140 Minn. 481 | Minn. | 1918
Lead Opinion
The defendants are the Motion Picture Machine Operators Union of Minneapolis, known as Local_ 219, and composed of motion picture machine operators; the Trades and Labor Assembly of Minneapolis composed of representatives from a large number of labor unions of Minneapolis of which Local 219 is one; and a large number of individuals who are officers or members of one or the other, or both, of these associations.
Defendants admit the acts above mentioned and also an intention to continue them, and insist that they have the legal right to do so. Plaintiff alleges that prior to the commission of such acts he had built up and enjoyed a large and lucrative business. He also alleges that these acts deter the public from patronizing his theatre to such an extent that his business has been greatly injured and will be ruined if they are continued, and that he has no adequate remedy at law.
The undisputed facts, some of which are mentioned above, show plainly that the purpose of defendants is to injure and perhaps destroy plaintiff’s business unless he accedes to their demands, and that the course adopted is having the effect intended, and that plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law.
No person or combination of persons has the right maliciously to injure or destroy the business of another by acts which serve no legitimate purpose of his own. Tuttle v. Buck, 107 Minn. 145, 119 N. W. 946, 22 L.R.A. (N.S.) 599, 131 Am. St. 446, 16 Ann. Cas. 807; Hitchman
Defendants cite and rely upon the case of Steffes v. Motion Picture M. Oper. U. of Minneapolis, 136 Minn. 200, 161 N. W. 524, as authorizing them to do the things complained of, and the showing which they make indicates that they intended to, and probably did, confine their acts to those which were recognized in that case as permissible for the purpose and under the circumstances there disclosed. In that case the purpose sought to be accomplished was found to be a lawful one, and to bring the present case within the doctrine of that case, the purpose sought to be accomplished in the present case must also be a lawful purpose.
Plaintiff is not a member of the operators’ union and cannot become a member because the constitution of the union provides that no owner, or part owner, or manager, of a place of amusement shall be admitted to membership. It also provides that any member who shall become owner, part owner, or manager of a place of amusement must either
In the Steffes case, Steffes employed a nonunion operator, and the purpose of the union was to secure the employment of a union operator. No question as to whether the owner should be permitted to work himself was involved. In the present case, according to the claim of plaintiff, the sole question involved is whether the owner shall be permitted to work himself in his own business.
If men, either singly or in combination, may lawfully injure or destroy the business of another for the purpose of compelling him not to work in such business himself, it will have far-reaching consequences. Such a doctrine would limit the field of business to those who hawe sufficient capital to carry on a business without becoming operatives therein themselves, and would debar those who have little or no capital, ex
If the facts bear out plaintiff’s claim that the purpose of defendants is to compel him to cease working as an operator in his own business, it will follow that they are seeking to accomplish an unlawful purpose, and that the acts by which they are attempting to prevent the public from patronizing him will fall within the class of acts which the law deems malicious, and which it is the duty of the courts to restrain. Hitchman Coal & Coke Co. v. Mitchell, 245 U. S. 229, supra. Acts
Granting or refusing an injunction pendente lite rests so largely in the discretion of the trial court, however, that an appellate court is not justified in interfering, unless the conclusion reached is clearly erroneous and will result in an injury which it is the duty of the court to prevent. While the question as to whether plaintiff shall work as an operator is doubtless the principal controversy between the parties, defendants deny that that is the only controversy. They assert that plaintiff discharged his union operators without cause, and refused to re-employ union operators unless they would work with nonunion operators. Also that he employed nonunion men to make improvements and repairs in the the-atre, and has had nonunion operators, other than himself, operating his machines. Defendants could not well complain of the employment of nonunion operators, if union operators refused to work for the sole reason that plaintiff worked himself, but we understand defendants to claim that plaintiff required union men to work with nonunion men other than himself. The refusal of the trial court to issue the injunction requires us to take the view of the facts most favorable to the defendants, and we cannot say that plaintiff’s contention is conclusively established. The case is presented upon the pleadings and upon affidavits pro and con; it has not yet been tried. If when the case is tried and findings are made determining the facts, it shall appear that plaintiff’s contention is correct, he is entitled to relief, but we cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to issue an injunction before the facts are ascertained, and the order appealed from is affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring).
I concur in the result.
I do not understand that the right of a man to work in his own business is questioned nor do I understand that there is any claim of right of defendants to “destroy plaintiff’s business” on any ground.
On December 7,1918, the following opinion was filed:
Plaintiff applied for a rehearing claiming that the admitted facts show a violation of section 8973 of the general statutes of 1913. The matter was submitted to the trial court upon the pleadings and upon affidavits pro and con, and that court refused to issue a temporary injunction. Defendants relied upon the Steffes ease and apparently assumed that they had brought themselves within the rule applied in that case. The right to and necessity for a temporary injunction is not so conclusively established that we feel required to order that one issue notwithstanding the refusal of the trial court to issue it. To direct its issuance under the circumstances would be, in effect, to determine the case upon affidavits, and the rights of the parties can be more satisfactorily determined after the parties adduce their evidence at the hearing upon the merits.
Eehearing denied.