Katz Drug Co. v. Kavner

249 S.W.2d 166, 30 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2132
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 12, 1952
Docket42506
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 249 S.W.2d 166 (Katz Drug Co. v. Kavner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Katz Drug Co. v. Kavner, 249 S.W.2d 166, 30 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2132 (Mo. 1952).

Opinion

249 S.W.2d 166 (1952)

KATZ DRUG CO.
v.
KAVNER et al.

No. 42506.

Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 1.

May 12, 1952.

*167 Harry H. Craig, Wiley, Craig & Armbruster, St. Louis, for appellants.

Paul R. Stinson, Lawrence R. Brown, Stinson, Mag, Thomson, McEvers & Fizzell, Kansas City, for respondent.

LOZIER, Commissioner.

Defendants appeal from a decree enjoining them from picketing and distributing literature in or about plaintiff corporation's stores and warehouses and from interference of any kind with plaintiff's property rights or business by intimidation, threats, menace or force. The appeal is properly here because of defendants' contention that the decree violates their constitutional rights. The primary questions are: Where the manner and one purpose of picketing were lawful and other initial unlawful purposes were "renounced" by the defendants, should the injunction have been issued? Was the decree's language too broad?

Plaintiff operates retail drug and general merchandise stores in Missouri, Kansas, Iowa and Oklahoma. Merchandise is delivered to the stores by vendors or trucked by plaintiff from its one warehouse at North Kansas City, Mo. Five of the stores are in St. Louis County and the City of St. Louis. Plaintiff's employees in the Kansas City area are "unionized." Those in the St. Louis area are not. No differences existed between plaintiff and the latter employees as to wages, hours or work conditions and there was no labor dispute.

*168 Defendants are officers, agents and representatives of an unincorporated labor union, Local No. 688, Warehouse and Distribution Workers Union, A.L.F., St. Louis, Mo. It was conceded that the defendants and the union did not represent a majority of plaintiff's St. Louis area employees; and that, in the conversations hereinafter mentioned, defendants admitted that they represented only 34 out of approximately 400.

On December 8, 1950, defendants set up picket lines around the North Kansas City warehouse, and several of the stores in Kansas City, Mo., Kansas City, Kan., the City of St. Louis and St. Louis County. The pickets carried these signs: "Katz Drug Co. is nonunion in St. Louis, Local No. 688, St. Louis." The picketing was "peaceful," unaccompanied by intimidation, threats or violence. However, customers and union drivers refused to cross the picket lines. Deliveries to the stores from the warehouse and deliveries by vendors (including daily deliveries of perishables) ceased. In a few hours, the stores were out of some items, and in a few days would have been out of others. Plaintiff's uncontradicted evidence was that it sustained and would continue to sustain substantial damage. The record supports the trial court's finding that the picketing resulted "in paralyzing and destroying plaintiff's business at the height of its Christmas season business." In this court, the parties appear to agree that the picketing, whatever its purpose, was "effective." See Gruet Motor Car Co. v. Briner, Mo.App., 229 S.W.2d 259.

There were several meetings and telephone conversations between plaintiff's general manager, Schlensky, its secretary, Blond, and one or more of the defendants. The first was in Kansas City on December 7, 1950, the day before the picket lines were established. The others were in St. Louis on December 8 (after the lines had been set up) and December 9 and in Kansas City on December 12, the day before the hearing. A suggested form of contract between plaintiff and the union was exhibited and referred to. Plaintiff's evidence was that defendants demanded that plaintiff execute the contract as a condition to withdrawal of the picket lines. Defendants' evidence was that the form was one which they had planned to show plaintiff's St. Louis area employees as containing the terms of a contract to be offered to plaintiff if and when the union represented a majority of those employees.

Plaintiff's theory and evidence was that defendants set up the picket lines with intent and purpose to unlawfully compel plaintiff to recognize the union as the exclusive representative of such employees for the purposes of collective bargaining, and to unlawfully compel plaintiff to sign a collective bargaining contract with the union. Defendants' theory and evidence was that the picketing was part of an "organizational campaign"; that their purpose was to inform the public that the St. Louis area employees were nonunion, and that plaintiff was a nonunion employer in that area and, by advertising, to persuade the public to patronize union drug stores; and that any refusals to cross the picket lines were voluntary and uncoerced. (It was undisputed that the refusals were voluntary and uncoerced.)

Defendants recognize the "sharp conflict in the testimony" as to the purpose of the picketing, and concede that "whenever there is conflicting evidence of that kind it becomes the task of the [trial] court to pass upon the credibility of witnesses, their demeanor on the stand and all of the other things which are necessary before the [trial] court can decide which contention to accept * * * and we do not overlook the fact that the trial court's findings in this regard should not be lightly overruled." However, they say that the evidence as to their illegal purposes was not positive and uncontradicted and that, therefore, plaintiff failed to sustain its burden of proof; "the worst that can be said of defendants' position is that there is a conflict in the testimony and the evidence."

Plaintiff sustained its burden of proof. According to Schlensky and Blond, in Kansas City on the afternoon before the picket lines were set up, and in the very first conference, defendant Kavner (who testified he was the union's "director of organization and strikes") twice told plaintiff's *169 officials: "Either you sign this contract today or there will be pickets on your stores tomorrow and on your warehouse in [North] Kansas City." On the afternoon of the next day (the picketing began that morning), Schlensky, then in St. Louis, telephoned the union's office and, in Kavner's absence, talked to Saffo, who said, "Why don't you and I get together, get the contract signed and I will pull the pickets off." The following morning, in a conference in the union's office, Kavner told Schlensky that what he (Kavner) "really wanted" was recognition of the union as bargaining agent for plaintiff's St. Louis area employees (and, asked what plaintiff should do "to get the pickets lifted from the St. Louis stores"), exhibited a contract form with a place for the signature of someone, "For the Katz Drug Co.," and said, "Sign the contract." On the day before the hearing, Kavner, who had come to Kansas City for the trial, telephoned Schlensky and "wanted to know whether the company had arrived at any decision regarding the contract."

This positive and cogent testimony sustains the trial court's finding that defendants' "design and intent" in establishing the picket lines was to compel plaintiff to recognize the union as the exclusive representative of the St. Louis area employees for collective bargaining purposes and to coerce plaintiff into signing a collective bargaining agreement. The decree restrained defendants, "so long as they do not represent the majority of plaintiff's St. Louis area employees," from demanding that plaintiff sign "a collective bargaining or other agreement."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 S.W.2d 166, 30 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katz-drug-co-v-kavner-mo-1952.