Drake Bakeries, Inc. v. Bowles

31 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 425
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1934
StatusPublished

This text of 31 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 425 (Drake Bakeries, Inc. v. Bowles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drake Bakeries, Inc. v. Bowles, 31 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 425 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

McMahon, J.

This matter came on to be heard upon an agreed statement of facts, plus oral testimony consuming several days of time. After a complete and thorough consideration of all the evidence, reading of briefs, and argument of counsel for both sides, the court makes the following finding:

That the plaintiff is a corporation doing business in the city of Cleveland; that at all times herein mentioned in addition to the 18 driver salesmen involved in this lawsuit, said company employed about 100 other employees; that it had a payroll of approximately $2,000 a week, from which about 100 families obtained their livelihood. From the testimony the court gathers that the company in this’ community had a business whereby it expended in the neighborhood of $200,000 a year in accounts payable; that it had about 2,000 customers in the vicinity of Cleveland, Ohio, [426]*426and transacted about a $400,000 business in the sale of its merchandise each year.. This, approximately, was the condition of the plaintiff company on or about the 22nd day of December in the year 1933. On the 20th day of January, 1934, it closed down its business, claiming that it could no longer operate under the methods adopted on the part of the combined efforts of all the defendants named herein in conducting a strike directed at this plaintiff company.

The testimony does show about as follows:

That during the course of the strike from the 22nd day of December until January 20th, a large amount of property was damaged. Trucks were upset on the highway, merchandise ruined, plate glass windows of customers who were the owners of grocery stores, delicatessen stores, and the like, were broken in the night time, and intimidations, threats and other acts of assault and violence were likewise committed and the police force of the city was called upon to preserve order, due to the general disorder that had prevailed attending the strike conditions.

It further appears to the court that three months before December 22nd, 1933, that ten of the sixteen driver salesmen of the plaintiff company joined what is known as Bakery Drivers Local Union No. 52. Shortly thereafter several of them resigned or refused to participate in Union activities or refused to pay dues. Three or four of the original sixteen driver salesmen of the plaintiff company refused to join the Local Union and indicated their desire not to do so and of the 16 men involved in this lawsuit as driver salesmen so far as the Union is concerned this was about their standing on the 21st day of December of 1933 at the time of the calling of the strike.

The court finds from all the testimony that there was no dispute at any time as to the wages that the men received nor the hours that they worked or general working conditions. The plaintiff company complied with and had signed up under the provisions of the N. I. R. A. and the only dissension that existed was the refusal on the part of the plaintiff company to comply with the demands of the defendant Bowles, named herein, the business agent of the [427]*427Local Union No. 52, to employ its members exclusively as driver salesmen on the part of the company. No employees who joined the Union ever were dismissed and the facts as given to the court are to the effect that at no time did the company discourage or attempt to restrain or influence its driver salesmen not to join the Local Union and after some had joined those that did join received the same treatment as those who did not join. There was some evidence that Manager Wood, of the plaintiff company, had called meetings. The court finds, however, that those were meetings regularly' held in the sales room for the purpose of educating* and instructing the driver salesmen in the company’s business, and -whenever the question of N. I. R. A. arose it was for the purpose of discussing the relations that the act might have as to the company and the men. Some evidence as to Manager Wood making certain remarks derogatory to the Union were offered in evidence. The court does find that whatever he did say was said after the strike was called and after the commission of violence and unlawful acts had taken place. The strike was ordered December 21st by the Business Agent, defendant Bowles, without any consultation or reference or advice with his superior, he claiming that he had full authority to order the strike whenever he desired to do so regardless of conditions. After the strike was called it is conceded that trucks of the plaintiff company were followed, coercion was used, some of those trucks were upset and the merchandise destroyed, merchants were intimidated and windows of customers of the plaintiff company who were in the grocery and delicatessen business were destroyed in the night time, “although this concession did not admit that the individual defendants were the perpetrators,” and that such violence was in furtherance of this strike. Counsel have agreed upon and have filed with the court a stipulation of facts which reads as follows:

“The defendants through their counsel concede that some of the acts of violence and intimidation against the plaintiff, its customers and employees, occurred as set forth in plaintiff’s amended and supplemental petition and by certain members of the class of defendants sued herein (without, however, admitting that they were committed by the [428]*428individual defendants charged in the amended and supplemental petition with their commission) and that said acts were committed in furtherance of the strike described in the amended and supplemental petition, and that said acts tended to injure plaintiff’s property, trade and good will.
“Further, that in these respects a permanent injunction should issue in proper language as against all forms of violence, destruction of property and intimidation against the plaintiff, its employees and customers.
“That many grocer customers throughout the city became informed of said breaking of the windows of grocer customers of the plaintiff. About the same time members of the defendant class called upon certain other grocer customers who continued to use the goods of the plaintiff and demanded that they display certain placards purchased by the bakers local union containing the language:
‘We Will Not Handle Drake’s Products Until Their Labor Trouble Is Settled.'
“prominently in their store windows and that many but not all of plaintiff’s grocer customers acceded to the demands of the defendants and permitted said placards to be displayed in their store windows.
“It is further stipulated between counsel that evidence if introduced by the plaintiff would tend to show that during the duration of the strike, Drake trucks were followed in the course of their business by automobiles either owned or driven by members of the class of defendants through the streets and to the various business places where the plaintiff was delivering or attempting to deliver goods.
“It is further stipulated between the parties that plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law for the relief of the acts complained of in the petition.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-bakeries-inc-v-bowles-ohctcomplcuyaho-1934.