The National Maritime Union, representing workers at Aquaslide’s Brownsville facility, struck Aquaslide. The facility remained open, and there was tension between the striking workers and those workers who continued on the job. First the NMU and then Aquaslide filed complaints in the district court seeking preliminary injunctions against alleged acts of harassment and other misconduct. Jurisdiction was alleged under the Norris-LaGuardia Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 101 et seq., 107, and under the pendent jurisdiction of a federal court hearing claims concerning a labor dispute. After a hearing, the court issued a preliminary injunction enjoining both parties from committing certain belligerent acts.
Each side soon filed motions to show cause why the other should not be held in contempt for violating the terms of the preliminary injunction. A hearing was held, and all parties agreed to treat the motions as civil contempt proceedings and to waive jury trial.
The district court pushed' aside disputes over obscene language at the strike site, concluding that this violation did not warrant the imposition of monetary sanctions against either party. More seriously, the court heard about incidents in which strikers had pelted workers’ automobiles with rocks, causing $733.57 in property damage for which Aquaslide reimbursed its employees. Finding that the national union was chargeable with the acts of its local officers and members, the court imposed a compensatory fine against NMU of $733.57 and attorneys’ fees and costs of $9550.45. The court also amended its preliminary injunction to prohibit explicitly various forms of conduct conducive to violent confrontations at the strike site.
Continued confrontations at the strike site led Aquaslide to file a second motion to show cause why three NMU members— Garcia, Aguirre, and Garza — should not be held in contempt for continuing to violate the terms of the preliminary injunction. Though the motion was treated as a criminal contempt proceeding, respondents’ request for a jury trial was denied by the district judge with an assurance that the punishment in the event of conviction would not exceed six months imprisonment. Garcia, Aguirre, and Garza were convicted of contempt and sentenced to 160 days imprisonment, which sentence was probated on condition that the respondents stay away from the strike site for 160 days. The court also amended further its preliminary injunction to specify the permitted placement and conduct of strikers picketing the Aquaslide plant.
The NMU appeals from the imposition of the compensatory fine and attorney fee award. Garcia, Aguirre, and Garza appeal from their criminal contempt convictions. Aquaslide cross-appeals seeking a larger award of attorneys’ fees. We reverse the judgment against the NMU for lack of jurisdiction, concluding that the Norris-La-Guardia Act is not a jurisdiction creating statute; and we reverse the convictions of
I
The NMU challenges the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction to issue the preliminary injunction governing the parties’ conduct at the strike site. That court took jurisdiction after considering the five elements established by 29 U.S.C. § 107 as prerequisites to the issuance of an injunction in a case growing out of a labor dispute.
Section 107, however, was not intended to expand federal jurisdiction in labor cases, but rather to limit the circumstances under which an injunction may be issued in those cases where the federal court already has jurisdiction by virtue of some federal question or diversity; § 107 does not itself introduce a federal question into a dispute that would otherwise be governed exclusively by state law. Brown v. Coumanis,
Our holding in Brown v. Coumanis controls this case, for we stated there that the Norris-LaGuardia Act
does not undertake to establish for employers any new substantive rights, nor put within the protection of federal courts all labor disputes, even though the conditions of the Act are met. Its purpose is not to enlarge federal jurisdiction, but, in the matter of using injunctions, to restrict it____ The Norris-LaGuardia Act does not vest power in a court of the United States to do anything it could not previously have done.
The majority opinion in Scott' noted that “[t]he Norris-LaGuardia Act was passed for the purpose of limiting the circumstances and conditions under which injunctive action could be taken against labor organizations in the context of a labor dispute.”
Here, Norris-LaGuardia was the only jurisdictional basis invoked. by the parties.
II
An unresolved challenge to its jurisdiction to enter an injunction does not end a court’s authority to enforce that injunction by the contempt power. Thus, in Carter v. United States,
Here, there was no challenge raised in the district court as to that court’s jurisdiction to enter an injunction governing the conduct of strikers and workers at the Aquaslide plant site. Indeed, it was .the NMU that first invoked the Norris-LaGuardia Act as a source of jurisdiction for the district court, and neither the union, the company, nor any of the individual strikers ever objected below that jurisdiction was lacking.
A distinction must be drawn, however, between civil contempt and criminal contempt. Civil contempt proceedings may be either coercive or compensatory. Coercive proceedings designed to impel compliance with the injunction necessarily cease when the injunction is invalidated. See Carter v. United States,
It does not follow, of course, that simply because a defendant may be punished for criminal contempt for disobedience of an order later set aside on appeal, that the plaintiff in the action may profit by way of a fine imposed in a simultaneous proceeding for civil contempt based upon a violation of the same order. The right to remedial relief falls with an injunction which events prove was erroneously issued, and a fortiori when the injunction or restraining order was beyond the jurisdiction of the court.
United States v. United Mine Workers of America,
The proceedings against Garcia, Aquirre, and Garza, on the other hand, were for criminal contempt. A criminal contempt proceeding is neither coercive nor compensatory; it is punitive. As we have noted above, a court has the power to punish as contempts acts in disobedience of an injunction which is ultimately determined to have been issued in error. Thus, the criminal contempt convictions of Garcia, Aguirre, and Garza are not affected by the invalidity of the underlying injunction.
Ill
Garcia, Aguirre, and Garza assert that the district court erred in denying them a jury trial on the criminal contempt charge. As the defendants were given pretrial assurance that no sentence in excess of six months imprisonment would be imposed, they had no right to jury trial under the Sixth Amendment. Cheff v. Schnackenberg,
Section 3691 was originally enacted as § 21 of the Clayton Act, and was intended to provide a jury trial to defendants charged with criminal contempt where the act constituting the contempt also constituted a criminal offense under state or federal law. This statute ended the anomo-lous circumstance that a defendant accused, of some criminal act violative of an injunction or order might be denied a jury if he was charged with the contempt rather than with the substantive criminal offense.
Because the right to jury trial in a prose1 cution based on the substantive criminal offense would have been subject to a petty offense exception, see District of Columbia v. Clawans,
The only substantial difference between such a [contempt] proceeding as we have here, and a criminal prosecution by indictment or information is that in the latter the act complained of is the viola*1402 tion of a law and in the former the violation of a decree. In the case of the latter, the accused has a constitutional right of trial by jury; while in the former he has not.”
Michaelson v. United States,
The contempt provisions of the Clayton Act were eventually recodified as part of the criminal code. 18 U.S.C. §§ 401, 402, 3691. The revisor’s note to § 3691 observes that certain portions of the old statute were superseded by Fed.R.Crim.P. 23 & 42. Significantly, the Advisory Committee notes to the general jury trial provision in rule 23 expressly observe that there is no right to a jury trial for petty offenses.
In light of the above, we will assume— though we are not here called upon to decide — that there is a petty offense exception to the right of jury trial granted under § 3691. Section 3692, however, has different origins and different language, and we are convinced that the two statutes diverge on this point.
Section 3692’s statutory predecessor was to some degree modeled on the statutory predecessor of § 3691. However, the observation that § 11 of the Norris-LaGuar-dia Act was a “similar provision” to § 21 of the Clayton Act, H.Rep. No. 669, 72d Cong. 1st Sess., at 10 (1932), signified only that the proposed statute represented no substantially greater intrusion on the courts’ power to punish contempts than did the existing statute, which had already been held constitutional by the Supreme Court in Michaelson v. United States. Moreover, § 3692 and its predecessor never contained a provision comparable to § 3691’s requirement that trials under the latter statute “shall conform as near as may be to the practice in other criminal cases.” As the Norris-LaGuardia Act was designed to limit the role of the judiciary in resolving labor disputes, a ban on summary treatment of all criminal citations for contempts not committed in the presence of the court would accord with the Congressional purpose. We hold accordingly that the right to jury trial under § 3692 is not subject to exception because the penalty imposed in a particular case is petty.
The district court cited Muniz v. Hoffman,
In sum, we hold that § 3692, where applicable, guarantees an accused contemnor a right to trial by jury regardless of the sentence to be imposed. As Garcia, Aguirre, and Garza were denied the jury trial to which they were entitled, their convictions of criminal contempt must be reversed.
REVERSED.
Notes
. Reversal of the judgment against the NMU moots Aquaslide's cross-appeal.
. In pertinent part, 29 U.S.C. § 107 provides:
No court of the United States shall have jurisdiction to issue a temporary or permanent injunction in any case involving or growing out of a labor dispute, as defined in this chapter, except after hearing the testimony of witnesses in open court (with opportunity for cross-examination) in support of the allegations of a complaint made under oath, and testimony in opposition thereto, if offered, and except after findings of fact by the court, to the effect—
(a) That unlawful acts have been threatened and will be committed unless restrained or have been committed and will be continued unless restrained, but no injunction or temporary restraining order shall be issued on account of any threat or unlawful act excepting against the person or persons, association, or organization making the threat or committing the unlawful act or actually authorizing or ratifying the same after actual knowledge thereof;
(b) That substantial and irreparable injury to complainant's property will follow;
(c) That as to each item of relief granted greater injury will be inflicted upon complainant by the denial of relief than will be inflicted upon defendants by the granting of relief;
(d) That complainant has no adequate remedy at law; and
(e) That the public officers charged with the duty to protect complainant's property are unable or unwilling to furnish adequate protection.
29 U.S.C. § 101 provides:
No court of the United States, as defined in this chapter, shall have jurisdiction to issue any restraining order or temporary or permanent injunction in a case involving or growing out of a labor dispute, except in a strict conformity with the provisions of this chapter; nor shall any such restraining order or temporary or permanent injunction be issued contrary to the public policy declared in this chapter.
. The majority opinion went on to conclude that the incident underlying the suit was not a “labor dispute,” rendering the Norris-LaGuardia Act inapplicable and pretermitting consideration of whether the district court’s failure to make the findings required by § 107 deprived it of jurisdiction to enter an injunction.
. The cross-complaint’s reliance on pendant jurisdiction is of course nugatory if no proper jurisdictional basis had been previously established.
. Because the absence of subject matter jurisdiction is a defect that cannot be waived, we consider this issue despite the fact that it was raised for the first time on appeal, and we would even have been obliged to raise it sua sponte had the appellants not urged it as a point of appeal.
. This circumstance also satisfies us that our decision in Brown v. Coumanis was not so widely understood as to make the invocation of Norris-LaGuardia as a source of federal jurisdiction frivolous. We noted in Carter,
. In pertinent part, § 3692 provides:
In all cases of contempt arising under the laws of the United States governing the issuance of injunctions or restraining orders in any case involving or growing out of a labor dispute, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the contempt shall have been committed.
In light of our holding that the district court lacked jurisdiction to issue the present injunction, an argument could be made that § 3692 does not apply because this case does not in fact "arise under” any law of the United States. We decline to place the defendants in the anomo-lous position of being worse off for having violated an injunction the district court had no jurisdiction to issue than they would be if they had violated a valid injunction. This case does grow out of a "labor dispute” as that term is defined in the Norris-LaGuardia Act, 29 U.S.C. § 113(c), and the statute under which the district court putatively exercised jurisdiction is one "governing the issuance of injunctions" in such cases. If this injunction was sufficiently extant that violations thereof may be punished as a contempt, we conclude that it was also sufficiently extant that the contemnor should enjoy the rights afforded one who disobeys a wholly valid injunction.
. A Sixth Amendment right to jury trial in non-petty criminal contempt cases was not recognized until the 1960's. See Cheff v. Schnacken-berg; United States v. Barnett,
. In pertinent part, § 3691 provides:
Whenever a contempt charged shall consist in willful disobedience of any lawful writ, process, order, rule, decree, or command of any district court of the United States by doing or omitting any act or thing in violation thereof, and the act or thing done or omitted also constitutes a criminal offense under any Act of Congress, or under the laws of any state in which it was done or omitted, the accused, upon demand therefor, shall be entitled to trial by a jury, which shall conform as near as may be to the practice in other criminal cases.
Section 3691 does not apply here because the acts for which the defendants were cited for contempt — picketing in a manner that obstructed ingress to and egress from Aquaslide’s plant, and failing to limit the number of persons engaged in picketing — are not criminal acts.
. Our holding that there is no petty offense exception to § 3692 accords with an underlying assumption in Martinez and Robinson and other similar cases such as United States v. Partin,
