F.F. East Co. v. United Oystermen's, C., 19600

15 A.2d 129, 128 N.J. Eq. 27, 7 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 680, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 44
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 26, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 A.2d 129 (F.F. East Co. v. United Oystermen's, C., 19600) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F.F. East Co. v. United Oystermen's, C., 19600, 15 A.2d 129, 128 N.J. Eq. 27, 7 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 680, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 44 (N.J. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Complainant seeks a decree declaring that a certain "closed shop" agreement entered into by it and the defendant Union be canceled as contrary to public policy and, therefore, void. It also seeks incidental relief by way of injunction. *Page 28

Complainant is engaged in that part of the oyster industry in the Delaware Bay area in New Jersey which has to do with the shucking, packing and marketing of oysters, and for two successive years has signed so-called closed shop agreements with the defendant Union, in both of which the provision with reference to closed shop is:

"It is agreed that all classes of help employed shall be members of the local Union, and only members with paid up due books, or those with original permit cards issued by an officer of the local Union shall continue to work."

In the year 1938 complainant filed a bill practically identical with the one now under consideration, in which complainant asked for the same relief it now seeks, excepting that the second contract is now the subject of attack. The first bill was filed shortly before the first contract expired, so that it would have been impossible to have had a final hearing and decision before the expiration of the contract. It was with this existing situation before complainant that its officers signed the second contract which, under its terms, expires in November of 1940, with the provision that it shall continue from year to year unless one party gives notice to the other of its non-continuance.

A reading of the bill discloses the pleading of many things which are not relative to the present controversy and which complainant did not attempt to prove at the final hearing. For instance, it was alleged in the bill that the Union, by threats and force, compelled non-union laborers to join the Union before being employed in any branch of the oyster industry and cited an incident which, if true, might have sustained the charge. However, the incident referred to, if in fact it occurred, was prior to the first contract, and complainant properly offered no evidence in support thereof. In fact, the evidence all showed that the Union, notwithstanding the provision of its contract, never interfered in any way with the even flow of labor, so that the oyster industry and all employers of labor therein were at all times free to employ whomsoever they chose, without any dictation from the Union, as will hereafter more fully appear. *Page 29

Casting aside, therefore, the superfluous allegation of the bill, we find complainant avering therein: "that said alleged contract is illegal and void, since it is an unreasonable and improper restraint of trade, in that it is part of the general scheme to maintain a monopoly of the labor market in the entire oyster industry and confine all employment to members of a Union, and then only to members of defendants' Union; that as a result of said alleged restraint of trade, defendants are engaged in an unlawful conspiracy to injure complainant's good will, trade and business."

To this bill of complaint there was added paragraph 28 by way of amendment, which concludes in the following language:

"And your complainant further states that this bill of complaint is predicated solely upon the theory and allegation that said contract is void because it is repugnant and against the public policy of the State of New Jersey."

The facts gathered from the evidence disclose that the extent of the territory embraced within the oyster industry is co-extensive with the Delaware Bay within the boundary lines of the State of New Jersey and extends from the upper reach thereof to the lower reach, including therein Maurice River Cove. Its confines extend from Cumberland county to Cape May county, both included, and in so far as Cumberland county is concerned, takes in the township of Commercial, part of Downe, Laurence and Maurice river. The total value of the industry is $33,000,000, but included therein is the estimated value of lands covered by water and owned by the State of New Jersey and commonly referred to as natural oyster ground. The gross business of the industry is about $3,000,000 per year. It employs approximately 2,200 men and women during the peak of the season, about eighty per cent. of this labor being men.

The business end of the industry may be divided into two parts; first, those who gather seed oysters from the natural beds belonging to the State of New Jersey aforesaid, and who plant them on bottom grounds in the bay, which grounds are leased by the state to the individual lessees. These lessees, in the fall of the year, gather matured oysters from these *Page 30 grounds and sell them to the other branch of the business, to wit, shuckers. The gathering of seed oysters is done in the spring of the year and this season lasts about three months. The harvesting and gathering of oysters and their sale to the shucking houses covers a season from September until April. The planting and harvesting of oysters is done by boats owned by those engaged in their branch of the industry. In 1939 there were 119 licensed boats, of which only 114 actually operated, each employing from ten to twenty or more men, depending largely on the character of the work being done, i.e., whether gathering or planting. There were ten shucking houses in 1939, one of which started operation in that year and one of which ceased to operate before the expiration thereof.

We have, then, 119 licensed boats, with 114 actually working, and the proof shows that some 51 planters and harvesters have more than one boat. The Union has closed shop contracts with these planter boatmen in the number of 87. It has such contracts with eight of the shucking house owners, including the complainant. The result is, as computed by complainant, that ninety-five per cent. of the entire industry is pledged by contract not to employ anyone other than Union laborers. Defendant says that that percentage is "slightly high" but that it does not "contend that the computations are so variant that the difference affects the considerations which may be thought to rule the case."

The proofs show that the shucking houses employ about 550 men in season and the planter boatmen the remaining number.

The evidence justifies the finding that the village or town of Port Norris, having a population of approximately 2,500 people, and Bivalve, having a population of approximately 600 people, and Shellpile, with a population of some 300 to 400 people, are mainly dependent for employment on the oyster industry, and that while not to the same extent, the adjacent villages, in accordance with their proximity to the Maurice river, are also largely dependent thereon for employment, and that the main source of work other than oystering in some of its branches, is agricultural, while as one goes further inland he comes in contact with Bridgeton, Millville, *Page 31 Vineland and other cities and villages in Cumberland county, where employment is mainly in glass factories, canneries and clothing factories, but there is no doubt that in so far as Port Norris, Bivalve and Shellpile and the country immediately contiguous thereto is concerned, that the oyster industry is the chief source of employment and income to the inhabitants, whether they be laborers, skilled workers or owners, and that the income derived from the industry supports the inhabitants thereof otherwise engaged in merchandising or whatnot.

The test as to whether these closed shop contracts are void as being monopolistic is their tendency in that direction, but the results flowing from their operation must be considered as indicative of the tendency.

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Bluebook (online)
15 A.2d 129, 128 N.J. Eq. 27, 7 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 680, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ff-east-co-v-united-oystermens-c-19600-njch-1940.