Sheehan v. Levy

215 S.W. 229, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1027
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 28, 1919
DocketNo. 8223.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 215 S.W. 229 (Sheehan v. Levy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheehan v. Levy, 215 S.W. 229, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1027 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

The appellant, P. J. Sheehan, sued the appellees, M. B. Levy, A. Z. Levy, Harry Kahn, A. S. Johnson, P. J. Beaney, J. J. Maddigan, H. J. Martin, C. Wallace, Ed. C. Hamilton, and the Hamilton Company, and Local1 Union No. 100, United Association of Journeyman Plumbers, and O. B. Olsen and E. B. Boyse, to recover damages and for injunction. It is alleged that the first-named defendants constitute an association known as the “Master Plumbers’ Association,” and that Local Union No. 100 is composed of journeyman plumbers in the city of Dallas, Tex., and is a subordinate local body of the national organization, known as the United Association of Journeyman Plumbers, with the said O. B. Olsen as its president and the said F. B. Boyse as its business agent. The suit was based, in substance, upon the ground that a conspiracy existed between the defendants to interfere with and prevent plaintiff from doing business as a plumbing contractor; by preventing journeyman plumbers from working for him. The trial court heard the pleadings and evidence, and denied' the plaintiff’s prayer for a temporary injunction, and he appealed to ‘this court.

The appellant alleged, in substance, that he was a contracting plumber, conducting his business in the city of Dallas, Tex., and that he employed journeyman plumbers, who were necessary to the conduct of his business ; that at the time the petition was filed he was engaged in installing plumbing fixtures in a building in Dallas owned by D. E. Waggoner, and occupied by the Trinity & Brazos Valley Bailroad Company, and other contracts, including the contract with the Southern Methodist University, to install plumbing fixtures in a building for that (institution, and that he had been engaged in such work during several months prior to the institution of this suit, and at all times employed journeyman plumbers, members of defendant’s Local Union No. 100; that he employed only union plumbers of that organization, and that he observed union hours of work and paid the union scale of wago.s; that all of his employés were satisfied with the terms of their employment, and had no complaint to make against him in any respect ; that the Master Plumbers’ Association, composed of the defendants Wallace, Kahn, Maddigan, Johnson, Martin, Hamilton Company, and Hamilton & Levy, weré competitors of his, and were engaged in like business in the city of Dallas; that said Master Plumbers’ Association have a conference committee composed of defendants Hamilton, Wallace, and Johnson, who represent said association, and represented it in respect to the matters and" things complained of in his petition; that shortly before the filing of said suit said Master Plumbers’ Association told appellant that, unless he became a member of said association, it would require and secure all journeyman plumbers, members of said local union, working for him, to leave his employ; that appellant refused to became a member of said association, and that said Master Plumbers, conspiring together, by persuasion, threats, and inducements, caused said Local No. 100, Journeyman Plumbers, to- order its members who were working for appellant to leave and cease to work for him, and that thereafter he was unable to employ or secure journeyman plumbers in the prosecution of his work; -that said acts of the Master Plumbers were without justifiable cause, and were done with malice and intent to injure appellant, and put him out of business in the city of Dallas, and also for the purpose of lessening competition; the said Master Plumbers knew that, unless appellant could em *230 ploy journeyman plumbers, be could not complete tbe work then on hand, and could not longer conduct his business in the city of Dallas or elsewhere; that all of said acts were done secretly by defendants, conspiring together, to injure appellant; that the order of prohibition of said union is void and without sanction of law, and made for the purpose of aiding defendants Master Plumbers, and with the sole intent to injure plaintiff, and not to further the interests of said local union or the members thereof, and were made as a part of a conspiracy land in furtherance of designs and intent of Master Plumbers to injure plaintiff and put him out of business; that unless appellant can employ union journeyman plumbers he cannot complete the contracts on hand, and that if he cafinot complete such contracts, he will suffer great loss and damage, and be liable on bonds executed by him for the faithful performance of said work, and will have to quit business, and will suffer great and irreparable loss and damage, without any adequate remedy at law. Appellant prayed for a writ of injunction restraining the defendants, and each 'of them, from interfering with or molesting plaintiff and his business, and the union journeyman plumbers working for or employed by plaintiff, and from insisting upon and requiring said Local No. 100 to refuse union journeyman plumbers to plain-: tiff, or to allow them to work for him, and restraining the president and business agent of said local union from refusing to allow its members or other plumbers to work for appellant, etc.

The defendants Plumbers’ Local Union No. 100, O. R. Olsen, and 1U D. Royse, besides a general denial under oath, denied that they had entered into any agreement or conspiracy with the Master Plumbers against appellant to do the things charged by appellant, or to cause or order the members of Journeyman Plumbers’ Local Union Ño. 100 to leave appellant’s service, or to cease to work for him, or to refuse to allow any of said local union members, or other union plumbers, to work for him, and denied that appellant’s men were caused to leave his work by reason of any agreement with said Master Plumbers, other than a general working agreement, in writing, between the Master Plumbers and Journeyman Plumbers’ Local No. 100, the terms of which agreement were well- known to appellant. They further denied that they entered into any conspiracy with the Master Plumbers against appellant, and denied that they had any malice against him, or did anything with intent to injure him, and further denied that they at any time did anything to prevent appellant fi;om employing journeyman plumbers not members of said Local Union No. 100.

They further plead that under the charter, by-laws, and regulations adopted by said plumbers’ local union they had the legal right to exercise control ovey its members, and in the exercise of such right, and on their own account, and for good and lawful reasons, they caused the journeyman plumbers, members of said union, working for appellant, to leave his service, but that in doing so they exercised only their lawful rights in the enforcement of the rules and regulations of said union, assented to by its members, and without violation of appellant’s rights. Wherefore they prayed that the injunction be denied; that they go hence without day, and recover their costs. 1

The defendants composing the Master Clumbers’ Association answered under oath, as follows: After general denial, they specially denied they conspired with the president, business agent, or the conference committee of or with Local Union - No. 100, Journeyman Plumbers, whereby said union should or did require its members to leave plaintiff and cease to work for him, or to refuse to allow its members to work for appellant, or threaten or persuade or induce its members to cease working for appellant, or fine or otherwise penalize its members should they not cease to work for appellant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 S.W. 229, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheehan-v-levy-texapp-1919.