Willson & Adams Co. v. Pearce

135 Misc. 426, 237 N.Y.S. 601, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 965
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 10, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 135 Misc. 426 (Willson & Adams Co. v. Pearce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willson & Adams Co. v. Pearce, 135 Misc. 426, 237 N.Y.S. 601, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 965 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

The plaintiffs, twenty-eight in number, are dealers in building materials, conducting business in Westchester county, some of them upon a large, and others upon a smaller scale. The amount of their gross annual business varies from $1,500,000, the highest, to $150,000, the lowest. Each has a substantial capital investment. Some have very large investments. Many of the concerns have been established for years. The good will and business of each plaintiff constitutes a valuable asset. Each plaintiff employs nonunion drivers (chauffeurs or teamsters), helpers, and yardmen. Each has a yard from which materials are sold, excepting one. Each annually makes many deliveries by truck to customers — in the aggregate the plaintiffs average 1,000 deliveries per working day. Each plaintiff had outstanding contracts for materials to be supplied [428]*428and unfulfilled at the time when the injunction pendente lite herein was granted in May, 1925. Some of the plaintiffs operate mills, one of them, Kapp & Nordholm Company, operates a mill only. In these mills union workmen are employed — members of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America. No plaintiff does any actual work upon any building operation, and, therefore, is not in that way in direct contact with the trades working thereon. The plaintiffs simply deliver materials to the different jobs. Before the incidents which immediately preceded the injunction herein, no plaintiff had labor difficulties with employees. Only a few of the plaintiffs actually had difficulties then; the injunction prevented similar incidents in the case of each of the other plaintiffs.

The defendants, excepting McGeory and Wildberger, are officers or business agents of the local labor unions involved, viz., (1) of teamsters, etc., (2) of carpenters, etc., (3) of bricklayers, etc., and (4) of hodcarriers, etc. These (excepting teamsters) are among the building trades of the county. The defendant Pearce, whose activities on behalf of the local teamsters’ union are here particularly involved, is the business agent of that union (Local No. 456). His activities set in motion the drastic actions of the Building Trades Council hereinafter mentioned. The local unions are, in effect, parties to this action by representation. (General Assn. Law, § 12 et seq. [added by Laws of 1920, chap. 915]; Auburn Draying Co. v. Wardell, 227 N. Y. 1, p. 4.) The defendants McGeory and Wildberger are respectively president and treasurer of the voluntary association called the Building Trades Council of Westchester County, the federation composed of delegates (business agents), sixty-seven in number, from the local unions of the county, including those enumerated in the title. Said council elects its own officers. It has power to call, and upon occasion, it is conceded, it has called strikes of craftsmen, members of the represented unions, upon building operations. In law, it is the agent of those unions in so doing. If a grievance of one craft, relating to a building operation, is filed, the council may vote, and frequently has voted, “ support ” or assistance by other member trades; the council has called out on strike, in certain instances, crafts working on a building, whether the alleged grievance directly affected them or not. As the evidence warrants, and indeed requires, the finding that the said building trades are practically 100 per cent unionized, it is perceptible that the said council is a very powerful body, if its acts are within the law, and that it constitutes serious menace to property rights, if its acts are illegal and result in trespasses.

In effect, in this action for an injunction to restrain alleged unlawful acts of the defendants and of the members of the council and [429]*429local unions, done and/or threatened as against the plaintiffs, the latter allege, and the defendants deny, that the defendants and said members, since April, 1925, until restrained pendente lite, have been in a combination or conspiracy (1) to injure the good will, trade, and business of each plaintiff and (2) to prevent each plaintiff from conducting business until such time as such plaintiff shall compel the laborers, teamsters, and chauffeurs, so employed and used in such plaintiff’s handling and delivery of materials to customers, to become members of Local 456, the Teamsters’ Union, and until such time as such plaintiff shall refrain from employing non-members thereof. It is fair to state that the injunction, which has been extant during the considerable period during which the action has been pending, has been respected by the defendants both in letter and in spirit, and to this extent, at least, the defendants are entitled to commendation for having performed that duty.

The activities of the defendants cause this case to bear, in certain fundamental respects, at least some resemblance to one decided by our highest court (Auburn Draying Co. v. Wardell, 227 N. Y. 1). It must be admitted, however, that the case at bar does not present the rather aggravated features which characterized the acts of defendants in the case cited, and which, undoubtedly, was strongly influential with the court in arriving at its decision to issue the injunction therein. Indeed, what was done by the defendants in the case at bar was, undoubtedly, done by advice of learned counsel that this case, in its facts would be distinguishable from the Auburn Draying Co. case, which presented such a decided invasion of the rights of the plaintiff therein. At all events, the principles of law set forth in the Auburn Draying Co. case, as well as those declared in Bossert v. Dhuy (221 N. Y. 342), will be helpful, if not decisive, in the disposition of this litigation.

It is charged by the plaintiffs and denied — in some instances in a qualified way — by defendants (1) that the council, acting for all defendants and union members, has called strikes of all trades of building operations to which plaintiffs through non-union drivers or chauffeurs, have delivered materials, regardless of the fact whether such trades used the delivered materials or not; (2) that in some instances strikes have been called upon other jobs of a given contrator, even though such material handled by non-union drivers had not been delivered to the other jobs; (3) that threats have been made to persons conducting building operations that strikes would be called of all trades thereon if materials furnished by a given plaintiff were used in the operations — this because the delivery agencies of the given plaintiff were non-union in character; (4) that willful attempts have been made to induce breaches of contracts for [430]*430materials between plaintiffs and their customers, builders; and (5) that defendants have tied up operations in instances where builders have not complied with the defendants’ attempts asserted by plaintiffs to be unlawful. In my opinion these charges are sustained by the evidence.

The plaintiffs claim, and defendants deny, that plaintiffs have suffered irreparable injury to their good will, trade and business, and that further injury of like character is to be anticipated reasonably, unless the acts of defendants, which are threatened and which are like in character to those already done, are restrained by judicial fiat. If the acts complained of are illegal, it is clear that the damages caused by them to the plaintiffs are not capable of exact estimate or computation, and. that equitable intervention is proper. No money damages may be awarded upon the proofs herein.

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Related

Willson & Adams Co. v. Pearce
240 A.D. 718 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
135 Misc. 426, 237 N.Y.S. 601, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willson-adams-co-v-pearce-nysupct-1929.