delivered the opinion of the Court.
We brought these two cases here to determine whether injunctions sanctioned by the New York Court of Appeals exceeded the bounds within which the Fourteenth Amendment confines state power.
We start with the Court of Appeals’ view of the facts. In No. 36, petitioners, a labor union and its president, picketed a cafeteria in an attempt to organize it. The cafeteria was owned by the respondents, who themselves conducted the business without the aid of any employees. Picketing was carried on by a parade of one person at a time in front of the premises. The successive pickets were “at all times orderly and peaceful.” They carried signs which tended to give the impression that the respondents were “unfair” to organized labor and that the pickets had been previously employed in the cafeteria. These representations were treated by the court below as knowingly false in that there had been no employees in the cafeteria and the respondents were “not unfair to organized labor.” It also found that pickets told prospective customers that the cafeteria served bad food, and that by “patronizing” it “they were aiding the cause of Fascism.”
The circumstances in No. 37 differ from those in No. 36 only in that pickets were found to have told prospective customers that a strike was in progress and to have “insulted customers . . . who were about to enter” the cafeteria. Upon a finding that respondents required equitable relief to avoid irreparable damages and that there was no “labor dispute” under the New York analogue
*295
of the Norris-La Guardia Act (§ 876-a of the New York Civil Practice Act), the trial court enjoined petitioners.in broad termsj^oxa picketing at or nearrespondents’ places oUbushiessT The decrees were affirmed by the Appellate Division (
In
Senn
v.
Tile Layers Union,
The present situation is thus wholly outside the scope of the decision in
Milk Wagon Drivers Union
v.
Meado
w
moor Co.,
The judgments must be reversed and the causes returned to the state court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
