Judges: Fowler
Filed Date: 4/18/1941
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 381
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 382
Petition by the Wisconsin Employment Relations Board against Milk Ice Cream Drivers Dairy Employees Union, Local No. 225, etc., under sub. (7) of sec.
Some evidentiary facts about which there is no dispute and make more readily apparent the issues will be here stated. The Golden Guernsey Dairy Co-operative, referred to herein as "the company," is a corporation engaged at Milwaukee in the *Page 383
wholesale and retail dairy business, buying and selling milk, cream, and other dairy products, and producing and processing some of its products. It sells its merchandise by truck and its drivers are paid commissions on their sales. The Milk Ice Cream Drivers Dairy Employees Union, Local 225, referred to herein as "the union," is a labor union affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. It has about two thousand members engaged as drivers, salesmen, and other employees in the ice-cream and dairy business at Milwaukee. The company had for several years had an all-union contract with the union which was about to expire upon notice, but to continue for another year unless notice of discontinuance was given. The union was the bargaining agent for the company employees. On giving notice of the termination of the existing contract the' company informed the union that it would enter into a new contract with the union, but would not enter into a contract containing an all-union provision unless such provision was desired by three fourths of its employees as required by sec.
Pursuant to the plans of the executive committee of the union, extensive like advertising was carried on by the union throughout the city, through newspapers, by men carrying signs, by automobiles following delivery wagons of the company, by a man on a bicycle. The gist of the matter thus advertised was that the company and its employees were unfair to *Page 386 organized labor. Pickets carried such signs at the company's plants and at some places where its products were delivered.
From the evidence before it the board made findings as to the activities of the union which are more specifically referred to in the body of the opinion. Other facts relating to these activities will be there stated so far as deemed material to our rulings.
The following opinion was filed June 25, 1941:
The proceedings involved were duly instituted by the Wisconsin Employment Relations Board upon the petition of the Golden Guernsey Dairy Co-operative against the Milk Ice Cream Drivers Dairy Employees Union, Local 225, under ch. 111, Stats. 1939, hereinafter referred to as "the act," enacted in furtherance of "the public policy of the state as to employment relations and collective bargaining." Secs.
After the judgment of the court was entered and notice of its entry given to the union, the board by petition to the circuit court charged that the union, its officers, and certain members wilfully and contumaciously committed acts in violation of provisions of the court's judgment and asked that they be dealt with as in contempt of the court. The court by order required the defendant union to show cause why it should not be so dealt with. The union by answer denied in part committing the acts charged and admitted them in part and claimed justification of the admitted acts under the free-speech clause of the United States constitution and the Fourteenth amendment. Upon hearing had before the judge who rendered the judgment, the president, vice-president, and secretary of the union were adjudged guilty of contempt of court and punishment therefor was imposed. The defendant officers so adjudged appeal to this court. The two appeals were argued and submitted together and are treated in this opinion.
The findings of fact made by the board on which the order involved is based are serially numbered from 1 to 19, inclusive. The union in its brief assigns as error that the court erred in sustaining these findings of fact because they are not supported by "credible and competent evidence." The credibility of the evidence was for the board to determine. No incompetent evidence is pointed out, unless the claim of incompetency is that the evidence is not "substantial" or "more than a scintilla." It is conceded that to be of probative force to support findings, evidence must be of this nature. The brief does not *Page 388
point out specifically any of the nineteen findings as not supported by the evidence. The findings of the board, if supported by credible and competent evidence, are conclusive. Sec.
Sec.
Sec.
Sec.
Therefore if the board found on sufficient evidence that the union "caused to be done" any acts in violation of pars. (f) and (g), above stated, it had power to issue an order requiring the union to cease and desist from the commissions of those acts, and its order so far as it required the union to cease and desist from such acts was valid and the judgment of the court was not in error in confirming such cease-and-desist order.
That the union "caused to be done" the picketing and all other acts recited in the statement of facts preceding the opinion is beyond dispute. Therefore such of those acts as *Page 389 constituted unfair labor practices the board properly required the union to cease and desist from doing and the court properly adjudged to be enforced.
The board by paragraph a of its finding of fact numbered 15 found that beginning early April 5th, while the company was loading its delivery trucks a picket line formed and passed to and fro in front of the company's plant. The number in line during the loading period frequently numbered from forty to ninety-five. The pickets marched slowly two by two, back and forth, with short steps, and close together. Policemen present were forced on an average of eight to ten times each morning to break or open this line to permit entrance and emergence of the trucks. The interference and delay thus caused made it necessary for the company to employ additional help to approximate its usual loading time. After the delivery trucks left the plant, the number of pickets decreased, but picketing continued throughout the day and into the night. It decreased somewhat after commencement of the proceeding before the board, but with such decrease all these acts continued down to the time of trial. By this finding the board in effect found that by mass picketing the union hindered the pursuit of lawful work of the company, and that it obstructed and interfered with entrance and egress to and from the company's plant.
By paragraph b of finding 15 the board found that the automobiles sent by the union to follow the company's delivery trucks to their places of delivery on many occasions cut in ahead of the trucks, impeded their progress, and prevented their proper parking in making deliveries, and generally interfered with the free and unobstructed use of the streets by the trucks, and endangered the safety of the drivers and the property of the company. It also found that at places of delivery there was frequent interference by the picketing carried on by the occupants of the automobiles with the free and *Page 390
unobstructed use of the sidewalks by the company drivers. These findings of the board are clearly supported by the evidence, and constituted such hindrance of the pursuit of lawful work and such obstruction of ingress and egress to and from the plant and of the use of the public streets and sidewalks as to constitute violations of both pars. (f) and (g) of sec.
The union contends that the picketing done at the places of business of the company's customers was not aimed at the owners of these places and that these places therefore were not picketed, but that the picketing involved was only of the trucks and their drivers. We regard this contention as sophistry. In our opinion it constituted a picketing of the places of business before which it occurred. Counsel also claim that the acts done did not constitute coercion or intimidation of the customers. That it did not constitute putting in fear of physical harm is true, but it is plain that it did constitute coercion.
We do not find it necessary to consider any other provisions of the cease-and-desist provisions of the judgment except paragraphs c, e, and h. All of the cease-and-desist provisions are set out in the margin. 1 *Page 392
It will be observed on inspection that all but paragraphs c, e, and h are general in their terms. None other mentions any specific act. It is contended that the acts done by the union respecting the matters covered by the other provisions did not constitute "coercion" or "intimidation." If not, then these acts are not under the ban of the judgment. As to paragraphs c and h, they ban asserting that the company is "unfair to organized labor or to the respondent union." Some of the placards proclaim the company as "unfair to organized labor, Local 225." Because of this we consider c and h proper. There may be some question, at least there is some contradiction in the authorities, as to whether doing or refusing to do certain acts render an employer "unfair," but there certainly can be no controversy over the proposition that an employer is not "unfair" when his only act is refusing to do and refraining from doing what the law forbids him from doing. All the company has done in this case, if the evidence produced by the company is believed, and the board and the trial court properly believed it, is to refuse to sign an all-union contract and to refrain from trying to influence its employees in respect to joining or not joining the independent union or the defendant union, and to refrain from interfering with its employees in *Page 393
respect to their choice of a bargaining representative o, r their attitude as to an all-union contract. It has done nothing proscribed by sec.
Counsel cite recent decisions of the United States supreme court to the proposition that it is proper in labor controversies to placard that an employer is unfair: Lauf v. E. G. Shinner Co.
Paragraph e of the judgment bans "hindering . . . by threats the obtaining [or] . . . use by the company's customers of its merchandise or services." So doing is in *Page 394
contravention of par. (g) of sec.
We consider that we have covered sufficiently the contents of the cease-and-desist order of the court. If those provisions are in point of law such as the court might properly enter, those provisions of the judgment of the court must be sustained. The only contention of the appellant that those provisions are erroneous is that they violate the free-speech and free-press provisions of the United States constitution and are therefore prohibited by the Fourteenth amendment. This contention is based upon three recent decisions of the United States supreme court: American Federation of Labor v.Swing,
"Picketing which in itself is peaceful may be coercive when set in a background of violence." (
With like reason may it be said that picketing which is unlawful is not justified on the ground that it is a proper exercise of the right of free speech. Paragraph 5 of the syllabus reads:
"The supreme court of the United States cannot say that the finding of a state court that a momentum of fear generated by past violence may survive even though future picketing may be wholly peaceful, so contradicts experience as to warrant rejection." (
With like or greater reason, the supreme court of the United States may not say that the statutory provisions above referred to contained in pars. (f) and (g) of sec.
It is said in American Furn. Co. v. I. B. of T. C. H. of A.
We find nothing inconsistent between the provisions of the cease-and-desist order covered by pars. (f) and (g) of sec.
"All that we have before us, then, is an instance of `peaceful persuasion' disentangled from violence and free from *Page 397 `picketing en masse or otherwise conducted' so as to occasion `imminent and aggravated danger.'"
We should not extend the rule of that case beyond the point at which the court itself stopped. Here we have violations of the statutes above mentioned as to which no question of constitutionality is raised.
All that was decided in the Thornhill Case, supra, p. 94, reducing it to its lowest terms, is that the statute there involved was void because it forbade picketing that was free from violence and in which the pickets only said that "they were on strike and did not want anybody to go up there to work." The picketing involved in the Thornhill Case was free from violence, but picketing is not lawful merely because it is free from violence. It is said by the United States supreme court in theSenn Case, supra, that picketing to be peaceful must not only be free from violence, but there must be "absence of any unlawful act. . . . It [peaceful picketing] precludes any form of physical obstruction or interference with the plaintiff's business." As above pointed out, there was here physical obstruction and physical interference with the company's business, both by mass picketing which is expressly excluded from consideration in the Thornhill Case, and which is there conceded to be subject to inhibition when properly particularized, and by obstruction to and interference with ingress and egress and use of streets, the latter to such an extent as to endanger safety of persons and property.
The Carlson Case, supra, involved violation during a strike of an ordinance by picketing, but it seems to be sufficiently distinguished from the instant situation by the statement in the opinion, page 110, that —
"During this period [of picketing, 7:30 to 9 a.m.] vehicles and persons passed freely without any molestations or interference through the picket line from the highway to the project and from the project to the highway, and the traffic *Page 398 of persons and automobiles along the highway was not obstructed."
As to violations of pars. (f) and (g) of sec.
The court in the Senn Case, supra, in saying, page 479, "Senn did not contend that it was untruthful to characterize him as `unfair,' if the requirement that he refrain from working with his own hands was a lawful one," plainly implies that one charged with being "unfair" may prove the fact to establish that he is not unfair, and that if he so establish, to placard him as unfair is unlawful. To assert that one is unfair to organized labor may properly be adjudged to be an unfair labor practice where, as here, the evidence shows that the assertion is false.
Since submission of the case appellant's counsel have by letter called attention to a per curiam decision of the supreme court of the United States announced June 2d, Bakery andPastry Drivers Helpers Local 802 v. Wohl and Platzman,
We believe the above sufficiently covers the claims of appellants respecting errors affecting the judgment of the court sustaining the board's order, except the claim that the board improperly rejected evidence offered by the union.
The rejected evidence was offered as of probative force in support of the union's contention that the company was "unfair" to organized labor. The items of rejected evidence will be briefly stated and our ruling given. (1) The president of the company was active in promoting the enactment by the legislature of ch. 111, Laws of 1939, and repealing the then existing ch. 111, Stats., which resulted in the creation of the present and abolished the then existing labor board. We fail to perceive that this has probative force upon the question of the company's fairness or unfairness toward the union. (2) The secretary of the union was asked what arguments were presented at the meeting of the union on April 4th relating to the questions submitted to vote at that meeting. Objection to the question was properly sustained. (3) The president of the company was asked whether any complaints were made to him as to unlawful acts by any of the strikers and offered to show that none was made. The objection was properly sustained, and testimony properly rejected. (4) A question was asked whether a route foreman of the company had engaged in antiunion activities. Objection to it was properly sustained. (5) A question was asked whether employees quit their employment with the company because of domination by the company over the independent union. The objection was properly sustained. *Page 400
As to the contempt matter, it seems not open to question that the appellants charged with contempt were properly adjudged guilty if they intentionally and knowingly violated any of the provisions of the judgment. It is said in State exrel. Attorney General v. Fasekas,
"The order and judgment of the court finding the defendant, Fasekas, guilty of contempt must be sustained on the authority of State ex rel. Fowler v. Circuit Court (1898),
Under the rule above stated, it was the duty of the union and its officers and members to obey the provisions of the judgment of the court until they were reversed on appeal or by the trial court set aside, modified, or declared to be no longer in force in some proper proceeding. Whether the provisions of the judgment were right or wrong in point of law is immaterial upon the proposition of obedience to them under the rule stated. We have first to determine whether the trial court was correct in adjudging that the defendants charged with contempt intentionally committed acts in violation of those provisions.
The court found, and it is not disputed, that the union continued to picket the company's main plant after the rendition of the judgment and the service of notice of its entry and of its terms upon the defendant union each day from early in the *Page 401 morning to 6 o'clock at night by pickets working in regular shifts; that said picketing consisted of from two to five pickets walking the sidewalks in front of the Golden Guernsey plant, one of whom wore an apron bearing the legend front and back: "2,000 milkmen from Local 225 beg your support. Do not patronize Golden Guernsey Dairy Employees." The same type of picketing was carried on during the same hours daily at the Golden Guernsey ice-cream plant and store located across the street from the main plant. The court also found that the union, for the purpose of injuring the Golden Guernsey Company, caused to be parked daily, at or near an advertising sign of the Golden Guernsey Company in the form of an immense milk jug located on one of the main approaches to the city, one or more automobiles from 5 to 7 o'clock p.m., and having a sign thereon bearing the legend above stated. This practice was not begun until after the judgment of the court affirming the order of the board was rendered.
The court further found that the union has continued to have the delivery trucks followed by automobiles, substantially as before entry of judgment, except on Sundays, and with signs as next above stated. Picketing at the places of the wholesale customers at times of delivery also continued as before the judgment. One or two occupants of the cars walked before the customer's place of business carrying a sign as next above stated. The extent to which the union has continued its violation of the provisions of the court's judgment, and the results of such continued violations, is stated in two of its findings that are sustained by the evidence, as follows:
"The union employed pickets to follow the wholesale route drivers of the Golden Guernsey while engaged in the delivery of milk to customers. Such practice has been persistent and continuous, except on Sundays; but it is not usually continuous throughout the entire route. Such following is usually a few car lengths behind the Golden Guernsey trucks, whose *Page 402 drivers in a number of instances have attempted to operate their trucks in such a manner as to cause their pursuers to lose sight of them. On one occasion a Golden Guernsey truck driver was pursued in Racine county at a speed of forty to fifty miles per hour by pickets, who, after overtaking the Golden Guernsey truck, drove ahead of it in such a manner as to cause the driver of the latter to fear that his truck would be ditched. When the route driver of the Golden Guernsey reaches the customer's place of business one or two pickets engage in picketing the place of business of the customer, regardless of the position of the route driver's truck. The pickets who follow the route driver usually park their automobiles very close to the rear of the route driver's truck while the latter is delivering milk. This surveillance and following of the company's truck drivers on wholesale routes has continued and, in recent days, has been conducted with increased vigor and persistency. . . .
"The methods employed by the union in following the Golden Guernsey trucks tend to endanger public traffic and to impair the driving control of the Golden Guernsey drivers."
Other specific findings of fact were made by the circuit judge, none of which we deem it necessary to set out, because the facts above stated sufficiently show that the cease-and-desist order of the court was disobeyed by picketing at the plant, by following the company trucks, and by picketing the stores of the wholesalers. The union contends that the facts stated did not constitute a violation of the order because the facts found were not aimed at the company or its customers but only at the drivers. The judgment banned the picketing, regardless of at whom it was aimed. The picketing at the plant was obviously a picketing of the company notwithstanding that the placards used subsequent to the entry of the judgment read "Golden Guernsey employees" instead of "Golden Guernsey Company." The mere device of pasting the word "employees" over the word "company" on these placards as was done, did not change the effect of the picketing of the plant of the company, or the picketing of the wholesale *Page 403 customers during' the times of delivery. As stated in discussion of the main case, paragraph a of the cease-and-desist portion of the judgment plainly required the union to cease and desist from picketing the company plant and the stores of its wholesale customers and so following the company trucks with automobiles as to endanger traffic or interfere with or obstruct the free use of the streets by the company trucks and drivers. Whatever else was involved in their acts did not obviate or evade the violations thus found.
The court further found that the president, vice-president, and secretary-treasurer of the union, the persons charged with contempt of court, intentionally and deliberately planned and instigated the acts found to have been committed:
"(a) In an attempt to exert compulsion upon the Golden Guernsey to enter into an all-union agreement with said union; (b) in an attempt to exert compulsion upon the Golden Guernsey to interfere with its employees in the exercise of their right to freely select their own bargaining agency without interference in their right to refrain from being subject to an, all-union agreement; (c) in an attempt to intimidate the employees of the Golden Guernsey in the exercise of their right to work for that company without molestation; (d) in an attempt to hinder by intimidation the disposition by the Golden Guernsey of its merchandise and services to its customers and the obtaining, use and disposition by its customers of its products and services; and for the purpose of causing such customers to cease buying and receiving the products and services of said company until such all-union agreement shall have been entered into between the company and its employees."
The court further found, as bringing the proceedings within sec. 295.01, Stats., prescribing the procedure in contempt-of-court cases, that these acts "were calculated to, and actually did, defeat, impede and prejudice" the rights and remedies of the board, who were the petitioners in the contempt proceedings, who have the right and are charged with the duty to *Page 404 prosecute the instant enforcement procedure under ch. 111, Stats. 1939, and that these acts have caused and are causing injury to the Golden Guernsey Company and to its employees.
Under these findings the conviction and sentence by the court was correct and must be affirmed unless the court erred in not granting a jury trial on the appellants' motion therefor or in denying their motion to have another judge called in on the filing of an affidavit of prejudice against the trial judge.
Like motions, based on the same statute (sec. 268.27 (3) and (4), Stats. 1931; sec.
"In all cases where a person shall be charged with civil or criminal contempt for violation of a restraining order or injunction issued by a court or judge or judges thereof, the accused shall enjoy: (1) . . . (2) . . . (3) . . . [right of jury trial]. (4) The right to file with the court a demand for the retirement of the judge sitting in the proceeding, upon an affidavit of prejudice being filed as is now provided by law in other cases. . . ."
We consider that neither par. (3) nor (4) of sec.
It is true that a trial court in New York has ruled (Bolandv. Parisi, 18 N.Y. Supp. 2d 698) that a provision of the New York code of civil procedure, similar to sec.
It follows that the order of the circuit court must be affirmed.
By the Court. — The judgment and order of the circuit court are affirmed.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, without costs, on October 7, 1941.
1. Cease and desist from —
a. Coercing or attempting to compel the complainant [Golden Guernsey Company, a corporation, hereinafter referred to as the "complainant"], by picketing its plant, obstructing the ingress to or the egress from its plant, interfering with its delivery trucks or the drivers of the same, picketing the residences or places of business of any of the complainant's customers, exercising any form of coercion toward or intimidation of any such customers, or in any other way, to make or enter into a labor contract with the respondent containing an all-union or closed-shop provision.
b. Coercing in any way or attempting to compel the complainant to interfere with its employees in the exercise of their legal right to refrain from being subject to a labor contract containing an all-union or closed-shop provision.
c. Publicly asserting in any way that the complainant is unfair to organized labor or to the respondent union, unless such charge is based upon some reason other than that the complainant has declined to enter into a labor contract with the respondent containing an all-union or closed-shop provision.
d. Intimidating in any way the employees of the complainant in the exercise of their legal right to work for the complainant without molestation.
e. Hindering by threats or intimidation of any sort the disposition by the complainant of its merchandise or services to its customers, and the obtaining, use or disposition by the customers of its merchandise or services.
f. Engaging in or conducting any secondary boycott of any customer of the complainant.
g. Exercising any form of coercion toward or intimidation of any the complainant's customers.
h. Asserting to any of the complainant's customers that the complainant is unfair to organized labor or to the respondent union because the complainant has declined to enter into an all-union or closed-shop labor contract with the respondent.
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