United States v. Railway Employees' Department of American Federation of Labor

290 F. 978, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1574
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 12, 1923
DocketNo. 2943
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 290 F. 978 (United States v. Railway Employees' Department of American Federation of Labor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Railway Employees' Department of American Federation of Labor, 290 F. 978, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1574 (N.D. Ill. 1923).

Opinion

WIEKERSON, District Judge.

This is a suit brought by the United States under the general equity jurisdiction of the District Court, and under the Anti-Trust Act of July 2, 1890 ( 26 Stat. 209), to restrain and enjoin the defendants, as an unlawful combination and conspiracy to obstruct and restrain interstate trade and commerce and the carriage of the United States mails upon and over the lines and systems of railroad transportation in the United States. The substance of the bill is set out in the opinion filed upon the granting of the temporary injunction. 283 Fed. 479. The substance of the answer is stated in the decision overruling defendants’ motion to dissolve the temporary injunction and to dismiss the bill. 296 Fed. 228. The questions of law involved are dealt with in those opinions, and upon a reexamination of those questions I find no reason to modify the views there expressed. The defendants could have had the decision of the reviewing court upon their legal contentions by appeal from either the order granting the temporary injunction, or from the one refusing to dissolve it. This they did not see fit to do.

Pursuant to the order of January 5, 1923, depositions of more than 500 witnesses were taken in Memphis, Nashville, St. Louis, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver, Pittsburgh, and New York. Defendants were represented by their counsel at the taking of this testimony, which occupied much of the time between the 5th of January and the 2d of May, the date fixed for the trial. After all these depositions had been taken, and on the eve of the trial counsel for defendants, on May 1, 1923, withdrew their appearances and stated that defendants would not be represented at the final hearing. Complainant introduced additional evidence at the trial, defendants offered no evidence whatever in the case, and the case is now submitted for final decree.

The record consists of about 4,000 pages, besides many exhibits; 724 witnesses have testified. Included among these are witnesses from 50 interstate railroads, whose aggregate' mileage is 190,242 miles. I shall not undertake to do more than outline the main points brought out in the proof. A digest of the evidence has been prepared by counsel for plaintiff at my request, and is filed as part of the record in this case. The evidence shows:

On June 5, 1922, the Railroad Labor Board published its decision No. 10036, effective July 1, 1922, wherein it determined in accordance with section 307 of the Transportation Act of 1920 (41 Stat. 470), the justness and reasonableness of the wages and salaries of the members of the Federated Shop Crafts, defendants herein. The defendant organizations were dissatisfied with this order, and instituted the strike as a protest against the decision of the board, and for [980]*980the purpose oi either compelling the carriers to disregard the order, and accede to the demands of the unions, or coercing the board into modifying its order, so as to comply with the union demands. In the first bulletin issued at the outset of the strike by the organization leaders in charge of the strike, it was declared:

“The ‘minute men’ of organized labor in the American railroad industry quit their work en masse as the only recourse left after two years of negotiation and “buck passing’ on the part of the railroad managers, and a series of ‘■injuries and usurpations’ by the United States Railroad Labor Board.” (Italics mine.)

I attached to the decision of January 5, 1923, on the motion to dissolve the injunction, extracts from bulletins issued from time to time during the strike. Those bulletins show the reponsibility of the officers of the defendant .organizations for the management of the strike. They also show that those officers, in the midst of a campaign of violence unparalleled in American industrial history, were continuously inciting the members of defendant organizations to greater activity. The real purpose back of the strike is indicated in the following language from the bulletin of August 21, 1922:

“Rest assured that this strike ha's aroused the American people as no previous strike in the nation’s history. They have visions of a fuelless and foodless winter, with the transportation system of the nation practically a derelict.”

Immediately upon the inauguration of the strike, practically all of the terminal shops and roundhouses of the 50 railroads from which-proof was taken were picketed. ' The conduct of the strikers and pickets was aggressive, belligerent, violent, and lawless. In order to keep men in the employ of these roads during the strike it was necessary, at practically all points, to construct bunkhouses and commissaries to house and feed the new employees on company properties. The 50 railroads from which proof has been taken housed and fed all employees on company property at 1,055 points scattered throughout the United States.

There was great damage both to persons and property during the strike. The evidence shows 19 deaths due to assaults and violence by strikers; 1,500 instances of various kinds of assaults by strikers on employees of the respective railroad companies and those seeking employment with them; 65 cases of kidnapping, with accompanying brutal assaults; 8 cases of tarring and feathering of new employees by strikers; 5Ó instances of burning and dynamiting, or attempting to burn and dynamite, bridges over which trains engaged in. interstate commerce and carriage of the United States mails passed; 250 cases of burning or dynamiting, or attempting to burn or dynamite, property of the railroads and homes and property of the employees; 50 cases of derailments, or attempts to derail or wreck trains engaged in interstate commerce by greasing tracks, placing obstructions on tracks, removing spikes, interfering with frogs and switches, cutting wires, signal apparatus, etc. The cutting of air hose, throwing of stones, firing of shots, placing foreign substances, such as blue vitriol, gaskets, soap, and slugs in pipes, cylinders, and other parts of locomotives, [981]*981tampering with electrical equipment, removal of cotter pins and other necessary parts of locomotives, and placing of emery, sand, and other foreign substances in journal boxes, occurred so generally and frequently throughout the country, on all railroads from which proof was taken, that it is impossible to compile the exact number of such cases.

As to the damage inflicted upon the railroads by the strike, the evidence shows that the total cost of the strike on the 50 railroads from which testimony was adduced, amounted to more than $96,000,000. This represents only money actually paid out on account of the strike, and does not include damages to property, loss of business incurred, increased cost of doing business, nor loss by claims for damages. The total cost to the Department of Justice of the United States for additional United States deputies and expenses, as evidenced by the certificate of the Attorney General, amounted to almost $2,000,000. The 50 railroads from which proof was taken had in their employ on the 1st of July, 1922, prior to the strike order becoming effective, approximately 277,000 shopmen. Of this number, more than 90 per cent, in every instance responded to the strike call. In some cases, the number of those answering the call was as high as 98 per cent.

The general effect of the strike on the performance and operations of the fifty railroads from which testimony was adduced, was to increase delays of freight, passenger, and mail service approximately 50 per cent.

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Bluebook (online)
290 F. 978, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-railway-employees-department-of-american-federation-of-ilnd-1923.