The plaintiff operates an establishment in Norwalk for the sale of ready mixed concrete, masons’ supplies, coal and fuel oil. All sales are made to purchasers in Connecticut. On October 29, 1956, and continuing through November 7, 1956, the defendant labоr union caused a person to patrol in front of the plaintiff’s office, carrying a sign reading “Employees of Devine Bros., Inс. Do Not Be Unfair to Members of Organized Labor by Working for Lower Wages and Working Conditions . . . Organ *79 ize. Join A.F.L.” Most of the time the picket wаs alone, but on occasions he was accompanied by two other pickets. There was no violence, mass picketing, threatening or blocking of entrances to the plaintiff’s premises. The picketing was conducted in a peaсeful and orderly manner at all times.
While the defendant had succeeded in organizing and becoming the exclusive bargaining representative of the employees of several firms in the Norwalk area which were competitors of the plaintiff in one or more lines, none of the plaintiff’s employees was a member of the defendant union. The defendant did not demand, or even request, that the plaintiff recognize it as the exclusive bargaining agent of any of the employees or that the plaintiff enter into any agreement so to do. None of the pickets is, or ever was, an employee of the plaintiff. Thе plaintiff had, as employees who were apparently eligible for membership in the defendant, eight drivers, who made deliveries of the plaintiff’s products to customers, and also six helpers, a yardman and a mechanic. The court found that the purpose of the picketing was to persuade the drivers, helpers, yardman and mechanic to join the defendant in order to secure for themselves better wages and working conditions.
The court issued a temporary injunction, sharply limited in scope, forbidding the picketing of the plaintiff’s place of business “in front of the office thereof located at 38 Commerce Street, Norwalk, Conn.,” until a trial on the merits could be had. The defendant appealed on many grounds. At the outset we are faced with a jurisdictional question as to whether an appeal is possible in this case. This question must be resolved before wе can consider the appeal on the merits.
Riley
v.
Board of Police Commissioners,
*80
The taking of an appeal from the granting or denial of a temporary injunction is ordinarily impossible, since such an order is not a final judgment.
Olcott
v.
Pendleton,
The court failed unequivocally to find whether this action was one “involving оr growing out of a labor dispute.” On this point the court found, as a subordinate fact, that “[n]o dispute has existed or exists between plaintiff and its employees concerning hours, wages or conditions of employment,” and, as a conclusion, that “ [n] o labоr dispute exists between the plaintiff and its employees.” These findings are inadequate on their face, since our definition оf “labor dispute” in terms is made applicable “regardless of whether or not the disputants stand in the proximate relation of employer and employee.” General Statutes § 7408 (c);
Alvarez
v.
Administrator,
The statutory definition of “labor dispute” is part of chapter 372, rеgulating the issuance of injunctions in actions involving or growing out of labor disputes. This definition has been held to be applicablе under chapter 374, our Unemployment Compensation Act.
Bartlett
v.
Administrator,
The language of our definition is broad, and it has been liberally construed and applied in our cаses.
E. M. Loew’s Enterprises, Inc.
v.
International Alliance,
If the case is tried on its merits and an appeal is taken from the judgment, the finding should set forth the facts supporting whatever conclusion is reaсhed on whether, in the light of the statutory definition, a labor dispute is involved. Cf.
Northam
v.
L. E. Bunnell Transportation Co.,
In a trial on the merits, the question whether the plaintiff is engaged in interstate commerce so as to affect the state’s jurisdiction to act in the premises may be determined in the light of cases such as
Guss
v.
Utah Labor Relations Board,
The appeal from the granting of the temporary injunction is dismissed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
