60 A.2d 21 | Pa. | 1948
Defendant labor union and the individual defendants appeal from an injunction granted at the instance of plaintiffs, proprietors of the Imperial Hotel in Chester, Pennsylvania, restraining defendants from picketing the hotel. The injunction was granted on the ground *50 that the picketing was for an unlawful purpose. The decree is supported by facts found on sustaining evidence. No witnesses were called by the defendants though one of them, Rocco Locantore, the union's business agent, was called by the plaintiffs as for cross-examination.
Defendants contend (1) that equity has no jurisdiction because the Labor Relations Act provides a remedy, (2) that as a proceeding was pending before the Labor Relations Board, comity required the dismissal of the bill, (3) that equity cannot enjoin peaceful picketing for organizational purposes, (4) the picketing did not constitute a secondary boycott.
The controlling question is whether the picketing which was prohibited was for an unlawful purpose. If the purpose was unlawful the case presented was within the general equity jurisdiction of the court, unrestricted either by the Labor Anti-Injunction Act of 1937, P. L. 1198,
The plaintiffs conduct a hotel, restaurant and taproom with fourteen employes. There was no controversy between plaintiffs and their employes. A majority of them were not members of a labor union and did not wish to become members. The plaintiffs had no objection to any of their employes joining any union and offered no objection to defendants' effort to persuade them to join a union. Defendant union did not represent any of plaintiffs' employes. In April or May, 1947, the defendant, Rocco Locantore, the defendant union's business agent, submitted to plaintiffs for execution a form of contract to govern plaintiffs' relations with their employes and requiring plaintiffs to employ only union employes; Locantore informed plaintiffs that if they did not execute the contract picketing would result. *51 Plaintiffs, desiring not to coerce their employes declined to comply with Locantore's request and the picketing followed as threatened. Pickets obstructed1 plaintiffs' doorways "so as to hinder customers' entrances thereto." "42. A fist fight occurred between one of the pickets and customers of plaintiffs' place of business at the hotel. 43. One of the pickets used vile and abusive language to and threatened to 'get' one of the plaintiffs' employes." The court also found that "sellers and suppliers of foods, soft drinks, beer and services have, as a result of the picketing, refused to make deliveries to plaintiffs at their place of business although prior [to the picketing] deliveries were regularly made."
Section 4 of the Labor Anti-Injunction Act of 1937, P. L. 1198, was amended by the Act of June 9, 1939, P. L. 302,
This record presents a case directly within the amendment restoring general equity jurisdiction. "A majority of [plaintiffs'] employes have not joined a labor organization." They seem to prefer to exercise the right of not joining any union, a right which is protected by section 5 of the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Act of 1937, P. L. 1168, 43 PS 211.5. Section 6 of the same Act makes it "an unfair labor practice" for an employer to interfere with, restrain or coerce employes in the exercise of the rights guaranteed by the Act.
Defendants' purpose in picketing was to require plaintiffs to force their employes to join the union or to discharge them and employ others who are members of the union. Such a purpose is clearly unlawful and subject to restraint: see sec. 13, Act of June 16, 1836, P. L. 784, 12 Pa.C.S.A. § 1221; 17 Pa.C.S.A. § 281, 282, 2082, and the Act of February 14, 1857, P. L. 39, 17 PS 283; compare Main C. D. Inc. v. Columbia etc.,
In analogous circumstances the same principles were applied in R. H. White Co. v. Murphy,
Having reached the conclusion stated above it is unnecessary to deal with alleged secondary boycott.
Decree affirmed; one-half the costs to be paid by the appellant Local No. 677 and the other half by Rocco Locantore, defendant.
From August 1, 1947, to Sept. 1, 1947, the signs bore the legend "IMPERIAL HOTEL AND BAR IS NON UNION PHILADELPHIA LOCAL JOINT BOARD A. F. OF L."
From September 1, 1947, to the date of the hearings the signs bore the legend "IMPERIAL HOTEL AND BAR THIS IS A NON-UNION HOUSE . . ."