McMichael v. Atlanta Envelope Co.

108 S.E. 226, 151 Ga. 776, 26 A.L.R. 149, 1921 Ga. LEXIS 384
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 10, 1921
DocketNos. 2372, 2373
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 108 S.E. 226 (McMichael v. Atlanta Envelope Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMichael v. Atlanta Envelope Co., 108 S.E. 226, 151 Ga. 776, 26 A.L.R. 149, 1921 Ga. LEXIS 384 (Ga. 1921).

Opinion

Gilbert, J.

These two cases were heard together in the trial court, upon the same evidence. One judgment was passed, applicable to both cases. Two bills of exception were sued out, and they were argued as one in this court. The bills of exception and the records in the two cases in this court are identical, with the exception of the difference in names. As the same judgment must necessarily be rendered in both cases in this court, they will be decided as one case.

The petitions filed by the plaintiffs in the court below, Atlanta Envelope Company et al. and Webb & Vary Inc., against McMi[777]*777ehael et al., prayed that the defendants, individually and as agents and representatives of Atlanta Printing Pressmen and Assistants Union Number Eight, be enjoined from interfering with or attempting to interfere with the plaintiffs’ employees, present or prospective, for the purpose of inducing those employees to join said union or to leave the employment of plaintiffs without the consent of the latter, by representing to such employees that they would suffer loss or be otherwise injured by remaining in petitioners’ employment, and from interfering with or attempting'to interfere with the pressmen and feeders employed by the plaintiffs for the purpose of unionizing, without the consent of plaintiffs, the employees in that branch of their plants, and from seeking to bring about, in aid of such purpose, the breach by present or future employees of the plaintiffs of contracts of employment made between the plaintiffs and their employees, the terms of which contracts were known to defendants; and from inducing or seeking to induce any of plaintiffs’ employees to leave their employment, by intimidation. misrepresentation, abusive language, promises o'f better conditions and shorter hours and better pay, or persuasion; and for general relief and process.

It was alleged that the defendants, acting as representatives of said Union, made a demand upon the plaintiffs that they contract with all of the pressmen and feedmen employed by them at that time, to give to such employees a large increase in wages, to make a substantial reduction in their working hours, and also to “ close ” their shops, that is, that the plaintiffs should agree to employ as pressmen and feedmen only persons who were members of said Union; that upon the refusal of the plaintiffs to yield to these demands all of the pressmen and feedmen then employed by plaintiffs walked out, rendering it necessary for plaintiffs to secure nonunion pressmen and feedmen or to yield to the demands of the defendants and thus be forced into bankruptcy; that they thereupon determined to run non-union shops so far as their pressmen and feedmen were concerned; that petitioners had at great expense made contracts of employment with certain persons, and expected to be able to contract with others, upon the distinct understanding that such new employees could not work for and be in the employment of plaintiffs and be a member of said union, and that if any one of such new employees should become a member of said union [778]*778at any time while in the employment of plaintiffs, such employment should immediately cease; that defendants had approached the non-union men employed by petitioners and had sought by threats, menaces, intimidation, coercion, and persuasion to induce them to breach their contracts of employment with petitioners and to leave their employment, and that defendants had openly threatened that they would cause the persons already so employed to leave their employment and would prevent petitioners from contracting with other non-union employees, or that in eases where contracts of employment were made on the terms above stated they would cause such new employees to become members of the union and leave the service of petitioners, or would prevent them from working for petitioners by making conditions so onerous and unpleasant that petitioners could not run their presses on a nonunion basis; that because of the activities of defendants they were daily losing large sums of money on account of their inability to procure sufficient help to enable them to fill outstanding contracts for printing'; and that unless the defendants are restrained by injunction from committing the acts complained of, petitioners will have to yield to the demands of the union or go out of business, either of which courses will result in irreparable loss and damage to them. The court, after hearing the evidence, granted the following interlocutory injunction: It is considered, ordered, and adjudged, that the defendants, O. L. McMichael, J. A. Alleyn, R. L. Brown, and J. R. Penny [in the judgment in the Webb & Vary case the name Will Walton appears as one of the persons enjoined, and the name J. R. Penny does not], and their agents and'confederates are enjoined from interfering with or attempting, to interfere with the plaintiff’s employees for the purpose of inducing the plaintiff’s employees to join said labor union without the consent of the plaintiff, by representing that they would suffer no loss by leaving the plaintiff’s employment and joining the said union, or because the plaintiff was running a non-union plant in so far as their pressmen and feeders are concerned. And said defendants, their agents, and confederates are further enjoined from interfering with or attempting to interfere with the plaintiff’s employees for the purpose of unionizing the plant of plaintiff in so far as their' pressmen and feeders are concerned without the plaintiff’s consent, and in aid of such purpose knowingly and wilfully bringing about [779]*779a breaking by plaintiff’s employees of contracts of service known at the time to exist with plaintiff’s present or future employees. And the said defendants, their agents, and confederates are further enjoined from inducing or seeking to induce the employees of plaintiff, present or future, to leave the service of the plaintiff, by intimidation, misrepresentation, abusive language, promises o.f better conditions and shorter hours and better pay, or persuasion.”

The question to be determined by this court is whether or not, under the pleadings and the evidence, there was an abuse of discretion by the trial judge. It is well settled and recognized that this court cannot undertake to decide questions of fact on conflicting evidence. "We can only say whether there was evidence sufficient to authorize the -finding of the trial court. Plaintiffs in error contend that the judgment was unauthorized by the evidence, because their acts, as shown by the evidence, were strictly within their lawful rights. Their brief contains the following statement: “This case involves the question of just what can striking employees do to win a trade.dispute; and second, just how far the employer can go towards fighting the demands of his employees without injuring the property rights of the employees or the rights of the public. It is a case of employee organization against employer organization. The rights and relations are so intermingled that the one can hardly act without trespassing upon the other.” In reference to what took place after the strike or walkout the brief for the plaintiffs in error says: “ The usual course of operations took place by the union employees doing all within their lawful power to keep, others from talcing their places and the employers getting in new employees in order to win the fight.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.E. 226, 151 Ga. 776, 26 A.L.R. 149, 1921 Ga. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmichael-v-atlanta-envelope-co-ga-1921.