State ex rel. Ohio Power Co. v. Utility Workers Union of America (CIO), Local 138

103 N.E.2d 49, 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 66, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 390
CourtMuskingum County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedAugust 30, 1951
DocketNo. 37913
StatusPublished

This text of 103 N.E.2d 49 (State ex rel. Ohio Power Co. v. Utility Workers Union of America (CIO), Local 138) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Muskingum County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Ohio Power Co. v. Utility Workers Union of America (CIO), Local 138, 103 N.E.2d 49, 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 66, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 390 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY OF FINDING AND JUDGMENT

By CROSSLAND, J.

The Charges of Contempt and the evidence relating thereto as contained in the evidence herein from July 25, 26 and 27, 1951, and upon the additional evidence received August 28, 1951, specifically involve the question and issue of disobedience of a lawful order of this court, to-wit, the Restraining Order or Temporary Injunction of July 22, 1951, reaffirmed July 31, 1951, and amended and supplemented August 8, 1951.

At this time the court will not reconsider its willingness in its Memorandum Opinion and Journal Entry of July 31, 1951, not to proceed further against individual members of the' Union which the July evidence, incorporated as part of the record of August 28, 1951, proved acted contrary to its order of July 22, 1951, for the reason that it is not clearly and convincingly established that any such named and identified individual defendant was a person identified as separately involved individually in any specific subsequent violation. The court is not disposed to assume that individual defendants not originally cited for contempt immediately following the July hearings have since actively participated individually in contempt of the court’s order so as to now merit consideration of punishment not formerly contemplated, in the absence of specific proof of subsequent individual violations established by clear and convincing evidence.

However, the foregoing is not to say that individual defendants are thereby absolved from liability as members of the Union for that organization’s accountability under the Temporary Injunction as amended and supplemented. On the contrary, the court does take into account, in connection with subsequent evidence, the fact that those guilty of early violations were and are members and agents of the Union and that the Union as such should not and can not evade or escape responsibility for their acts and conduct as alluded to in the said Memorandum Opinion and Journal Entry of July 31, 1951.

The court considers and determines that when member acts of proven disobedience such as occurred in ■

[68]*681. admittedly following the occupants of a visiting automobile from Duncan Falls to Zanesville, over Zanesville streets and three miles west of Zanesville, driving alongside long enough for words to ensue, cutting around and returning past from west of Zanesville, with ample opportunity for further words, with which admitted facts and circumstances the testimony of the Newark witnesses reasonably accords, while that of the Union members is not only ricidulously incredible but patently false;

2. admittedly following and allegedly driving across the path of a coal truck whose driver obviously was badly scared by what was done and said when accosted at the Ohio Power Company plant entrance and upon the premises of the Bruns Coal Company;

3. admittedly driving across the main plant entrance so as to impede an incoming coal truck, explained as merely turning around, but with no other valid reason for being there so as to be required to turn around in the entrance to company premises, or of any occasion to do so when plenty of public highway in three directions was a few feet west thereof;

4. admittedly walking in past a full complement of four pickets for unwarranted access to railroad right of way at a time and place where railroad employes were engaged in serving their employer’s business with the relator, unsatisfactorily explained as part of an uninvited, self-assumed investigation of an alleged prior day’s stoning incident; the court repeats, when such acts and conduct occurred, among others, several days after the making, issuance, service and private and public communication of the court’s order and, in fact, during the very progress of the court’s first hearings, on the part of members, some of whom were then filling and exercising positions of Union responsibility in the course and conduct of the strike, plus an evident willingness, if not desire, of the chosen and accepted leadership to accept the fruits of such efforts as well as to disavow in behalf of such members any influence or implication of their disobedience to the existing Order, then it is quite clear, positive and convincing to the court that the Union thereby ratified and approved, if it had not already previously authorized, the acts, deeds and conduct of such members as its own, in addition to the Union’s initial responsibility to the court to undertake to prevent and not to permit disobedience of the Restraining Order by any of the membership.

Proceeding to the evidence adduced at Tuesday’s hearing, it is uncontradicted that a number of acts repugnant and [69]*69contrary to this court’s Temporary Injunction occurred during the night of August 6, and early morning of August 7, 1951, in the immediate or proximate vicinity of Union pickets, none of whom testified and whose names and identity were not disclosed by any Union officer or principal agent nor acknowledged or admitted by any Union member.

Astoundingly, there was not a single syllable of testimony offered by any Union officer or member relative to the name or knowledge of a single Union picket for the three days and nights of August 5, 6 and 7, regarding the events and occurrences charged and complained of by plaintiff.

It is an inescapable inference from complete unwillingness of any picket or Union or picket officer to testify as to the occurrences and events which precipitated the ordered elimination of all picketing that they could not testify truthfully without implicating their Union or its members and perhaps themselves.

In any event, it is utterly incomprehensible and wholly unbelieveable to the court that not one of approximately a half hundred pickets presumably on duty at various points surrounding the well lighted company premises during the hours of that particular night, according to other night picketing schedules, saw or knew nothing whatever, of time consuming sabotage in their immediate vicinity.

The court can only conclude, not only from clear, positive and convincing evidence, but beyond a reasonable doubt, that such related and coordinated activities were planned and executed either by or for and in behalf of the Union, whose members and agents in substantial number admittedly were present nearby throughout the night.

Would these members of the Union have stood blindly and deafly in dumb silence if uninvited or unacceptable persons were “planting” evidence for use against them?

Fear-inspiring communication severances, property damaging transportation hindrances, body endangering rail track tampering, were known to and permitted by Union pickets as surely as night follows day, regardless of the identity of the perpetrators. How could anyone with an iota of intelligence conclude otherwise?

Piecing together the early “thrusts” days following issuance of the original restraining order, Union unwillingness to disbelieve or repudiate the incredibly preposterous explanations of established and evident violations, the well coordinated and calculated conduct of the night of August 6th and 7th, with total absence of any explanation whatever by Union officers or members, and the wilfull persistence in attempting [70]*70to maintain picketing after it was ordered terminated, and there is an unmistakable pattern of consistent and concerted disobedience by the Union of the court’s Temporary Restraining Order and Injunction, regardless of the number of participating or contributing members.

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Bluebook (online)
103 N.E.2d 49, 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 66, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ohio-power-co-v-utility-workers-union-of-america-cio-ohctcomplmuskin-1951.