KENMIKE THEATRE, INC. v. MOVING PICTURE OPERATORS, LOCAL 304, AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR, ET AL.
Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut
Argued May 7-decided July 8, 1952
139 Conn. 95
BROWN, C. J., JENNINGS, BALDWIN, INGLIS and O‘SULLIVAN, JS.
Perry Graicerstein, with whom was Eugene H. Kaplan, for the appellee (plaintiff).
Herman M. Levy filed a brief as amicus curiae.
JENNINGS, J. The question to be decided is whether the court had the power to enjoin peaceful picketing by the defendants of the plaintiff‘s theater to force unionization of its employees. The facts found can be briefly stated. The plaintiff operates a neighborhood motion picture theater in Waterbury and employs seven persons. Two of them are projectionists. There has been no dispute between the plaintiff and its employees concerning hours, wages or conditions of employment. None of the employees are members of a union. The defendants are a union and its officers. They will be referred to as the union. It has contracts covering terms and conditions of employment with most of the theaters in the Waterbury area. The union demanded that the plaintiff enter into a contract requiring, among other things, that the plaintiff hire as projectionists only members of the union on terms prescribed by it and that the two projectionists employed at the theater become members of the union or lose their employment. When the plaintiff refused to enter into such a contract the union caused the plaintiff‘s theater to be peacefully picketed on July 22, 1950. The picketing continued to the date of trial, December 6 and 7, 1950. People have been annoyed and made uncomfortable thereby and have refused to patronize the plaintiff‘s theater because of it. The defendants did not pursue in their brief their attack on the finding. There was no reason for printing the evidence.
The only relevant Connecticut statutory limitation on the jurisdiction of the court to issue the injunction is contained in the so-called “Little Norris-LaGuardia Act,”
The court found that the purpose of the picketing was to force the plaintiff to employ only union members. It was thus an attempt to force the plaintiff to violate the statute ensuring to its employees freedom from interference by their employer.
Many apposite quotations are available from the cases cited. The following is typical. It is taken from Safeway Stores, Inc. v. Retail Clerks’ Union, 184 Wash. 322, 338, 51 P.2d 372, and is quoted with approval in Gazzam v. Building Service Employees International Union, 29 Wash. 2d 488, 497, 188 P.2d 97, 11 A.L.R.2d 1330, and note, 1338, 1340. “The vital, controlling question at issue here is plain and easy of solution. It in no way pertains to the relations between the appellant, a merchant, and its employees. For aught that appears, they are content and satisfied, among themselves. On the contrary, this is a lawsuit between appellant and a third party—a labor union that does not include in its membership any employee of the appellant. What right have the respondents to insist or demand, at the threat or cost of the destruction of appellant‘s business, or at all, that appellant ask, urge or coerce, directly or indirectly, its employees, who are at
The numerous cases cited by the defendants have been examined, but it would serve no useful purpose to analyze them in detail. They establish the fact, admitted in the briefs, that there is a sharp conflict of authority on the principal question, although the recent trend of the authorities supports the conclusion we have reached. Most of the federal cases are decided on the principle that the federal courts accept the interpretation of state law adopted by the highest court of the state in question. See, for example, Senn v. Tile Layers Protective Union, 222 Wis. 383, 268 N.W. 270, aff‘d, 301 U.S. 468, 477, 57 S. Ct. 857, 81 L. Ed. 1229.
The union has advanced the claim in its brief that the restraining of peaceful picketing is a deprivation of its constitutional right of free speech, as set forth above. No such issue is raised by the pleadings, nor was the claim made at the trial. “It is an entirely familiar rule, requiring no citation of authorities, that in so grave a matter as a constitutional question, it should be lodged in the case at the earliest moment that good pleading and orderly procedure will admit under the circumstances of the given case, and must thereafter be kept alive by appropriate steps; otherwise, it will be waived.” State v. Williams, 337 Mo. 987, 988, 87 S.W.2d 423; Aetna Ins. Co. v. Hyde, 275 U.S. 440, 447, 48 S. Ct. 174, 72 L. Ed. 357; 11 Am. Jur. 774; 16 C.J.S. 226. On the merits, it is well settled that the issuance of an injunction to restrain picketing for an unlawful purpose does not violate the constitutional guarantee of the right of freedom of speech. Building Service Employees International Union v. Gazzam, 339 U.S. 532, 536, 70 S. Ct. 784, 94 L. Ed. 1045; Silkworth v. Local 575, 309 Mich. 746, 757, 16 N.W.2d 145; Wilbank v. Chester & Delaware Counties Bartenders Union, 360 Pa. 48, 50, 60 A.2d 21.
As is indicated in many of the cases cited, the discussion could be prolonged almost indefinitely. We have tried to keep it within reasonable bounds. We hold that the subordinate facts justify the conclusions of the trial court that the picketing was unlawful and that the plaintiff was entitled to injunctive relief.
There is no error.
In this opinion BROWN, C. J., and INGLIS, J., concurred.
O‘SULLIVAN, J. (concurring). I concur in the result. I am not satisfied, however, that the opinion makes clear the extent of its operation. Peaceful picketing for an illegal purpose should be enjoined. The illegality found in the case at bar stems solely from the statute. It lay in the effort of the defendants to coerce the plaintiff, contrary to the provisions of
In this opinion BALDWIN, J., concurred.
