S. Cal. Iron & Steel Co. v. Amalgamated Ass'n of Iron, Steel & Tin Workers

200 P. 1, 186 Cal. 604, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 485
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1921
DocketL. A. No. 6049.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 200 P. 1 (S. Cal. Iron & Steel Co. v. Amalgamated Ass'n of Iron, Steel & Tin Workers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. Cal. Iron & Steel Co. v. Amalgamated Ass'n of Iron, Steel & Tin Workers, 200 P. 1, 186 Cal. 604, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 485 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

LAWLOR, J.

This is an appeal by the defendants, Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, Golden State Lodge, Local No. 3, et al. (hereinafter referred to as “the union”), and the 102 individual members thereof (hereinafter referred to as “the strikers”), from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Southern California Iron and Steel Company, a corporation, in an action to enjoin the defendants from “picketing” plaintiff’s place of business, from molesting plaintiff’s employees, and from otherwise interfering with plaintiff’s business.

Respondent conducts a steel rolling-mill at the corner of Fourth and Mateo Streets, in the city of Los Angeles. The union is an unincorporated association, organized in 1907. Respondent employed a varying number of the members of the union. All of the strikers were employees of respondent *606 up to November 1, 1917. On that day a meeting of the union was called and it was voted to quit respondent’s employment. Accordingly, all of the individual appellants, who, however, did not constitute all of respondent’s employees, immediately went on strike. Their places were taken by other men, not members of the union, and to these we shall hereafter refer as “the employees.”

Respondent continued to operate its plant under these conditions until the commencement of this action, on or about March 1, 1918. It was alleged that on various occasions after the strike was called the strikers had been seen on the street in front and in the immediate vicinity of respondent’s mill, singly and in grotips of varying size, and that on those occasions they had engaged in conversation with certain of respondent’s employees. Respondent alleges, in ¡effect, that at all times the strikers were instructed by ■ the union thus to visit the neighborhood of the mill in order, j by intimidation, threats, and, in certain instances, actual ! physical violence, to induce respondent’s employees to leave their employment; that, in carrying out these instructions, the strikers did threaten, menace, molest, and intimidate certain of the employees, so that a' number of them were induced, through fear of personal violence at the hands of the strikers, to quit respondent’s employ; and that, by reason of such acts on the part of both union and strikers, respondent has been greatly hindered and damaged in the conduct of its business.

The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law. The judgment is a permanent injunction restraining both the union and the strikers from interfering with the use by respondent of its property; hindering, in the manner set forth, the respondent’s business; molesting, intimidating, or harassing, using any force against, or applying vil'e names or language of ridicule or contempt toward any employee of respondent or person seeking to enter its employ; placing pickets near respondent’s place of business to induce persons to quit respondent’s employ or refrain from entering it, or for any other purpose; and from going to the homes of any employees of respondent to intimidate or threaten them, or to intimidate any member of their families for the purpose of inducing them to pursuade the employees to quit respondent’s employ.

*607 Appellants contend “that the evidence in this case is insufficient to sustain any of the material findings as found by the trial court.” Respondent insists “That the findings have ample evidence to sustain a conspiracy and the acts done in furtherance thereof.”

We shall first consider the law on this general subject as laid down in numerous authorities. The leading case in the United States is United States v. Kane, 23 Fed. 748. There the defendants had quit the employ of the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad, and the road was suing to enjoin them from interfering with the operation of its line. Mr. Justice Brewer, in that case, said:

“I think a few preliminary considerations, in reference to the common rights which we all have as free men in this country, may not be amiss. Every man has a right to work for whom he pleases, and to go where he pleases, and to do what he pleases, providing, in so doing, he does not trespass on the rights of others. And every man who seeks another to work for him has a right to contract with that man, to make such an agreement with him as will be mutually satisfactory; and unless he has made a contract binding him to a stipulated time, he may rightfully say to such employee at any time, ‘I have no further need of your services.’ . . .
“Supposing Mr. Wheeler had two men employed. . . . But supposing . . . one is discharged and the other wants to stay, is satisfied with the employment; and the one that leaves goes around to a number of friends and gathers them, and they come around, a large party of them,—as I suggested yesterday, a party with revolvers and muskets,—■ and the one that leaves comes to the one that wants to stay and says to him: ‘Now, my friends are here; you had better leave; I request you to leave’; the -man looks at the party that is standing there; there is nothing but a simple request, —that is, so far as the language which is used; there is no threat; but it is a request backed by a demonstration of force, a demonstration intended to intimidate, calculated to intimidate, and the man says: ‘Well, I would like to stay, I am willing to work here, yet there are too many men here, there is too much of a demonstration; I am afraid to stay. ’ Now, the common sense of every man tells him that that is not a mere request,—tells him that while the language used may be very polite and be merely in the form of a *608 request, yet it is accompanied with that backing of force intended as a demonstration and calculated to make an impression; and that the man leaves; really because he is intimidated. . . .
“That is really the question here: whether these parties went there simply, as persons have a right to do, to request engineers and train-men to desist from further labor, or whether they went there, under the circumstances, with such a demonstration of force, with such an attitude and an air, that although nothing but a request was expressed, it was a request which men did not dare decline to comply with. The fact that half a dozen men went there and asked an engineer, or a brakeman, or a train-man to quit,— that is all right, if it was simply a mere matter of request, a mere matter of giving views and reasons. That is part of the common right of us ’ all. We all can express our opinions. We can go to any friend and urge him to do this or do that; that is a part of the common liberties of every man in this country; and the question is not, whether these gentlemen went there in a pleasant way and stated reasons, or urged their friends to quit work, but, did they go with such an intended demonstration of power, and in such an attitude, that though, as they have stated here, they simply requested these engineers and employees to quit, they did it under circumstance that the engineers and the train-men were intimidated, and quit because they felt compelled to. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
200 P. 1, 186 Cal. 604, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-cal-iron-steel-co-v-amalgamated-assn-of-iron-steel-tin-workers-cal-1921.