310 Mass. 346 | Mass. | 1941
The plaintiff brings this bill in equity against the officers and members of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Stablemen and Helpers, Local 25, hereinafter called the local, a voluntary association, for an injunction restraining the defendants from interfering with his business and for the assessment of damages. The defendant Sullivan appealed from an interlocutory decree overruling his exceptions to the reports of the master and confirming the reports, and from a final decree dismissing the bill as against all defendants except Sullivan and order
We summarize the facts disclosed by the reports of the master. The plaintiff in May, 1939, became engaged in the trucking business under the name and style of K & K Trucking Company. He was an officer of the Golden Arrow Motor Line, Inc., a company engaged in trucking brewery products in Boston which employed truckmen, all of whom were members of Local 14 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Stablemen and Helpers. The plaintiff was also an officer of the Eastern Carloading Company which was engaged in soliciting freight between Boston and New York and Brooklyn. All three concerns occupied the same office. All of the plaintiff’s business was procured from the Eastern Carloading Company. His business was conducted by transporting' brewery products upon trailers, which were drawn to a railroad freight yard, loaded on flat cars and shipped by rail to New York and Brooklyn where they were, unloaded and the empty trailers then reshipped by rail to Boston. C. Bowen, Inc. had an exclusive franchise with the railroad for the loading of flat cars at the freight yard, and the loading of the trailers upon the cars was performed by one King, an employee of C. Bowen, Inc., and a member of Local 25. The plaintiff entered into a written agreement with Local 25 about the first of June, 1939, by which he agreed to employ as chauffeurs and helpers only members of that local. Later on, in June, he conferred with officials of the local. At this conference Sullivan stated to the plaintiff that the local wanted to have the employees of the Golden Arrow Motor Line, Inc. transfer their membership from Local 14 to Local 25. The plaintiff replied that it was a matter for these employees to decide but that he would take the matter up with them. The plaintiff was informed that one of his employees, Shea, was not a member of the local and that the plaintiff’s brother, Leo, was doing occasional work as a helper. The plaintiff was also told at this conference that he was expected to sign a flat car agreement with the local, Such an agreement was subsequently exe-
Sullivan, the president and business agent of Local 25, instructed King on July 6, 1939, not to load the plaintiff’s trailers upon the flat cars, and King, on the same day, in compliance with such instructions, refused to load the two trailers that were delivered at the freight yard and two trailers that were delivered the next day. These trailers remained in the freight yard until July 12, 1939, when they were removed and shipped by steamship to New York. The plaintiff discontinued business on July 7, 1939. The master reported that the said conduct of Sullivan damaged the plaintiff to the extent of $2,000.
The principal contention of Sullivan is that the plaintiff is barred from relief on account of a violation by the plaintiff of his agreement to hire only members of Local 25. The master found that this agreement was in full force and effect on June 26, 1939, when the plaintiff signed the flat car agreement with the local and that it continued in effect thereafter. The plaintiff’s brother, Leo, performed no services after July 1, 1939. Such services as he performed would appear to have been for the accommodation of the plaintiff and such as one brother might naturally perform for another brother on account of their relationship and not upon any commercial basis. The extent of these services is not disclosed by the record. The local itself took no action either under the first agreement or otherwise against the plaintiff on account of these services of his brother. Evidently, it did not consider the matter of sufficient importance to warrant any action by it. If the acceptance by the plaintiff of these services was contrary to that agreement with the local, yet such a breach was so trivial that it did not put an end to the agreement. National Machine & Tool Co. v. Standard Shoe Machinery Co. 181
In accordance with the findings of the master, Sullivan knew that his order to King not to load the plaintiff’s trailers would be obeyed and that the plaintiff’s business would be thereby injured, and he intended such a result. That order of Sullivan could properly be found to be tor-tious in the light of the attending circumstances unless it was justified. The burden was upon him to prove that, in giving the order to King, he was exercising a right of equal dignity in law with the right of the plaintiff to conduct and manage his business in a lawful manner in accordance with his own judgment and discretion. He could not, however, exert pressure upon the plaintiff to compel him to induce the employees of the Golden Arrow Motor Line, Inc., to transfer their membership from Local 14 to Local 25. We fail to find anything in the reports of the master that would furnish a justification in law for the conduct of Sullivan.
There was no error in overruling the various exceptions taken to the reports of the master. All of them relate to findings made by the master, and none of the findings excepted to is inconsistent with any of the other. findings appearing in the reports. The amount of- damages found by the master may be more than Sullivan might reasonably expect to -pay, but we cannot say that any of the findings of the master demonstrates error in the assessment of damages. The matter to a large extent must rest upon common sense and sound judgment aided by a knowledge of practical affairs and a determination to reach a just result from the facts established by the testimony. Cross v. Sharaffa, 281 Mass. 329. Potier v. A. W. Perry, Inc. 286 Mass. 602. Graustein v. H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc. 293 Mass. 207. Levine v. Lawrence & Co. Inc. 305 Mass. 210.
Interlocutory decree affirmed.
Final decree affirmed with costs.