delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought by petitioners against respondents in the federal district court for the southern district of New York to enjoin respondents from combining or conspiring to compel petitioners to employ, in their work of fabricating and erecting structural iron and steel, only members of a labor union, and to refrain from employing non-members; from conducting, -inducing, or advising a boycott of petitioners; and from other enumerated acts. The bill invoked the jurisdiction of the federal court upon the ground of diversity of citizenship, and also upon the ground that acts complained of unlawfully interfered with interstate commerce and constituted a violation of the federal anti-trust acts. The case was sent to a referee, who, after a hearing, made a report and decision sustaining the charge of boycotting, but holding that the interference occasioned thereby was local in character and did not constitute an interference with interstate commerce. The report and decision were confirmed by the district court, and the bill dismissed as to certain of the respondents, and an injunction issued against others, the particulars of which, in the view we take of the case, it is not necessary to state.
The circuit court of appeals reversed the decree of the district court, holding that the allegations of the bill were insufficient to establish jurisdiction on the ground of diversity of citizenship, and that the case having failed on the federal question, the coürt was without power to consider the nonfederal question because it was asserted in an independent cause of action. While resting its decision upon these considerations, that court expressed the further view that the allegations of the bill in respect of the claim of federal jurisdiction under the anti-trust acts were probably so unsubstantial as to disclose, on the face
The question of jurisdiction as thus limited is to be determined by the allegations of the bill, and not upon the facts as they may turn out, or by a decision of the merits.
Mosher
v.
Phoenix,
Passing,' without inquiry, the first of these tests, a consideration of the decision^ of this court rendered prior to the filing of the present bill demonstrates that the question is concluded by an application of the second test.
The prayer for relief primarily is based upon the averments that petitioners are engaged in fabricating and erecting structural iron and steel; that they are, and have been for a long time, operating in such business on the open shop method in relation to their employment of labor; that they have large contrácts for the construction of work in the City of New York; that respondents are organizations of labor and officers and agents thereof; that by means and in ways which are set forth, respondents have conspired, and are attempting, to compel petitioners and others to employ,' exclusively, union labor in their building operations; that in pursuance of the conspiracy respondents have called out on strike petitioners’., union employees, and conducted boycotts, and undertaken other injurious interferences particularly set forth in the biff. These allegations conclude with the statement: “ The sole purpose of the activities of the said defendants [respondents] is to compel a putting into effect the closed union shop in the industry of erecting structural iron and steel and inasmuch as this branch of the building industry is the only branch of the building industry where a person not a member of the labor union can secure employment if successful the entire building industry in the entire Metropolitan District will be closed union.” •
Following these allegations the bill contains averments to the effect that all the steel used by petitioners in the City of New York is transported from other states, being
“ The alleged conspiracy arid the acts here complained o.f, spent their intended and direct -force upon a local situation — for building is as essentially local as mining; manufacturing or growing crops, — and if, by a resulting diminution of the commercial demand, interstate trade was curtailed either generally or in specific instances, that was a fortuitous consequence so remote and indirect as plainly to cause it to fall outside the reach of the Sherman Act.”
,The pertinent facts of that case and those here alleged are substantially the same, and subject to the same rule. It follows that the. federal district court was without jurisdiction because the federal question presented was plainly unsubstantial, since it had, prior to the filing of the bill, been foreclosed by the two previous decisions last named, and was no longer the subject of controversy. See also
Browning
v.
Waycross,
Decree affirmed.
