Purcell v. J.B. B. Int. Union of Am.

133 S.W.2d 662, 234 Mo. App. 843, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 91
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 133 S.W.2d 662 (Purcell v. J.B. B. Int. Union of Am.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purcell v. J.B. B. Int. Union of Am., 133 S.W.2d 662, 234 Mo. App. 843, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 91 (Mo. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

This is a suit in equity, wherein plaintiff seeks to enjoin the defendants from picketing her business known as the Isis Beauty Shop located at 1019 East Thirty-First Street, Kansas City, Missouri, and from committing certain alleged unlawful acts in connection therewith. Upon a trial of the case on the merits, the trial court made a general finding denying to plaintiff the relief prayed for and dismissing plaintiff's petition. The specific grounds on which this decree was based do not appear inasmuch as the court made no findings of fact or conclusions of law.

The injunctive relief sought is based upon the allegations of the petition to the effect that the Journeymen Barbers and Beauticians International Union of America, Local 192-A, and the Hairdressers Guild, an organization of beauty shop owners, and various members or sympathizers of said organizations, have threatened and attempted to intimidate plaintiff by telling her that her life was not safe and that her property would be destroyed unless she complied with the requests of the defendants and the defendant associations, "and that *Page 847 the defendants since the 6th day of December, 1937, have placed persons who are either members of the defendant associations or associated therewith, or sympathizers thereof, in groups in and about plaintiff's premises and in front thereof, and have placed said members or associates or sympathizers as pickets in front of plaintiff's place of business, which persons carry about their person and display to the public signs and placards to the effect that plaintiff employs non-union operators and is opposed to unions and organized labor, and circulate rumors that plaintiff is unfair to organized labor."

It is further alleged that defendants (including both the associations and a number of individuals who are members of one or the other of said associations and some non-members who were acting as pickets), their associates and sympathizers, have threatened to destroy plaintiff's said property and are interfering with plaintiff's business, and refuse to permit supplies and equipment to be delivered to plaintiff at her place of business, and on two occasions, to-wit, on October 29, 1937, and on November 12, 1937, windows in her place of business were broken and shattered; that the defendants "assemble in large crowds in and about plaintiff's place of business and loiter and congregate and pace back and forth in front of plaintiff's place of business, and that said pickets accost, coerce, and threaten plaintiff and plaintiff's patrons and other persons who desire to patronize plaintiff at her place of business;" that the plaintiff has repeatedly remonstrated with defendants and requested them to remove and recall said pickets from in front of and about plaintiff's premises and to cease to intimidate and threaten her and her patrons and customers and to "cease and desist from coercion and from circulating false rumors and reports regarding the status of her employees, and of interfering with the operation of her place of business, and that the defendants and each of them have refused so to do, and still continue to commit said unlawful, unwarranted, and illegal acts and actions to the great damage and irreparable loss of plaintiff."

It is further alleged that none of the defendants has ever been employed by plaintiff or has ever been discharged from employment by plaintiff, and that none of the members of the Journeymen Barbers and Beauticians International Union of America, Local 192-A, has ever been discharged from employment by plaintiff.

The petition further alleges that unless the defendant associations and the individual defendants are enjoined from continuing to threaten and intimidate plaintiff and from harassing and coercing plaintiff's patrons, and "from continuing to circulate false rumors and reports to the effect that plaintiff is a non-union shop and has labor difficulties, and from picketing, and unlawful acts of violence, and that she is opposed to unions and organized labor, she will suffer great loss and damages, and will be forced to close her place of business, depriving her of her right to work and earn a livelihood." *Page 848

These allegations are followed by a prayer that injunction issue against the defendants ordering them to cease from interfering with plaintiff's peaceful possession and use of her premises and from assembling in or near her premises, whether on the street, sidewalk, entrance, or nearby, and from picketing and pacing back and forth in front of plaintiff's place of business and from intimidating or coercing plaintiff or her patrons, and for such other relief as to the court may seem proper.

Since we must pass upon the evidence in this case de novo, and in view of the sharp conflict in the evidence, we feel it essential that we set out the testimony in substantial detail.

Plaintiff testified that she had been engaged in the beauty shop business in Kansas City for the past fourteen years, and for the past eight years at her present location at 1019 East Thirty-First Street, Kansas City, Missouri, and at the time of the trial she was, and for some time prior thereto had been, employing fifteen beauty operators; that the first conversation she had with reference to her joining an organization of shop owners was a conversation with Mr. Elden Christmas on Sunday morning, August 29, 1937. This was a telephone conversation in which Mr. Christmas told plaintiff that he wanted her to serve on his committee to organize the beauty shop owners into a business organization. He told plaintiff that she would have to raise her prices and that she would not be permitted to give a permanent for less than $5. She asked him who was going to tell her she had to charge $5 for her permanents, whereupon he replied that "you will have all your window lights broken and they will all be in the street and you will be like at Price's Candy Company, 39th and Main, and Katz, and it costs $1600 to replace them, and you wouldn't be able to do that very often." The substance of this conversation was also testified to by plaintiff's husband who, at plaintiff's direction, listened in on an extension telephone.

Plaintiff testified to a second conversation with respect to this matter, stating that about the second week in September, Miss Myrtle Chapman and Mr. O.L. King (who, it later appears from the evidence, was Vice-President and Business Agent of the Hairdressers Guild) and another gentleman whose name she did not remember, called at her place of business at 8:30 in the morning, at which time Miss Chapman said, "Mrs. Purcell, we have come to talk to you about joining the Hairdressers Guild." Plaintiff replied that she was not interested, thereupon Mr. King said, "Well, you are interested in raising prices, aren't you?" Plaintiff replied, "No, sir, I am not, you folks are cutting your own throats but don't know it;" whereupon plaintiff went back to continue her work on a customer, and these parties left.

About two weeks after this second conversation, she had a third conversation, this time with Miss Chapman. On this occasion Miss Chapman told plaintiff that she wanted to talk to plaintiff's employees *Page 849 about joining the union, to which plaintiff replied, "All right, but talk to them somewhere else." Miss Chapman replied that she had no intention of talking to them there because they were busy. This is the same Miss Chapman who, two weeks earlier, had appeared with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W.2d 662, 234 Mo. App. 843, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purcell-v-jb-b-int-union-of-am-moctapp-1939.