222 Wis. 34 | Wis. | 1936
The plaintiff in error, hereinafter called the defendant, threatened to do injury to the business of the New York Coffee Pot, Inc., and the Torres Café, Inc., with the intent thereby to extort money, to wit, $200. The defendant was business agent of the cooks’ and waiters’ union.
The defendant urges, first, that the legislature of Wisconsin has declared it lawful conduct by one singly, or in concert, to threaten to call a strike; second, that the threat was made to certain individuals and not to the corporations whose business would be affected.
Workingmen have the right to unite to protect themselves, and to strike where grievances exist. But neither labor’s policy nor legislation has indorsed any plan or policy giving a right to threaten the management of business concerns with interference with contract with their employees unless a business agent, for his own use, be given a sum of money demanded by him. One is guilty of the crime charged against defendant when he maliciously threatens to- do- injury to the business of another with intent to extort money. Sec. 340.45, Stats.
Defendant, in his insistence that the evidence does not disclose a direct threat to injure the business of complainants, relies on the case of Schultz v. State, 135 Wis. 644, 114 N. W. 505, 116 N. W. 259, 571. In the Schultz Case it was held that the facts did not support a threat to injure the property or business of the person threatened, because the threat was to accuse the individual of a crime. There is a
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.