1. An unincorporated labor union demanded of an employer that he
require all his employees, none of whom belonged to the union, on
pain of dismissal, to join it and make it their bargaining agent.
The employees, though left free in the matter by the employer,
refused to join, having an organization of their own. The employer
having rejected the demand, the members of the union, for the
purpose of coercing him and in a conspiracy to destroy his business
if he refused to yield, caused false and misleading signs to be
placed before his markets; caused persons who were not his
Page 303 U. S. 324
employees to parade and picket before the markets; falsely
accused him of being unfair to organized labor in dealings with
employees, and, by molestation, annoyance, threats, and
intimidation, prevented patrons and prospective patrons of the
employer from patronizing the markets. Irreparable injury
resulted.
Held:
(1) That there was a "labor dispute" within the meaning of
Wisconsin Labor Code, §§ 103.62, 103.53, and of the
Norris-LaGuardia Act, 29 U.S.C. § 113(C). P.
303 U. S.
327.
(2) In a suit brought by the employer against the union for an
injunction, the substantive rights of the parties were governed by
the state law, as construed by the state Supreme Court.
Id.
(3) An injunction was too broad which included peaceful
picketing, advertising the employer as unfair to organized labor,
solicitation of customers not to trade, etc., these being acts
which are made lawful by the Wisconsin Labor Code, § 103.53,
if fraud, violence or threat thereof are not involved. P.
303 U. S.
328.
(4) The District Court was without jurisdiction to grant an
injunction in the absence of findings of fact required by the
Norris-LaGuardia Act, 29 U.S.C. § 117. P.
303 U. S.
329.
(5) The declarations of policy in the two Acts mentioned to the
effect that employees shall have full freedom of association,
designation of representatives of their own choosing, etc., free
from coercion of their employers, did not put the case beyond the
scope of those Acts, since those declarations do not narrow the
definition of "labor dispute" in the Acts, and the rights of the
parties and the jurisdiction of the federal courts are to be
determined according to the express provisions applicable to labor
disputes as so defined. P.
303 U. S. 330.
2. Since the courts below did not pass on the questions of the
legality under the Wisconsin law of the acts charged to have been
done by the union, or the constitutionality of that law in
legalizing any of such acts, no opinion is expressed on these
questions, and the case is remanded. P.
303 U. S.
330.
90 F.2d 250 reversed.
Certiorari, 302 U.S. 669, to review the affirmance of a decree
permanently enjoining acts on the part of a labor union --
picketing, parade of misleading signs, solicitation of customers,
etc. -- directed against the plaintiff, a retail dealer in meats.
See also 82 F.2d 68.
Page 303 U. S. 325
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to restrain the petitioners from picketing the
respondent's place of business, from coercing the respondent to
discharge any of its employees who do not belong to the petitioning
union, or to compel them to become members of the union and to
accept it as their bargaining agent and representative, and from
advertising that the respondent is unfair to organized labor or
molesting customers or prospective customers or persuading them to
cease patronizing it. After a hearing, and upon findings of fact
and conclusions of law, the District Court granted a preliminary
injunction. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. [
Footnote 1] Upon final hearing the parties
relied upon the record as made in the preliminary hearing and some
additional testimony.
The District Court found the following facts: the respondent is
a Delaware corporation maintaining five meat markets in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin. The petitioners are, respectively, an unincorporated
labor union and its business manager, citizens and residents of
Wisconsin. The respondent's employees number about thirty-five;
none of them are members of the petitioning union. The petitioners
made demand upon the respondent to require its employees, as a
condition of their continued employment, to become members of the
union. The respondent notified the employees that they were free to
do this, and that it was willing to permit them to join, but they
declined,
Page 303 U. S. 326
and refused to join. The union had not been chosen by the
employees to represent them in any matter connected with the
respondent. For the purpose of coercing the respondent to require
its employees to join the union and to accept it as their
bargaining agent and representative, as a condition of continued
employment, and for the purpose of injuring and destroying the
business if the respondent refused to yield to such coercion, the
petitioners conspired to do the following things, and did them:
they caused false and misleading signs to be placed before the
respondent's markets; caused persons who were not respondent's
employees to parade and picket before the markets; falsely accused
respondent of being unfair to organized labor in its dealings with
employees, and, by molestation, annoyance, threats, and
intimidation, prevented patrons and prospective patrons of
respondent from patronizing its markets; respondent suffered and
will suffer irreparable injury from the continuance of the
practice, and customers will be intimidated and restrained from
patronizing the stores as a consequence of petitioners' acts. There
is more than $3,000 involved in the controversy.
The District Court held that no labor dispute, as defined by
federal or state law, exists between the respondent and the
petitioners, or either of them; that the respondent is bound to
permit its employees free agency in the matter of choice of union
organization or representation, and that the respondent had no
adequate remedy at law. It entered a final decree enjoining the
petitioners from seeking to coerce the respondent to discharge any
of its employees for refusal to join the union or to coerce the
respondent to compel employees to become members of the
organization, from advertising that the respondent is unfair to
organized labor, and from annoying or molesting patrons or
persuading or soliciting customers, present or prospective, not to
patronize the respondent's markets.
Page 303 U. S. 327
The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the decree. [
Footnote 2] By reason of alleged conflict
with a decision of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin,
Senn v. Tile
Layers Protective Union, 222 Wis. 383, 268 N.W. 270, 872, and
with our decision in
Senn v. Tile Layers Protective Union,
301 U. S. 468, we
granted the writ of certiorari.
In the Court of Appeals, the petitioners assigned error to
certain of the District Court's findings of fact, as well as to its
conclusions of law. In this Court, the only errors assigned are to
the holdings that, on the facts found, there was no labor dispute,
and that the Norris-La Guardia Act and the Wisconsin Labor Code had
no bearing on the case as made. In these circumstances, we accept
the findings of fact, and confine our inquiry to the correctness of
the District Court's conclusions based upon them.
The institution of the suit in the federal court is justified by
the findings as to diversity of citizenship and the amount in
controversy. As the acts complained of occurred in Wisconsin, the
law of that state governs the substantive rights of the parties.
But the power of the court to grant the relief prayed depends upon
the jurisdiction conferred upon it by the statutes of the United
States.
First. The District Court erred in holding that no
labor dispute, as defined by the law of Wisconsin, existed between
the parties. Section 103.62, paragraph (3) of the Wisconsin Labor
Code [
Footnote 3] is:
"The term 'labor dispute' includes any controversy concerning
terms or conditions of employment, or concerning the association or
representation of persons in negotiating, fixing, maintaining,
changing, or seeking to arrange terms or conditions of employment,
or concerning employment relations, or any other controversy
arising out of the respective interests of employer and employee,
regardless of whether or not the disputants stand in the proximate
relation of employer and employe. "
Page 303 U. S. 328
The District Court was bound by the construction of the section
by the Supreme Court of the state, [
Footnote 4] which has held a controversy indistinguishable
from that here disclosed to be a labor dispute within the meaning
of the statute. [
Footnote
5]
Second. The District Court erred in not applying the
provisions of section 103.53 [
Footnote 6] of the Wisconsin Labor Code, which declares
certain conduct lawful in labor disputes;
inter alia,
"giving publicity to . . . the existence of, or the facts
involved in, any dispute . . . by . . . patrolling any public
street . . . without intimidation or coercion, or by any other
method not involving fraud, violence, breach of the peace, or
threat thereof;"
advising, urging, or inducing, without fraud, violence, or
threat thereof, others to cease to patronize any person; peaceful
picketing or patrolling, whether singly or in numbers. A Wisconsin
court could not enjoin acts declared by the statute to be lawful,
[
Footnote 7] and the District
Court has no greater power to do so. The error into which the court
fell as to the existence of a labor dispute led it into the further
error of issuing an order so sweeping as to enjoin acts made lawful
by the state statute. The decree forbade all picketing, all
advertising that the respondent was unfair to organized labor, and
all persuasion and solicitation of customers or prospective
customers not to trade with respondent.
Page 303 U. S. 329
Third. The District Court erred in granting an
injunction in the absence of findings which the Norris-La Guardia
Act [
Footnote 8] makes
prerequisites to the exercise of jurisdiction.
Section 13(c) of the act [
Footnote 9] is:
"The term 'labor dispute' includes any controversy concerning
terms or conditions of employment, or concerning the association or
representation of the persons in negotiating, fixing, maintaining,
changing, or seeking to arrange terms or conditions of employment,
regardless of whether or not the disputants stand in the proximate
relation of employer and employe."
This definition does not differ materially from that above
quoted from the Wisconsin Labor Code, and the facts of the instant
case bring it within both.
Section 7 [
Footnote 10]
declares that
"no court of the United States shall have jurisdiction to issue
a temporary or permanent injunction in any case involving or
growing out of a labor dispute, as herein defined,"
except after a hearing of a described character,
"and except after findings of fact by the court, to the effect
(a) that unlawful acts have been threatened and will be committed
unless restrained or have been committed and will be continued
unless restrained,"
and that no injunction
"shall be issued on account of any threat or unlawful act
excepting against the person or persons, association, or
organization making the threat or committing the unlawful act or
actually authorizing or ratifying the same."
By subsections (b) to (e), it is provided that relief shall not
be granted unless the court finds that substantial and irreparable
injury to complainants' property will follow; that, as to
Page 303 U. S. 330
each item of relief granted, greater injury will be inflicted
upon the complainant by denying the relief than will be inflicted
upon defendants by granting it; that complainant has no adequate
remedy at law, and that the public officers charged with the duty
to protect complainants' property are unable or unwilling to
provide adequate protection.
There can be no question of the power of Congress thus to define
and limit the jurisdiction of the inferior courts of the United
States. [
Footnote 11] The
District Court made none of the required findings, save as to
irreparable injury and lack of remedy at law. It follows that, in
issuing the injunction, it exceeded its jurisdiction.
Fourth. The Court of Appeals erred in holding that the
declarations of policy in the Norris-La Guardia Act and the
Wisconsin Labor Code, to the effect that employees are to have full
freedom of association, self-organization, and designation of
representative of their own choosing, free from interference,
restraint, or coercion of their employers, puts this case outside
the scope of both acts, since respondent cannot accede to the
petitioners' demands upon it without disregarding the policy
declared by the statutes. This view was expressed in the court's
first opinion on the appeal from the issue of an interlocutory
injunction, [
Footnote 12]
and the opinion on the appeal from the final order adopts what was
said on the earlier appeal as the law of the case. We find nothing
in the declarations of policy which narrows the definition of a
labor dispute as found in the statutes. The rights of the parties
and the jurisdiction of the federal courts are to be determined
according to the express provisions applicable to labor disputes as
so defined.
Fifth. Since the courts below were of opinion that a
labor dispute, as defined by state and federal statutes,
Page 303 U. S. 331
had not been shown, they did not pass on the questions of the
legality, under the Wisconsin law, of the acts charged to have been
done by the petitioners or the constitutionality of that law in
legalizing any of such acts. As the case must go back for further
proceedings, we express no opinion upon these questions.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the District
Court for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO and MR. JUSTICE REED took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Lauf v. Shinner & Co., 82 F.2d 68.
[
Footnote 2]
90 F.2d 250.
[
Footnote 3]
Wisconsin Statutes 1937, c. 103, § 103.62.
[
Footnote 4]
Senn v. Tile Layers Union, supra, p.
301 U. S.
477.
[
Footnote 5]
American Furniture Co. v. Chauffeurs, Teamsters &
Helpers General Local, 222 Wis. 338, 268 N.W. 250.
See
also Senn v. Tile Layers Union, supra.
[
Footnote 6]
Wisconsin Statutes 1937, c. 103, § 103.53.
[
Footnote 7]
Senn v. Tile Layers Protective Union, 222 Wis. 383,
400, 268 N.W. 270, 872;
American Furniture Co. v. Chauffeurs,
Teamsters & Helpers General Local, supra.
[
Footnote 8]
Act of March 23, 1932, c. 90, 47 Stat. 70, U.S.C. Tit. 29,
§ 101
et seq.
[
Footnote 9]
47 Stat. 73, U.S.C. Tit. 29, § 113(c).
[
Footnote 10]
47 Stat. 71, U.S.C. Tit. 29, § 107.
[
Footnote 11]
Kline v. Burke Construction Co., 260 U.
S. 226,
260 U. S.
233-234.
[
Footnote 12]
82 F.2d 68, 72, 73.
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER, dissenting.
The opinion just announced reflects faithfully, though quite
nakedly, the findings of fact. These and uncontradicted details
disclose the circumstantial basis of the suit. Local No. 73 is an
unincorporated labor union, never in any way related to respondent.
None of its employees is a member of the union; all have definitely
rejected the suggestion that they join it. In every legal sense,
the union is a stranger both to respondent and its employees.
Shortly before petitioners conspired to destroy respondent's
business, one Joyce, of the American Federation of Labor, called by
telephone respondent's vice-president, Russell, at his Chicago
office. The latter's uncontradicted narration of the conversation
follows:
"Mr. Joyce . . . said 'We are in Milwaukee and want you fellows
to join our Union up there. They tell me up there you are the man I
must see, to get a contract signed for Shinner & Company with
the Butchers Union up there.' I told him I could not sign any
contract with him, that our men had their own association and were
perfectly well satisfied, and didn't want to belong to any other
union. He said 'Well, I am going there tonight
Page 303 U. S. 332
and if you don't join, I will declare war on you.' I said,
'There is nothing I can do about it.' He said 'All right, the war
is on, and may the best man win,' and he hung up."
Then followed
a demand by the union that respondent compel
its employees, on pain of dismissal from their employment, to join
the union and constitute it their bargaining representative and
agent. Respondent rightly declined to undertake any such
interference with the liberty of its employees, but informed them
that they were free to do as they saw fit. It left them wholly free
to join or not to join the union; the union was left free to
invite, urge, persuade, or induce them to join. Everyone who
respects the lawful exercise of individual liberty of action must
regard the attitude of the respondent as being above criticism and
beyond reproach. The opinion of the Court just announced does not
suggest a contrary view.
Under these circumstances, the union, in order to force
respondent to coerce its employees, and in pursuance of a
conspiracy to that end, publicly and falsely accused respondent of
being unfair to labor in dealing with its employees, and by means
of false placards and banners, and by picketing, molestation,
annoyance, threats, and intimidation it prevented, and, when this
suit was brought, was continuing to prevent, patrons and
prospective patrons from dealing with respondent, all to the
latter's serious and irreparable injury.
1. Respondent's business constitutes a property right, and the
free opportunity of respondent and its customers to deal with one
another in that business is an incident inseparable therefrom. It
is hard to imagine a case which more clearly calls for equitable
relief, and the court below rightly granted an injunction.
Truax v. Corrigan, 257 U. S. 312,
257 U. S. 327,
and cases cited.
Page 303 U. S. 333
But here it is held that the decree conflicts with the Norris-La
Guardia Act. That the action demanded by petitioners of respondent
with respect to its employees, if taken, would have been morally
indefensible is plain; that it would have been against the declared
policy of the act is equally plain . That act, 29 U.S.C. §
102, [
Footnote 2/1] declares that,
under prevailing conditions, the individual unorganized worker,
"though he should be free to decline to associate with his
fellows," should "have full freedom of association,
self-organization, and designation of representatives of his own
choosing," and should "be free from the interference, restraint, or
coercion of employers of labor, or their agents, in the designation
of such representatives," etc. This declaration of policy, as the
introductory clause plainly recites, was intended as an
Page 303 U. S. 334
aid "in the interpretation" of the act and "in determining the
jurisdiction and authority of the courts" under the act. If
respondent had joined the conspiracy and yielded to the demand of
the union, its action as an employer of labor unquestionably would
have constituted an "interference, restraint, or coercion" of its
employees in the designation of their representatives, in the teeth
of the declared policy of the act.
The opinion of the Court asserts, however, that this definite
declaration of policy in no way narrows the definition of the
phrase "labor dispute" found in substantive provisions of the act.
But that statement cannot be intended to suggest that the
declaration of policy does not affect the meaning and application
of the words used, for the opening clause of that declaration is
precisely to the contrary. Whether a labor dispute exists in a
given case depends upon the facts, and in each case the phrase
"labor dispute" is to be interpreted in harmony with the declared
policy of the act. That is the congressional mandate, and courts
are required to observe it. In
Ozawa v. United States,
260 U. S. 178,
260 U. S. 194,
we said:
"It is the duty of this Court to give effect to the intent of
Congress. Primarily this intent is ascertained by giving the words
their natural significance, but if this leads to an unreasonable
result plainly at variance with the policy of the legislation as a
whole, we must examine the matter further. We may then look to the
reason of the enactment and inquire into its antecedent history and
give it effect in accordance with its design and purpose,
sacrificing, if necessary, the literal meaning in order that the
purpose may not fail."
See also, to the same effect,
Heydenfeldt v. Daney
Gold & S. M. Co., 93 U. S. 634,
93 U. S. 638;
Holy Trinity Church v. United States, 143 U.
S. 457,
143 U. S. 459
et seq.; Fleischmann Co. v. United States, 270 U.
S. 349,
270 U. S. 360;
Karnuth v. United States, 279 U.
S. 231,
279 U. S. 243.
The principle applies here with peculiar force,
Page 303 U. S. 335
for it is an unnatural assumption to suppose that Congress
intended by general definition of the flexible term "labor dispute"
to annul its own very explicit declaration in respect to the policy
to be observed by the courts in the administration of the act.
The decision just announced ignores the declared policy of
Congress that the worker should be free to decline association with
his fellows, that he should have full freedom in that respect and
in the designation of representatives, and especially that he
should be free from interference, restraint, or coercion of
employers. To say that a "labor dispute" is created by the mere
refusal of respondent to comply with the demand that it compel its
employees to designate the union as their representative
unmistakably subverts this policy, and consequently puts a
construction upon the words contrary to the manifest congressional
intent.
Moreover, the immediately preceding section of the act, 29
U.S.C. § 101, [
Footnote 2/2]
provides that no restraining order or injunction in a case
involving or growing out of a labor dispute shall issue "contrary
to the public policy declared in this chapter." Sections 101 and
102, taken together, constitute nothing less than an expression of
the legislative will that the court shall enforce the public policy
set forth in § 102 and shall have regard thereto in reaching a
determination as to whether it has jurisdiction to issue an
injunction in any particular case. Since the
Page 303 U. S. 336
whole aim of the injury here inflicted and threatened to be
inflicted by the union was to compel respondent to influence and
coerce its employees in the designation of their representatives,
the acts of the union were in plain defiance of the declared policy
of Congress, and find no support in its substantive provisions.
2. But, putting aside the congressional declaration of policy as
an indication of meaning and considering the phrase entirely apart,
the facts of this case plainly do not constitute a "labor dispute"
as defined by the act. Undoubtedly "dispute" is used in its primary
sense, as meaning a verbal controversy involving an expression of
opposing views or claims. The act itself, 29 U.S.C. § 113(c),
so regards it: "The term
labor dispute' includes any
controversy concerning terms or conditions of employment," etc. In
this case, there was no interchange or consideration of conflicting
views in respect of the settlement of a controversial problem.
There was simply an overbearing demand by the union that respondent
should do an unlawful thing and a natural refusal on its part to
comply. If a demand by a labor union that an employer compel its
employees to submit to the will of the union, and the employer's
refusal, constitute a labor controversy, the highwayman's demand
for the money of his victim and the latter's refusal to stand and
deliver constitute a financial controversy.
There being an utter lack of connection between the petitioners
and respondent or its employees, the union was an intruder into the
affairs of the employer and its employees. The union had the right
to try to persuade the employees to join its organization, but,
persuasive methods failing, its right under the law in any manner
to intermeddle came to an end. It lawfully could not coerce the
employees to abandon their own organization and to join Local No.
73 any more than the employees could coerce the union to disband
and its members to join
Page 303 U. S. 337
their organization. Otherwise, the worker would not "be free,"
as the act requires, "to decline to associate with his fellows;"
nor would he have "full freedom of association, self-organization,
and designation of representatives of his own choosing." Clearly
the union could not be authorized by statute to resort to coercive
measures directly against the employees to compel submission to its
wishes, for that would be to give one group of workmen autocratic
power of control in respect of the liberties of another group, in
contravention of the Fifth Amendment as well as of the policy of
Congress expressly declared in this act. And that being true, the
attempt to coerce submission through constrained interference of
the employer was equally unlawful.
So far as concerns the question here involved, the phrase "labor
dispute" is the basic element of the act. For, unless there was
such a dispute -- that is to say, a "controversy" -- the act does
not even purport to limit the District Court's jurisdiction in
equity. The phrase must receive a sensible construction in harmony
with the congressional intent and policy. There can be no dispute
without disputants. Between whom was there a dispute here? There
was none between the union and respondent's employees, for the
latter were considered by the union mere pawns, to be moved
according to the arbitrary will of the union. There was none
between respondent and its employees, for they were in full accord.
And finally there was none between the union and respondent,, for
it would be utterly unreasonable to suppose Congress intended that
the refusal of a conscientious employer to transgress the express
policy of the law should constitute a "labor dispute" having the
effect of bringing to naught not only the policy of the law, but
the obligation of a court of equity to respect it and to restrain a
continuing and destructive assault upon the property rights of the
employer, as to which no adequate remedy at law existed.
Page 303 U. S. 338
3. As to what constitutes a "labor dispute" within the meaning
of the Wisconsin statute, the interpretation put upon it by the
highest court of that state is binding here.
Supreme Lodge,
Knights of Pythias v. Meyer, 265 U. S. 30,
265 U. S. 32;
Morehead v. New York ex rel. Tipaldo, 298 U.
S. 587,
298 U. S. 609.
But this Court authoritatively declares the meaning of acts of
Congress and is required to decide for itself what constitutes a
"labor dispute," which, within the meaning of the Norris-La Guardia
Act, will have the effect of abridging the jurisdiction of a
federal court.
The things here found to have been done for the purpose of
coercing respondent to compel its employees to join the union are
not declared lawful by the Wisconsin statute or by the courts of
that state.
Cf. American Furniture Co. v. Chauffeurs, T. &
H. Union, 222 Wis. 338, 268 N.W. 250;
Senn v. Tile Layers
Protective Union, 222 Wis. 383, 268 N.W. 270, 872. While this
Court refrains from condemning the means employed by petitioners,
the opinion contains nothing to suggest that their conduct was not
wrongful and unlawful. The publicity and peaceful picketing
declared legal by Wisconsin laws are utterly unlike the display of
libelous signs, parade of pickets, false accusations, molestation,
threats, and intimidation employed by the union not on behalf of
former or present employees of respondent, but to destroy the
business of respondent. Here, by means everywhere held to be
unlawful, the union carried on and was continuing to carry on a
campaign of destruction in order to coerce respondent to deprive
its employees of their right of freedom of association,
self-organization, and designation of representatives of their own
choosing. That the Wisconsin statute does not attempt to make
lawful the means employed by the union to impose its will upon
respondent and its employees clearly appears from this Court's
portrayal of that law in
Senn v. Tile Layers Union,
301 U. S. 468.
Page 303 U. S. 339
The opinion in that case states (p.
301 U. S.
478):
"The judgment of the highest court of the state establishes that
both the means employed and the end sought by the unions are legal
under its law. . . . The Legislature of Wisconsin has declared that
'peaceful picketing and patrolling' on the public streets and
places shall be permissible 'whether engaged in singly or in
numbers,' provided this is done 'without intimidation or coercion'
and free from 'fraud, violence, breach of the peace, or threat
thereof.' The statute provides that the picketing must be peaceful,
and that term as used implies not only absence of violence, but
absence of any unlawful act. It precludes the intimidation of
customers. It precludes any form of physical obstruction or
interference with the plaintiff's business. It authorizes giving
publicity to the existence of the dispute, 'whether by advertising,
speaking, patrolling any public street or any place where any
person or persons may lawfully be,' but precludes misrepresentation
of the facts of the controversy. And it declares that 'nothing
herein shall be construed to legalize a secondary boycott.' . . .
Inherently, the means authorized are clearly unobjectionable. In
declaring such picketing permissible, Wisconsin has put this means
of publicity on a par with advertisements in the press. . . . The
picketing was peaceful. The publicity did not involve a
misrepresentation of fact, nor was any claim made below that
relevant facts were suppressed."
The state statute, defining "labor disputes" and declaring the
means that lawfully may be used against employers in such
controversies, does not purport to make lawful either the end here
sought by petitioners or the means they employed to attain it.
Their purpose was not unionization of respondent's employees, for
they already belonged to a labor organization of their own
choosing. The purpose was to coerce the employees to join a
particular organization which they had already repudiated.
There
Page 303 U. S. 340
is nothing in the state or federal statutes that purports to
give labor unions or individuals so contriving the status of party
to a "labor dispute." Coercion of employees to surrender their
freedom of self-organization is repugnant to both statute. Wis.Laws
1935, c. 551, § 5. 29 U.S.C. §§ 101, 102.
Cf.
American Furniture Co. v. Chauffeurs, T. & H. Union, 222
Wis. 338, 268 N.W. 250;
Senn v. Tile Layers Protective
Union, 222 Wis. 383, 268 N.W. 270, 872;
Senn v. Tile
Layers Union, 301 U. S. 468.
There is no ground upon which petitioners' purpose in this case or
the means employed to accomplish it can be supported as lawful.
4. The case is a simple one. Respondent's employees had no
connection with the union, and were unwilling to have any. The
union, being unable to persuade the employees to assent to its
wishes in that regard, undertook to subjugate them to its will by
coercing an unlawful interference with their freedom of action on
the part of the employer. If that is a "labor dispute," destructive
of the historical power of equity to intervene, then the Norris-La
Guardia Act attempts to legalize an arbitrary and alien state of
affairs wholly at variance with those principles of constitutional
liberty by which the exercise of despotic power hitherto has been
curbed. And nothing is plainer under our decisions than that, if
the act does that, its effect will be to deprive the respondent of
its property and business without due process of law, in
contravention of the Fifth Amendment.
Truax v. Corrigan,
supra, 257 U. S.
327-328.
I am of opinion that the Circuit Court of Appeals rightly held
that this case discloses no "labor dispute" within the meaning of
the Norris-La Guardia Act; that the union's coercive attack upon
respondent was unlawful under state law and in violation of the
policy declared by the federal statute, and was properly enjoined,
and that, there being no "labor dispute" as defined by that act,
its provisions
Page 303 U. S. 341
as to allegations, proof, and findings do not apply. I would
affirm the judgment.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS concurs in this opinion.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Section 2 of the Act of March 23, 1932, 47 Stat. 70, 29 U.S.C.
§ 102:
"Public policy in labor matters declared. In the interpretation
of this chapter and in determining the jurisdiction and authority
of the courts of the United States, as such jurisdiction and
authority are defined and limited in this chapter, the public
policy of the United States is hereby declared as follows:"
"Whereas under prevailing economic conditions, developed with
the aid of governmental authority for owners of property to
organize in the corporate and other forms of ownership association,
the individual unorganized worker is commonly helpless to exercise
actual liberty of contract and to protect his freedom of labor, and
thereby to obtain acceptable terms and conditions of employment,
wherefore, though he should be free to decline to associate with
his fellows, it is necessary that he have full freedom of
association, self-organization, and designation of representatives
of his own choosing, to negotiate the terms and conditions of his
employment, and that he shall be free from the interference,
restraint, or coercion of employers of labor, or their agents, in
the designation of such representatives or in self-organization or
in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective
bargaining or other mutual aid or protection; therefore, the
following definitions of, and limitations upon, the jurisdiction
and authority of the courts of the United States are hereby
enacted."
[
Footnote 2/2]
Section 1 of the Act of March 23, 1932, 47 Stat. 70, 29 U.S.C.
§ 101:
"Issuance of restraining orders and injunctions; limitation;
public policy. No court of the United States, as defined in this
chapter, shall have jurisdiction to issue any restraining order or
temporary or permanent injunction in a case involving or growing
out of a labor dispute, except in a strict conformity with the
provisions of this chapter; nor shall any such restraining order or
temporary or permanent injunction be issued contrary to the public
policy declared in this chapter."