered its order enjoining the hotel company pendente lite from continuing in its employ any persons not members of the union, provided that not more than ten should be discharged each week until all nonunion members had been dis *486 charged and replaced by union members. It was further provided that all employees who should make application within one week to join the union whether accepted or rejected, should be exempt from the order.

Following the issuance of the order to show cause on March 28, 1942, and before the hearing thereon, the intervenors herein on April 2, 1942, moved the court for leave to intervene as parties defendant and they are the appellants on appeal.

The first assignment is that the court erred in enjoining defendant and intervenors (certain employees of the hotel company) from violating the contract of January 2, 1942, for the reason that this contract was secured by means of false representations, and for that reason the plaintiffs do not come before the court with clean hands. They also contend that the said contract has for its purpose the destruction of the individual right to work without joining a union and is therefore against public policy. It is also contended by defendant that the enforcement of the agreement by the hotel company to employ only members of the union is an actionable tort.

We will consider assignment number one. The evidence concerning the agreement to employ only union men is not in conflict. It appears therefrom that one of the agents for the hotel company and the managing director thereof and Baldwin, the agent of the union, in meetings discussed the union’s demand that only members be employed by the hotel company several times prior to the execution of the agreement. The strongest statement testified to by the witnesses for the hotel company is “He stated that he and Mr. Holahan ... in conversations with me stated on many occasions that they, meaning Mr. Baldwin as the representative, represented 95% or better of the employees who were members of the *487 union or who desired to become members.” The witnesses testified that it was on such representation that they were induced to sign the agreement.

It should be remembered that these employees were the employees of the hotel company. It appears to us that the representatives of the hotel company could easily have ascertained whether that statement was true simply by making inquiry of its employees. The contention that the hotel company relied upon this representation and accepted it as true, in view of the surrounding circumstances, requires a higher degree of credulity than we possess. The means of determining the truth of such representation were easily accessible to the hotel company and its officers. They knew, or could have found out, by simple inquiry from the hotel employees as to whether they had joined the union or intended to do so or not. The claim that the execution of the agreement was obtained through false representations is not supported by the evidence.

Negotiations for signing this contract were started the middle of November, 1941, and the contract was finally executed February 2, 1942.

It is a fact disclosed by the evidence that the total number of employees of the hotel company was from 150 to 175, and it is also true that only about 20 or 30 were members of the union at that time, but these facts were as well known by the hotel company as by the representative of the union, or should have been. The evidence conclusively shows that the contract by the hotel company to employ union men only was voluntarily entered into by the hotel company, with a full knowledge of the facts, and that the contention now made is an after-thought.

An employer who voluntarily enters into an agreement with a labor union to employ union workers only in his business may be enjoined from violat *488 ing his agreement by employing nonunion workers when union workers are available.

As we take up the other assignments of the appellants, we find the contention that Section 26-109, Arizona Code Annotated 1939, is designed to prohibit an injunction in such a case as the instant one because it involves labor controversies. Said section reads, in part, as follows:

“No restraining order or injunction shall be granted in any case between employer and employee, or between employees, or between persons employed and persons seeking employment, involving or growing out of a dispute concerning terms or conditions of employment, unless necessary to prevent irreparable injury to property or to a property right.

Also appellants submit Section 43-1608, Arizona Code Annotated 1939, which reads as follows:

“Coercing persons not to join labor organisations. —Any person who shall coerce or compel any other person to enter into an agreement, either written or verbal, not to join or become a member of any labor organization, as a condition of such other person securing employment or continuing in the employment of any such person shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. ’ ’

We find no application of these two sections to the case before us.

We believe the case of appellants rests on the first assignment of error and shall give but brief attention to the other assignments.

The case of Schwab v. Moving Picture Machine Operators Local, 1941, 165 Or. 602, 109 P. (2d) 600, submitted by appellants is where the object of the union activity is principally directed to securing a monopoly of jobs available to the members of the union, such activity is not within the scope of the *489 union’s legal rights. In that case the defendant union picketed the plaintiff’s theatre in order to compel the discharge of non-union operators. When an injunction was issued restraining the picketing the union asserted the anti-injunction statute.

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151 P.2d 705, 61 Ariz. 483, 1944 Ariz. LEXIS 148, 15 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corpuz-v-hotel-restaurant-employees-international-alliance-ariz-1944.