wis.E. R. Board v. International Asso., Etc.

6 N.W.2d 339, 241 Wis. 286, 144 A.L.R. 430, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 223
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 N.W.2d 339 (wis.E. R. Board v. International Asso., Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
wis.E. R. Board v. International Asso., Etc., 6 N.W.2d 339, 241 Wis. 286, 144 A.L.R. 430, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 223 (Wis. 1942).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 288 Petition filed in the circuit court under sub. (7) of sec. 111.07, Stats. 1939, by the Wisconsin Employment Relations Board (hereinafter called the "State Board") against the respondents, International Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers and Shopmen's Local No. 471 (hereinafter called "Local 471"), International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Stablemen and Helpers Union General Local No. 200 (hereinafter called "Local 200"), International Hod Carriers, Builders, Common Laborers of America Local No. 113 (hereinafter called "Local 113"), Bricklayers' Union Local No. 8 (hereinafter called "Bricklayers' Union No. 8"), and Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers' Union Local No. 8 (hereinafter called "Local 8"), for the enforcement of an order made by the State Board on December 23, 1940, requiring the respondents to "cease and desist" from certain "unfair labor practices" found by the State Board to have been committed *Page 289 by them. The order which the State Board petitioned to have enforced was made by that board in proceedings which it instituted upon the petition of Lakeside Bridge Steel Company (hereinafter called "Lakeside"), which charged that by various acts alleged in detail the respondents had engaged and were engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of sec. 111.06 (2) (b), (f), (g), and (3), Stats. 1939, by combining and conspiring to cause injury to persons with whom no labor dispute existed; by picketing and boycotting, although a majority of the employees had not voted by secret ballot to call a strike; by seeking to induce Lakeside to violate the law, and by hindering and preventing, by threats, intimidation, and coercion, the obtaining, use, and disposition by Lakeside of materials, equipment, and services. Respondents in a joint answer denied the commission of unfair labor practices as charged, and the existence of any concert or combination; and alleged, among other matters, as affirmative defenses that Local 471 had been designated by the National Labor Relations Board (hereinafter called "National Board") as the collective-bargaining agent for the production workers employed by Lakeside as the result of an election conducted by that board on June 18, 1937; that Lakeside was engaged in interstate commerce and subject to the National Labor Relations Act (49 Stats. at L. 449, 29 USCA, sec. 151 et seq.) exclusively, and Local 471 had filed with the National Board, prior to the filing of Lakeside's complaint in this proceeding, charges that Lakeside had committed unfair labor practices in violation of that act, and such charges were still pending before the National Board; and that the State Board was without jurisdiction because the company's interstate business was such as to subject it to the jurisdiction of the National Board.

After a hearing, the State Board made findings of fact which briefly summarized are, so far as here material, to the following effect. After Local 471 was selected as the exclusive *Page 290 collective-bargaining agent for Lakeside's production workers through an election held by the National Board, Lakeside, on June 23, 1937, entered into a collective-bargaining contract with Local 471, which expired February 1, 1938, and was renewed orally for a period of two weeks, and since then Local 471 has not had any contractual relations with Lakeside. From September, 1938, no attempts were made by Local 471 to enter into such relations until July 31, 1940, after which on a number of occasions, until November 17, 1940, representatives of Local 471 sought to negotiate on behalf of Lakeside's production employees, a collective-bargaining agreement covering wages, hours, and other working conditions, but no employee of Lakeside joined in the negotiations at conferences held between Lakeside and representatives of Local 471. Local 471 admits to membership only production workers of Lakeside, and in 1937 and 1938 had one hundred thirteen fully paid-up members, but commencing in 1938 members ceased paying dues, until about one year previous to the hearing the members paying dues had been reduced to five or six, and because approximately one hundred seven members had failed to pay dues within a year after they became due, their membership in Local 471 was automatically forfeited under its rules, regulations, and by-laws. Because Lakeside and Local 471 could not come to a mutual understanding regarding the right of the latter to exclusive representation of all production workers and regarding proposed terms of an agreement pertaining to wages, hours, and working conditions, Local 471, on November 4, 1940, commenced picketing and has since continued such picketing daily near the entrance for trucks on Lakeside's premises. The pickets, numbering generally from two to eight, and twenty on one occasion, display a banner with the printed legend "Lakeside Bridge Steel Company has no contract with Local 471, A.F.L. Please do not patronize." The legend is a fraud on the public and on other A.F.L. unions, in that the legend *Page 291 impliedly states that Local 471 has the right and that Lakeside is free to make a contract with Local 471, when no such right in Local 471 and no such freedom in Lakeside exists. Readers of the legend were misled as to the true facts involved in the controversy between Lakeside and Local 471, and this fraudulent advertising, as an incident of picketing, characterizes the picketing itself as fraudulent, and the effect of this deceptive picketing and bannering had induced officers and members of the respondent unions and others interested in union labor movement to loose upon Lakeside and its independent contractors and truckers damaging economic pressure, which Local 471 calculates would follow from such conduct. On November 4, 1940, Peter Schoemann, acting as the agent for Local 113 and Bricklayers' Union No. 8 and also as president of Milwaukee Building Trades Council, with which those unions were affiliated, informed a construction company, which was erecting structures on Lakeside's premises, that it had labor trouble with Local 471, and that a picket line had been established by Local 471; and upon the contractor's receiving such information, it had its employees cease with further construction work for Lakeside until Local 471 ceased picketing. Likewise, when on November 4, 1940, the superintendent of another contractor, who was to erect a fence for Lakeside, requested the business agent of Local 8 to supply him with a crew from among the members of Local 8, he refused the request and told the superintendent that he would furnish no crew until Local 471 ceased picketing activities at Lakeside. All of the respondents made common cause against Lakeside and the quarrel between Local 471 and Lakeside became the quarrel of each and in the pursuit of their common objective to have Local 471 succeed in obtaining a contract from Lakeside recognizing Local 471 as the exclusive bargaining agent for all of Lakeside's production workers, and respondents adopted a course of coercive conduct directed against Lakeside with the intent and purpose of producing *Page 292 injury and damage to Lakeside's business and by co-operating in this common plan to cause injury and damage to Lakeside, without engaging in actual violence, respondents incited and caused the withdrawal of services of union members from their respective employers when their services were required the performance of contracts by their employers with Lakeside.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.W.2d 339, 241 Wis. 286, 144 A.L.R. 430, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wise-r-board-v-international-asso-etc-wis-1942.