In Re Catalano

623 P.2d 228, 29 Cal. 3d 1, 171 Cal. Rptr. 667, 1981 Cal. LEXIS 127, 106 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2565
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1981
DocketDocket Nos. Crim. 21445, 21446
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 623 P.2d 228 (In Re Catalano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Catalano, 623 P.2d 228, 29 Cal. 3d 1, 171 Cal. Rptr. 667, 1981 Cal. LEXIS 127, 106 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2565 (Cal. 1981).

Opinion

Opinion

TOBRINER, J.

Petitioners (hereafter defendants), authorized representatives of the carpenters’ union, entered a construction site to inspect safety conditions and prepare a shop steward’s report. When they refused to leave upon request by an agent of the landowner, defendants were arrested and convicted of trespassing. (Pen. Code, § 602, subd. (k)(1).) 1 Maintaining that the record demonstrates that their conduct did not violate the trespass statute, defendants petition us for writs of habeas corpus. 2

*4 We first observe that defendants, sentenced to a fine or imprisonment, are under sufficient restraint that they may seek relief by habeas corpus. Turning then to the merits of the petition, we explain that under California statutes and decisions on labor relations, union representatives who enter a jobsite to conduct lawful union activity do not violate the criminal trespass laws by refusing to leave upon an arbitrary request of the owner. Defendants’ entry to perform a safety inspection and prepare a steward’s report is an accepted and traditional practice in the construction industry, which does no harm to the economic or property interests of the landowner; such conduct, we conclude, is lawful union activity which does not expose the union representative to prosecution for trespass.

The district attorney here suggests that defendants were requested to leave the jobsite and subsequently convicted of trespassing only because one defendant talked to a worker who did not belong to defendants’ union. As we explain, however, defendants’ conviction does not rest upon any theory that either of them exceeded the scope of proper union activity, but upon the trial court’s mistaken conclusion that union representatives had no right to remain on the jobsite to conduct lawful union activities.

We conclude that because defendants were engaged in lawful union activities, they did not violate section 602. We accordingly issue habeas corpus to direct their discharge from custody.

1. Proceedings in the courts below.

Defendants were charged with trespass in violation of section 602, subdivision (k)(l), which prohibits refusing to leave property upon request from the owner or his agent. Defendants admitted refusing to leave, but maintained that they had a right to remain on the property to carry out a safety inspection and complete other union activity.

Since the case presented primarily an issue of law, trial was brief. 3 The parties stipulated to the prosecution’s case, that “on September 25, 1978, each of the defendants .. . entered . . . [the] Stonecraft Homes *5 jobsite ... and refused and failed to leave such land upon being requested to do so by the owner of such land or his agent.”

Defendants testified that they are business representatives and shop stewards for the Ventura District Council of Carpenters. That union had collective bargaining agreements with three subcontractors doing construction work on a jobsite in Simi Valley where Stonecraft Homes was building 30 houses. The agreements expressly provided that union representatives could enter the jobsite to conduct safety inspections, and further stipulated that union members could not work on a jobsite on which a union respresentative was not allowed. The union did not, however, have any agreement with Stonecraft Homes, the owner of the property.

Defendant Catalano, newly appointed shop steward for the Stone-craft Homes jobsite, entered the property to conduct a safety inspection and to prepare a steward’s report indicating which union members were presently working at that location. Defendant Geyer, the former shop steward, accompanied Catalano to show him the project. Both had written authorization from the union to conduct safety inspections.

The defendants drove to the superintendent’s shack. Finding no one there, they proceeded to the project. After defendants had inspected several houses under construction, an agent of the owner asked them to leave the property; Catalano replied they would leave when they finished the steward’s report. The agent departed, threatening to call the police. Defendants completed the report, spoke for a few minutes to two workers on coffee break concerning the union health and pension program, then returned to their car to leave the property.

When defendants arrived at the gate they found John Randall, the owner of Stonecraft Homes, and two police cars blocking the exit. After the police declined to arrest defendants, Randall effected a citizen’s arrest.

Defendants further testified that it was customary for union business agents to enter construction sites to conduct safety inspections and prepare steward’s reports. Agents of three other unions testified they had entered the Stonecraft Homes jobsite to inspect the property and check on working conditions; they agreed that such inspections and reports were customary in the construction trades.

*6 In rebuttal, Randall claimed that on September 25 he saw defendant Catalano talking to a painter who was not a member of the carpenter’s union, and had seen similar conduct by Geyer on past occasions. Catalano, recalled to the stand, denied talking to any painter. The trial court apparently considered the matter immaterial.

In an oral opinion, the court found that defendants were at the job-site “to check on working conditions in compliance with safety regulations and to check the books of the various people on the job . .. to find out whether there were union or non-union people working at the job.” The court assumed, however, that defendants’ failure to halt such activities and leave immediately on request violated section 602, subdivision (k)(l), unless defendants could claim the protection of section 552.1. 4 The court held, however, that section 552.1 authorized safety inspections and other lawful union activity only on industrial property subject to posting under the industrial trespass law (§§ 552-555). 5 Finding that the Stonecraft Homes jobsite was not property sub *7 ject to posting under that act, it concluded that the protective reach of section 552.1 did not extend to defendants’ activities. 6

The trial court accordingly found defendants guilty of trespass in violation of section 602, subdivision (k)( 1), and sentenced them to a fine of $100 (plus a $30 assessment), or to county jail at a rate of one day for each $30 or fraction thereof. Defendants appealed to the appellate department of the superior court, which affirmed the conviction on the ground that “the . .. construction site ... does not constitute property subject to posting within the meaning of section 554 of the Penal Code. Consequently, the exemption for union activities provided for in section 552.1 of the Penal Code is inapplicable.”

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Bluebook (online)
623 P.2d 228, 29 Cal. 3d 1, 171 Cal. Rptr. 667, 1981 Cal. LEXIS 127, 106 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-catalano-cal-1981.