New York Lumber Trade Ass'n v. Lacey

245 A.D. 262, 281 N.Y.S. 647, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10280
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 12, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 245 A.D. 262 (New York Lumber Trade Ass'n v. Lacey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Lumber Trade Ass'n v. Lacey, 245 A.D. 262, 281 N.Y.S. 647, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10280 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Hagarty, J.

Plaintiffs are twenty-eight individual shippers and an association, known as the New York Lumber Trade Association, comprising one hundred and ten shippers, all engaged in manufacturing and distributing merchandise and dependent in part upon the flow of interstate and foreign commerce in and out of the port of New York and, necessarily, the handling thereof through the terminal facilities and steamships operated by the defendant carriers. Their grievance is that the carriers will not accept or deliver freight from their terminals unless the delivery trucks supplied by the plaintiffs are manned by teamsters or drivers who are members of the defendant teamsters’ union. The defendant carriers, nearly all of whom are members of the New York Shipping Association, which association comprises fifty-six steamship lines, admit the refusal, but claim that they would be willing to accept and deliver freight regardless of the manner of delivery, were it not for the fear that their employees, longshoremen and checkers, who are members exclusively of the defendant longshoremen’s union, will strike if compelled or ordered so to do by the defendant labor unions.

The relations between the carriers and their employees are governed by contracts entered into on the 22d day of October, 1934, effective as of the 1st day of October, 1934, for a period of [264]*264one year thereafter. These contracts are the result of collective bargaining between the shipping association and the longshoremen’s association, as were preceding contracts, under which preference as to employment is given to members of the union, with fixation of hours and wages and other incidents, including a method of arbitration outlined for the purpose of settling disputes between the parties.

Although these contracts do not refer to the complained-of practice on the part of the carriers and their employees, the fact is that, prior to their execution, the unions, longshoremen and teamsters, had resolved upon a course of proceeding designed, apparently, to bring about a complete unionization of the teamsters and drivers of all trucks which were operated at the piers or terminals, including those of the plaintiffs in question here. To bring about this result, the practice was originally more drastic and extensive than was that which obtained immediately prior to the commencement of this action, since as late as the 6th of September, 1934, the refusal of the longshoremen and checkers extended to shippers who employed any non-union chauffeurs or drivers or who employed non-union men in connection with the production of merchandise. Pickets, maintained by the -unions, enforced this refusal; individual longshoremen who disobeyed orders with respect to refusal to check or handle non-union freight were subject to discipline, and the carriers were informed that if they attempted to require their employees to check or handle such freight a strike of all employees would ensue. Thereupon the carriers acquiesced in the practice. Thereafter and on or about the 14th day of September, 1934, the union defendants limited the extensiveness of the refusal to trucks manned by non-union employees, so that there was no objection to the receipt or delivery of freight by trucks manned by union employees regardless of the practice of employment by the shippers elsewhere. The result is that shippers who employ non-union teamsters exclusively are obliged to employ public union truckmen to transport freight to and from the piers.

The teamsters are not as completely unionized as the longshoremen and checkers, but the members of that union handle a substantial portion of the freight moving in and out of the port of New York, of which the freight of the plaintiffs is but a small percentage. The union rate of wages for drivers and helpers is generally higher than that paid by the plaintiffs, and all of the union defendants here involved believe it to be to their advantage not to check or handle freight transported by trucks operated by non-union employees and, in the matters as to which complaint [265]*265is made, have been actuated by that belief and motive. A requirement that the longshoremen and checkers handle the freight of the plaintiffs will give the latter an advantage over all concerns in the vicinity of New York city which employ union drivers and helpers and will tend to limit the market for the labor of members of the teamsters’ union. There is no evidence that that union has refused to take into membership any of the plaintiffs’ drivers or helpers.

The situation is a simple one wherein the two unions have combined for the purpose of aiding each other, and the piers at the port of New York are the strategic points at which such a combination becomes effective. The advantage to the teamsters’ union is obvious. The advantage to the longshoremen’s union lies in the fact that if the teamsters’ union becomes completely unionized, then, in the event of difficulty between the longshoremen and the checkers on the one side, and the carriers on the other, resulting in strike, the trucking of all freight to and from the piers would be under the control of union labor.

Alleging that the practice is a conspiracy between the unions and the carriers in violation of the Federal shipping and anti-trust acts, and also in violation of the common law, the plaintiffs have sought and obtained by the judgment at Special Term an injunction perpetually restraining the defendants from combining and conspiring together in any manner to injure and destroy the plaintiffs’ business and from taking any steps to interfere with the rights of the plaintiffs to ship in and out of the docks, piers and terminals of the carriers without discrimination; from inducing the longshoremen and checkers not to perform their usual duties with respect to plaintiffs’ freight because the latter employ non-union truckmen; from picketing for the purpose of carrying on the conspiracy; from instigating or participating in a strike because of the requirement to handle plaintiffs’ freight, and from failing to take reasonable steps to prevent the performance of such acts by persons acting under the direction and control of the defendants. The injunction, in substance if not in form, is a mandatory one requiring the acceptance and transportation of the freight of the plaintiffs by the defendant carriers.

If this case were dependent simply upon the right of the longshoremen and checkers to insist upon dealing with none but union drivers and helpers, irrespective of the status of their employers as common carriers, it is well settled that an injunction would not lie. There is no question here that the union defendants are acting in pursuance of their belief as to their best interests, nor has their action been attended with violence or with a primary or secondary boycott.

[266]*266Bossert v. Dhuy (166 App. Div. 251; revd., 221 N. Y. 342), presented an analogous situation wherein union carpenters refused to work on building construction projects when trim and flooring were furnished by a mill employing non-union labor. Distinguishing between stoppage of work based upon the principle of self-interest and a situation where a boycott ensued as the result of malicious intent, Judge Chase, writing for the Court of Appeals, concludes (pp. 364, 365): We think that the rules laid down by this court in the National Protective Association Case [170 N. Y. 315] require a reversal of the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs upon the findings before us.

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Bluebook (online)
245 A.D. 262, 281 N.Y.S. 647, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-lumber-trade-assn-v-lacey-nyappdiv-1935.