226 Mass. 21 | Mass. | 1917
By becoming a member of the voluntary association known as “The United Shoe Workers of America” the plaintiff engaged to be bound by its rules and subjected himself to its discipline. Correia v. Portuguese Fraternity of the United States of America, 218 Mass. 305. Carter v. Papineau, 222 Mass. 464. And the trial for alleged infraction of his obligations having been conducted, as the master finds, in accordance with the constitution, his expulsion is not reviewable and the original bill cannot be maintained under the first prayer,, that the defendants be enjoined “from excluding the plaintiff from access to their meetings and from membership.” Spilman v. Supreme Council of the Home Circle, 157 Mass. 128. But upon severance, his interest in the funds and property of the association ended, nor was he bound by the purposes or amenable to the penal code of the body with which he had been affiliated, and in so far as the defendants were concerned his right to dispose of his own labor according to his own will had not been abrogated or restricted. McFadden v. Murphy, 149 Mass. 341. Plant v. Woods, 176 Mass. 492. Berry v. Donovan, 188 Mass. 353.
It is unnecessary to pass on the validity of the agreement, which is an instrument under seal, or to decide whether the manufacturers or the members of the association could have compelled specific performance, for in the light of the findings quoted this defence vanishes.
It is true that the fifth, and in this connection the important article of this agreement or “Peace Pact” entered into by the association when the plaintiff was a member and certain shoe manufacturers including his employers provides, that “. . . so long as these local unions are in a position to furnish help to do the work no other help may be employed.” The defendants nevertheless were not seeking its protection for the economic purpose of furnishing work for their own members, where if this were not done there would not be enough work to keep them employed, which was the motive underlying the strike decided to be lawful in Minasian v. Osborne, 210 Mass. 250. Nor were they actuated by a desire to conserve and promote the welfare of the plaintiff and his employers through the offer of friendly advice. Tasker
The report, while stating that the plaintiff has lost the benefit of his contracts of employment, goes further. It is specifically found “that by reason of the control which the defendants and their organization exercise over the shoe industry in Lynn, it will be impossible for the plaintiff hereafter to obtain work in at least ninety per cent of the shoe factories of Lynn in which the labor is controlled by the United Shoe Workers of America, and further as a marked man, it is highly improbable that he could obtain and keep employment in the remaining ten per cent of the shoe factories in Lynn.”
The plaintiff manifestly is a sufferer from the consequences of an intentional and a successful boycott. If he had ceased to work at his calling and had engaged in trade the attempt to deprive him of his customers and to destroy his business by the methods described would have been under the master’s findings an actionable wrong. Burnham v. Dowd, 217 Mass. 351. The right to acquire property by labor is coequal with the right to acquire property by contract and, having the same right to sell his labor as he would have had to sell his merchandise to the highest bidder, it is no less an actionable wrong where the right to his handiwork as a means of subsistence has been malevolently taken away or impaired under industrial conditions which the defendants knew would so operate as to make his further employment in the community where he resides extremely precarious if . not practically impossible. Berry v. Dorman, 188 Mass. 353, 355, and cases cited.
While it is apparent upon the record that the plaintiff cannot be effectively aided by injunctive relief, he is entitled to damages. Perry v. Pye, 215 Mass. 403, 413. New England Cement Gun Co. v. McGivern, 218 Mass. 198, 204. The decree dismissing the bill is reversed, and a decree with costs is to be entered for the amount assessed by the master.
Ordered accordingly.