delivered the opinion of the court:
Defendants, who are a teachers’ union, and certain of its officers and members, were convicted of criminal contempt for wilfully failing to comply with a temporary restraining order issued against them by the circuit court of Kankakee County. A fine of $12,000 was levied on the union while lesser fines, and in some instances jail sentences of 60 days, were meted out against the individual defendants. They have appealed, raising constitutional questions which serve to invest us with jurisdiction to entertain a direct appeal.
During the month of April, 1969, the Kankakee Federation of Teachers Local No. 886 and the Board of Education of Kankakee School District No. m were engaged in contract negotiations. After ineffectual meetings and correspondence, which nonetheless left the door open for further negotiations, the union dispatched a telegram to the Board president on April 25, shortly after midnight, advising him that the membership had voted “to withhold teaching services beginning Friday, April 25, 1969, until satisfactory agreements on a new contract and other matters are reached.” Later in the morning, when the time for school to start arrived, the majority of the teachers were on strike and many of them picketed at the schools. As a consequence, all but one of the Board’s fifteen schools were unable to operate. It may be stated at this time that such a strike by school employees was unlawful as being in violation of the expressed public policy of this State. See: Board of Education of Community Unit School District No. 2 v. Redding (1965),
Because of the statute requiring a 24-hour public notice to be given prior to a special meeting, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, ch. 102, par. 42.02,) the Board could take no official action until Saturday, April 26. A meeting was held the latter date and after its conclusion in late afternoon, an attorney for the Board presented a complaint to a judge of the circuit court, properly supported by affidavit, praying for a temporary injunction, without notice or bond, restraining defendants from striking and picketing, and from inducing or encouraging others to do so. (See: Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, ch. 69, par. 3 — 1). In substance, and patterned to a degree after the decision in Redding, the complaint alleged that the strike was in violation of the declared public policy of this State and therefore unlawful; that it had interrupted the operation of schools causing immediate and irreparable damage to the public; and that it prevented the Board from fulfilling its constitutional duty to provide the district with a thorough and efficient system of free schools. No prior notice was given defendants, nor was there an attempt to do so, and, at 5 :4s P.M. a temporary restraining order was entered granting the relief prayed. By 8:30 P.M. of the same day, Saturday, April 26, the sheriff had served the temporary restraining order on all but one of defendants, and he was served the following day.
On Monday, April 28, the teachers continued to strike and picket. No effort was made by defendants to vacate or dissolve the restraining order, or to otherwise seek judicial relief with respect thereto. On the same day the Board filed a motion for a preliminary injunction in accordance with sections 3 and 3 — 1 of the Injunction Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, ch. 69, pars. 3 and 3 — 1,) which was set for hearing on Friday, May 2. Defendants appeared at the hearing but filed no pleadings, presented no evidence and in no manner sought to attack the legal basis for either the temporary order or the preliminary injunction. The latter injunction was issued but, as in the case of the temporary restraining order, defendants ignored it. As we interpret the record, the strike continued and the schools remained closed until May 12, the date upon which the trial court ruled on the evidence and found defendants in contempt.
Pursuant to a petition filed by the Board on April 29 an order entered on that date directed defendants to appear and to show cause why they should not be held in contempt and punished for disobeying the temporary restraining order. Hearing on the matter was held Monday, May 5, and on this occasion defendants filed a motion to dismiss the contempt proceedings. As grounds therefore it was alleged that the issuance of the temporary restraining order without notice or hearing deprived defendants of due process of law, and that both the petition for a rule to show cause and the order entered thereon were so vague, indefinite and uncertain as to violate the requirements of due process. The motion was denied and, after hearing evidence on both sides, the court found certain of the defendants in contempt and imposed fines and sentences as heretofore related. As to two of the individual defendants, however, the evidence was found to be insufficient to show that they had violated the restraining order and the rule to show cause was dismissed as to them. In this regard, the defendants appealing do not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support their convictions.
To obtain a reversal defendants rely principally on Carroll v. President and Commissioners of Princess Anne (1968),
Inasmuch as the order in the instance case restrained defendants from picketing, which defendants see as the precise legal equivalent of free speech, it is contended that the same basic infirmity in the procedure by which the order was obtained requires it to be set aside and the contempt convictions held for naught. But we believe it clear that Carroll is inapposite, and of no persuasion here.
We are not dealing with a prior restraint, nor was the trial court, when asked to issue the temporary restraining order, confronted with a constitutionally protected area of free speech. Picketing, while a mode of communicating ideas, is not dogmatically equated with constitutionally protected speech, (Hughes v. Superior Court of California,
More in keeping with the circumstances of this case are the teachings of Howat v. Kansas,
Unquestionably the court below had the necessary jurisdiction. Section 1 of the Injunction Act provides that our circuit courts shall have the power to grant writs of injunction, and by the provision of section 3 — 1 they are authorized to grant temporary restraining orders, without notice, where it “clearly appears from specific facts shown by affidavit or by the verified complaint that immediate and irreparable injury, loss, or damage will result to the applicant before notice can be served and a hearing had thereon.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, ch. 69, pars. 1 and 3—1.) Noteworthy also, in light of defendants’ choice to ignore the order, is the further language of section 3 — 1 which states: “On 2 days’ notice to the party who obtained the temporary restraining order without notice or on such shorter notice to that party as the court may prescribe, the adverse party may appear and move its dissolution or modification and in that event the court shall proceed to hear and determine such motion as expeditiously as the ends of justice require.” Nor, since defendants failed to attack it, can there be any question here of the sufficiency of the complaint to justify the issuance without notice. (See: Miollis v. Schneider,
Defendants next urge that the petition for rule to show cause and the order entered thereon are vague and uncertain, and insufficient to give them notice of the charges against them, the thrust of their argument being that both the petition and order should have spelled out names, dates, places and the specific conduct which constituted a violation of the order. Upon examination of the petition and the order which incorporates the petition, and bearing in mind that each of the defendants had been served with the restraining order so as to be aware of the prohibited conduct, we find no merit to this contention. In essence, defendants are contending that the evidence against them should have been pleaded. But it is a rule of pleading long established, that a pleader is not required to set out his evidence. To the contrary, only the ultimate facts to be proved should be alleged and not the evidentiary facts tending to prove such ultimate facts. (Levinson v. Home Bank and Trust Co.,
During the course of the contempt hearing the court permitted a witness for the Board to testify, without objection by defendants, that one of the defendants had stated at a public meeting held May 3, 1969, that "no court nor anybody else could bulldoze the teachers into coming in the school room [aíc] Defendants now make the belated and fanciful claim that the admission and consideration of such evidence has the effect of inhibiting free speech, and also assert, as we interpret the vague argument advanced, that the contempt order may have punished the defendant in question for having exercised his right of free speech. We need look no further than the oral findings of the court to dispel the latter contention, for they clearly show that it was his actions, not his statements, upon which the court based its conclusion that the defendant had wilfully disobeyed the restraining order. Nor was the evidence inadmissible under any theory that it was protected free speech. Such an expansive interpretation of the constitutional guarantee of free speech would make it impossible to enforce laws against conspiracies, solicitation and like offenses, and would render a court powerless to hear subjective evidence of intent. The questioned statement here was relevant to the issue of whether the disobedience of the restraining order had been wilful on the part of this defendant, and, in its context as relevant evidence, was not meant to be sheltered by the constitutional guarantees of free speech.
The judgment of the circuit court of Kankakee County was correct, and it is therefore affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
