MEMORANDUM-DECISION and ORDER
This action arose from a dispute between plaintiff, a newspaper publishing company, and a local Typographical Union which includes among its members 165 printers employed by plaintiff to publish its several newspapers. The Herald Company publishes the daily Syracuse Herald-Journal, the daily Syracuse Post Standard and the Sunday Syracuse Herald-American/Post Standard. The Union is sued through its named officers.
The suit was commenced in the Supreme Court, Onondaga County, New York. The defendants removed it to this Court and there is no challenge by plaintiff to the removal or motion to remand. The complaint alleges refusal by certain employee printers of the defendant Union, commencing specifically on or about March 15, 1971, to work necessary overtime when so requested by the Foreman. Such refusal it is stated constituted a strike and work slowdown and cut the work production in the printing of the newspapers to about one-third of normal. The complaint alleges that this conduct complained of, essentially the refusal to work overtime, threatens to continue, has caused and will cause irreparable harm and damage. The relief sought is temporary and injunctive relief pending final arbitration determination, an order to direct the defendants’ Union through its named officers to submit the contro
This arbitration direction and the questions raised by the complaint in that regard are important in the consideration of the motions to be decided herein. The complaint says that this alleged refusal by certain printers to work overtime, characterized as a strike and work slowdown, constituted a violation of certain of the terms and provisions of a collective bargaining agreement entered into between plaintiff and the Union. This agreement is present in booklet form as Ex. A, “Newspaper Contract, Effective February 1, 1966, Expires January 31, 1969”, attached to affidavit of defendant Hopkins, dated April 1, 1971, filed in support of motion by defendants to vacate State temporary restraining order.
The procedural maneuvers in the background situation before arrival of the action in this Court are not unfamiliar to me or uncommon. (See Sealtest Foods Div. of Nat. Dairy Prod. Corp.-Branch 443 v. Conrad (NDNY1966),
The defendant union upon removal filed a motion to vacate a State temporary restraining order issued without hearing and notice that was included in an order to show cause pending hearing upon a preliminary injunction at a later return date. The preliminary injunction hearing in the State was circumvented by the defendants filing the petition for removal of the case to this Court. The contentions of the defendants that the State Judge may have violated certain State procedural provisions, I do not think are of any moment here because the defendants could have argued these alleged deficiencies in the State courts if they did not make the choice to remove. The plaintiff cross-moves in this District Court for a preliminary injunction under Rule 65(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and in opposition to the defense motion to vacate the State temporary restraining order.
There has been a substantial submission by both sides on the separate motions. Oral argument by the attorneys was heard in Albany, but no oral testimony was taken on either the motion to vacate the State temporary restraining order or on the new federal preliminary injunction cross-motion. (See SEC v. Frank, 2 Cir.,
In the available time for research, it is my judgment that the defendants must prevail in each of the motions. I find lacking the factor of an existent collective bargaining contract that is absolutely essential from my reading of Boys Markets for the lessening of the anti-injunction provisions of the Norris LaGuardia Act, 29 U.S.C. § 104. The Newspaper contract, Exhibit A, in the statement on its cover expired January 31, 1969. Thereafter, the contract was formally extended in effect by the letter of defendant Hopkins, dated November 28, 1970, notifying Publisher Rogers of the plaintiff company, that agreement, written, oral or implied, would terminate on January 31, 1971. To my view, the letter of Union President Hopkins, dated March 17, 1971, attached to plaintiff’s complaint as Exhibit 1, and addressed internally to Union Chapel Chairmen, does not give the support plaintiff contends to infer there was a further valid agreed extension of the contract. This letter states that it was agreed to by the scale committee that we (union printers) would work under the existing contract. I am unable to read this letter or the telegram of the International to Hopkins, as acceptable basis to conclude a legal extension of the contract was accomplished that would afford the full blown continuation of all the express terms of the written contract. If the position of the plaintiff were accepted that an extension resulted from such writings, then such extension of a formal contract or agreement would be effective for a limitless time period.
In my judgment, the State restraining order in any event would have to be considered much too broad. The issue that would be subject to arbitration consideration and determination if such were to be directed would have to be confined to the active grievance, the overtime dispute. It seems clear in the setting here overbroad grant of injunctive relief and general arbitration direction if such were legally warranted would seriously hamper the collective bargaining negotiations for a new contract now underway by unlimited and indefinite restraint upon the right to strike for other grievances. However, as already stated, it is my
In relation to the independent motion by plaintiff for preliminary injunction under the federal rules, this holding I make would necessitate its denial. In Boys Markets, at p. 254,
The motion of the defendants to vacate the State Court temporary restraining order is granted. The motion of plaintiff for a preliminary injunction and in opposition to the defendants’ motion to vacate is denied.
It is so ordered.
