Rosenwasser Bros. v. Pepper

104 Misc. 457
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1918
StatusPublished

This text of 104 Misc. 457 (Rosenwasser Bros. v. Pepper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosenwasser Bros. v. Pepper, 104 Misc. 457 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Scudder, J.

A strike occurred in plaintiff’s shoe factory on September 17, 1917, which was instigated, aided and abetted by a labor union known as the United Shoe Workers of America. Plaintiff thereupon brought an action seeking injunctive relief against certain local and subordinate organizations of the union and certain individuals who were officers, members or agents thereof. The strike was accompanied by violence, assaults and mass picketing.

The plaintiff is entitled to a permanent injunction restraining such actions. If this was all that there was to the case, no opinion would be necessary. There are, however, matters involved in this action which transcend the usual rights of the parties, and forbid its disposition upon cases and authorities involving disputes between capital and labor which arose before the war.

The following facts differentiate this case from the usual run of ante-bellum capital-labor cases.

The United States is a participant in this, the greatest war of all times. In the performance of its part it has been and is sending hundreds of thousands of men to Europe, who must be clothed and equipped. The president has called upon both manufacturers and workers to do their utmost in the way of supplying our forces with clothing and equipment.

[460]*460Plaintiff’s factory is a large one, employing about 2,500 workers. Eighty per cent of its business is with the United States government for which it is manufacturing shoes, leggings, gas masks and other equipment.

Prior to the strike in plaintiff’s factory about 6,000 pairs of shoes and 15,000 pairs of leggings, besides other articles, were being turned out daily and shipped to government stations.

The result of the dispute between the plaintiff and the union, which has been going on for almost a year and is still going on, is that the output of the factory has been reduced to about one-fifth of its former production.

It is well established by judicial decisions of this state rendered in cases which arose before the war that one employed for no definite period can quit work for no reason at all, and that such employee therefore has the right to threaten his employer that unless he adopts a business policy suggested or demanded by the employee the latter will terminate their relationship; and, basing their conclusions on these elementary rights of the individual employee, the same authorities further hold that it is permissible for an employee to urge other employees to quit work together, or to threaten their employer with such action unless their demands "are granted, thus doing in combination what each might lawfully do himself. Bossert v. Dhuy, 221 N. Y. 342; National Protective Assn. v. Cumming, 170 id. 315; Auburn Draying Co. v. Wardell, 178 App. Div. 270, 274.

In other words, it seems established as the law of this state by decisions of the higher courts' ip cases .which arose before the war, that a labor union may induce or persuade the employees of a manufactory [461]*461or other business, which is conducted by the owner thereof either as an open or a non-union shop, to become members of the union and to strike in order to compel the owner to conduct his factory or business as a union shop.

It seems to me that the principles announced in cases which arose before the war cannot be applied to the relation between workers and employers in war industries in so far as they conflict with the principles and policies of the United States government in the conduct of the war.

The production of war industries is so closely and immediately connected with actual military operations that it may be said to be a part of them. Can it then be that with means afforded by the government to" adjust differences between employers and employees in war industries a labor union has the right, for any cause whatever, to induce or incite workmen in such industries to strike, or not to work, and thereby to jeopardize the successful outcome of our country’s military operations, and all that depends upon them, even though so to do would have been lawful in times of peace? Ah answer other than no is unthinkable.

All the parties to the present controversy — the employer, the employees and the labor union — recognized that their respective rights and relations to each other were modified and controlled by their obligations and duties to the United States government. Their recognition of the principles and policies uf the United States government in the matter of the control of war industries is shown by the evidence. The contract entered into between the plaintiff and the representatives of its employees in October, 1917,-was the direct result of the mediation of the war department and the department’s approval of the [462]*462contract, is shown by the signature thereto of the mediator for the department. This contract was in accord with the principles and policies of the United States for the settlement of labor disputes in war industries.

The principles and policies of the United States government which should be applied in the decision of this case have been recently set forth in a pamphlet issued by the national war labor board.

The portions thereof which are especially applicable to the case at bar are as follows:

“ Principles and Policies to Govern Relations Between Workers and Employers in War Industries for the Duration of the War. •
“ There should he no strikes or lockouts during the
ivar.
“ Right to organize.

The right of workers to organize in trade-unions and to bargain collectively through chosen representatives is recognized and affirmed. This right shall not be denied, abridged or interfered with by employers in any manner whatsoever. * * *

‘ ‘ Employers should not discharge workers for mem-. bership in trade-unions, nor for legitimate trade-union activities.

“ The workers, in the exercise of their right to organize, shall not use coercive measures of any kind to induce persons to join their organizations, nor to induce employers to bargain or deal therewith.

“ Ecdsting Conditions.

1 ‘ In establishments where the union shop exists the , same shall continue, and the union standards as to wages, hours of labor, 'and other conditions of employment shall be maintained.

“ In establishments where union and non-union men [463]*463and women work together, and the employer meets only with employees or representatives engaged in said establishments, the continuance of such conditions shall not be deemed a grievance. This declaration, however, is not intended in any manner to deny the right or discourage the practice of the formation of labor unions, or the joining of the same by the workers in said establishments, as guaranteed in the last paragraph, nor to prevent the War Labor Board from urging or any umpire from granting, under the machinery herein provided, improvement of their situation in the matter of wages, hours of labor, or other conditions as shall be found desirable from time to time. * * *

“ Maximum Production.

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Related

Bossert v. . Dhuy
117 N.E. 582 (New York Court of Appeals, 1917)
Auburn Draying Co. v. Wardell
178 A.D. 270 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
104 Misc. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenwasser-bros-v-pepper-nysupct-1918.