Schlesinger v. Quinto

117 Misc. 735
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 117 Misc. 735 (Schlesinger v. Quinto) 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
Schlesinger v. Quinto, 117 Misc. 735 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Wagner, J.

The plaintiffs move to continue pendente lite a preliminary injunction enjoining the defendants from combining and conspiring to order, direct, instigate, counsel, advise or encourage members of the defendant association to violate a certain agreement made between the association and plaintiffs’ union, and from doing any act in furtherance of such conspiracy.

The contract, the subject of this litigation, was entered into between the Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufacturers Protective Association, acting on behalf of its members, employees, and the International Ladies’ [737]*737Garment Workers Union and its subsidiary, the Joint Board of Cloakmakers Unions of the City of New York, representing the employees, on May 29, 1919, to continue operative up to June 1, 1922.

This agreement was the culmination of a long-continued economic struggle between the parties, and for the first time recognized in a collective bargaining contract the week work system in place and stead of the so-called piecework system formerly prevailing in the garment industry, and provided also a reduction in the hours of labor from forty-eight to forty-four hours per week. This innovation the workers regarded as a great stride forward in their struggle to raise their standard of life. Under the piecework system there was no uniform or fixed scale of wages. Besides the constant disputes that arose as to what the employee should receive for a particular garment, the workers contend that the piecework system was an incentive to work with an -intensity injurious to their health, principally in view of the fact that the industry is seasonal, the periods of work, therefore, rare, and the worker in his anxiety to make up for the slack time would strain himself beyond his physical endurance and thus fall into ill-health, in many cases hopeless.

After the agreement had- gone into effect relations theretofore strained were resumed and peace once more restored in the industry, and the workers began operating under the new system. During the transitional period, as might well have been contemplated in so radical a change in the method of production, complaints were made on both sides respecting “ soldiering on the job/’ due to security of position on the one hand and the inadequacy of wages due to the constant increase in living costs on the other. These difficulties, involving isolated instances, were adjusted by [738]*738voluntary concessions of higher wage and the averting of intended or actual stoppages of work. And so matters proceeded until the request of plaintiffs on behalf of the workers in the early part of November,. 1919, for an appreciable increase in the scale of wages provided for in the contract due to the more aggravated conditions then prevailing, but which clearly in. nowise was to affect the integrity and mutuality of obligations under the agreement.

Discussions became more- acute on this question as the differences of opinion widened, with the result that the parties found themselves engulfed in an acrimonious controversy, both private and in the advertising columns of the press, in which the respective contentions were strikingly and appealingly presented to gain for themselves public approval and support. Apprehensive of public calamity, Governor Smith summoned representatives of the opposing factions to a conference, resulting in their consent to the appointment of a board, with power to make a final and conclusive disposition of the controversial matter. The report of this board, after an extended examination into the statistics as to increased living costs, made a unanimous finding that the workers were entitled to a wage increase, “ called for by certain conditions inherent in the industry,” to be absorbed by the increased productivity and conservation of other manufacturing costs.

After acceptance of the board’s decision its intern pretation caused a divergent view as to the parties to be benefited. Because of the equivocal language in portions of the report the difference of opinion as to its interpretation was not without justification.. To the plaintiffs it spelled out a clear increase :of the minimum wage scale therein provided. To the defendants the benefits thereunder were to accrue only to those [739]*739employed at the time of its rendition and future employees were not entitled to participation.

Attempts to persuade the defendants to confer failed. They insisted upon the correctness of their interpretation and their right of self-construction.

Solicitations that the source of origin, namely, the board, should be requested to interpret its own decision, were summarily refused. The deadlock was further accentuated by plaintiff’s claim that independent contractors who had accepted the new award by private agreement and were now seeking membership in defendant association for the purpose of taking advantage of its construction as to who shall benefit by the increase were so accepted in violation of the agreement. Discontent among the workers followed disappointment. Their fruitless appeals to the unions, which in view of defendants’ attitude on the question of interpretation could afford no assistance, resulted in sporadic strikes. These were few, however, in comparison with the extent of the work, and in most instances inconsequential in duration. Importunities by plaintiff union succeeded in many cases to a return of the men to work, though it failed in some few instances, owing to the obdurate conduct and inflexible state of mind of the workers.

Finally, on October 6,1920, the defendant addressed a communication to the union stating on account of strikes against its members the contract obligations had been violated, and threatened a discontinuance of “ function of the machinery of the contract for adjustment of grievances.” The plaintiffs replied disclaiming any connection with or instigation of strikes, and again appealed for the submission of the question of interpretation of the board’s decision as to awards. From then on, in accordance with their previous notification, the defendants ceased the adjustments of fur[740]*740ther disputes pursuant to the methods set up in the agreement. The letter itself and the developments that followed are significant of its purpose in view of the claim made by the defendants that thereafter they considered the binding force of the contract at end. By its terms it made no pretense of abrogating the existing agreement as a whole. It confined the discontinuance of recognition merely to one of its provisions, namely, that involving the adjustment of dispntes. There was no mention nor implied abandonment of the provisions relating to hours of labor, wages, labor conditions or others that formed the real basis and purpose of the collective bargaining agreement, as indeed there were none in fact, as such were continued and observed in practice long after the adjustment routine had gone into temporary disuse and clearly defendants’ refusal to carry out the above-named provision did not, as against plaintiffs ’ protest and in the absence of rescission, vitiate the agreement.

In April, 1921, communications were again resumed by the association with plaintiffs with the view of increasing the productivity in the trade by reason of the alleged refusal of the public to purchase their product at high prices then obtaining. The union accepted the invitation to conference on this question, and on June 3, 1921, the parties entered into the following agreement:

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Bluebook (online)
117 Misc. 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schlesinger-v-quinto-nysupct-1922.