380 Pa. 164 | Pa. | 1955
Opinion by
In this case an injunction was issued restraining defendants from picketing plaintiff’s premises and from interfering with its employes in the course of their work. The questions now presented are whether the issuance of the injunction was justified, and whether, even if it were, the injunction should now be dissolved because of the lapse of more than five years since it was issued and the picketing ceased.
Did the facts warrant the issuance of the injunction? Judge Lewis found as facts that at the time the picketing began five of plaintiff’s employes were members of the defendant union but in the interim had discontinued their employment, leaving 52 employes none of whom was á union member; that there was no strike and apparently no differences of any kind between plaintiff and its employes; that the pickets were disorderly and prevented both customers and employes from entering and leaving plaintiff’s plant; that when the picketing began on March 30, 1949, some 16 to 30 pickets appeared carrying signs inscribed “On Strike, International Ladies’ Garment Workers Union” but subsequently changed to read: “Wilkes Sportswear does not employ union help. Signed, International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union”; that from March 30 until the date of the final hearing on June 1 the picketing continued, and on April 20 there were between 50 and 100 pickets in front of the premises; that on the latter date some of the employes were assaulted and their clothes torn in an attempt to prevent them
Both parties to this controversy agree that plaintiff’s business involved interstate operations (cf. National Labor Relations Board v. Fainblatt, 306 U. S. 601), which makes it unnecessary to discuss the facts justifying such mutual understanding. To the extent, therefore, that plaintiff claimed defendants were attempting to coerce its employes into joining the union or to coerce plaintiff into compelling or influencing its employes to join the union, plaintiff would be obliged to present its grievance to the National Labor Relations Board and not to the courts of the State: Garner v. Teamsters, Chauffeurs and Helpers Local Union No. 776 (A.F.L.), 346 U. S. 485. But in view of the court’s findings in regard to the lawlessness, violence and intimidation of plaintiff’s employes and customers which featured the picketing the court certainly had jurisdiction of the bill of complaint and was justified in
As thus modified the final decree of the court below is affirmed at defendants’ costs.
A second question has been introduced into the present proceedings by a petition filed by defendants requesting that the record be remanded to the court below with direction that, upon its receipt of a petition to dissolve the final decree, it should determine the issue raised thereby. Defendants point to the fact that no picketing of any kind has taken place since the issuance of the preliminary injunction on June 17, 1949, — being a period of more than five years and covering the year that elapsed between the dissolution of the injunction in December, 1951, and its reinstatement by the court en banc in December, 1952. In their brief they assure this court that they intend at all times hereafter to confine their conduct and activities to lawful picketing for organizational purposes. The question, then, is whether under such circumstances the injunction, even as heretofore modified, should be retained in force,- or whether it should now be dissolved, subject, of course, to being reinstated if any disorderly picketing or other unlawful activities recur.
In Milk Wagon Drivers Union of Chicago, Local 753, v. Meadowmoor Dairies, Inc., 312 U. S. 287, 298, the court said: “The injunction which we sustain is ‘permanent’ only for the temporary period for which it may last. It is justified only by the violence that induced it and only so long as it counteracts a continuing intimidation. Familiar equity procedure assures opportunity for modifying or vacating an injunction
The controlling question, therefore, is whether there is any reasonable ground to believe, under all the circumstances, that the illegal practices which led to the original entry of the injunction would be repeated if the injunction were dissolved. The answer to that question here can be given only, in the first instance, as in the Tamagno and Pappas cases, by the court below upon consideration of a petition presented to it seeking dissolution of the injunction, and testimony that may be offered in support thereof. Accordingly, the record is remanded to the court below for such determination.
Defendants presented a petition to the court on October 25, 1950, praying that the decree entered on June 17, 1949 (wbicb was in the identical terms of the subsequent final decree), be modified to permit picketing in a peaceful manner and for a lawful purpose.