This is an action for injunction and damages brought by G. C. Breidert Company, a California corporation (hereinafter referred to as “the employer”), against Sheet Metal Workers Union and Teamsters Unions (hereinafter referred to as “the unions”), under the California Jurisdictional Strike Act (Lab. Code, §§ 1115-1120).
The complaint allegеs that for some time prior to the filing of the complaint, the unions requested the exclusive right to bargain collectively with the employer on behalf of the latter’s employees with respect to wages, hours and working conditions and have requested that the unions have the exclusive right to have their members perform work for the employer; that Air-X-Hauster Workers Association is a labor organization which exists for the purpose, in whole or in part, of dealing with employers concerning grievances, labor disputes, wages, hours of employment or conditions of work; that Air-X-Hauster Workers Association represents the majority оf the employees and has made demand upon employer to be recognized as the exclusive bargaining agent of the latter’s employees and has made a request of the employer to negotiate a written contract relating to wages, hours and working conditions and has demanded the exclusive right to have its members perform work for the employer; that the Air-X-Hauster Workers Association has not been financed, in whole or in part, interfered with, dominated or controlled by employer, or any representative of the latter; that the unions are engaged in concerted interference with the opеration of employer’s business for the purpose of compelling the latter to refuse to recognize Air-X-Hauster Workers Association as exclusive bargaining representative of employer’s employees and for the purpose of *635 forcing and compelling employer to bargain colleсtively with the unions on behalf of employer’s employees and to compel the former to employ only members of the unions in connection with employer’s business; that the unions’ concerted interference with employer’s business arises out of a controversy between said unions and Air-X-Hauster Workers Association as to which of said unions has, or should have, the exclusive right to bargain collectively with employer on behalf of its employees, or any of them, and as to which of said unions has, or should have, the exclusive right to have its members perform work for employer; that the concerted interference with the business of employer by the unions consists of a primary picket line which causes customers and suppliers of employer to refuse to do business with it, and a consumer secondary boycott wherein the unions threatened officials and supervisors of companies with whom employer does business, with picketing and boycotting if said companies do not cease doing business with the latter; that, as a consequence of said threats, companies with whom employer has in the past done business have ceased doing business with it; that the unions carry picket signs which proclaim to the public that employer is “unfair to organized labor”; that the unions characterize employer as “unfair to organized labor,” only because employer has failed and refused to recognize the unions as the exclusive representative for the employees of employer. Based upon its verified complaint and supporting affidavits, employer sought a preliminary injunction restraining the unions from:
(a) “Picketing ... at or near, around or in front of the entrance to plaintiff’s place of business ...”
(b) “Persuading, inducing, or causing by any means or manner whatsoever any person, customer or supplier, to refrain from doing business with plaintiff.”
(c) “Representing to any person that plaintiff is unfair to organized labor or to the American Federation of Labor, or to any one associated therewith.”
(d) “Persuading, inducing or causing plaintiff to cease recognizing the Air-X-Hauster Workers Association as the exclusive bargaining agency for plaintiff’s employees by concerted interference with plaintiff’s business in any manner whatsoever. ’ ’
(e) “Causing plaintiff to interfere with or coerce its employees in their designation of a collective bargaining representative.”
*636 The unions, by their verified answers, denied the allegations relating to such asserted jurisdictional controversy and offered two affirmative defenses; the first such dеfense being that the state court was without jurisdiction to enjoin the conduct complained of because such jurisdiction had been preempted by the authority vested in the National Labor Relations Board under federal law.
Upon the hearing of the application for a preliminary injunction, it was stipulated in open court that the employer was a corporation engaged in interstate commerce within the meaning of section 2(7) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, popularly known as the Taft-Hartley Act.
In its order, “denying preliminary injunction,” the trial court concluded that, “it does not have jurisdiсtion in this matter to issue a preliminary injunction,” because “While the Supreme Court of California held in
Sommer
v.
Metal Trades Council,
It is first contended by appellant that the trial court had no power to act in the instant case except in accordance with the latest decision of the Supreme Court of California in
Sommer
v.
Metal Trades Council,
Let us therefore examine the controlling decisions of the United States Supreme Court to determine whether “the facts of the instant case” fall within “the area of activities, neither protected nor prohibited that the state may regulаte.”
There can be no doubt that state action is permissible to enjoin activity which threatens “a probable breach of the State’s peace” or calls for “extraordinary police measures,” such as recurrent unannounced work stoppages
(International Union
v.
Wisconsin Emp. Relations Board,
As pointed out by respondent, “Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, by the Labor Management Relations Act provides that ‘Employees shаll have the right ... to engage in . . . concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection . . .’
“These ‘concerted activities’ protected by Section 7 of the Federal Act clearly include the right to strike, peacefully picket, and boycott for рurposes and by methods not prohibited by Section 8.
(International Union
v.
O’Brien,
“Section 8(b)(4), in turn, prohibits a labor organization or its agents from engaging in certain specified types of picketing, secondary boycotting, recognition strikes, and jurisdictional strikes.
(Garner
v.
Teamsters etc. Union,
“Other provisions of the Federal Act provide appropriate machinery for dеaling with controversies between labor organizations with respect to exclusive bargaining representative (§9) and exclusive work jurisdiction (§ 10(k)); for securing limited injunctions against prohibited picketing, striking, and boycotting (§ 10(1)), and for securing'judicial decrees against this and other proscribed conduct of a labor organization or its agents (§ 10(c)). Such other prohibited conduct includes restraining or coercing employees in the exercise of their right to choose their collective bargaining representative (§ 8(b) (1) (A)), and causing an employer to discriminate against his employees in order to influence their choice of a bargaining representative (§ 8(b) (2)).”
Since it is conceded that appellant employer was engaged in interstate commerce, we are persuaded from a reading of the cases of
Weber
v.
Anheuser-Busch, Inc.,
“A state court has no jurisdiction to enjoin, at the instance of an employer engaged in interstate commerce, the picketing of the employer’s premises, delaying the construction of an oil terminal, where the picketing was conducted for one of the following purposes: coercing the employer to sign closed shop contracts with the defendant unions; coercing the employees to become members of these unions, even though the emplоyees voted, in an election conducted by the federal Board, against joining the unions involved; inducing the employees of another employer (not involved in the litigation) to engage in a concerted refusal to perform services in the course of their employment at the plaintiff employer’s oil terminal for the purpose of forcing again other employers (likewise not involved in the present litigation) to recognize the defendant unions as the representatives of their employees, even though such unions had not been so certified by the federal Board. Pocahontas Terminal Corp. v. Portland Bldg. & Const. Trade Council (1950 D.C.Me.), 93 P.Supp. 217. The *641 court pointed out that the facts stated аbove would constitute violations of unfair labor practice provisions of the federal act. ’’
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Doran, J., and Fourt, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 26, 1956, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 30, 1956. Shenk, J., and Spence, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
