Nusbaum v. Retail Clerks' International Protective Ass'n

227 Ill. App. 206, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 37
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 5, 1922
DocketGen. No. 27,738
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 227 Ill. App. 206 (Nusbaum v. Retail Clerks' International Protective Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nusbaum v. Retail Clerks' International Protective Ass'n, 227 Ill. App. 206, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 37 (Ill. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Morrill

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the superior court of Cook county imposing a fine upon appellants for violating an injunction order issued by that court September 8, 1921. To determine whether or not there was a violation of the injunction, it is necessary and proper to refer to the bill of complaint as a whole, the answers thereto, the injunction order in question and the evidence in the case. Illinois Malleable Iron Co. v. Michalek, 279 Ill. 221.

The bill of complaint alleged that the complainants, as copartners, are doing business under the name of Continental Clothing House. The defendants are the Eetail Clerks’ International Protective Association, Local Number 195, Leon Batowsky (alias Leon Green), Stephen Pannert and Louis Szymonek. It charged that said association is a labor union composed of clerks of certain stores in Chica'go and organizers and representatives of the union; that said individual defendants have been attempting to influence salesmen emploA^ed by complainants to become members of the union and to unionize complainants’ store, and have been engaged in picketing and boycotting it; that the defendant Pannert was at one time an organizer for the I. W. W. engaged in many strikes in Seattle, subsequent to which he became affiliated with the Chicago Federation of Labor as a labor union agitator and organizer and attempted to unionize various stores in Chicago, in the course of which attempts he assailed their employees and destroyed the property of the employers; that complainants are engaged in the business of selling at retail clothing, hats and furnishing goods and have a store located at Milwaukee and Ashland avenues, consisting of several buildings; that complainants employ in their business, exclusive of office help, about one hundred persons, including fifty salesmen, forty tailors and ten miscellaneous employees; that the vicinity in which the store of complainants is situated is generally recognized as the largest retail business center of Chicago outside of the loop district; that complainants have operated their sales department upon the open shop basis; that defendants have conspired with other persons, whose names are unknown, to compel salesmen employed by complainants to join the union and to compel complainants to employ only union employees, and in furtherance of such conspiracy have caused complainants’ store to be picketed and the business of complainants to be boycotted for the purpose of injuring said business and complainants; that it is the purpose of defendants and those confederating with them to continue these acts until complainants yield to defendants’ demand. The bill sets forth sundry specific instances of picketing and boycotting and the display of signs and placards indicating that complainants are unfair to organized labor and notices of a strike against the Continental Clothing House; that many pedestrians stopped and observed the pickets and read the signs; that there is no strike on the part of the salesmen employed by complainants and that defendants are seeking to compel persons not to patronize complainants to the end that complainants may be compelled to employ only such salesmen as are members of said union. The bill then recites the procedure which has been followed in the City of Chicago in numerous other strikes and boycotts, including the practice on the part of such pickets of standing, loitering and patrolling, maintaining close watch and espionage, following, threatening, intimidating, assaulting and beating employees, the offering of money inducements, calling persons scabs and vile names and subjecting employees and patrons to criticism, censure, hatred, scorn, humiliation, disgrace and annoyance. These practices are set forth at length in apt language, which we do not deem it necessary to repeat in detail. The bill prayed for a temporary injunction restraining defendants from picketing or maintaining any pickets at or near complainants’ premises or from patrolling or congregating in front of or in the vicinity of the place of business of complainants, from exhibiting or distributing printed or other matter in the vicinity of complainants’ place of business, designating or characterizing complainants as unfair to organized labor or designed to induce or influence persons not to deal with complainants, from soliciting, inducing or attempting to induce or influence persons not to enter or continue in the employment of complainants or not to patronize or deal with them; from assaulting, menacing, intimidating or harrassing persons employed by complainants or from organizing, maintaining or engaging in, or attempting to organize or maintain any boycott against complainants, and for general relief. The temporary injunction granted September 8, 1921, was substantially in conformity with the prayer of the bill as above set forth.

On November 26, 1921, a rule was entered requiring the respondents Green, Goldstein, Pannert and Vent to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt of court for violating the injunction. The various respondents filed their answers to this rule, in which they substantially admitted some of the acts of which complaint was made, but denied any intention on their part of violating the injunctional order of the court.

Thereafter on that date the court entered the order, from which this appeal has been taken, in which is recited the filing of the bill of complaint, the issuance of the preliminary injunction, the rule to show cause, the affidavits filed in support of the petition for the rule and the respective answers of the respondents thereto. The court found that the respondent Vent participated in the violation of the order to some extent but that he has since left Cook county, Illinois, and is engaged in farming operations. In consideration whereof it was ordered that the rule to show cause be discharged as to him.

The court further found that on September 10,1921, the respondent Goldstein patrolled the sidewalk in front of the Continental Clothing House, carrying a banner on which there was an inscription calling attention to the injunction and purporting to request all union men to abide by the same. The placard is described in detail, from which it appears that it was of a character to attract the attention of persons passing the store. The order further recites that on September 9,1921, the respondent Goldstein was engaged in distributing handbills in the vicinity of the store, calling attention of union men to the Continental Clothing House and characterizing it as “a store full of scabs,” and calling attention to the attempts of defendants to unionize the store and containing an appeal to organized labor to stay away from the store and to advise their friends not to patronize it.

The order further recites the activities of the said respondent Goldstein in promoting a strike and boycott of said union against the United Cigar Stores Company and the ' employment -of similar tactics in connection with that affair.

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Bluebook (online)
227 Ill. App. 206, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nusbaum-v-retail-clerks-international-protective-assn-illappct-1922.