Nash v. State of Tex.

632 F. Supp. 951, 121 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3140, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29074
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1986
DocketCiv. A. TY-79-73-CA, TY-79-98-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 632 F. Supp. 951 (Nash v. State of Tex.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nash v. State of Tex., 632 F. Supp. 951, 121 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3140, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29074 (E.D. Tex. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JUSTICE, Chief Judge.

This civil action presents the issue of whether two sections of the Texas mass picketing statute 1 abridge plaintiffs’ right to freedom of expression under the First Amendment. 2

*957 I. FACTS

In September 1978, Buddy Schoellkopf, Inc. (“Schoellkopf Products” or “the company”), maintained a plant in Tyler, Texas, where it manufactured marine safety equipment and down-filled hunting clothes. Many of the events giving rise to this action occurred near the plant. It is located on Gentry Parkway, a main thoroughfare, which consists of six lanes of traffic and measures 150 feet in width. Two access roads lead to the plant from Gentry Parkway, each of which is about twenty-seven feet wide.

On September 18, 1978, the National Labor Relations Board certified Local 746 of the United Rubber Workers (“the union”) as the collective bargaining representative of an appropriate unit of employees at the Schoellkopf Products plant in Tyler. Management personnel at Schoellkopf Products were disquieted by the union’s presence at the plant, and seemingly felt that the presence of the police might be needed, because of union activities. Accordingly, company representatives and agents called on Willie Hardy, then the Assistant Chief of Police of Tyler, in order to “get to know” officials of the Tyler Police Department. The plant manager, Jeff Keasler, again met with Hardy (by then Chief of Police) and Charles Clark, Esquire, his attorney, in late January 1979, for lunch at a country club in Tyler, ostensibly to discuss security at the company’s plant.

During the period from September 1978, to February 8, 1979, the union bargained with Schoellkopf Products, without any disruption of work at the company’s Tyler plant. On February 8, 1979, the union began engaging in protected concerted activity, in the form of a strike, against the company. Picket lines were thereafter established at the entrance to the company’s plant in Tyler. Members of the union at Schoellkopf Products’ Tyler plant were mostly women. Thus, picketing at the plant site was primarily conducted by striking women employees of the company, from the inception of the strike on February 8, 1979, to March 12, 1979.

The company employed the services of Century Security Company, as a security force, prior to the beginning of the labor dispute. This service provided three armed guards, led by one Herbert Thompson. Each guard was issued one or more firearms, including pistols, shotguns, and rifles. At the picketing site, Thompson possessed a .357 caliber magnum revolver, worn as a sidearm. In his automobile, stationed nearby, he kept a 12 gauge shotgun, a .30 caliber carbine with a 20-shot clip, and an AR-15 automatic rifle, all of which were loaded. At times, security personnel pointed the weapons in the direction of pickets. Security guard Thompson frequently taunted picketers by threats of violence. Additionally, he made crude, explicit, and unwelcome sexual overtures to some female pickets.

Apparently in response to the tactics employed by the company’s security force, a large number of the union’s members, mostly male, from the Kelly-Springfield Tire Company plant in Tyler, joined in the picketing at the Schoellkopf Products’ plant on March 12, 1979. In several instances during that day and the following two days, non-striking employees were delayed for short periods in entering and leaving the company’s plant, when pickets tempo-' rarily blocked the access roads leading from Gentry Parkway to the plant. On these occasions, picketers taunted and jeered at non-striking employees, often using obscene and abusive language and gestures, as well as making a few intermittent threats of violence. The strikers, in turn, were reviled and scoffed at by the non-strikers, who also uttered obscenities and threats. In addition, pickets broke off several radio antennas on automobiles occupied by non-strikers, and they flailed a small number of the non-strikers’ vehicles with picket signs and with their hands. On one occasion during the three day interval, the president of Local 746, John Nash, apparently provoked by his perception that plant guards were making unnecessary and threatening displays of their weapons, ap *958 peared on the picket line with a shotgun. At the instance of the company, he was promptly arrested by the police. Aside from these incidents, no actual force or significant threats of force occurred during the entire course of the strike.

In the period from February 8, 1979, to March 14, 1979, the Tyler Police Department had sent police officers to the location of the picketing at Schoellkopf Products’ plant only in response to specific complaints from company representatives. During that interval, five arrests were made by the police force at the scene of the picketing, none of them concerning alleged violation of the mass picketing statute. On at least one occasion, on February 12, 1979, police officers “advised that as long as strikers were moving, no action could be taken by officers.”

On March 14, 1979, the company filed a suit in a state court against the union, John Nash, and another union member, seeking a temporary restraining order, a temporary injunction, and a permanent injunction against the union’s picketing activities. 3 A temporary restraining order was granted, ex parte, by the Honorable Galloway Calhoun, Judge of the 114th Judicial District of Texas, on March 14, 1979, restraining picketing and other alleged activities of the union and Local 746. 4

On March 15, 1979, the company’s president, Hugo Schoellkopf, arranged for a meeting to be held in the office of the City Manager of Tyler, Texas, at 11:00 o’clock a.m. Schoellkopf, executive vice-president Delbert Chandler, plant manager Jeff Keasler, and company attorney Erich Klein represented the company. Also present were City Manager Ed Wagoner, Assistant City Manager Terry Childress, Chief of Police Willie Hardy, and the executive director of the Tyler Chamber of Commerce, Freeman Carney. Neither the City Attorney, State District Attorney, nor any union representative was invited to attend this meeting. According to Schoellkopf, the purpose of the meeting was to insure that the City of Tyler and its Police Chief would enforce the mass picketing statute at the company’s Tyler plant. At the gathering, copies of the statute were made available to the city officials by the company representatives.

Later on March 15, 1979, at 2:15 o’clock p.m., Hardy met with Chandler and Nash. In the ensuing discussion, Hardy stated that the police would be present at the picketing situs and would enforce the mass picketing statute. He further explained *959 that the pickets would be allowed to cross the company driveway, if traffic at the entrance to the plant was not blocked for more than one minute. Nash was not advised by Hardy of the 11:00 o’clock a.m. meeting earlier that day with officials of the company, the City of Tyler, and the Chamber of Commerce.

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632 F. Supp. 951, 121 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3140, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nash-v-state-of-tex-txed-1986.