UNITED ASS'N OF JOURN. & APP. OF PLUMBING, ETC. v. Stine

351 P.2d 965, 76 Nev. 189, 1960 Nev. LEXIS 103, 46 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2239
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1960
Docket4241
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 351 P.2d 965 (UNITED ASS'N OF JOURN. & APP. OF PLUMBING, ETC. v. Stine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
UNITED ASS'N OF JOURN. & APP. OF PLUMBING, ETC. v. Stine, 351 P.2d 965, 76 Nev. 189, 1960 Nev. LEXIS 103, 46 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2239 (Neb. 1960).

Opinion

*192 OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

Respondent Stine was the successful plaintiff below. The appellant union was defendant. They are referred to as they appeared in the district court or by their respective abbreviated names. Plaintiff sued for damages for defendant’s alleged breach of a labor agreement, charging that the defendant union called a work stoppage, destroyed plaintiff’s business by depriving him of the assurance that journeymen plumbers would be available to work for him, that his contract jobs were brought to a halt, and that the strike was in violation of provisions of the labor agreement setting forth certain grievance and arbitration machinery. Plaintiff also sought a temporary restraining order and a preliminary and permanent injunction against the strike. Judgment was entered against defendant upon the jury’s verdict for $50,000 damages, and the court thereafter denied defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, for a new trial. Defendant has appealed from the judgment and from these orders.

Allied or associated matters in connection with this situation have heretofore been before this court. Stine and his employee, James D. Ringelberg, had appealed from the trial court’s order denying them an injunction pendente lite against the union enjoining the strike. They sought from this court an injunction pending appeal. This we denied. Ringelberg v. United Association of Journeymen, 72 Nev. 156, 297 P.2d 1079. Thereafter the union moved this court for an order assessing damages upon the injunction bond, which Ringelberg and Stine resisted, contending that the proper course of the union was an independent action upon the bond. The *193 motion that this court assess damages on the injunction bond was based on NRCP Rule 65(c) to the general effect that the surety’s liability might be enforced on motion without the necessity of an independent action. We concluded however that the rule did not apply to this court and denied the motion. Ringelberg v. United Association of Journeymen, 73 Nev. 185, 314 P.2d 380. Thereafter counsel for both parties advised the court that the appeal from the court’s order denying injunction was moot, and on August 19, 1957 we dismissed that appeal. This however left pending in the district court the suit for damages resulting in the judgment and orders from which the present appeal is taken.

Plaintiff, doing business as A-l Plumbing Supply Company, had been engaged in that business for a number of years. Some 60 percent of that business resulted from plumbing contracts and some 40 percent from the retail sale of prefabricated plumbing fixtures. It enjoyed a gradual growth to a peak of some $305,000 annual gross sales in 1954, and resulting in a net profit of $31,500 in 1955, with proportionate returns until the strike of April 13,1956.

About three weeks before the strike of April 13, 1956, according to Stine’s testimony, in response to a letter from the union, he appeared before its executive board and Frank Long, its business agent. The witness testified: “There was quite a lengthy discussion as to the tactics or the advertising program that I had put on to operate my business. There was a great deal of criticism on the part of the executive board. * * * Well, I’d been advised at that time by the executive board that if my conduct of business was not changed they would close my shop.” This was further explained by Long concerning that meeting: “We were disturbed in the plumbing industry by materials being made and sold to customers. Q. Prefabricated fixtures? A. Now you are talking. Q. Your executive board was concerned with the fact A-l Plumbing was selling prefabricated fixtures to retail customers? A. We were concerned to a certain extent with any hardware store selling prefabricated materials.” It was pursuant to that concern that Stine *194 was requested to appear before the union’s executive board.

Mickey Kern, called by the defendant, a member of the plumbers’ union and an executive board member and vice president and later chairman of the board, was present at the meeting of March 21, 1956, and testified that in the Stine matter: “Mr. Stine was advertising plumbing trees for sale. The members of the board felt that this was causing unemployment among the plumbing trade and also it was detrimental to the plumbing industry, so it was discussed and Mr. Stine was asked if he would refrain from this, but Mr. Stine he thought it was actually bringing more work to the plumbing industry rather than harming it.” He denied that any member of the board stated that the union would close Stine’s shop unless he changed his method of conducting business. It was conceded that the sale of prefabricated plumbing material and the advertising of such material for sale was not a breach of the plumbing contract hereinafter discussed at length.

On April 11, 1956 it was reported to the union that Ringelberg was cutting pipe contrary to the contract. Ringelberg was not a journeyman plumber and was accordingly not permitted to cut pipe. He was employed by Stine as a sales clerk and shop clerk and 75 percent of his time was occupied in this capacity. The union however had given Stine permission to have Ringelberg cut pipe for over-the-counter sales. This service occupied 25 percent of his time.

On the following day, April 12, Long reported this as a breach of the contract and a strike was called for the morning of April 13. That morning no plumbers appeared for work. Stine phoned McKee, managing director of the Federated Employers of Nevada to see what could be done about it. McKee unsuccessfully tried to reach Long by telephone and the latter called back later in the day. A meeting was arranged for 1:30 p. m. that day between McKee and Long. What was said at that meeting is in dispute, but the jury had the right to conclude that the meeting concerned other matters, that *195 Stine was not present, and that the matter of the strike was not discussed. The first day of the strike, April 13, was a Friday. On the following Monday, April 16, Stine commenced his action for an injunction against the strike and for damages. On April 20, a temporary restraining order was issued and bond thereon filed April 23. The strike lasted seven days. No pickets were posted, there was no violence, and Stine was not placed on “we do not patronize” lists. The case was fully tried on the motion for temporary injunction, which was denied May 3. The strike however was not renewed. On June 8 this court denied an injunction pending appeal.

On September 29, 1956 Stine closed his shop.

In May or June, 1956 Ringelberg left Stine’s employment to take employment with the City of Las Vegas, and August 8, 1956 he withdrew as plaintiff in the action.

Defendant’s answer denied that the work stoppage violated the obligations of its contract and justified the strike on the asserted ground of plaintiff’s breach by his failure to pay health and welfare contributions; by working Ringelberg, not a qualified journeyman, on pipe-cutting machines for contract jobs without journeyman supervision; by employing Ringelberg as a second apprentice at a time plaintiff was entitled to employ only one apprentice and by working Ringelberg and other employees on Saturday without paying the overtime rate.

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Bluebook (online)
351 P.2d 965, 76 Nev. 189, 1960 Nev. LEXIS 103, 46 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-assn-of-journ-app-of-plumbing-etc-v-stine-nev-1960.