112 Misc. 650 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1920
This is a motion on the papers to vacate or modify a temporary injunction in a strike case. The defendants concede that the papers show specific acts for -an injunction against the defendant Meinhart who is alleged in the complaint to have been convicted of coercion in connection with this matter, the defendant Carusotti who was convicted of having committer an assault and the defendant Ancini who is identified as one of the pieketers but defendants idaim that there are not sufficient allegations in the complaint to justify the granting of the order against the other defendants. In this contention the defendants are in error. The complaint is based upon the claim that the defendants were united in a conspiracy to compel the employees of the plaintiff who were not
It is claimed by some that injunctions should not issue in labor cases. This is an extreme view and is not supported by a reasonable consideration of the evils of abolishing such a remedy. As heretofore suggested some of the acts of the defendants described in the complaint constitute a crime under the penal statutes of the state which provide that it shall be a crime for two or more persons to conspire: “ To prevent another from exercising a lawful trade or calling, or doing any other lawful act, by force, threats, intimidation, etc.” (Penal Law, § 580, subd. 5), and the assaults alleged to have been committed in the complaint also constitute a crime under the statutes of the state (Penal Law, § 244) and not only is the person actually engaged in the assault liable to prosecution therefor but one who “ aids and abets in its commission, and whether present or absent, and a person who directly or indirectly counsels, commands, induces or procures another to commit a crime.” Penal Law, § 2. The defendants who have violated any of these provisions of the statutes are liable to criminal prosecution therefor, but this remedy can be resorted to only after the commission of the offense and after the injury has been done. This remedy is not adequate in all cases. The very acts in this case which the injunction seeks to prevent the defendants from doing illustrate the necessity for such a procedure. The injunction, based upon a reasonable apprehension of
The injunction, however, should not run against persons who are not defendants or who are not connected with the defendants.' The power of the Supreme Court to issue a temporary injunction seems to be limited by the decisions to the authority conferred upon the court by the Code of Civil Procedure, apparently overlooking that the Constitution confers upon the Supreme
The injunction is continued in other respects until
Ordered accordingly.