E. L. Kerns Co. v. Landgraf

16 A.2d 623, 128 N.J. Eq. 441, 131 A.L.R. 1063, 1940 N.J. LEXIS 651, 7 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 673
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedDecember 12, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 A.2d 623 (E. L. Kerns Co. v. Landgraf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. L. Kerns Co. v. Landgraf, 16 A.2d 623, 128 N.J. Eq. 441, 131 A.L.R. 1063, 1940 N.J. LEXIS 651, 7 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 673 (N.J. 1940).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Perskie, J.

This is a labor case. Appellants here, defendants below (hereinafter referred to as the Union), challenge the propriety of the permanent restraint imposed upon them by the order under review.

The facts are concededly undisputed. E. L. Kerns Co., a corporation of the state, respondent here, complainant below (hereinafter referred to as complainant), manufactures, sells and distributes soft drinks and carbonated waters. It employs some twenty-five employes. None of these employes is, nor ever has been, a member of the defendant Union, nor of any other union. There was neither a strike, nor a dispute between these employes and complainant.

The Union presented to complainant a proposed contract between itself and complainant. The terms of this contract required complainant to acknowledge and recognize the Union as the proper bargaining representative on behalf of complainant’s employes. Complainant refused to sign the proffered contract. Defendants then commenced to distribute the circulars or cards (hereinafter referred to as circulars), “* * * among customers and prospective customers of complainant, and caused the said circulars, to be placed in mail boxes of customers and prospective customers of complainant.”

The wording on one side of the circulars was:

“To Organized Labor, Friends and Sympathizers, E. L. Kerns Beverages are non-union made. The Soft Drink Workers Local 26, of Trenton, will appreciate your patronage of soft drinks in Trenton, in union shops, by skilled labor, working under union conditions, wages and hours. I. U. of U. B. F. O. D. W. of America, Local 26.”

*443 The wording on the other side was:

“Demand beverages made by these concerns Union made, Coca Cola Bottling Company, Mercer Beverages, O. K. Bottling Co. — made in Trenton.”

Neither the pleadings, nor the proofs, nor any legitimate inferences dedncible therefrom warrant any suggestion that the statements on the circulars were in anywise untrue. The distribution of these circulars was made not on, nor in front of, nor adjacent to complainant's place of business, but miles away therefrom. The Union’s action was free from coercion, duress, threats, force or violence; it was altogether peaceable.

In this posture of the proofs, the learned Vice-Chancellor advised the challenged order by which the Union was permanently enjoined “from circularizing, posting, publicizing, mailing, or in anywise distributing circulars * * * in any manner whatsoever, or any circulars of like and similar nature with respect to the conduct of complainant's business among patrons or customers, employes of complainant, and the public generally.” The Vice-Chancellor rested the restrain upon two grounds.

1. The distribution of the circulars was without warrant or justification and, therefore, unlawful. That conclusion was based upon the premise that the circulars ask, by implication, the customers and prospective customers not to patronize the complainant, and, by further implication, the circulars give the impression that the wages, hours and working conditions of complainant's employes are less favorable than those of employes in union shops, and that complainant's business has been, and will be greatly damaged, if not completely ruined, as a result of the distribution of the circulars.

The cases of Kitty Kelly Shoe Corp. v. United Retail, &c. (Court of Chancery), 125 N. J. Eq. 250; 5 Atl. Rep. (2d) 682, and Feller v. Local 144, International, &c., Union (Court of Errors and Appeals), 121 N. J. Eq. 452; 191 Atl. Rep. 111, are cited in support of the stated grounds.

2. The complainant might, in the future, be held to be engaged in interstate commerce (although it is conceded that there is no proof of the fact), and ergo the proffered contract *444 might be in violation of that provision of the N. L. R. A. which grants to employes the right to choose their own bargaining representative.

First: We take up the second ground first. We are entirely satisfied that the order cannot be sustained on this ground. The order cannot be bottomed upon the proofless premise, namely, that some time in the distant future a court may determine that complainant’s business had become interstate in its scope. It is altogether rudimentary that the propriety or impropriety of an order of court can be determined only upon the actual, proper proofs submitted and the law applicable thereto as of the day of said order.

Second: We take up the first ground. We do not share the view that the holding in either the cited Kilty Kelly or the Feller Case is controlling or dispositive of the case at bar. Por the question requiring decision is not one concerning picketing. There is no proof, nor is the claim made, that there was a “posting” at a “station” to the end of accomplishing a result contrary to the wishes or the plans of those who control the premises or who have business or other interest there. Indeed, the acts prohibited by the challenged order do not pretend to embrace the “essentials of a fixed station, beat or patrol and the posting of a person or persons thereat in an effort to compel, by this means, a yielding to [Union’s] demands.” Evening Times Printing and Publishing Co. v. American Newspaper Guild,, 124 N. J. Eq. 71, 79, 80, 81; 199 Atl. Rep. 508. As we have already observed, the circulars were distributed miles away from complainant’s premises and in a manner altogether foreign to the adjudicated concept of picketing.

Third: Nor is the question requiring decision one of secondary boycotting, the purpose of which is to bring to bear a duress or coercion upon or against the customers of one, as complainant here, by threatening them, directly or indirectly, with a boycott if they persist in trading with such person. Duplex Printing Press Co. v. Deering, 254 U. S. 443, *466; 65 L. Ed. 349; Truax v. Corrigan, 257 U. S. 312, *327, *328; 66 L. Ed. 254, 260; Bayonne Textile Corp. v. American, &c., Silk Workers, 116 N. J. Eq. 146, 159; 172 Atl. Rep. 551. *445 Cf. The Labor Injunction (Frankfurter & Greene) 43; 32 C. J. 167 § 233, and 32 A. L. R. 756, note 2.

Clearly, the proofs utterly fail to support the holding that the distribution of the circulars by the Union constituted a secondary boycott. And if a recognized nomenclature is necessary or desirable judicially to describe the action of the Union, it already exists. It is characterized as a boycott in the nature of a primary boycott. Such a boycott differs radically from a secondary boycott in that it is free from coercion, duress, threat, violence or intimidation. 88 G. J. 176 § 251.

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Bluebook (online)
16 A.2d 623, 128 N.J. Eq. 441, 131 A.L.R. 1063, 1940 N.J. LEXIS 651, 7 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-l-kerns-co-v-landgraf-nj-1940.