Plaintiffs, skilled Negro shipyard workers, brought this action on behalf of themselves and approximately 2,000 other Negro workers similarly situated, to restrain defendants from interfering with their employment or reemployment because they are not members of certain local labor unions affiliated with the defendant International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Shipbuilders and Helpers of America. The trial court sustained the demurrers of all defendants, discharged an order to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue and dismissed the action. Plaintiffs have appealed from the order of discharge and from the judgment of dismissal.
The complaint alleges in substance as follows: Plaintiffs are employees and fоrmer employees of defendants Permanente Metals Corporation and Kaiser Company, Inc. A written contract containing a provision for a closed shop is in effect between the employers and the International Brotherhood, which dispatches workers for employment at the shipyards through the agencies of defendant loсal unions. Negroes are not admitted to membership in the local unions, but plaintiffs were dispatched for employment at the shipyards without permitting or requiring them to become members. Subsequently, however, the unions attempted to compel plaintiffs and other Negro workers to become members of and pay dues to Negro lodges established under the authority of the International Brotherhood as auxiliaries to the local unions. These auxiliaries, it is alleged, are not bona fide labor unions but constitute schemes and devices whereby the defendant unions segregate Negro from non-Negro workers and discriminate against Negroes, the sole reason for the segregation and dis *589 crimination being race and color. Various practices of the unions, provided for in the By-Laws Governing Auxiliary Lodges of the International Brotherhood, are set forth in the complaint and are challenged as discriminatory. Plaintiffs are willing to join the local unions upon the same terms and conditions as non-Negro workers, but they are not willing to join or pay dues to the auxiliary lodges.
The gravamen of the complaint is that the unions assert the right to obtain the discharge of the Negro workers under the closed shop contract because they are not members of the unions, although at the same time the unions will not admit Negroes to membership except under discriminatory and unequal conditions. In
James
v.
Marinship Corp.,
Defendants point out, however, that the complaint filed herein does not allege that either the International Brotherhood or its local affiliates had attained a monopoly of labor in the locality, and, therefore, they contend, the complaint does not state a cause of action under the decision in the James case. Although it is true that the court in the James case treated the existence of such a monopoly as an important reason for granting relief, the decision, contrary to defendants’ contention, was not made dependent thereon. The question was expressly reserved for future determination, but we noted, however, that some states, by statute, have declared
all
labor unions to be affected with a public interest and thus subject to regulation. (
It is now established by a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States rendered since the James case, that a state has the power to prohibit discrimination on account of race, crеed or color by any labor union with respect to membership or union services.
(Railway Mail Assn.
v. Corsi,
The failure to allege a monopoly of labor in the entire locality is not fatal to plaintiffs’ cause of action insofar as the authorities relied upon in the James case are concerned. Although it is true that certain of the cases cited emphasize the fact that such a monopoly existed (see, for example,
Wilson v
.
Newspaper & Mail Deliverers’ Union
(1938), 123 N.J.Eq. 347 [
These decisions are based upon the theory that such collective labor activity does not have a proper purpose and constitutes an unlawful interference with a worker’s right to *591 employment. The Restatement of Torts, section 810, has adopted this view, stating: “Workers who in concert procure the dismissal of an employee because he is not a member of a labor union satisfactory to the workers . . . are liable to the employee if, but only if, he desires to be a member of the labor union but membership is not open to him on reasonable terms.” This rule is not founded upon the рresence of a labor monopoly in the entire locality, and the reasoning is simply that it is unfair for a labor union to interfere with a person’s right to work because he does not belong to the union although he is willing to join and abide by reasonable union rules and is able to meet all reasonable conditions of membership. No purpose apрropriate to the functions of a labor organization may be found in such discriminatory conduct. Here the union’s efforts are directed, not toward advancing the legitimate interests of a labor union, but rather against other workers solely on the basis of race and color.
The reasons why an arbitrarily closed union should not be permitted to exist together with a closed shop are stated in 1 Teller, Labor Disputes and Collective Bargaining (1940), at page 285, as follows: “Labor unions which close their ranks to the public thereby assume a sovereignty which is not theirs to assume. . . . The closed shop as an instrumentality of a labor union, membership wherein is reasonably open to the public, establishes a desirablе rule governing industrial enterprise. The closed shop at the hands of a labor union which substantially excludes the public from its benefits, on the other hand, is a means whereby an anti-social monopoly is foisted upon the industrial body politic.” This reasoning is applicable whether the monopoly is limited to a single plant or covers an entire community.
The public interest is directly involved because the unions are seeking to control by arbitrary selection the fundamental right to work. While the need for protection may be greater where the union has secured closed shop contracts covering all the jobs in the locality, this is only an aggravated phase of the general problem. The individual workеr denied the right to keep his job suffers a loss, and his right to protection against arbitrary and discriminatory exclusion from union membership should be recognized wherever membership is a necessary prerequisite to work. A closed shop agreement with a single employer is in itself a form of monopoly, giving a third party, the union, control over at least the plаnt of the
*592
signatory employer, and although such a labor monopoly is not in itself improper, it carries with it certain responsibilities, and the public clearly has an interest in preventing any abuse of it. As pointed out in the Corsi case (
It is assumed in connection with another phase of the case that the shipyards are industries affecting interstate commеrce and that the parties hereto are subject to the National Labor Relations Act. (49 Stats. 449, 29 U.S.C.A. § 151, et seq.) The act affords a further reason for granting relief because under its provisions it is unnecessary to show that the unions have a labor monopoly in the locality. The union as the bargaining agent of the employees selected in accordance with the act has the duty to represent
all
employees, without discrimination because of race or color, and it may be compelled to do so by judicial action.
(Cf. Steele
v.
Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co.,
The complaint, therefore, does not fail to state a cause of action merely because it does not allege that the union defendants have attained a monopoly of the supply of labor in the locality.
The union dеfendants contend that their demurrers were properly sustained on the ground that the complaint did not allege unreasonable discrimination against Negro workers. They say that the International Brotherhood is open to Negro members if they consent to segregation into separate auxiliaries and that this is not unreasonable discrimination. In addition tо segregation, however, the complaint alleges specific provisions of the by-laws of the International Brother
*593
hood which would operate to place members of the auxiliaries in an unequal and disadvantageous position as compared with members of the local unions. Plaintiffs charge, for example, that the locals control, manage, and supervise all of the affairs and business of the auxiliaries whereas the auxiliaries have no voice or vote in the affairs of the supervising locals; that the auxiliaries are not allowed business agents or grievance committees to act for their members but must seek representation through the business agents of the local unions, “whо refuse to act for the members of said auxiliaries”; and that members of the auxiliaries are dispatched to employment only through the agencies of the local unions and cannot obtain a change of classification of work from helper to journeyman without their approval. These union rules and practices were held discriminatоry in
James
v.
Marinship Corp.,
The union defendants next contend that the trial court did not have jurisdiction over the subject matter because, they assert, if an injunction were granted it would in effect destroy their closed shop contract and affect the status of the employees of the shipyards, and it would thus interfere with the rights of collective bargaining granted by the National Labor Relations Act. This contention was determined adversely to defendants in the James case. They now rely upon
Hill
v.
State of Florida,
There is nothing in the Hill case, however, that precludes a state court from enforcing against a labor union such rights of individual workers as are consistent with the provisions of the federal act. That act clearly does not give a union the authority to maintain a closed shop agreement together with an arbitrarily closed union membership. Moreover, the rights which plaintiffs seeks to enforce not only are consistent with the provisions of the federal act but appear to be affirmatively granted thereby. Seсtion 9(a) provides that the union selected
*594
by a majority of the employees of a bargaining unit “shall be the exclusive representatives of all the employees in such unit” (49 Stats. 453, 29 U.S.C.A. §159), and it is difficult to see how a union can fairly represent all employees of a bargaining unit if it arbitrarily excludes some from membership thereby depriving them of the opportunity to vote for union leaders and to participate in determining union policies. (See
James
v.
Marinship Corp.,
An additional contention made by the employer in
Thompson
v.
Moore Drydock, Co., post,
page 595 [
Defendants further contend that the trial court had discretionary power to deny a preliminary injunction. The record shows, however, that the order to show cause was discharged upon the sustaining of the demurrers without leave to amend and the injunction was refused solely on the ground that the trial court concluded that the action had to be dismissed because the complaint did not state a cause of action. Since the judgment of dismissal must be reversed, the trial court should consider thе application for a preliminary injunction on the merits in accordance with the views set forth in this opinion.
The judgment of dismissal and the order discharging the order to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue are reversed.
Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for a rehearing was denied February 25, 1946.
