delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit for damages for the effect of an alleged conspiracy of the defendants unlawfully to restrain and prevent plaintiffs’ interstate trade in coal in violation of the first and second sections of the Federal Anti-Trust Act. The charge is that the defendants, in 1914, for the purpose of consummating the conspiracy, destroyed valuable mining properties of the plaintiffs. Treble damages and an attorney’s fee are asked under the seventh section of the Act. The suit was brought in the District Court for the Western District of Arkansas. The. plaintiffs are the Bache-Denman Coal Company and eight other corporations, in each of which the first named owns a controlling amount of stock. One of them is the Coronado Company, which gives the case its name. The corporations were correlated in organization and in the physical location of their mines. They had been operated for some years as a unit in the Prairie Creek Valley in Sebastian County, Arkansas. Immediately after the destruction of the property the District Court in a proper proceeding appointed receivers for the mines, and they or their successors are also parties to this suit. The original com
In our previous opinion we, held that the International Union, known as the United Mine Workers of America, the union known as United Mine Workers, District No. 21, and the subordinate local unions which were made defendants, were, though unincorporated associations, subject to suit under the Anti-Trust Act, but that there was not sufficient evidence to go to the jury to show participation by the International Union in the conspiracy and the wrongs done. We found evidence tending to show that District No. 21 and other defendants were engaged in the conspiracy and the destruction of the property, but not enough to show an intentional restraint of interstate trade and a violation of the Anti-Trust Act. The plaintiffs contend that they have now supplied the links lacking at the first trial against each of the principal defendants.
The Bache-Denman mines lie near the west line of Arkansas, next to Oklahoma. In all the Arkansas minds,
First. Is there any evidence in the-present record tending to show that the International Union of - the United Mine Workers participated?
Under Article 16 of the constitution of the International Union, it is provided, Section 1:
“ No district shall be permitted to engage in a strike involving all or a major portion of its members, without the sanction of an International Convention or the International Executive Board.”
Section 2:
“ Districts may order local strikes within their respective districts on their own responsibility, but where local
It does not appear that the International Convention or Executive Board ever authorized this strike or took any part in the preparation for it or in its maintenance, or that they ratified it by paying any of the expenses. It came within the definition of a local strike in the constitutions of both the national and district organizations. The district organization made the preparations and paid the bills. It was sought on both trials to bring the International in by proving that the President of the national body, John P. White, was in Kansas City and heard of the trouble which had taken place on April 6 at Prairie Creek, and that he reported it to the International Board; and further that in May he made a long speech at a special convention of District No. 21, held at Fort Smith, Arkansas, for the trial of one of its officers for corruption, in which he referred with earnest approval to the great international union strikes in Colorado and West Virginia, but made no specific allusion to the Prairie Creek difficulty. It was also argued that communications from outsiders ,and editorials published in the United Mine Workers’ journal giving an account of the occurrence at Prairie Creek, and representing that the.troubles were due to the aggression of the armed guards, and that the action of the union men was justified in defense of their homes, expressed such sympathy with the union men as to constitute a ratification by the International Union because the United Mine Workers’ journal was an authorized publication of the Union.
There were introduced at both trials long accounts of speeches and votes at national conventions of the International Union and meetings between union operators and representatives of the International Union from 1898 to 1914, revealing a constant effort on the part of the
We thought at the first hearing and we think now that none of. this evidence tends to. establish the participation of the International in the. Prairie Creek strike and disturbances.
The new evidence adduced for the purpose is chiefly the testimony of one James K. McNamara, He was the secretary of Local Union No. 1526 at Hartford and checkweighman at Mine No. 4 of the Central Coal & Coke Company, a union mine which was a competitor of the Bache-Denman mines .and of larger capacity , and business. McNamara seems to have been the field leader of the union forces at the battle of July 17, 1914. He was tried with others and convicted for violation of the injunction as a conspiracy to defeat the process of- the federal court, and was confined in the Leavenworth penitentiary. His testimony at the.second trial was that in. May, 1914, between the riot df April and the July battle, he went to Port Smith to see Pete Stewart, the President of District No. 21, who was ill; that Stewart told him that he had been to Kansas City and had a talk with White, the International President, and that. they had arranged a plan there to prevent Bache from producing coal. He said that White wished to see McNamara. Thereafter White came to Port Smith to participate in the trial of the .secretary of No. 21, already mentioned, between the 18th and 23rd of May. McNamara said he went to Port Smith and met. one Jim Slankard, who was a. town.marshal in Hartford, Sebastian County, and a Very active promoter of union violence in this- case, that Slankard told him that White wished to see him at the -hotel, that he and Slankard went to White’s room, that
Q. Did he say why? A. Yes sir.
Q. Tell it. A. He said, “because if Bache coal, scab dug coal got into the market it would only be'a matter of time until every union operator in that country would have to close down his mine, or scab it, because the union operators could not meet Bache competition.”
Q. Did he say anything more after that? A. Yés sir.
Q. What did he say? A. He said, “ When you go back to Hartford,” he said, “ I want you to tell the men what I havfe told you, but don’t tell them I have told you.”
Q: Did he say why not? A. Yes sir, he said he did not want the National Organization mixed up in this case; he said, “ So far you have handled it, this part, and we have West Virginia and Colorado oh our hands, and we can not bear,any more fights.”
Q. After that, did you go up and down the valley, as he said? A. I went back to Hartford and just quietly told the. men what he said.
Q. How many of them did you tell, m a general way? A. I don’t remember, I told practically everybody, I suppose.
Q. What did you tell them? A. I told them what White told me.
Q. Tell them the reasons, as he had given them to you? A. Yes sir. .
Q. And in pursuance of that, was that doctrine told all over the valley? A. Yes sir. I told the men we wouldn’t do anything until Bache begun producing coal. . . .
McNamara further testified that he saw between three and.four hundred guns in boxes at Hartford and that part of .them were, distributed to the union miners and part returned to the secretary of District No. 21 at McAlester, Oklahoma. It was an avowed grievance of McNamara that he had not been paid sufficient money for the sacrifices he had made to the union cause. He said he had received $250 after the battle of July 17 from Stewart of District No. 21 to enable him to escape and avoid arrest, and something more later, but nothing from White or the International. He volunteered in his cross-examination the statement that White said to him at the interview:
“
Now you boys will not lose a day and your expenses will be paid for every day you are in this trouble.” He was led by other questions to add that the trouble referred to by White was his suffering in the penitentiary. When, it was called to his attention that his conversation wi^i White in May, 1914, was before-he had gone to the penitentiary, he found it necessary to qualify his statement and in- answer to the question: “ Did -you have any arrangements to get money from him then?” said: “ It was generally understood that the National Organization was going to pay us for the time we lost . . , and I thought the only man to go to would be White to get it, because he Vas the National President.” And so, he said, two years after he had finished his term at the penitentiary^ he met White at Hartford and asked him “ When will I get my money that I was promised for this work?”
Giving the fullest credence to all that McNamara says, it is clear that White did not intend by what he did to make the Prairie Creek difficulty a national affair. The International Board had not approved as the constitution required that they should do in order to make it so. It is quite true that White himself personally can be held as a defendant, if McNamara’s evidence is to be believed, for urging and abetting the destruction of the plaintiffs’ property; but according to McNamara’s testimony, repeated by him several times, White was particular to insist that he did not wish to be regarded as acting for the International in the matter or to involve it in the Prairie Creek difficulties. In our previous opinion we held that a trades-union, organized as effectively as this United Mine Workers’ organization was, might be held liable, and all its funds raised for the purpose of strikes might be levied upon to pay damages suffered through illegal methods in carrying them on; but certainly it must be clearly shown in.order to impose such a liability on an association of 450,000 men that what was done was done by their agents in accordance with their fundamental agreement of association.
As we said in our previous opinion,
“A corporation is responsible for the wrongs committed by its agents in the course of its business, and this principle is enforced against the contention that torts. are
ultra vires
of the corporation. But it must be shown that it is in the business of the corporation. Surely no stricter rule can be enforced against an unincorporated organization like this. Here it is not a question of contract or of holding out an appearance of authority on which some
Again:
“ But it is said that the District was doing the work of the International and carrying out its policies and this circumstance makes the former an agent. We can not agree to this in the face of the specific stipulation between them that in such case unless the International expressly assumed responsibility, the District must meet it alone.”
The action of the trial court in its direction of a verdict for the defendant, the International Union, must be affirmed.
Second. The tendency of the evidence to show that District No. 21 through its authorized leaders' and agents and certain of its subordinate local unions organized and carried through the two attacks of April 6th and July 17th is so clear that it does not need further discussion. The only issue is whether the outrages, destruction and crimes committed were intentionally directed toward a restraint of interstate commerce/ On the first trial we held that the evidence did not show this. The circustances seemed amply to supply a different and a merely local motive for the conspiracy. The hostility of the head of District No. 21 and that of his men seemed sufficiently aroused by the coming of non-union men into that local community, by Mr. Bache’s alleged breach of his contract with District No. 21 in employing non-union men three months before it expired, by his charged evasion of it through a manipulation of his numerous corporations, by his advertised anticipation of trespass and violence in his warning notices, in his enclosing his mining premises with a cable, and in stationing guards with guns to defend them. These preparations in the heart of a territory that had been completely unionized for years were likely to stir a bitterness of spirit in the neighborhood. Bache
“Nothing of this is recited to justify in the slightest the lawlessness and outrages committed, but only to point out that’ as it was a local strike within the meaning of the International and District constitutions, so it was in fact a local strike, local in its origin and motive, local in its waging, and local in its felonious and murderous ending.”
Were we concerned only with the riot of April 6th, we should reach the same conclusion now; but at the second trial plaintiffs were able to present a large amount of new evidence as to the attitude and purpose of the leaders and members of District No. 21, shown especially in the interval between the riot of April 6th and the destruction of the, mine property on July 17th following. This is attributed by counsel for the plaintiffs to the fact that the new witnesses had moved away from Sebastian County, Arkansas, and were freed from local restraint and to. grievances of former union sympathizers and participants who thought themselves not sufficiently appreciated.
Part of the new evidence was an extract from the convention proceedings of District No. 21 at Fort Smith, Arkansas, in February, 1914, in which the delegates discussed the difficulties presented in their maintenance of the union scale in Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas because of the keen competition from the non-union fields of Southern Colorado and the non-union fields of the South in Alabama and Tennessee. Stewart, the president,
A new witness was one. Hanraty, who was for seven years president of District No. 21, then a state mine inspector for three years, and then national organizer from 1912 to 1914, and president of District No. 21 again in 1915, but subsequently separated from the union. He testified that he had been closely associated as president of the District with Stewart as a member of the District executive board. He had been frequently in close, conference with most of the leading men who had .taken part in the violence at Prairie Creek. He said that he made speeches all through District No. 21 and did not remember a speech in which he did not mention the-danger from non-union coal in taking the markets of-union coal and forcing a nonrunion scale, and that it was a constant subject of discussion among the officers and members.
A leading witness among many others on this subject was a Dr. H. P. Routh, who practiced medicine at Hartford in 1914, and who lives now at. Tulsa, Oklahoma. He said he was living at the Davis Hotel in Hartford in May, 1914, when the Executive-Board of District No. 21 came down there for a meeting, and he heard a great deal of the conversation between the board membérs as to the
In addition to this, the testimony of McNamara, already discussed, while ineffective to establish the complicity of the International Union with this conspiracy, contains much, if credited, from which the jury could reasonably infer that the purpose of the union miners in District No. 21 and the local unions engaged in the plan was to destroy the power of the owners and lessees of the Bache-Denman mines to send their output into interstate commerce to compete with that of union mines in Oklahoma, in Kansas, in Louisiana markets and elsewhere. It appeared that 80 per cent, of all the product of the mines in Sebastian County went into other States.
New and more elaborate evidence was:also introduced in the second trial as to the capacity of the Bache-Denman mines under the open shop. In our previous opinion we declined to hold that the mere elimination from interstate trade of 5,000 tons a week, which we took to be the practical limit of capacity of the plaintiffs, was significant in the total tonnage of the country or state or that its stoppage furnished a basis of itself for inferring a palpable and intentional restraint of interstate trade with which the defendants could be charged even though coal could be produced at a reduced cost under non-union conditions. The amount wé assumed was based on the averments of the third amended bill in which the normal gross income from the four mines of the plaintiffs used by them, and which were destroyed, was alleged to be in good times be
The mere reduction in the supply of an article to- be shipped in interstate commerce by. the illegal or tortious prevention of its manufacture or production is ordinarily an indirect and remote obstruction to that commerce. But when the intent of those unlawfully preventing the manufacture or production is shown to be to restrain or control the supply entering and moving in interstate commerce, or the price of it in interstate markets, their action is a direct violation of the Anti-Trust Act.
United Mine Workers
v.
Coronado Co.,
We affirm the judgment of the District Court and the Circuit Court of Appeals in favor of the International Union of United Mine Workers of America, and reverse that in favor of District No. 21 and the other local unions and the individual defendants and remand the cause as to them for a new trial.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
