Thе contract complained of was effective April 15, 1953. These petitioners were notified that unless they became members of the union within 60 days from the effective date of the contract their employment would be terminated. This notice accords with a clause in the contract. Thus is alleged and shown by the petitioners definite impending danger of losing their jobs unless this procedure which conforms to the alleged void contract is hаlted. While a mere apprehension will not authorize resort to equity (Railway Emp. Dept.
v.
Hanson,
While, as indicated above, this appeal to equity for injunctive relief is based upon facts and not mere apprehension and is therefore not premature, there is an additional reason why the judgment dismissing the amended petition can not be sustained upon the ground that it is premature; and that is the prayer that the contract be decreed illegal and void.
Section 2, Eleventh, of the Railway Labor Act (45 U. S. C. A. 481, § 152) plainly authorizes thе embodiment of a “closed shop” clause in contracts of employment, and in sweeping terms, nullifies all State laws in conflict therewith. The Suprеme Court upheld the constitutionality of such a contract under the act in Railway Emp. Dept.
v.
Hanson,
Anyone familiar with the experiences of the thirteen original colonies under the dictatorial powers of the King as expressed in the Declaration of Independence, the reluctance of the States to surrender or delegate any powers to a general government as evidenced by the Articles of Confederation, and the demonstrated need for more powers in the area where jurisdiction was given the general government, will have no difficulty in clearly understanding the meaning of the Constitution when it defines those powers and by thе Ninth and Tenth Amendments removes all doubt but that powers not expressly conferred were retained by the States. Even the school children in these originаl States know that solely because of the erection by individual States of trade barriers inimical to other States, and the inability to remove this evil by State action, the commerce clause, art. 1, sec. 8, par. 3 (Code § 1-125), invested the general government with exclusive jurisdiction of interstate cоmmerce to insure the free flow of commerce across State lines. But claiming authority under this clause the Congress, with the sanction of the Supreme Court, has projected the jurisdiction of the general government into every precinct of the States and assumed Federal jurisdiction ovеr countless matters, including the right to work, which are remotely, if at all, related to interstate commerce. By this unilateral determination of its own powers the general government has at tire same time and in the same manner deprived its creators, the States, of powers they thought and now believe they retained. But State courts, irrespective of contrary opinions held by their own judges who by law are required to have had experienсe as practicing attorneys before they can become judges of the law, must obey and accept the decisions of the *284 Supreme Court of the United States pertaining to interstate commerce. We believe that a single person armed with right, the right to work, should in all courts of justice be ablе to defeat the selfish demands of multitudes though they be members of a labor union who seek to deprive him of that right. We would so rule in any case where we are allowed jurisdiction. When the. Supreme Court has, as seen above, held the closed shop labor contract act valid we must likewise hold, not upon our own judgment, but solely because we are required to follow the Supreme Court ruling. We have made these observations to indicatе our deep distress over the utter helplessness of a free American under this law, and our inability to judge his cause according to our understanding of the Constitution.
We go now to the single point raised which the Supreme Court has, we believe, clearly indicated is still open for decision. The petition of these non-union employees alleges that they have been notified in accordance with the law and -the contract of emplоyment that unless they become members of a union within 60 days their employment will be terminated. It is alleged that the union dues and other payments they will be requirеd to make to the union will be used to “support ideological and political doctrines and candidates” which they are unwilling to support and in whiсh they do not believe, and that this will violate the First, Fifth and Ninth Amendments of the Constitution. While Railway Emp. Dept.
v.
Hanson,
Accordingly, the trial court erred in dismissing the amended petition which alleges that such uses will be made of dues and other money which as members of the union petitioners would be required to contribute to the union.
Judgment reversed.
