1. This Court accepts findings of fact in which the two lower
federal courts concur unless clear error is shown. P.
281 U. S.
558.
2. Evidence in this case supports the conclusion of the courts
below that the defendant Railroad Company and its officers were
actually
Page 281 U. S. 549
engaged in promoting the organization of an association of its
clerical employees in the interest of the Company and in opposition
to the plaintiff labor organization, and that these activities
constituted an actual interference with the liberty of the clerical
employees in the selection of representatives for the purposes set
forth in the Railway Labor Act of May 20, 1926. P.
281 U. S.
559.
3. A statute ought to be so construed that, if it can be
prevented, no clause shall be treated as superfluous, or
insignificant, or intended to be without effect. P.
281 U. S.
568.
4. While an affirmative declaration of duty contained in a
legislative enactment may be of imperfect obligation because not
enforceable in terms, a definite statutory prohibition of conduct
which would thwart the declared purpose of the legislation cannot
be disregarded.
Id.
5. The Railway Labor Act of 1926, while elaborating a plan for
amicable adjustments and voluntary arbitration of disputes between
common carriers and their employees, imposed certain definite
obligations enforceable by judicial proceedings, one of which is
found in the provision of subdivision 3 of § 2, that
"Representatives, for the purposes of this Act, shall be
designated by the respective parties . . . without interference,
influence, or coercion exercised by either party over the
self-organization or designation of representatives by the
other."
P.
281 U. S.
567.
6. The word " influence," as used in this provision, is not to
be taken as interdicting the normal relations and innocent
communications which are part of all friendly relations between
employer and employee; it means pressure -- the use of the
authority or power of either party to induce action by the other in
derogation of what the statute calls "self-organization." P.
281 U. S.
568.
7. The phrase "interference, influence or coercion" covers the
abuse of relation or opportunity so as to corrupt or override the
will.
Id.
8. Freedom of choice in the selection of representatives on each
side of the dispute is essential to the statutory scheme. All the
proceedings looking to amicable adjustments and to agreements for
arbitration of disputes -- the entire policy of the Act -- must
depend for success on the uncoerced action of each party to the end
that agreements satisfactory to both may be reached and the peace
essential to the uninterrupted service of the instrumentalities of
interstate commerce may be maintained.
Id.
9. As the prohibition was appropriate to the aim of Congress and
is capable of enforcement, the conclusion must be that enforcement
was contemplated. P.
281 U. S.
569.
Page 281 U. S. 550
10. The creation of an enforceable statutory right is not
dependent on the existence of a statutory penalty for its
violation. P.
281 U. S.
569.
11. As applied against interference by an interstate railroad
company with the lawful right of its employees to organize and
select representatives for the purposes of the Act, the prohibition
of § 2,
supra, is within the power of Congress to
regulate interstate commerce. P.
281 U. S.
570.
12. Since the prohibition does not interfere with the normal
exercise of the right of the carrier to select its employees or to
discharge them, and since the carrier has no right to interfere
with the freedom of the employees to select their representatives,
there is no ground for the carrier to complain that the prohibition
violates the Fifth Amendment.
Adair v. United States,
201 U. S. 161;
Coppage v. Kansas, 236 U. S. 1,
distinguished.
Id.
13. The interest of employees in the selection of
representatives to confer with their employer about contracts of
service is a property interest sufficient to satisfy § 20 of
the Clayton Act, which provides that no injunction shall be granted
in any case growing out of a dispute concerning terms or conditions
of employment unless necessary to prevent irreparable injury to
property or to a property right. P.
281 U. S.
571.
14.
Quaere: whether § 20 of the Clayton Act limits
the authority of the court to restrain the violation of an explicit
provision of an Act of Congress where an injunction would otherwise
be the proper remedy.
Id.
33 F.2d 13 affirmed.
Certiorari, 280 U.S. 550, to review a decree of the circuit
court of appeals which affirmed a decree of the district court
permanently enjoining the Railroad Company and other defendants
from interfering with, influencing, intimidating, or coercing
certain employees with respect to their right to select
representatives for the purpose of considering and deciding all
disputes between them and the company, and with respect to their
right of "self-organization." There was also a preliminary
injunction and a contempt order resulting from its violation.
See 24 F.2d
426; 25
id. 873, 876.
Page 281 U. S. 554
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in the district court by the Brotherhood
of Railway and Steamship Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express and
Station Employees, Southern Pacific Lines in Texas and Louisiana, a
voluntary association, and H. W. Harper, general chairman of its
System Board of Adjustment, against the Texas & New Orleans
Railroad Company and certain officers and agents of that company,
to obtain an injunction restraining the defendants
Page 281 U. S. 555
from interfering with, influencing, or coercing the clerical
employees of the railroad company in the matter of their
organization and designation of representatives for the purposes
set forth in the Railway Labor Act of May 20, 1926, c. 347, 44
Stat. 577, U.S.C. Tit. 45, §§ 151-163.
The substance of the allegations of the bill of complaint was
that the brotherhood, since its organization in September, 1918,
had been authorized by a majority of the railway clerks in the
employ of the railroad company (apart from general office
employees) to represent them in all matters relating to their
employment; that this representation was recognized by the railroad
company before and after the application by the brotherhood in
November, 1925, for an increase of the wages of the railway clerks
and after the denial of that application by the railroad company
and the reference of the controversy by the brotherhood to the
United States Board of Mediation; that, while the controversy was
pending before that board, the railroad company instigated the
formation of a union of its railway clerks (other than general
office employees) known as the "Association of Clerical
Employees-Southern Pacific Lines;" and that the railroad company
had endeavored to intimidate members of the brotherhood and to
coerce them to withdraw from it and to make the association their
representative in dealings with the railroad company, and thus to
prevent the railway clerks from freely designating their
representatives by collective action.
The district court granted a temporary injunction. [
Footnote 1] Thereafter, the railroad
company recognized the Association
Page 281 U. S. 556
of Clerical Employees-Southern Pacific Lines, as the
representative of the clerical employees of the company. The
railroad company stated that this course was taken after a
committee of the association had shown authorizations signed by
those who were regarded as constituting a majority of the employees
of the described class. The subsequent action of the railroad
company and its officers and agents was in accord with this
recognition of the association and the consequent
nonrecognition
Page 281 U. S. 557
of the brotherhood. In proceedings to punish for contempt, the
district court decided that the railroad company and certain of its
officers who were defendants had violated the order of injunction
and completely nullified it. The court directed that, in order to
purge themselves of this contempt, the railroad company and these
officers should completely "disestablish the Association of
Clerical Employees," as it was then constituted as the recognized
representative of the clerical employees of the railroad company,
and should reinstate the brotherhood as such representative until
such time as these employees, by a secret ballot taken in
accordance with the further direction of the court, and without the
dictation or interference of the railroad company and its officers,
should choose other representatives. The order also required the
restoration to service and to stated privileges of certain
employees who had been discharged by the railroad company.
24 F.2d
426. Punishment was prescribed in case the defendants did not
purge themselves of contempt as directed.
On final hearing, the temporary injunction was made permanent.
25 F.2d 873. At the same time, a motion to vacate the order in the
contempt proceedings was denied. 25 F.2d 876. The circuit court of
appeals affirmed the decree, holding that the injunction was
properly granted and that, in imposing conditions for the purging
of the defendants of contempt, the district court had not gone
beyond the appropriate exercise of its authority in providing for
the restoration of the
status quo. 33 F.2d 13. This Court
granted a writ of certiorari, 280 U.S. 550.
The bill of complaint invoked subdivision third of § 2 of
the Railway Labor Act of 1926 (c. 347, 44 Stat. 577), which
provides as follows:
"Third. Representatives, for the purposes of this Act, shall be
designated by the respective parties in such manner
Page 281 U. S. 558
as may be provided in their corporate organization or
unincorporated association, or by other means of collective action,
without interference, influence, or coercion exercised by either
party over the self-organization or designation of representatives
by the other."
The controversy is with respect to the construction, validity,
and application of this statutory provision. The petitioners, the
railroad company and its officers, contend that the provision
confers merely an abstract right which was not intended to be
enforced by legal proceedings; that, insofar as the statute
undertakes to prevent either party from influencing the other in
the selection of representatives, it is unconstitutional because it
seeks to take away an inherent and inalienable right in violation
of the First and Fifth Amendments of the federal Constitution; that
the granting of the injunction was prohibited by § 20 of the
Clayton Act (U.S.C. Tit. 29, § 52); that, in any event, the
action taken by the railroad company and its officers in the
recognition of the Association of Clerical Employees, and in other
proceedings following upon that recognition, was not contrary to
law, and that there was no warrant for the interposition of the
court either in granting the injunction order or in the proceedings
for punishment for the alleged contempt.
On the questions of fact, both courts below decided against the
petitioners. Under the well established rule, this Court accepts
the findings in which two courts concur unless clear error is
shown,
Stuart v. Hayden, 169 U. S. 1,
169 U. S. 14;
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Railroad Commission,
232 U. S. 338;
Washington Securities Co. v. United States, 234 U. S.
76,
234 U. S. 78;
Bodkin v. Edwards, 255 U. S. 221,
255 U. S. 223.
We cannot say that there was such error in this case. Both the
district court and the circuit court of appeals approached the
consideration of the evidence as to intimidation and coercion, and
resolved
Page 281 U. S. 559
such conflicts as the evidence presented, in the light of the
demonstration that a strong motive existed on the part of the
railroad company to oppose the demands of the brotherhood and to
promote another organization of the clerical employees which would
be more favorable to the interests and contentions of the company.
Both courts found the explanation of the company's attitude in the
letter addressed by H. M. Lull, executive vice-president of the
railroad company, to A.D. McDonald, its president, under date of
May 24, 1927, shortly before the activities of which complaint was
made in this suit. In this letter, Mr. Lull referred to the
pendency before the United States Board of Mediation of the demand
of the brotherhood for an increase of wages for the clerical
employees, and it was stated that, if the matter went to
arbitration, and the award was made on the same basis as one which
had recently been made with respect to the lines west of El Paso,
it would mean an increased payroll cost of approximately $340,000
per annum. Mr. Lull said that, from the best information
obtainable, the majority of the clerical and station service
employees of the railroad company did not belong to the national
organization (the brotherhood), and that
"it is our intention, when handling the matter in mediation
proceedings, to raise the question of the right of this
organization to represent these employees, and, if arbitration is
proposed, we shall decline to arbitrate on the basis that the
petitioner does not represent the majority of the employees. This
will permit us to get away from the interference of this
organization, and, if successful in this, I am satisfied we can
make settlement with our own employees at a cost not to exceed
$75,000 per annum."
Motive is a persuasive interpreter of equivocal conduct, and the
petitioners are not entitled to complain because their activities
were viewed in the light of manifest interest and purpose. The most
that can be said in favor
Page 281 U. S. 560
of the petitioners on the question of fact is that the evidence
permits conflicting inferences, and this is not enough. The
circumstances of the soliciting of authorizations and memberships
on behalf of the association, the fact that employee of the
railroad company who were active in promoting the development of
the association were permitted to devote their time to that
enterprise without deduction from their pay, the charge to the
railroad company of expenses incurred in recruiting members of the
association, the reports made to the railroad company of the
progress of these efforts, and the discharge from the service of
the railroad company of leading representatives of the brotherhood
and the cancellation of their passes, gave support, despite the
attempted justification of these proceedings, to the conclusion of
the courts below that the railroad company and its officers were
actually engaged in promoting the organization of the association
in the interest of the company and in opposition to the
brotherhood, and that these activities constituted an actual
interference with the liberty of the clerical employees in the
selection of their representatives. In this view, we decline to
subject to minute scrutiny the language employed by these courts in
discussing questions of fact (
Page v. Rogers, 211 U.
S. 575,
211 U. S.
577), and we pass to the important questions of law
whether the statute imposed a legal duty upon the railroad company
-- that is, an obligation enforceable by judicial proceedings.
It is unnecessary to review the history of the legislation
enacted by Congress in relation to the settlement of railway labor
disputes, as earlier efforts culminated in Title 3 of the
Transportation Act, 1920 (c. 91, 41 Stat. 456, 469), the purpose
and effect of which have been determined by this Court. In
Pennsylvania Railroad Co. v. United States Railroad Labor
Board, 261 U. S. 72, the
question was whether the members of the Railroad
Page 281 U. S. 561
Labor Board as constituted under the provisions of the
Transportation Act, 1920, had exceeded their powers. The Court held
that the board had jurisdiction to hear and decide a dispute over
rules and working conditions upon the application of either side,
when the parties had failed to agree and an adjustment board had
not been organized. The board also had jurisdiction to decide who
might represent the employees in the conferences contemplated by
the statute and to make reasonable rules for ascertaining the will
of the employees in this respect. Interference by injunction with
the exercise of the discretion of the board in the matters
committed to it, and with the publication of its opinions, was
decided to be unwarranted. The Court thought it evident that
Congress considered it to be "of the highest public interest to
prevent the interruption of interstate commerce by labor disputes
and strikes," and that its plan was
"to encourage settlement without strikes, first by conference
between the parties, failing that, by reference to adjustment
boards of the parties' own choosing,"
and, if this proved to be ineffective, "by a full hearing before
a national board" organized as the statute provided. But the Court
added:
"The decisions of the Labor Board are not to be enforced by
process. The only sanction of its decision is to be the force of
public opinion invoked by the fairness of a full hearing, the
intrinsic justice of the conclusion, strengthened by the official
prestige of the Board, and the full publication of the violation of
such decision by any party to the proceeding."
It was said to be the evident thought of Congress
"that the economic interest of every member of the public in the
undisturbed flow of interstate commerce and the acute inconvenience
to which all must be subjected by an interruption caused by a
serious and widespread labor dispute fastens public attention
closely on all the circumstances of the controversy and arouses
public criticism of the side thought to be at
Page 281 U. S. 562
fault."
Id., pp.
261 U. S. 79-80.
The court concluded that the Labor Board was "to act as a board of
arbitration," but that there was "no constraint" upon the parties
"to do what the Board decides they should do except the moral
constraint . . . of publication of its decision."
Id., p.
261 U. S.
84.
The provisions of Title III of the Transportation Act, 1920,
were again before the Court in
Pennsylvania Railroad System
& Allied Lines Federation No. 90 v. Pennsylvania Railroad
Company, 267 U. S. 203.
This was a suit by a union to enjoin the railroad company from
carrying out an alleged conspiracy to defeat the provisions of the
legislation establishing the Railroad Labor Board. The
complainants, the Court said, sought "to enforce by mandatory
injunction a compliance with a decision of the board," and the
Court held that "such a remedy by injunction in a court it was not
the intention of Congress to provide."
Id., p.
267 U. S. 216.
The Court pointed out that "the ultimate decision of the board, it
is conceded, is not compulsory, and no process is furnished to
enforce it." It was in the light of these conclusions as to the
purport of the statute that the Court considered the freedom of
action of the railroad company. The Court said that the company was
using
"every endeavor to avoid compliance with the judgment and
principles of the Labor Board as to the proper method of securing
representatives of the whole body of its employees,"
that it was "seeking to control its employees by agreements free
from the influence of an independent trade union," and, so far as
concerned its dealings with its employees, was "refusing to comply
with the decisions of the Labor Board." But the Court held that
this conduct was within the strict legal rights of the railroad
company, and that Congress had not intended to make such conduct
legally actionable.
Id., p.
217 U. S. 217.
It was with clear appreciation of the infirmity of the existing
legislation, and in the endeavor to establish a
Page 281 U. S. 563
more practicable plan in order to accomplish the desired result,
that Congress enacted the Railway Labor Act of 1926. It was decided
to make a fresh start. The situation was thus described in the
report of the bill to the Senate by the Committee on Interstate
Commerce (69th Cong., 1st Sess., Sen.Rep. No. 222):
"In view of the fact that the employees absolutely refuse to
appear before the labor board, and that many of the important
railroads are themselves opposed to it, that it has been held by
the Supreme Court to have no power to enforce its judgments, that
its authority is not recognized or respected by the employees and
by a number of important railroads, that the President has
suggested that it would be wise to seek a substitute for it, and
that the party platforms of both the Republican and Democratic
Parties in 1924 clearly indicated dissatisfaction with the
provisions of the transportation act relating to labor, the
committee concluded that the time had arrived when the labor board
should be abolished and the provisions relating to labor in the
transportation act, 1920, should be repealed."
The bill was introduced as the result of prolonged conferences
between representative committees of railroad presidents and of
executives of railroad labor organizations, and embodied an
agreement of a large majority of both. [
Footnote 2] The provisions of Title 3 of the
Transportation Act, 1920, and also the Act of July 15, 1913 (c. 6,
38 Stat.
Page 281 U. S. 564
103, 45 U.S.C.A §§ 101-125) which provided for
mediation, conciliation, and arbitration in controversies with
railway employees, were repealed.
While adhering in the new statute to the policy of providing for
the amicable adjustment of labor disputes, and for voluntary
submissions to arbitration, as opposed to a system of compulsory
arbitration, Congress buttressed this policy by creating certain
definite legal obligations. The outstanding feature of the Act of
1926 is the provision for an enforceable award in arbitration
proceedings. The arbitration is voluntary, but the award pursuant
to the arbitration is conclusive upon the parties as to the merits
and facts of the controversy submitted. (Section 9.) The award is
to be filed in the clerk's office of the district court of the
United States designated in the agreement to arbitrate, and unless
a petition to impeach the award is filed within ten days, the court
is to enter judgment on the award, and this judgment is final and
conclusive. Petition for the impeachment of the award may be made
upon the grounds that the award does not conform to the substantive
requirements of the Act or to the stipulation of the parties, or
that the proceedings were not in accordance with the Act or were
tainted with fraud or corruption. But the court is not to entertain
such a petition on the ground that the award is invalid for
uncertainty,
Page 281 U. S. 565
and in such case, the remedy is to be found in a submission of
the award to a reconvened board or to a subcommittee thereof for
interpretation, as provided in the Act. Thus, it is contemplated
that the proceedings for the amicable adjustment of disputes will
have an appropriate termination in a binding adjudication,
enforceable as such.
Another definite object of the Act of 1926 is to provide, in
case of a dispute between a carrier and its employees which has not
been adjusted under the provisions of the Act, for the more
effectual protection of interstate commerce from interruption to
such a degree as to deprive any section of the country of essential
transportation service. Section 10. In case the Board of Mediation,
established by the Act as an independent agency in the executive
branch of the government, finds that such an interruption of
interstate commerce is threatened, that board is to notify the
President, who may thereupon, in his discretion, create an
emergency board of investigation to report, within thirty days,
with respect to the dispute. The Act then provides that:
"After the creation of such board and for thirty days after such
board has made its report to the President, no change, except by
agreement, shall be made by the parties to the controversy in the
conditions out of which the dispute arose."
Id. This prohibition, in order to safeguard the vital
interests of the country while an investigation is in progress,
manifestly imports a legal obligation. The brotherhood insists, and
we think rightly, that the major purpose of Congress in passing the
Railway Labor Act was "to provide a machinery to prevent strikes."
Section 10 is described by counsel for the brotherhood as "a
provision limiting the right to strike," and in this view it is
insisted that there
"is no possible question that Congress intended to make the
provisions of § 10 enforceable to the extent of authorizing
any court of competent jurisdiction to restrain
Page 281 U. S. 566
either party to the controversy from changing the existing
status during the sixty-day period provided for the emergency
board. [
Footnote 3]"
The provision of § 10 is to be read in connection with the
qualification in subdivision eighth of § 9 that nothing in the
Act shall be construed to require an individual employee to render
labor without his consent or as making the quitting of service by
an individual employee an illegal act, and that no court shall
issue any process to compel the performance by an individual
employee of labor without his consent. The purpose of this
Page 281 U. S. 567
limitation was manifestly to protect the individual liberty of
employees and not to affect proceedings in case of combinations or
group action. The denial of legal process in the one case is
significant with respect to its expected, appropriate use in the
other. [
Footnote 4]
It is thus apparent that Congress, in the legislation of 1926,
while elaborating a plan for amicable adjustments and voluntary
arbitration of disputes between common carriers and their
employees, thought it necessary to impose, and did impose, certain
definite obligations enforceable by judicial proceedings. The
question before us is whether a legal obligation of this sort is
also to be found in the provisions of subdivision third of § 2
of the Act, providing that
"Representatives, for the purposes of this Act, shall be
designated by the respective parties . . . without interference,
influence, or coercion exercised by either party over the
self-organization or designation of representatives by the
other."
It is at once to be observed that Congress was not content with
the general declaration of the duty of carriers and employees to
make every reasonable effort to enter into and maintain agreements
concerning rates of pay,
Page 281 U. S. 568
rules and working conditions, and to settle disputes with all
expedition in conference between authorized representatives, but
added this distinct prohibition against coercive measures. This
addition cannot be treated as superfluous or insignificant, or as
intended to be without effect.
Ex parte Public National
Bank, 278 U. S. 101,
278 U. S. 104.
While an affirmative declaration of duty contained in a legislative
enactment may be of imperfect obligation because not enforceable in
terms, a definite statutory prohibition of conduct which would
thwart the declared purpose of the legislation cannot be
disregarded. The intent of Congress is clear with respect to the
sort of conduct that is prohibited. "Interference" with freedom of
action and "coercion" refer to well understood concepts of the law.
The meaning of the word "influence" in this clause may be gathered
from the context.
Noscitur a sociis. Virginia v.
Tennessee, 148 U. S. 503,
148 U. S. 519.
The use of the word is not to be taken as interdicting the normal
relations and innocent communications which are a part of all
friendly intercourse, albeit between employer and employee.
"Influence," in this context, plainly means pressure, the use of
the authority or power of either party to induce action by the
other in derogation of what the statute calls "self-organization."
The phrase covers the abuse of relation or opportunity so as to
corrupt or override the will, and it is no more difficult to
appraise conduct of this sort in connection with the selection of
representatives for the purposes of this Act than in relation to
well known applications of the law with respect to fraud, duress,
and undue influence. If Congress intended that the prohibition, as
thus construed, should be enforced, the courts would encounter no
difficulty in fulfilling its purpose, as the present suit
demonstrates.
In reaching a conclusion as to the intent of Congress, the
importance of the prohibition in its relation to the plan devised
by the Act must have appropriate consideration.
Page 281 U. S. 569
Freedom of choice in the selection of representatives on each
side of the dispute is the essential foundation of the statutory
scheme. All the proceedings looking to amicable adjustments and to
agreements for arbitration of disputes, the entire policy of the
Act, must depend for success on the uncoerced action of each party
through its own representatives to the end that agreements
satisfactory to both may be reached and the peace essential to the
uninterrupted service of the instrumentalities of interstate
commerce may be maintained. There is no impairment of the voluntary
character of arrangements for the adjustment of disputes in the
imposition of a legal obligation not to interfere with the free
choice of those who are to make such adjustments. On the contrary,
it is of the essence of a voluntary scheme, if it is to accomplish
its purpose, that this liberty should be safeguarded. The definite
prohibition which Congress inserted in the Act cannot, therefore,
be overridden in the view that Congress intended it to be ignored.
As the prohibition was appropriate to the aim of Congress, and is
capable of enforcement, the conclusion must be that enforcement was
contemplated.
The absence of penalty is not controlling. The creation of a
legal right by language suitable to that end does not require for
its effectiveness the imposition of statutory penalties. Many
rights are enforced for which no statutory penalties are provided.
In the case of the statute in question, there is an absence of
penalty, in the sense of specially prescribed punishment, with
respect to the arbitral awards and the prohibition of change in
conditions pending the investigation and report of an emergency
board, but, in each instance, a legal obligation is created and the
statutory requirements are susceptible of enforcement by
proceedings appropriate to each. The same is true of the
prohibition of interference or coercion in connection with the
choice of representatives. The
Page 281 U. S. 570
right is created and the remedy exists.
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137,
5 U. S.
162-163.
We entertain no doubt of the constitutional authority of
Congress to enact the prohibition. The power to regulate commerce
is the power to enact "all appropriate legislation" for its
"protection or advancement" (
The Daniel
Ball, 10 Wall. 557,
77 U. S. 564);
to adopt measures "to promote its growth and insure its safety"
(
County of Mobile v. Kimball, 102 U.
S. 691,
102 U. S.
696-697); to "foster, protect, control and restrain"
(
Second Employers' Liability Cases, 223 U. S.
1,
223 U. S. 47).
Exercising this authority, Congress may facilitate the amicable
settlements of disputes which threaten the service of the necessary
agencies of interstate transportation. In shaping its legislation
to this end, Congress was entitled to take cognizance of actual
conditions and to address itself to practicable measures. The
legality of collective action on the part of employees in order to
safeguard their proper interests is not to be disputed. It has long
been recognized that employees are entitled to organize for the
purpose of securing the redress of grievances and to promote
agreements with employers relating to rates of pay and conditions
of work.
American Steel Foundries v. Tri-City Central Trade
Council, 257 U. S. 184,
257 U. S. 209.
Congress was not required to ignore this right of the employees,
but could safeguard it and seek to make their appropriate
collective action an instrument of peace, rather than of strife.
Such collective action would be a mockery if representation were
made futile by interferences with freedom of choice. Thus, the
prohibition by Congress of interference with the selection of
representatives for the purpose of negotiation and conference
between employers and employees, instead of being an invasion of
the constitutional right of either, was based on the recognition of
the rights of both. The petitioners invoke the principle declared
in
Adair v. United States, 208 U.
S. 161, and
Coppage v. Kansas, 236 U. S.
1,
Page 281 U. S. 571
but these decisions are inapplicable. The Railway Labor Act of
1926 does not interfere with the normal exercise of the right of
the carrier to select its employees or to discharge them. The
statute is not aimed at this right of the employers, but at the
interference with the right of employees to have representatives of
their own choosing. As the carriers subject to the Act have no
constitutional right to interfere with the freedom of the employees
in making their selections, they cannot complain of the statute on
constitutional grounds.
A subordinate point is raised by the petitioner under § 20
of the Clayton Act. This section provides, in substance, that no
injunction shall be granted in any case growing out of a dispute
concerning terms or conditions of employment unless necessary to
prevent irreparable injury to property or to a property right. This
provision has been said to be declaratory of the existing law.
Duplex Printing Press Co. v. Deering, 254 U.
S. 443,
254 U. S. 470.
It may be doubted whether § 20 can be regarded as limiting the
authority of the court to restrain the violation of an explicit
provision of an act of Congress, where an injunction would
otherwise be the proper remedy. It is not necessary to pass upon
this point, for, if it could be said that it was necessary in the
present instance to show a property interest in the employees in
order to justify the court in granting an injunction, we are of the
opinion that there was such an interest, with respect to the
selection of representatives to confer with the employer in
relation to contracts of service, as satisfied the statutory
requirement.
See Coppage v. Kansas, supra, pp.
236 U. S.
14-15.
We do not find that the decree below goes beyond the proper
enforcement of the provision of the Railway Labor Act.
Decree affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS did not hear the argument, and took no
part in the decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The injunction order provided as follows:
"That the defendant Texas and New Orleans Railroad Company (a
corporation and common carrier owning, leasing, and operating
certain railroads throughout the States of Texas and Louisiana),
its officers, servants, and agents are hereby enjoined and
restrained from in any way or manner interfering with, influencing,
intimidating, or coercing plaintiffs or any of the approximately
seventeen hundred clerical employees (and being the clerical
employees described and referred to in plaintiffs' petition, which
includes approximately seventeen hundred railroad clerks in the
employ of the defendant Railroad Company on its lines throughout
the States of Texas and Louisiana, except such clerical employees
as are employed and engaged in its general office in the City of
Houston, Texas, and in its general office in the City of New
Orleans, Louisiana), with respect to their free and untrammeled
right of selecting or designating their representatives for the
purpose of considering and deciding any and all disputes between
said clerical employees and the defendant Railroad Company, and
further enjoining and restraining said defendant Railroad Company,
its officers, servants, and agents from in any way or manner
interfering with, influencing, intimidating, or coercing plaintiffs
or any of said clerical employees herein referred to of their free
and untrammeled right of self-organization."
"Nothing in this injunction shall be considered or construed as
authority to prevent any employee of said defendant Railroad
Company, in the class referred to, from organizing, joining,
promoting, or fostering as many unions as he or they (meaning such
employees in the class referred to) may desire, and in any way
which he or they may desire, and with the assistance and aid of any
of his fellow employees in any way and to any extent that said
fellow employees (in the class referred to) may desire; nor shall
anything in this injunction be considered or construed as authority
or permission for any officer or agent of said company, or any
employee, acting for or on behalf of the defendant Railroad
Company, attempting to influence or to interfere with said
selection or designation of their said representatives, or their
right to self-organization as herein referred to, upon any pretext
that they are acting individually and not as representatives of
said defendant corporation."
[
Footnote 2]
In the report of the bill by the Committee on Interstate and
Foreign Commerce to the House of Representatives, it was said (69th
Cong., 1st Sess., H.R.Rep. No. 328):
"The bill was introduced as the product of negotiations and
conferences between a representative committee of railroad
presidents and a representative committee of railroad labor
organization executives, extending over several months, which were
concluded with the approval of the bill, respectively, by the
Association of Railway Executives and by the executives of 20
railroad labor organizations. As introduced, it represented the
agreement of railway managements operating over 80 percent of the
railroad mileage and labor organizations representing an
overwhelming majority of the railroad employees."
The Committee of the Senate on Interstate Commerce reported to
the Senate on this point, as follows (69th Cong., 1st sess.,
Sen.Rep. No. 222):
"The railroads favoring the bill appeared before the committee
through their representatives and advocated it. None of the
railroads opposing the bill appeared either in person or by any
representative. The bill was agreed to also by all the
organizations known as 'standard recognized railway labor
organizations,' 20 in number, and these appeared by their
representatives before the committee in advocacy of the bill."
[
Footnote 3]
In the report to the House of Representatives by its Committee
on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, it was stated as to this
provision (69th Cong., 1st sess., H.R.Rep. No. 328):
"This temporary emergency board will be able to express and to
mobilize public opinion to an extent impossible to any permanent
board or any agency of government which has been heretofore created
for that purpose. It is also highly important to point out that,
during the period of investigation and for 30 days thereafter, the
parties to the controversy are bound under the proposed law to
maintain unchanged the conditions out of which the dispute arose,
thereby assuring the parties and the public that the emergency
board will have the full and unembarrassed opportunity to exert its
authority and fulfill its important function."
The Committee on Interstate Commerce of the Senate stated in its
report, with respect to a proposed amendment of § 10
forbidding strikes
eo nominee, as follows (69th Cong., 1st
sess., Sen.Rep. No. 222):
"The objection that the bill should in express terms forbid
strikes during the period of the inquiry by the emergency board and
for 30 days thereafter is successfully met, in the opinion of the
committee, by the contention that, in forbidding a change in the
conditions out of which a dispute arose, one of which, and a very
fundamental one, is the relationship of the parties, it already
forbids any interruption of commerce during the period referred to,
and, if strikes were in express terms forbidden for a given period,
there might be an implication that, after that period, strikes to
interfere with the passage of the United States mails and with
continuous transportation service might be made be made legal. In
the opinion of the committee, this possible implication should be
avoided."
[
Footnote 4]
In relation to this paragraph, the Senate Committee stated in
its report (69th Cong., 1st sess., Sen.Rep. No. 222):
"As to paragraph (8) of § 9, it was urged that it should be
clarified so as certainly to apply only to the use of legal process
against an individual employee and so as not to apply to
combinations or conspiracies between several employees or groups of
employees to interrupt interstate commerce. It was frankly stated
by the advocates of the bill, both those representing the carriers
and those representing the employees, that the purpose of the
paragraph was to deal merely with individual employees, to express
only the constitutional right of individuals against involuntary
servitude, and was not intended to deal with combinations,
conspiracies, or group action. This construction has been made
abundantly clear by an amendment to the bill by which the word
'individual' has been inserted before the 'employee' wherever the
latter word appears in the paragraph."