Vim Elec. v. Retail, Local 830

16 A.2d 798, 128 N.J. Eq. 450, 7 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 768, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 2
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 20, 1940
StatusPublished

This text of 16 A.2d 798 (Vim Elec. v. Retail, Local 830) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vim Elec. v. Retail, Local 830, 16 A.2d 798, 128 N.J. Eq. 450, 7 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 768, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 2 (N.J. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

The complainant is a corporation of the State of New York. It operates twenty-three stores in that state and six stores in this state. The New Jersey stores are located in Jersey City, Newark, Elizabeth, Paterson, Union City and Perth Amboy. In its New Jersey stores it has forty-seven employes.

The defendant union Local 830 is a labor organization which counts among its membership many of complainant's New York employes, and some of its New Jersey employes. The New York Labor Relations Board has designated it as the collective bargaining agency of complainant's New York City and Westchester county, New York, employes. Local *Page 451 830 for a period of at least one year had been negotiating with complainant for better working conditions, hours and wages of employment for complainant's employes without satisfactory adjustment, with the result that on or about November 13th, 1940, the local called a strike of complainant's New York City employes. The defendants, Ralph Rispoli and Joseph Hoffman, two of complainant's Union City employes, and Benjamin Bonn, from its Paterson store, who are members of Local 830, left complainant's employ — Rispoli on November 13th and Hoffman and Bonn on November 16th, 1940 — and engaged in picketing complainant's stores in Paterson and Union City. While picketing, they carry placards upon which is inscribed "Employes of Vim are on strike for decent working conditions. Retail Employes Union Local 830." The Newark store is being picketed by persons who, it is alleged, have never been in complainant's employ. As to them the bill recites:

"The said pickets of the Newark store never were employes of this complainant and are complete strangers to this complainant. These pickets are picketing at the same time and are walking together about three feet from the show windows. These pickets are very noisy and speak out very loudly. These pickets speak so loudly that salesmen are required to turn on the radios at full blast to enable the customers to hear the radios which are being sold. These pickets are on hand generally between eleven A.M. and ten P.M. when the Newark store closes. The manner in which these men are picketing renders passage across the sidewalk and ingress and egress to and from complainant's Newark store difficult. From time to time one of the pickets has walked up and down across the entrance lobby to the store. The presence of these pickets and the manner in which they carry on their picketing is a threat and intimidation not only to persons who are actually or prospective customers of the complainant but also with respect to the employes of this complainant."

The bill does not allege violence, threats, picketing in large numbers, or the commission of acts which are considered coercive. It is largely devoted to complainant's troubles with the New York local. It states that there is no strike in *Page 452 progress in New Jersey, and that the vacancies caused by the three defendants leaving its employ have been filled by capable, competent, efficient and experienced substitutes. However, the allegations in paragraphs 20 and 22 of the bill convey the inference of labor trouble between complainant and defendants. Those paragraphs read as follows:

20. "* * * Actually out of the forty-seven employes in the six stores in New Jersey conducted by this complainant, only three employes left their jobs, two in Union City and one in Paterson. None of the other employes have left their employment and none of the other employes have authorized a strike or have authorized Local 830 to represent them in collective bargaining."

22. "* * * All of the aforementioned employes, except the defendant, Benjamin Bonn, are presently working and are satisfied with their wages and hours and other working conditions. None of these men, except Benjamin Bonn, authorized Local 830 to call a strike for them and none of these men, except Benjamin Bonn, have authorized Local 830 to bargain collectively for them."

The defendants say that the strike of complainant's employes in both New York and New Jersey, is current and is the result of a labor dispute. They allege that their activities are of a most peaceful nature, and are of a kind recognized as proper, lawful and appropriate. They aver that they attempted in good faith to negotiate with the complainant to secure for its employes better working conditions, satisfactory hours of employment and fair wages; they asked to extend to the union, full recognition as collective bargaining agent in accordance with "the authorization of the Vim employes to that effect." The defendants further allege that the strike in progress in New York and in this state was caused solely by the complainant's attempt to "disregard its obligation to bargain with the local union."

While it may be conceded that the positions of the three former employes of complainant in this state have been filled and taken by others, that in itself does not effect a termination of the strike. While the bill alleges that the three men hired in the place of complainant's three former employes, *Page 453 are capable, competent, efficient and experienced, and are doing satisfactory work, yet complainant's conclusion to that effect is challenged by the defendants. They contend that it lacks a recital of the essential, ultimate facts which lead to the inference.

The court's language in McPherson Hotel Co. v. Smith,127 N.J. Eq. 167; 12 Atl. Rep. 2d 136, on the question of when a strike may be considered terminated, is, in the circumstances, illuminating; in part, it reads as follows:

"But when can it be said that a condition of strike no longer exists as a practical matter? Technically of course as soon as the strikers' places are filled with permanent competent men, the strikers are no longer employes of the employer, and there would be no longer in existence a `strike,' by `employes.' But obviously that is not the view held by our courts, as evidenced by their expressions. It would seem that the law in this state to-day is that where employes have gone out on strike (for a lawful purpose) that strike is deemed to continue to exist, and the strikers are deemed to continue to be employes orquasi-employes (so far as concerns the question of lawfulness of picketing by them), as long as the strike has not been abandoned, or terminated by mutual consent, and there exists some reasonable possibility that the purposes of the strike (or some of them) may still be attained."

In the instant case, the present and continuous picketing by the complainant's former employes, shows that the strike is still in progress. Newark International, c., v. TheatricalManagers, c., 126 N.J. Eq. 520; 10 Atl. Rep. 2d 274. The complainant expresses fear of loss of business from the picketing; yet, it does not show that the picketing has materially affected its business. Meyer v. Somerville WaterCo., 79 N.J. Eq. 613; 82 Atl. Rep. 915; Meyer v. SomervilleWater Co., 82 N.J. Eq. 572; 89 Atl. Rep. 545; Brunetto v. Townof Montclair, 87 N.J. Eq. 338; 100 Atl. Rep. 201; McMahon v.Pneumatic Transit Co., 85 N.J. Eq. 544; 96 Atl. Rep. 999;Schindler Adv. Co. v. Public Service Transportation Co.,97 N.J. Eq. 542;

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Bluebook (online)
16 A.2d 798, 128 N.J. Eq. 450, 7 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 768, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vim-elec-v-retail-local-830-njch-1940.