Local No. 802 v. Asimos

227 S.W.2d 154, 216 Ark. 694, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 605, 25 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2471
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1950
Docket4-9061
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 227 S.W.2d 154 (Local No. 802 v. Asimos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Local No. 802 v. Asimos, 227 S.W.2d 154, 216 Ark. 694, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 605, 25 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2471 (Ark. 1950).

Opinion

Ed. F. McFaddin, Justice.

The Miller Chancery Court, on petition of appellees, permanently enjoined appellants from picketing appellees’ restaurant; and this appeal seeks a dissolution of the injunction.

Appellees Asimos and Scott are partners, operating the Jefferson Coffee Shop in Texarkana, Arkansas. It is located at the corner of Front Street ánd State Line Avenue, with an entrance on each street. Thirty-four persons are employed in the Coffee Shop, which is open twenty-four hours of each day. The business is entirely intra-state, and no question of inter-state commerce arises in this case. Appellant, Local No. 802 of the Hotel and Restaurant Employees and Bartenders Union, (an affiliate of the American Federation of Labor) is a Union for waitresses of any and all restaurants in Texarkana, Arkansas-Texas. In addition to the Local No. 802, other appellants include the officers of the said local. For convenience, we will hereinafter refer to the appellees as “Jefferson” or ““Coffee Shop”, and to the appellants, either individually or collectively, as the “Union”.

In 1927 Jefferson had a contract with either the present Union or some predecessor local; and again in 1942 Jefferson bargained with the Union. The failure to continue the bargaining in each instance seems to have been due to the inability of the Union to hold its members. A few weeks prior to May 3, 1949, an officer of the Union asked Jefferson to sign a contract with the Union as the bargaining agent of Jefferson’s employees. Only one Jefferson employee was a member in good standing of the Union. Sis or eight other employees, in months or years previous, either had joined, or signed application cards to join, but had abandoned the affiliation.

Jefferson discussed the Union request with some of its employees and was told that few of them had any desire to make the Union the bargaining agent. The employees were satisfied with their working conditions. Jefferson conveyed this information to the Union and was advised that “. . . if Jefferson did not recognize the Union, the Jefferson employees would be called out”. The Union official reported Jefferson’s attitude to a regular meeting of Local No. 802, and it was voted to call a strike of Jefferson’s employees and to establish a picket line in front of the Coffee Shop, in order to enforce collective bargaining by Jefferson with the Union.

At 1:00 a. m., May 3, 1949, the Union established a picket line on the sidewalk in front of the Jefferson Coffee Shop. There were two pickets: one girl walked slowly in front of each of the doors of the Coffee Shop; and each girl carried a placard reading: “Jefferson Coffee Shop Refuses to Bargain with Employees’ Local 802”. As soon as the picketing commenced, three or four employees of Jefferson left their work. Several employees refused to return to work, either because they were frightened by the assembled crowd, or because they had relatives in some Union and were reluctant to cross the picket line.

About thirty minutes after the picket line had been established, a man named Murphy entered the Coffee Shop as a patron, and, after being served with food, went out on the sidewalk, where a group of twenty-five or thirty people had assembled. Murphy gives this version: A man named Pruitt made the remark, “Anybody who goes in there and eats is a dirty scab”; that after other words of like import, Murphy struck Pruitt, and a fight ensued; and that officers quickly took both men in custody. Pruit gives this version: Hq yms employed as floor manager at Cliaylors Night Club and had an argument with Murphy at that place earlier in the evening ; that when Murphy saw Pruitt at the Coffee Shop, they renewed their previous quarrel, which was in no wise connected with the picketing. Although Murphy denied ever having seen Pruitt before the Coffee Shop difficulty, he did admit having been to Chaylors Night Club about two months prior to the Coffee Shop encounter; and Murphy’s pugilistic instinct and willingness to engage in an affray is reflected by the following question and answer on cross-examination:

“Q. Mr. Witness, what are you smiling about?
A. Mr. Lawyer, I was thinking about how I would like to punch you in the nose. ’ ’

In addition to the facts previously detailed, the evidence further showed (1) that the Murphy-Pruitt fight was the sole act of violence occurring during the entire time of the picketing; (2) that at several times a crowd — actuated by curiosity and estimated from twenty-five to a hundred — gathered on the sidewalk in front of the Coffee Shop; (3) that there was no mass picketing (being only one picket at each door); (4) that sometimes a picket would walk so close to the door of the Coffee Shop that a patron would be impeded in entering; and (5) that because of the picketing the volume of business of the Coffee Shop materially decreased, and the appellees suffered financial loss.

The picketing began at 1:00 a. m. on May 3 and continued until 5:30 p. m. on May 5, at which time the Chancery Court granted a temporary restraining order against all picketing. On June 17 the temporary order was made permanent in the injunction decree (here challenged) which reads in part as follows:

“IT IS THEREFORE by the Court considered, ordered and adjudged that the defendants and each of them be and they are hereby permanently and forever restrained, enjoined and prohibited from in any manner interfering with the employees of the plaintiffs and from in any manner interfering with any person who may desire to enter the employ of plaintiffs by way of threats, personal violence, intimidation or -other means calculated or intended to prevent such person or persons from entering or continuing in the employ of plaintiffs or calculated or intended to induce any such person or persons to leave the employ of the plaintiffs; from picketing plaintiffs ’ place of business and from patroling the abutting sidewalks or boycotting plaintiffs’ business by the display of placards, distributing circulars, handbills or otherwise; from interfering, intimidating, boycotting, molesting or threatening in any manner the patrons or prospective patrons of plaintiffs or other person or persons seeking to enter plaintiffs ’ place of business; from congregating or loitering about and congregating on the sidewalks or streets abutting plaintiffs’ place of business, or at other places, with intent to interfere with the employees of plaintiffs with intent to cause them to leave the employ of plaintiffs or to interfere with or obstruct plaintiffs’ place of business in any manner, or induce the public not to deal with plaintiffs; from interfering with the free access of employees and patrons to and from plaintiffs’ place of business and from obstructing the sidewalk in front of plaintiffs’ place of business; from giving- any directions or orders to individuals, committees, associations or otherwise, for the performance of any such acts or threats which would in any manner impede, obstruct or interfere with the regular operation and conduct of plaintiffs’ business.”

So much for the statement of the case. The appellant (Union and its officers) claims that the injunction decree violates the right of free speech guaranteed under the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution.

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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W.2d 154, 216 Ark. 694, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 605, 25 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/local-no-802-v-asimos-ark-1950.