Gill Engraving Co. v. Doerr

214 F. 111, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1790
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 19, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 214 F. 111 (Gill Engraving Co. v. Doerr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gill Engraving Co. v. Doerr, 214 F. 111, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1790 (S.D.N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

HOUGH, District Judge.

Complainant (hereinafter called ‘'Gill Company”) has dong conducted a photo-engraving business; i. e., from a photograph or drawing it produces a plate from- which a picture or pattern can be printed. The principal use of such engravings is to [113]*113adorn the pages of books, magazines, and the like. It follows that, when complainant’s work is finished, it is not useful, or at any rate not ordinarily used, except in conjunction with the services of printers, electrotypers, bookbinders, etc. The united efforts of all these tradesmen produce the completed volume, toward which complainant has then contributed but one item. To carry on its business and produce its share in the book trade the Gill Company employs photo-engravers; i. e., men whose trade qualifies them for membership in Union No. 1.

The defendants may be said to represent and act for Union No. 1. As officers of that union they or some of them have written and spoken, acted, and induced others to act in a manner which is thought to justify the charge of the bill; that they and others have long been guilty of “a combination and conspiracy to prevent the employment at his trade of any photo-engraver in the city of New York who was not a member of Union No. 1.” It is further charged that the same persons have also been engaged for years in another combination and conspiracy (contrary to common law and the statutes of New York) to “restrain trade and commerce in the production and sale of photoengravings within the state of New York,” to injure and destroy the Gill Company’s “good will, trade, and business,” and to prevent that company from competing with other photo-engraving shops in which the members of Union No. 1 are or have been exclusively employed.

These several objects of conspiracy defendants (and others equally active but not within the jurisdiction) are alleged to have pursued with the assistance and co-operation of the Allied Printing Trades Council, an aggregation for purposes of mutual assistance of the unions of all the trades commonly considered as requisite for the preparation and publication of a printed book. This allegation is not sustained. Union'No. 1 and the allied council have some officers in common, and some letters have been written on paper of the allied council, but everything proved or admitted to have been done was the act of the photo-engravers as represented by Union No. 1, and not of any other trade organization. There is no proof that printers, bookbinders, etc., have taken any part in the matters producing this suit.

The principal officers of complainant (who are named Gill), and therefore the company itself, have been admittedly distrustful of, if not hostile to, Union No. 1 since about 1898, but the definite history of contest begins in 1907. In April of that year the Gill Company kept an open shop1 employing about 120 men. Union No. 1 “ordered a strike of all union men employed by complainant, comprising about one-half of its employés; said strike took place * * * and caused complainant great loss and damage.”

The immediate causes of the strike in 1907 are stated differently by the contending parties. Undoubtedly one Schwartz was the agent of the union in the matter, and Gill says that Schwartz told him the sole question was the “closed” shop.

[114]*114' Schwartz denies that the strike was ordered in an effort to unionize the Gill Company, and alleges that the reason for striking he gave Gill was that his own employés had entered a protest with the union against the employment of an excessive number of apprentices, a number so great that the Gill Company was “looked upon as a school for teaching photo-engraving, a condition that was eminently unfair2 to organized labor.”

As article 4 of the Constitution of Union No. 1 declares that “this union claims the right to regulate the number of persons who may be employed as apprentices,” and article 5 of the same document makes the union initiation fee $30 for all who have learned their trade under the jurisdiction of the union and $200 for those who have done so outside said jurisdiction, the difference between Gill’s version of the difficulties of 1907 and that of Schwartz would seem to be one of .time merely. But the effect of Schwartz’s statement (whatever it was) and of the consequent strike on the Gill Company’s conduct is thoroughly admitted. From that date to the present the Gill Company has refused to knowingly employ any union worker, has discharged any and every employé who joined the union, and, in short, has refused to recognize, deal with, or encourage Union No. 1 (or any other union) in any way whatever. For seven years the Gill shop has been “closed” in a recognized but unusual sense of that word.

The record is full of reasons for this action on the part of complainant and of assertions by defendants that the Gill Company does not give to its employés the “same scale of wages and the same working conditions as those generally prevailing.” This phrase means conditions which respond to the demands of the union, and, when tested by the affidavits submitted, the difference between the Gill shop and a union shop in New York appear to be these: Some of the Gill em-ployés (the most skillful) get more than union wage; the average or ordinary workman gets less; and special time is allowed in union plants for luncheon, which is not the case in the Gill shop. As mediocrity always outnumbers ability, I think it proven that a shop closed to union men has hitherto been cheaper than one exclusively manned by unionists, and that the most obvious result of change is to make mediocrity more expensive.

No change needing comment is shown to have occurred in the relations between these parties from 1907 to 1913. In that year it is admitted that the defendants Doerr and Brady officially addressed communications to customers or persons of influence with customers of the Gill Cqmpany, urging that the business of such customers be diverted from complainant to union shops. Doerr also sent out circular letters to friends throughout the land indicating methods by which one large customer of complainant (MacMillan Company) might be coerced into withdrawing patronage from the Gill Company “until such time as it was a union office.” MacMillan promptly succumbed, but there is no [115]*115evidence to show whether its action was distasteful or gratifying to itself. MacMillan’s change of business relations with complainant is ■ evidenced by the following (from a letter to defendant Brady):

“Our manufacturing department has been instructed to withhold any further orders from the Gill Engraving Company for the present; and all future contracts for printing books will contain a proviso that all work coming under the jurisdiction oi International Photo-Engravers’ Union 3 .* * * shall be done in accordance with the scale of wages and conditions of these unions in the locality where the work is done.”

Shortly before the defection of MacMillan Company, other fuel, and of a different kind, was added to the flames of contest and hatred.

The men managing the Gill Company owned stock and held office in the Colorplate Company, a concern operating a union shop and doing a special line of engraving work. Mr. Gill deposes that he was told by the 'Colorplate’s president that, unless the Gills severed all connection with that corporation and parted with their stock,, “the officers” of Union No. 1 would call a strike.

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Bluebook (online)
214 F. 111, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-engraving-co-v-doerr-nysd-1914.