25 N.W.2d 425 | Wis. | 1946
The proceeding was initiated on September 9, 1946, by petition of the Wisconsin Employment Relations Board for an order to show cause directing that Allis-Chalmers Workers' Union, Local 248, U. A. W. A., C. I. O., be required to show cause why they should not be punished as and for a civil contempt for failing to obey and in disobeying a judgment of the circuit court for Milwaukee county entered September 9, 1946, in an action under ch. 111 of the statutes, brought by Wisconsin Employment Relations Board against Allis-Chalmers Workers' Union, Local 248, U. A. W. A., C. I. O., and Robert Buse, Joseph W. Dombek, Fred McStroul, Arne H. Hansen, Jr., Herbert Nagi, Charles N. Fisher, John F. Kennedy, Raymond G. Mickelson, Alfred Reinke, Robert O. Wartchow, John Fallon, George Laich, Walter Golon, Virgil Steele, William Zastrow, Nicholas Ostovich, Edwin Peters, Michael Sheehan, Owen N. Lambert, Richard Pearson, John Krier, Ralph Hagenkord, Anthony Todryk, Morris Kipnis, Charles Kompas, and Kermit F. Gavigan to enforce certain orders of the board relating to picketing. The amended petition alleges that copies of the judgment were mailed to each member of the Union and posted in the meeting hails and offices of the Union prior to the events later described in the petition. It is alleged that the Union and the officers and members specifically named have failed to conform to the provisions of the judgment and to desist from enjoined activities; "that on the contrary on the 27th, 28th, 29th, and 30th days of October, 1946," they and *592 each of them have engaged in inducing picketing of a character to hinder and prevent persons on foot and in conveyances from freely entering and leaving the premises of the Allis-Chalmers Company; that on the same dates they have engaged in mass picketing, force and coercion, and thereby hindered the pursuit of lawful work and employment on the premises of said company, and have obstructed and interfered with ingress and egress to and from the premises respectively; that the acts and omissions were calculated and do impair the rights of petitioner which is charged with the duty of preventing such acts and omissions in the interests of employers, employees, and the general public,
The petition prays for an order to show cause why the respondents should not be punished "for said civil contempt" and for such other relief as is just and proper.
Respondents demurred to the petition on the grounds, (1) that petitioner has no legal capacity to sue; (2) that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
In addition, three motions were made, two purporting to be on and in behalf of "the respondent" and one on behalf of "the individuals named in the order to show cause." The motions were doubtless made in this form in order to cover all possible contingencies, and since this necessarily involved some repetition, it is deemed sufficient simply to summarize the motions as a whole. They were to the effect, (1) that the amended petition states no cause of action; (2) that it states no facts entitling plaintiff to relief by way of civil contempt; (3) that the petitioner is not a proper party; (4) that the proceedings be entitled criminal contempt under ch. 256, Stats.; (5) that the individuals named in the order to show cause be made parties to the proceedings and permitted to file written answers.
On November 12, 1946, the court entered an order overruling the demurrer and denying all of respondents' motions. Respondents appeal. *593
To avoid confusion resulting from the fact that respondents to the petition are appellants here, attention is called to the fact that in the opinion the petitioner will be referred to as "respondent," and the respondents to the petition will be referred to as "appellants."
Appellants make the following contentions upon this appeal: (1) That Wisconsin Employment Relations Board under sec.
We proceed to appellants' first contention. Sec.
We have carefully considered the contentions of appellants, and see no reason to depart from the holding of WisconsinE. R. Board v. Milk, etc., Union, supra. Sec.
Respondent argues that this power is necessarily implied from the express statutory grant of power to enforce its orders by an action in court, and that upon identical enforcement provisions in the National Labor Relations Act the National *596
Labor Relations Board concededly had this power. In this connection see Amalgamated Utility Workers v. Consol. EdisonCo.
The power of the National Labor Relations Board to initiate proceedings in labor relations affecting interstate commerce was necessary in view of the source and scope of federal powers to deal with the subject of labor. The National Labor Relations Act is not an exercise of police power. The power of congress to deal with the subject Has its source in the commerce clause of the constitution, and the purpose of the act was to prevent such unfair labor practices as proximately affect interstate commerce. The board was given the power to initiate proceedings because it must in each case exercise a discretion to determine whether a particular dispute so proximately affects interstate commerce as to warrant its intervention. In the light of this we see no distinguishing significance in the fact that the National Labor Relations Board has exclusive powers and an initiative that is absent in the case of the Wisconsin Board. This simply means that greater administrative powers and discretion were vested in the Federal Board. Fundamentally, however, both boards are administrative in character, and both have fact-finding functions of aquasi-judicial character. The preamble of the Wisconsin Act states that three distinct interests are to be considered in labor disputes: Employer, employee, and general public. When its jurisdiction is aroused, the statute vests the Wisconsin *597
Labor Relations Board with authority to seek enforcement of its orders by actions in the circuit court. The purpose is to enable it to administer the act efficiently in the interests named in the preamble. There is a necessary implication from the express grant of power to seek enforcement through the courts that the board may seek and obtain effective court action. The objection that so to hold permits the board to seek enforcement of a judgment and not of its order since the latter is merged in the judgment, appears to us to be formal rather than substantial. The provisions and purposes of sec.
We conclude that the board has the power to invoke the remedy of contempt as an incident to its power to enforce its judgment by judicial action. In this connection, see Carterv. Blaine County Inv. Co. (D.C.)
We now consider the question whether the facts alleged in the petition show a cause of action for civil or for criminal contempt. This question is not raised by appellants' general demurrer, since if the petition discloses a cause of action, a general demurrer must be overruled. It is, however, effectively *598 raised by the motions filed herein. Since this subject is governed by statute, it will be convenient to set forth the applicable statutory provisions.
Contempt in civil actions is governed by ch. 295, Stats. Sec. 295.01, Stats., so far as applicable here, provides as follows:
"295.01 Every court of record . . . shall have power to punish by fine and imprisonment, or either, any neglect or violation of duty or any misconduct by which the rights or remedies of a party in an action or proceeding depending or triable in such court . . . may be defeated, impaired, impeded or prejudiced in the following cases: . . .
"(3) Parties to actions . . . and all other persons . . . for any other disobedience to any lawful order, judgment or process of such court. . . ."
Criminal contempt is governed by ch. 256, Stats. Sec. 256.03, Stats., contains seven precisely described situations in which acts may be punished as criminal contempt. The only one applicable here is that described in sub. (3) as "wilful disobedience of any process or order lawfully issued or made by it." These sections indicate, (1) that civil contempt is more limited in scope than criminal contempt, and (2) that many acts which would constitute civil contempts may also be criminal contempts.
In order to constitute civil contempt, the acts must, as specified by the statute, tend to defeat, impair, impede, or prejudice the rights or remedies of a party to an action. Emerson v.Huss,
"If by this language the federal supreme court intended to declare that where one contumaciously performs an act or pursues a line of conduct in violation of a court order prohibiting the same, thereby indicating a purpose on his part to continue a course of conduct constituting a continuous violation of the rights of a suitor, his imprisonment is not and cannot be remedial, we must most emphatically disagree."
The court goes on to state that if the fact that "the imprisonment is for a definite term, and was induced by a past violation, is merely to be considered as a test by which to determine the character of the punishment, then we assent." The RoddCase, supra, involved an injunction directed against illegal picketing and it was held, (1) that the act could be prosecuted either as a civil or criminal contempt; (2) that contemnor was entitled at the outset to know whether he was being prosecuted civilly or criminally; (3) that the petition did not, as it should, disclose whether the proceeding was civil or criminal in nature, but (4) that defendant had waived this by failing to interpose a timely objection. The trial court having tried the matter as a civil contempt, this court declined to hold that *600
prejudicial error had resulted. See also Bowles v. Davidson,
We conclude: (1) That to constitute civil contempt, the act of disobedience to an injunctional order must tend to defeat, impair, impede, or prejudice the rights or remedies of a party in an action or proceeding pending or triable in such court; (2) that the wilful disobedience of an injunctional order also constitutes a criminal contempt; (3) that civil contempt is not limited to cases of failure to act on the part of contemnor but is maintainable for positive acts in violation of a restraining order where these evidence a purpose or have a tendency to defeat or impair the rights of a party to the action; (4) that the Wisconsin Labor Relations Board may bring contempt proceedings upon a judgment giving effect to its orders; (5) that the board has the representative interest defined in the preamble of ch. 111, Stats., and is injured by acts in violation of a restraining order which affect these interests; (6) it has brought this action for a civil contempt and appellants are adequately notified of the pleader's purpose in this respect.
The only remaining question is whether the positive acts charged to appellants in the petition do tend to defeat, impair, impede, or prejudice the rights or remedies of a party. On this point it is argued that paragraph (3) of the petition simply alleges past acts of disobedience to the restraining order on four specific days; that neither by express allegation nor inference therefrom is there disclosed a purpose on the part of petitioners to continue with the violation of the restraining order. This objection is not well taken. The allegations of the petition are not in the alternative. It is alleged in paragraph 1 that the restraining order was issued on September 9, 1946, and that appellants have "wholly failed and neglected to conform to the provisions of the judgment described in paragraph 1 hereof; that they and each of them have failed, refused, and neglected to cease and desist from the activities and conduct described in paragraph 1 hereof. . . ." Specific *601 acts of violation by mass picketing, and denial of access, are charged to have occurred on four consecutive days. In paragraph 4 it is alleged that the foregoing acts and omissions were calculated to, and do in fact defeat and impair the rights of petitioner. We consider that the petition sufficiently alleges that since the service of the court's injunctional order there has been a complete and continuous failure on the part of appellants to obey it, and that this course of conduct culminated in the specific acts charged. The latter are not isolated instances of past violation but extend for consecutive days and, taken in connection with the charge that there has been a failure to obey the order from the start, support the conclusion in paragraph 4 that the rights of respondent as a party have been and are being impaired. In view of this, we conclude that the trial court correctly held that the petition stated a cause of action for civil contempt. It is hardly necessary to add that upon the trial the proof and adjudication must satisfy the requisites of a proceeding for civil contempt according to the standards laid down in Emerson v. Huss, supra. By the Court. — Order affirmed.
FRITZ, J., took no part. *602