114 Misc. 662 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1921
The moving papers show that plaintiff is engaged in the restaurant business in which it has invested upwards of $100,000. Its rent is about $25,000 yearly; it employs approximately 100 persons in different capacities, among them a large number of waiters; that it has always maintained an “ open shop ” and never discriminated against union labor; that the head waiter hired the employees. On February 13, 1921, at about ten p. m. while the restaurant was crowded with patrons who had given their orders but had not yet been served, all the waiters without cause or grievance therefor suddenly and without warning or notice walked out and on the following day began picketing in front of its place of business in groups or squads consisting of from two to fifteen persons; that the latter carry upon their
I am not unmindful of the rulings of the courts of our state on the subject of strikes and picketing. They exist in abundance, but in none that have been examined by me were the acts chargeable to the defendants here ever sanctioned. The terms, threats, coercion, oppression, intimidation, and perhaps others, have all been passed upon. It is known that a strike to coerce an employer to discharge non-union men has been held by .our courts to be lawdul. They have gone so far as to say that employees may dictate to employers how their business shall be conducted and whom they shall employ (National Protective Association v. Cumming, 170 N. Y. 315-324), and that the employees “ have the moral and legal right to say that
At least a contrast is shown between what our courts have held on the subject of picketing and what the courts of sister states have declared. The cases cited may perhaps be explained or distinguished or even.held inapplicable to the instant case, but whether followed or not, the fact remains that they also represent the best'thought on a subject that touches the very heart of the body politic.
Prom the proof submitted, I find myself finable to agree with the argument of counsel for defendants, that the picketing in the case at bar has been as peaceful and as gentle as he would have me believe. The motion to continue the injunction pendente lite is granted. The amount of the undertaking to be given will be fixed on the settlement of the order.
Ordered accordingly.