Joe Dan Market, Inc. v. Wentz

20 S.W.2d 567, 223 Mo. App. 772, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 101
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 20 S.W.2d 567 (Joe Dan Market, Inc. v. Wentz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joe Dan Market, Inc. v. Wentz, 20 S.W.2d 567, 223 Mo. App. 772, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 101 (Mo. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

* Corpus Juris-Cyc References: Injunctions, 32 CJ, section 50, p. 67, n. 18; section 262, p. 179, n. 54; section 265, p. 182, n. 76; section 581, p. 350, n. 76; section 645, p. 378, n. 3. This is an injunction suit brought by plaintiff to enjoin the picketing by defendants of his place of business, which is a retail grocery store and butcher shop, called the Joe Dan Market, located at 4113 Easton Avenue, in the city of St. Louis. Upon the filing of the petition, an order to show cause issued. On July 31, 1924, upon proper hearing, a temporary restraining order issued. On June 1, 1925, upon final hearing judgment was given perpetually enjoining the picketing, and from this judgment defendants appealed to the Supreme Court, but that court finding itself without jurisdiction of the cause transferred it to this court. The opinion transferring the cause is reported in 13 Southwestern 2d 641. *Page 776

The defendants contend here that the evidence shows a peaceful picketing of the plaintiff's premises in support of a valid grievance which the defendant union claimed to have against Daniel Kohn as owner and operator of the Joe Dan Market, and urge that this court, exercising its prerogative as a court of equity, should review the evidence, and reverse the judgment.

Prior to the events involved in this suit, Daniel Kohn had been a resident of the city of St. Louis for about twenty-five years, and for a year or two had operated a butcher shop and grocery store at 4113 Easton Avenue, using the trade name "Joe Dan Market." On June 3, 1924, he incorporated his business, the incorporators being Daniel Kohn, his wife, and Arthur O'Donnell. Kohn had been acquainted with defendants Geddell, Leonard, and Wentz for some time, and knew Leonard as the business agent of defendant Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butchers Workmen of North America, Local Union No. 88, and knew the defendant Wentz as secretary and treasurer of the union, and made the acquaintance of defendant Geddell as chief in charge of the men and women who were picketing his place of business. Arthur O'Donnell was a meat cutter, who had been in the employ of Kohn from January, 1924, at a wage of $45 per week. The union scale of wages was $37.50 per week. O'Donnell was not a member of the union. When the Joe Dan Market was incorporated, on June 3, 1924, Arthur O'Donnell, who became one of the incorporators, remained as an employee and meat cutter at the same salary, to-wit, $45 per week. On May 22, 1924, suddenly and without any previous warning to come, Leonard, Geddell, and Wentz, accompanied by other men whose names were unknown to Kohn, appeared on the sidewalk in front of plaintiff's place of business and began to pass to and fro on the same, one of the men carrying an umbrella with a sign painted thereon, as follows: "Do not patronize Joe Dan Market, unfair to union labor," and began to pass handbills to all pedestrians. The building in which plaintiff's shop was conducted, and in front of which the picketing was done, has a front of twenty or twenty-one feet on Easton Avenue, and the sidewalk is about nine or ten feet wide. There is only one entrance to the front of the building, which has a screen door, opening out, situated midway between the east and the west wall of the building. The pickets at times would walk to and fro in front of the premises so close to the screened door as to interfere with the opening of the door by persons who desired to go into the store or to leave the store. The number of pickets varied from two to twelve, women also appeared in front of the place, and called out in a loud voice to those who attempted to enter the store that they would bow their heads in shame rather than enter that place to patronize a place that was unfair to organized labor. This picketing was continuous *Page 777 from nine o'clock in the morning until the place was closed in the evening. The actions and the tones of voices at which the pickets carried on their activities in front of the building attracted at times such a number of people that the sidewalk in front of the store was blocked. Finally Kohn requested the police department to keep his sidewalk open in front of his place of business. A great many persons who patronized the store would not enter same, but would walk away, and go across the street and patronize other stores. The pickets would also follow, or accompany, persons who had been in the store making purchases. Sometimes they followed them three or four blocks from the store to their place of residence. Defendant Geddell, one of the pickets, assaulted and struck Kohn in front of his store with an umbrella. On that occasion Geddell stopped a man and a woman who had been in the store and bought some groceries. In order to stop them, he stepped into the doorway of the store and Kohn told him that he did not want him to stop any one in the doorway. Whereupon Geddell requested Kohn to step out of the door. Kohn did this, and Geddell closed the umbrella he was carrying, called Kohn a vile name, and struck him with the umbrella, and then assaulted him with his fists. On another occasion subsequent to that, a man by the name of Clark, who had recently been talking with Geddell in front of the store, came up and spoke to Kohn and made a vile remark to him and told him that he should agree to the union's terms, and then walked away. He soon afterwards came back. Kohn told him that he was getting along all right, managing his own business. Thereupon, Clark struck him in his face with his fist. On other occasions the pickets attacked and threatened attacks upon Kohn. Prior to the time that Kohn had hired Arthur O'Donnell as a meat cutter, he had men in his employ who were members of local union No. 88, and those men had quit his employ. He thereupon requested the officers of the local union to send him a meat cutter, and the local union either could not or would not send a meat cutter, and after five days Kohn employed O'Donnell at a salary of $45 per week. On one occasion one of the pickets, while in an intoxicated condition, followed a woman, who had been in the store and made purchases, several blocks. The pickets were frequently intoxicated. After the picketing had been going on for some time, defendant Geddell came to Kohn and told him that Leonard would call upon him with reference to settling the matter. Soon afterwards Leonard called and advised Kohn that he desired a conference with a view to settling the matter, but advised him that before he would discuss the matter of settlement with him he must first pay the pickets $9 per day for picketing his place. Kohn refused to do this, and the picketing continued until it was stopped by the temporary injunction issued herein. Kohn customarily opened his store at *Page 778 5:30 in the morning, and the butchers who worked for him began work at six o'clock. This was true of the butchers whom the union supplied. On one occasion an old man coming out of the store was accosted by defendant Geddell, captain of the pickets, who asked him what in the hell he was doing in there, and called him a damned scab. At times pickets would step into the doorway, and accost those who were leaving the store. Persons who stopped their automobiles in front of the store were told that they had better move on or the machine would be torn up. A woman who had refused to take a handbill from the picket was cursed and told to go hell. The calling of the pickets and the woman accompanying them was so loud that it could be heard across the street, a distance of about eighty feet. Neither Kohn nor the Joe Dan Market had ever had a contract with local union No. 88.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.W.2d 567, 223 Mo. App. 772, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joe-dan-market-inc-v-wentz-moctapp-1929.