Restful Slipper v. United, Union

174 A. 543, 116 N.J. Eq. 521, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 35
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 27, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 174 A. 543 (Restful Slipper v. United, Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Restful Slipper v. United, Union, 174 A. 543, 116 N.J. Eq. 521, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 35 (N.J. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

This is an application by the complainant for an injunction restraining the defendants from (a) promoting, inciting, encouraging, directing and participating in any manner whatsoever, any strike against the complainant; (b) from picketing in any manner or under any guise or form, the premises of the said complainant or in the vicinity thereof; (c) from communicating in any manner whatsoever and to any person whomsoever, that there is a strike of the employes of the complainant, c.

After reading the affidavits submitted on behalf of the complainant, and the replying affidavits of the defendants, I felt that it would be advisable for all parties to this suit to have the affiants appear personally and submit to cross-examination in respect to the matters contained in their affidavits; and, accordingly, I signed an order to that effect, in pursuance of which the affiants appeared before me.

The bill alleges that the complainant is a New York corporation; that it conducted its business at 80 York street, Brooklyn, New York, up to August 31st, 1934, after which time it discontinued its business there, dismantled its plant, and removed its machinery and equipment to a building at 31 Wilkinson avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey, where it had been operating since February, 1934. Its business in Jersey City is not unionized; it operates what is known as an "open shop;" its employes in the Jersey City plant are not, and have not been, affiliated with the defendant United Shoe and Leather Workers Union, Local 23, or with any other union or organization. The Brooklyn plant, through an agreement with the union, was operated by union labor and was known as a "closed shop." The agreement with the union terminated on August 31st, 1934.

On September 5th, 1934, Stephen Lombardi, a former employe in the Brooklyn plant, allegedly acting under orders *Page 523 from said local, led approximately fifty people to the entrance of complainant's Jersey City plant with the design, and for the purpose, of threatening, coercing and intimidating its employes; that the said gathering was successful in its object; that they insulted, abused, threatened and interfered with its employes; called them dirty scabs, and, inter alia, said, "you'll get yours if you don't quit and walk out;" that the members of that gathering then and there picketed and paraded up and down in front of the plant with large signs reading, "Strike at Restful Slipper Co., 31 Wilkinson Avenue, Jersey City, N.J., United Shoe Leo W. Union, 26 W. 15th St., N.Y."

The complainant denies that any of its employes are on strike. It charges that the pickets, and their associates, persistently follow its employes, direct vile epithets at them, and threaten them with bodily harm if they do not quit work.

The answer and counter-claim of the defendants say that the Jersey City plant is conducted as an "open shop." They deny that it is their aim to force the complainant to employ only members of the defendant union, or to operate its business under the "closed shop" system. They allege that the Brooklyn plant was closed and the employes therein discharged because the employes were members of a labor union. They contend that the closing of that plant was a repudiation of the recognized rights of employment of union members — a deliberate "lockout," and that that "lockout" caused the trouble or dispute now existing between the complainant and its employes. The defendants claim that by virtue of the dispute between them and the complainant, they peaceably picketed the complainant's plant in Jersey City with two of its members walking back and forth before the complainant's plant carrying signs as already indicated; they assert that the picketing was conducted under the supervision of the Jersey City police department and pursuant to its regulations; that during the time it was done an officer of the Jersey City police department was observing their actions and he at no time interfered with them or was called upon to interfere with them. *Page 524

The defendants contend that the employes in the Brooklyn plant should not have been discharged, but that they should have been continued in the complainant's employment and placed in the Jersey City plant in preference to those engaged there; that the acquisition of the Jersey City plant by the complainant was a deliberate fraud upon their rights as employes and was a subterfuge resorted to in an attempt to circumvent the contract of labor under which they had been employed; that it did not in fact discontinue its business; that the business it is now conducting in Jersey City is its Brooklyn plant transferred without cessation, and that it is one and the same identical business it had directed in Brooklyn; that it is but a change in location without the slightest change in activity.

The defendants charge that the complainant refused to negotiate, or to arbitrate, with them or with any of its employes; and they maintain such attitude is in violation of section 7(a) of the National Industrial Recovery act as embodied in the code for the boot and shoe industry. They deny that there has been any violence used, or threats made, or intimidation or coercion exercised against any of the employes of the complainant and they deny that the union has directed or authorized any such conduct.

Is there a strike at the complainant's plant?

"A strike is cessation of work by employes in an effort to get for the employes more desirable terms."

"A lockout is a cessation of the furnishing of work to employes in an effort to get for the employer more desirable terms.

"Neither strike nor lockout completely terminates, when this is its purpose, the relationship between the parties. The employes who remain to take part in the strike, or whether the lockout, do so that they may be ready to go to work again on terms to which they shall agree, the employer remaining ready to take them back on terms to which he shall agree. Manifestly, then, pending a strike or lockout, and as to those who have not finally and in good faith abandoned it, a relationship exists between employer and employe, nor again that *Page 525 of employer looking among strangers for employes, or employes seeking from strangers employment." Iron Molders' Union No. 125,of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, v. Allis-Chalmers Co.,166 Fed. Rep. 45; 20 L.R.A. (N.S.) 315 (at p. 321).

The employes contend that they are not responsible for the cessation of work; and the complainant does not assert that there was cessation of work through the act of the employes; it (the employer) avers it discontinued its business and that that act of discontinuance automatically dispensed with the service of its employes; if that be the correct situation, measured and judged by the standard set up in the last cited case, it cannot be successfully maintained that a strike is pending. The employes say that there is a cessation of furnishing of work to them and that it is due to an effort of the complainant to get more desirable terms for itself. If their contention be correct, then a lockout exists. Iron Molders' Union No. 125, of Milwaukee,Wisconsin, v. Allis-Chalmers Co., supra. Equity will draw from the facts and circumstances presented to it, fair, reasonable and legitimate inferences; and in its efforts to reach the truth, it "penetrates all disguises of form and disregarding the shadow, grasps the substance." Earle v. American Sugar Refining Co.,74 N.J. Eq. 751.

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Bluebook (online)
174 A. 543, 116 N.J. Eq. 521, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/restful-slipper-v-united-union-njch-1934.