Jacobs v. . Cohen

76 N.E. 5, 183 N.Y. 207, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 614
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 28, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 76 N.E. 5 (Jacobs v. . Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobs v. . Cohen, 76 N.E. 5, 183 N.Y. 207, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 614 (N.Y. 1905).

Opinions

Gray, J.

The plaintiff sues the makers and the indorser •' a promissory note, payable to the order of the Protective Coat Tailors’ Union, of which he is the president, to recover the amount due thereon. The answer of the- defendants denied the allegations of the complaint, except as to the making of the note, and set up as a distinct and separate defense that it was given “ as collateral security to the plaintiff, to be applied as liquidated damages, for violation by the defendants, of any of the covenants and conditions of a cer *209 tain .contract.” The particular part of the contract set forth is as follows: “ That the party of the first part [meaning the makers’ firm] shall not employ any help whatsoever other than those belonging to, and who are members of the party of the third part, [meaning a £ union ’ of the firm’s employés] and in good standing, and who conform to the rules and regulations of the said party of the third part, and the said party of the first part shall cease to employ any one and all those employés who are not in good standing, and who do not conform to and comply with the rules and regulations of said party of the third part, upon being notified to that effect by its duly credentialed representatives. That the party of the first part shall not engage any help whatsoever, even those who are members of the party of the third part, without their first having produced a pass-card duly executed and signed by the authorized business agent of the party of the third part; said card to show that the bearer thereof is a member in good standing of the party of the third part, and that he has complied with the rules and regulations thereof in force at that time.” The answer then alleged “ that the said contract is in restraint of trade and the said contract has for its purpose the combination of employers and employees, whereby the freedom of the citizen, in pursuing his lawful trade and calling, is through such contract, combination and arrangement, hampered and restricted, and has also for its purpose the coercing of workingmen, to become members of the said Employees’ Organization and come under its rules and its conditions, under the penalty of the loss of their positions and of deprivation of employment, and that such purposes are in restraint of trade, that they hamper and restrict the freedom of a citizen, in pursuing his lawful trade and calling and that they are against public policy and unlawful.” To this defense, the plaintiff demurred, for being insufficient in law. The demurrer was sustained at the Special Term ; hut, upon appeal to the Appellate Division, in the second department, the judgment sustaining the demurrer was reversed and the demurrer was overruled. Permission *210 was given to the defendants to appeal to this court and the following questions-were certified for our review, namely :

“• I. Is a contract made by an employer of labor, by which he binds himself to employ and to retain in his employ only members in good standing of a single labor union, consonant with public policy, and enforcible in the courts of justice in this state?
IL Is the ‘ Second ’ separate defense, contained in the answer .herein of the defendants, Morris Cohen and Louis Cohen, insufficient upon the face thereof to constitute a defense ? ”

If we refer to the prevailing opinion of the Appellate Division, it appears that the question in this'case was there regarded as within our decision in Curran v. Galen, (152 N. Y. 33), and, hence, that the contract was unlawful because contrary to public policy. In this view, I think the learned justices below erred. The contract is arnexed to, and made part of, the answer and is tripartite, between the defendants, Morris and Louis Cohen, a firm engaged in the tailoring business, their employes, represented by an attorney in fact, and a voluntary association, formed by the latter and called the Protective Coat Tailors’ and Pressers’ Union, of which the plaintiff is president. It provided for the employment by the Cohens of their employes, in their various skilled capacities, for the term of one year; for a system of work by the week; for the number of hours of work and for the mode of payment of the wages and, generally, for the regulation of the relations between the employers and their employés,. including this particular agreement not to employ others than members of their employes’ union. Whatever else may be said of it, this is the casé of an agreement voluntarily made by an employer with his workmen, which bound the latter to give their skilled services for a certain period of time, upon certain conditions, regulating the performance of the -work to be done, and restridting the class of workmen, who should be engaged upon it, to such persons as were in • affiliation with an association, organized by the employers’ workmen with reference to the *211 carrying on of the very work. It would seem as though an employer should be, unquestionably, free to enter into such a contract with his workmen for the conduct of the business, without its being deemed obnoxious upon any ground of public policy. If it might operate to prevent some persons from being employed by the firm, or, possibly, from remaining in the firm’s employment, that is but an incidental feature. Its restrictions were not of an oppressive nature, operating generally in the community to prevent such craftsmen from obtaining employment and from earning their livelihood. It was but a private agreement between an employer and his employés, concerning the conduct of the business for a year and securing to the latter an absolute right to limit the class of their fellow-workmen to those persons, who should be in affiliation with an organization entered into with the design of protecting their interests in carrying on the work; as, indeed, the agreement recites. ISTor does the answer aver that it was intended, thereby, to injure other workmen; or that it was made with a malicious motive to coerce any to their injury, through their threatened deprivation of all opportunity of pursuing their lawful avocation. To coerce workmen to become members of the employés organization, through such a contract, is not the allegation of something, which the law will, necessarily, regard as contravening public policy. The allegation that its purposes are in restraint of trade,” or that “ they hamper and restrict the freedom of a citizen,” or that they are against public policy,” is the mere statement of a legal conclusion.

If the question were more correctly presented by some appropriate allegation, I, still, would be of the opinion that the agreement is not one which comes under the condemnation of the law. The rigli fc of workingmen to unite and to organize for the protection of their interests and welfare is not denied. It has been, expressly and recently, declared by this court. (Curran v. Galen, 152 N. Y. 33; National Protective Association v. Cumming, 170 ib. 315, at pp. 320, 334, 338.) The inviolability of the right of persons to freedom of *212

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.E. 5, 183 N.Y. 207, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-cohen-ny-1905.