Appellees, four in number, owners of a certain restaurant or café in Fort Worth, known as the Mecca Café, instituted this action against the Cooks’, Waiters’, and Waitresses’ Local Union No. 748, a voluntary association of persons forming what is commonly known as a labor union, and Jap L. Nolen, its president, A. R. Jenkins, its business agent and walking delegate, and Bonny Childs, its secretary and treasurer, and all the associates, agents, em'ployés, and members of said union, being about 300 in number, to restrain them from picketing said restaurant and interfering with its business by certain unlawful acts set out in detail, in the petition, by which they were seeking to destroy its patronage and cause great financial damage to its owners. Appellants filed a number of exceptions to the petition, which were overruled, and sought to defend on the ground that appellees were seeking to destroy the union, and that a conspiracy had been formed for that purpose, and sought to dissolve a temporary injunction granted by the court. The court overruled the motion to dissolve and enjoined appellants from doing certain specified acts and from boycotting appel-lees’ place of business and from going into and near said place of business for the purpose of interfering with the business and intimidating its employés or assaulting or threatening them.
“Appellant has discharged no employe nor retained one objectionable to the other employes. Nor does it appear that any one or more of appellant’s employes are dissatisfied with appellant’s government, with the wages paid, or hours of service required. So that the question is narrowed to the simple one of whether in enacting article 5245 it was the legislative purpose to authorize any character of coercion or intimidation to compel a person in business necessitating the employment of servants to employ such persons only as shall be designated by another person or association of persons, and to permit such other person or association to dictate the rate of wages to be paid, the number of hours to serve, etc. * * * The right of a citizen in this free republic to conduct any lawful business in any lawful manner that he may think best in view of his situation and circumstances is too important to yield at the behest of any private person or association organized to promote the interest of but a single class of our people, laborers though they may be.”
“You must respect the rights of others, which are as sacred as yours, and which must be protected.”
The Constitution, as in all instances, guarantees freedom, not license and crime. The principle that runs through the entire warp and woof, as a scarlet thread of American law, is that each person must so use his own rights as not to invade the rights of others; and no constitutional law will, when properly administered, give special privileges to any man or class of men.
No power exists in our government to curtail the liberty of speech or of the press, and no such attempt was made in this case. It is recognized that every person has the absolute right to express Ms opinion and speak his mind on any subject, and' no one has the authority to declare what any man may think or speak. It is recognized by every American that without freedom of speech the government could not exist as a people’s government. But, as said by the Supreme Court in Ex parte George Tucker,
“Equity will protect the exercise of natural and contractual rights from interference by attempts at intimidation or coercion. Yerbal or written threats may assume that character. When they do, they amount to conduct, or threatened conduct, and for that reason may * * * be restrained.”
See, also, Ins. Co. v. State,
We are of opinion that appellants fully understand from what acts they have been enjoined by the judgment in this case, and such judgment will not interfere with them in the exercise of any constitutional or legal right. All it does is to prohibit them from interfering with the rights of others. The assignments of error are without merit and are overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.
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