Statler Co. v. Hotel & Restaurant Employees' International Alliance & Bartenders' International League

19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 375, 1914 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 142
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 375 (Statler Co. v. Hotel & Restaurant Employees' International Alliance & Bartenders' International League) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Statler Co. v. Hotel & Restaurant Employees' International Alliance & Bartenders' International League, 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 375, 1914 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 142 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Lawrence, J.

Where an injunction is sought in controversies between employers and employees which have resulted in a strike by the [376]*376latter, little aid is usually to be derived from an examination of the decisions of courts in other similar cases, for almost always the question comes to the application of well established principles to the facts of the particular case. Fundamentally, the principles which apply in a case like this are the same as apply in any other case in which it is claimed that individual or property rights have -been injuriously affected or interfered with in such manner as to make the ordinary legal remedies inadequate.

There is no question of the right of the former employees of the Statler Company to strike and quit their employment, or of their right to use peaceable argument and persuasion to induce others not to accept employment in their places! They also have the right, by fair and peaceable means, to advise or persuade those who have accepted such employment, to quit the same, there being no proof of any attempt to induce such persons to break a contract for a definite term of service.

On the other hand, there can be no question that the strikers or others associated with them, have no right to use threats, violence, intimidation or coercion to accomplish these objects. Nor have they a right to obstruct access to their former employer’s place of business, or to threaten, insult or unreasonably interfere with its guests or patrons in any way, nor have they the right to cause wanton or wrongful injury to the business or property of the plaintiff, or to join together with the motive or intent of causing such injury.

In my opinion, the weight of authority supports the right of strikers, as an incident of their right of persuasion, as well as a means of obtaining information, to maintain what are called “pickets,” provided such pickets are limited in number, and the picketing is carried on in a peaceable and lawful manner without violence, threats or intimidation, without obstruction to the premises of any other person, and without annoying others or causing a nuisance in the vicinity by loud cries, noise or other disturbance. In other words, whether picketing in a given ease is lawful or otherwise, depends on the manner in which it is carried on. In this case the evidence shows that since the 16th day of December last there have been shifts of ten to [377]*377fifteen men regularly employed and paid as pickets, who during much, of the time, from about five o’clock a. m. to one o’clock a. m. of the following day, walk back and forth upon the sidewalk on Euclid avenue in front of the Statler Hotel, calling out and shouting in loud tones of voice that ^he hotel is unfair to organized labor, besides many other things reflecting on the hotel and its employees, which I can not now state accurately. That in addition to the regularly employed pickets, there are at times large numbers of volunteers who join in, thus marching back and forth and shouting. That occasionally guests, as they are entering the hotel, have been obstructed by some of these men. That there are also some five sandwich men, - so-called, who march in front of the hotel carrying banners with inscriptions thereon uncomplimentary to the hotel and its employees, and that Mr. Farrell, the business agent of the Local Union No. 106, is present during a good part of each day, and has general charge of what has been done. In addition to what I have already stated, these pickets distribute cards to guests and passers by, insinuating that there is danger of poison being placed in food served within the hotel. Some few of the waiters who took the place of strikers had such relations with the men on picket duty that they were able to go outside of the hotel and, perhaps, about the city, but the greater number of such employees have been substantially prisoners within the hotel, because of threats made against them and of actual violence committed on a few of their number who did venture to go outside.

The result of all this has been an almost continuous noise and confusion in the vicinity of the hotel by means of which its guests have suffered annoyance, and their rest at night has been disturbed, and this noise was of such a character that it must also have been an annoyance to persons on the street or in other buildings in the neighborhood. Necessarily, too, the congregating of so many men upon the sidewalk in front of the hotel must be an obstruction to persons desiring to enter or leave the hotel, as well as to persons passing by on the sidewalk.

I can have no doubt that those who are carrying on this strike have gone beyond their legal rights in much that has been done, and that the necessary tendency of their acts is to unlawfully [378]*378and wrongfully injure the business and property of the plaintiff.

It has been argued, however, that no substantial damage has been shown by the hotel company, inasmuch as its business has continued, and its available rooms have been well occupied. The patronage of this hotel, coming from persons who can afford to pay the prices charged there, may of such a character that not many of its guests have a very altruistic interest in the questions at issue between the hotel and its former employees, but still I can not see why there would not be some loss of business. Certainly what has occurred is calculated to. have that effect, and it has been shown that the business of the restaurant and bar has been diminished; besides, there is the loss of the use of the guest rooms occupied by the present employees and the expense of employing a number of decteetives or guards.

There is another question to be considered before coming to a final conclusion whether an injunction shall be issued, and that is whether such injunction is necessary. It is always to be regretted when a court is called upon to interfere in a case of this kind, not only because of the difficulty of defining definitely the rights of the parties in a decree which must be drawn in general terms, and also because of the inadequacy of the means which the court has to supervise or enforce compliance with its orders, and I think that an injunction should never be granted in a labor dispute where the acts complained of are covered by penal statutes or ordinances, and the police department and police court are able and willing to perform their respective duties.

Undoubtedly, some of the things which, have been done here in violation of the rights of the plaintiff are not within .such statutes or ordinances, but it does seem to me that there has been disorderly conduct and obstruction of the sidewalk in front of the hotel which could have been prevented by the police. An ample force of policemen were detailed for duty, but they seemed to feel that they were merely umpires in a game played without rules.

I think, therefore, that a temporary injunction must be granted in the respects I shall presently explain, but it is necessary first to determine against whom the same shall run.

[379]*379. It is argued on .behalf of some of the defendants that the unincorporated volunteer associations are not proper parties to this action. I think that is true, technically speaking, so far as the organization by its accustomed name is concerned. I think that is true, because under our statute there is no authority for bringing such an association by any process before the court unless it partakes of the character of a partnership.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 375, 1914 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/statler-co-v-hotel-restaurant-employees-international-alliance-ohctcomplcuyaho-1914.