Section 2 of the Federal Anti-Racketeering Act provides,
inter alia, that "any person" who, in connection with or
in relation to any act affecting interstate commerce or any article
or commodity moving in such commerce, obtains or attempts to obtain
by use or threat of force, violence or coercion, the payment of
money, "not including, however, the payment of wages by a
bona
fide employer to a
bona fide employee," shall be
guilty of a felony.
Held:
1. That the legislative history of the Act shows that it was
intended to suppress terroristic activities of professional
gangsters, and not to interfere with traditional labor union
activities. P.
315 U. S.
530.
2. The exception is not limited to those who had acquired the
status of employees prior to the time when they obtained, or
attempted or conspired to obtain, the payment. P.
315 U. S.
531.
3. The exception is applicable to an agreement by members of a
city union of truck drivers, who, for the purpose of obtaining
employment at union wages in connection with "over the road" trucks
entering the city, agree to tender their services in good faith to
each truck owner and to do the work if he accepts their offer, but
agree further that, should he refuse it, they will nevertheless,
for the protection of their union interests, require him to pay
them the wages, even by resort to threats and violence. P.
315 U. S.
534.
The test of the applicability of the exception in such case is
whether the objective of the conspirators was to obtain "the
payment of wages by a
bona fide employer to a
bona
fide employee," and not
Page 315 U. S. 522
whether the intent of the truck owner in making payment was to
pay for services, rather than for protection. P.
315 U. S.
532.
4. Labor union activities such as those disclosed by the record
in this case are not beyond the reach of federal legislative
control, and the use of violence such as that here disclosed is
subject to the ordinary criminal law. P.
315 U. S.
536.
118 F.2d 684 reversed.
Cross-petitions for certiorari, 314 U.S. 592, to review a
judgment reversing convictions of a labor union, and individual
members of it, on charges of conspiracy to violate § 2(a) and
other sections of the Federal Anti-Racketeering Act of June 8,
1934.
Page 315 U. S. 524
MR. JUSTICE BYRNES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes here on cross-petitions for certiorari to review
a judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals reversing the conviction
of Local 807 and 26 individuals on charges of conspiracy to violate
§ 2(a), (b) and (c) of the Anti-Racketeering Act of June 18,
1934. [
Footnote 1] The
Page 315 U. S. 525
government asks that the judgments of conviction be reinstated.
In their cross-petition, the defendants seek dismissal of the
indictment. We do not regard this as a correct disposition of the
case. Since the correctness of the views concerning the meaning of
the statute on which the trial court submitted the case to the jury
goes to the root of the convictions and their reversal by the
Circuit Court of Appeals, we shall confine our consideration of
these cases to that issue. Consequently, we are concerned only with
whether the defendants were tried in a manner consistent with the
proper meaning and scope of the pertinent provisions of § 2 of
the Act, which provide:
"Any person who, in connection with or in relation to any act in
any way or in any degree affecting trade or commerce or any article
or commodity moving or about to move in trade or commerce --"
"(a) Obtains or attempts to obtain, by the use of or attempt to
use or threat to use force, violence, or coercion, the payment of
money or other valuable considerations, or the purchase or rental
of property or protective services, not including, however, the
payment of wages by a
bona fide employer to a
bona
fide employee; or"
"(b) Obtains the property of another, with his consent, induced
by wrongful use of force or fear, or under color of official right;
or"
"(c) Commits or threatens to commit an act of physical violence
or physical injury to a person or property in furtherance of a plan
or purpose to violate sections (a) or (b);"
The proof at the trial showed that the defendant Local 807
includes in its membership nearly all the motor truck drivers and
helpers in the City of New York, and that, during the period
covered by the indictment, defendants Campbell and Furey held
office in the Local as delegates in charge of the west side of
Manhattan, and the other defendants
Page 315 U. S. 526
were members. Large quantities of the merchandise which goes
into the city from neighboring states is transported in "over the
road" trucks which are usually manned by drivers and helpers who
reside in the localities from which the shipments are made and who
are consequently not members of Local 807. Prior to the events
covered by this indictment, it appears to have been customary for
these out-of-state drivers to make deliveries to the warehouses of
consignees in New York, and then to pick up other merchandise from
New York shippers for delivery on the return trip to consignees in
the surrounding states.
There was sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that the
defendants conspired to use and did use violence and threats to
obtain from the owners of these "over the road" trucks $9.42 for
each large truck and $8.41 for each small truck entering the city.
These amounts were the regular union rates for a day's work of
driving and unloading. There was proof that, in some cases, the
out-of-state driver was compelled to drive the truck to a point
close to the city limits and there to turn it over to one or more
of the defendants. These defendants would then drive the truck to
its destination, do the unloading, pick up the merchandise for the
return trip, and surrender the truck to the out-of-state driver at
the point where they had taken it over. In other cases, according
to the testimony, the money was demanded and obtained, but the
owners or drivers rejected the offers of the defendants to do or
help with the driving or unloading. And, in several cases, the jury
could have found that the defendants either failed to offer to
work, or refused to work for the money when asked to do so.
Eventually many of the owners signed contracts with Local 807 under
whose terms the defendants were to do the driving and unloading
within the city and to receive regular union rates for the work. No
serious question is raised by the evidence
Page 315 U. S. 527
as to the ability of the defendants to perform the labor
involved in these operations.
The first count of the indictment was based upon § 2(a) of
the Act, and charged a conspiracy "to obtain the payment of money .
. . [from the owners] by the use of, attempt to use and threat to
use, force, violence and coercion." The second count accused the
defendants of conspiring to obtain the property of the owners "with
their consent induced by wrongful use of force and of fear," in
violation of § 2(b). The third and fourth counts alleged a
conspiracy to violate § 2(c) in that the defendants agreed "to
commit and threatened to commit acts of physical violence and of
physical injury to the persons and property" of their victims in
furtherance of the general scheme to violate §§ 2(a) and
2(b). Local 807 and all of the individual defendants were convicted
on the first count; the Local and 17 individuals on the second, and
the Local and 11 individuals on the third and fourth.
The question in the case concerns that portion of § 2(a)
which excepts from punishment any person who
"obtains or attempts to obtain, by the use of or attempt to use
or threat to use force, violence, or coercion . . . the payment of
wages by a
bona fide employer to a
bona fide
employee. [
Footnote 2]"
The Circuit Court of Appeals reversed because it believed that
the trial court had failed to instruct the jury properly with
respect to this exception.
To ascertain the limits of the exception is a difficult
undertaking. Always assuming the presence of violence and threats,
as we must in the face of this record, three interpretations of
varying restrictive force require consideration: (1) The exception
applies only to a defendant
Page 315 U. S. 528
who has enjoyed the status of a
bona fide employee
prior to the time at which he obtains or attempts to obtain the
payment of money by the owner. (2) Assuming that this is incorrect,
and that the exception may affect a defendant who has not been a
bona fide employee prior to the time in question, it does
not apply if the owner's intention in making the payment is to buy
"protection," and not to buy service, even though the defendant may
intend to perform the service or may actually perform it. We
understand this to be the position adopted by the government in its
brief and argument in this Court. (3) Assuming that both (1) and
(2) are incorrect, the exception is not applicable to a defendant
who obtains the payment of money if the owner rejects his genuine
offer of service. We understand this to be the theory of the
dissenting judge below.
Confronted with these various interpretations, we turn for
guidance to the legislative history of the statute. Pursuant to a
Senate Resolution of May 8, 1933, [
Footnote 3] a subcommittee of the Senate Committee on
Interstate Commerce which became known as the Copeland Committee
undertook an investigation of "rackets" and "racketeering" in the
United States. After conducting hearings in several large cities,
the committee introduced 13 bills, of which S. 2248 was one.
[
Footnote 4] As introduced, as
reported by the Senate Judiciary Committee, [
Footnote 5] and as passed without debate by the
Senate, [
Footnote 6] S. 2248
embodied very general prohibitions
Page 315 U. S. 529
against violence or coercion in connection with interstate
commerce, and contained no specific mention of wages or labor.
After the bill had passed the Senate, however, representatives of
the American Federation of Labor expressed fear that the bill in
its then form might result in serious injury to labor, [
Footnote 7] and the measure was
redrafted by officials of the Department of Justice after
conferences with the President of the Federation. In the course of
this revision, the bill assumed substantially the form in which it
was eventually enacted. In particular, the exception concerning
"the payment of wages by a
bona fide employer to a
bona fide employee" was added, and a proviso preserving
"the rights of
bona fide labor organizations" was
incorporated in what became § 6 of the Act as finally passed.
[
Footnote 8] In its favorable
reports on this revised bill, [
Footnote 9] the House Committee on the Judiciary set forth
without comment a letter from the Attorney General to the
Committee, dated May 18, 1934. In this letter, the Attorney General
informed the Committee that the draft of the substitute bill had
been "definitely approved" by the President of the American
Federation of Labor and his counsel. The letter continued:
"We believe that the bill in this form will accomplish the
purposes of such legislation and at the same time meet the
objections made to the original bill."
"The original bill was susceptible to the objection that it
might include within the prohibition the legitimate and
bona
fide activities of employers and employees. As the
Page 315 U. S. 530
purpose of the legislation is not to interfere with such
legitimate activities, but rather to set up severe penalties for
racketeering by violence, extortion, or coercion, which affects
interstate commerce, it seems advisable to definitely exclude such
legitimate activities."
"As the typical racketeering activities affecting interstate
commerce are those in connection with price-fixing and economic
extortion directed by professional gangsters, we have inserted
subparagraphs (a) and (b), making such activities unlawful when
accompanied by violence and affecting interstate commerce."
The substitute was agreed to by both the House and Senate
without debate when assurances were given that the approval of
organized labor had been obtained. [
Footnote 10] Thereafter, while the bill awaited the
signature of the President, Senator Copeland submitted a report
[
Footnote 11] in which he
referred to S. 2248 as one of eleven bills which had been enacted
"to close gaps in existing Federal laws and to render more
difficult the activities of predatory criminal gangs of the Kelly
and Dillinger types."
This account of the legislative proceedings obviously does not
provide specific definition of "wages," "
bona fide
employer," or "
bona fide employee," as those terms are
used in § 2(a). But it does contain clear declarations by the
head of the Department which drafted the section and by the sponsor
of the bill in Congress first, that the elimination of terroristic
activities by professional gangsters was the aim of the statute,
and second, that no interference with traditional labor union
activities was intended.
It may be true that professional rackets have sometimes assumed
the guise of labor unions, and, as the Circuit Court of Appeals
observed, that they may have
Page 315 U. S. 531
"covered their practices by the pretence that the tribute
collected was pay for services rendered." 118 F.2d 684, 688. And it
may also be true that labor organizations of good repute and honest
purpose can be misdirected and become agencies of blackmail.
Nevertheless, Congress plainly attempted to distinguish militant
labor activity from the other, and to afford it ample protection.
With this legislative purpose uppermost in mind, we return to test
the three theories of interpretation of § 2(a) to which we
have referred.
(1) We hold that the exemption is not restricted to a defendant
who has attained the status of an employee prior to the time at
which he obtains or attempts or conspires to obtain the money. In
the first place, we agree with the observation of the Court below
that "practically always the crux of a labor dispute is who shall
get the job and what the terms shall be. . . ." To exclude this
entire class of disputes from the protection of the exception would
be unjustifiably to thwart the purpose of Congress as we understand
it. In the second place, the structure and language of § 2(a)
itself is persuasive against so narrow an interpretation. It does
not except "a
bona fide employee who obtains or attempts
to obtain the payment of wages from a
bona fide employer."
Rather, it excepts "
any person who . . . obtains or
attempts to obtain . . . the payment of wages from a
bona
fide employer to a
bona fide employee." Certainly, an
outsider who "attempts" unsuccessfully by violent means to achieve
the status of an employee and to secure wages for services falls
within the exception. And where, as here, the offense charged is
conspiracy to violate the section, the defendants are entitled to
immunity if their objective is to become
bona fide
employees and to obtain wages in that capacity, even though they
may fail of their purpose.
(2) The government contends, as we have said, that the test is
"whether, under all the circumstances, it appears
Page 315 U. S. 532
that the money has been paid for labor or for protection." If
the defendants do not offer to work, or if they refuse to work, or
if their offer to work is rejected by the owners, the government
argues that any payment made to them must be for protection, rather
than for services. And even if the defendants actually perform some
work, it is said, this circumstance should be regarded as relevant,
but not controlling, in determining "the one crucial issue in every
case such as this -- namely, whether the money was paid for labor
or for protection."
We take this to mean that the intent of the owners in making the
payment is to be regarded as controlling. We cannot agree. The
state of mind of the truck owners cannot be decisive of the guilt
of these defendants. On the contrary, their guilt is determined by
whether or not their purpose and objective was to obtain "the
payment of wages by a
bona fide employer to a
bona
fide employee." And, of course, where the defendants are
charged with conspiracy, as they were here, it is particularly
obvious that the nature of their plan and agreement is the crux of
the case. The mischief of a contrary theory is nowhere better
illustrated than in industrial controversies. For example, the
members of a labor union may decide that they are entitled to the
jobs in their trade in a particular area. They may agree to attempt
to obtain contracts to do the work at the union wage scale. They
may obtain the contracts, do the work, and receive the money.
Certainly Congress intended that these activities should be
excepted from the prohibitions of this particular Act, even though
the agreement may have contemplated the use of violence. But it is
always an open question whether the employers' capitulation to the
demands of the union is prompted by a desire to obtain services or
to avoid further injury, or both. To make a fine or prison sentence
for the union and its members contingent upon a finding by the
jury
Page 315 U. S. 533
that one motive or the other dominated the employers' decision
would be a distortion of the legislative purpose.
We are told, however, that, under this view, such a common law
offense as robbery would become an innocent pastime, inasmuch as it
is an essential element of that crime that the victim be moved by
fear of violence when he parts with his money or property. This
objection mistakes the significance of this requirement of proof in
the case of robbery. Its true significance is that it places an
added burden upon the prosecutor, rather than upon the accused.
That is, the prosecutor must first establish a criminal intent upon
the part of the defendant, and he must then make a further showing
with respect to the victim's state of mind. The effect of this rule
is to render conviction of robbery more, rather than less,
difficult. There is no such restrictive evidentiary requirement in
prosecutions under this Act. If the objective that these defendants
sought to attain by the use of force and threats is not the
objective to which the exception in § 2(a) affords immunity,
they are guilty, and nothing further need be shown concerning the
actual motive of the owners in handing over the money. On the other
hand, if their objective did enjoy the protection of that
exception, they are innocent, and their innocence is not affected
by the state of mind of the owners. We shall consider in a moment,
in point (3) below, the legal consequences which flow from the
owners' actual rejection of proffered services. But it needs to be
emphasized here that for the owners to reject an offer of services
amounts to an overt act on their part. It is conduct or behavior,
as distinct from intention or state of mind. It is an event which
alters the external situation in which the defendants find
themselves. T he latter must then decide whether they will continue
to push their demands for the money. Whether or not they are guilty
of an offense under this
Page 315 U. S. 534
Act if they choose to do so we shall presently discuss. But that
decision must be made in terms of their motives and purposes and
objectives, rather than those of the owners.
We do not mean that an offer to work, or even the actual
performance of some services, necessarily entitles one to immunity
under the exception. A jury might, of course, find that such an
offer or performance was no more than a sham to disguise an actual
intention to extort and to blackmail. But the inquiry must
nevertheless be directed to whether this was the purpose of the
accused, or whether they honestly intended to obtain a chance to
work for a wage.
(3) There remains to be considered the difficult issue which
divided the court below. The whole court agreed that the payment of
money to one who refuses to perform the services is not "the
payment of wages by a
bona fide employer to a
bona
fide employee" within the meaning of § 2(a); it also
agreed that payments to one who has been permitted actually to
perform the services do fall within the exception. But it divided
over the question whether the payment of money to one whose sincere
offer to work is rejected constitutes the payment of "wages" to a
"
bona fide employee." Since the offense charged here is
conspiracy, these questions must be put somewhat differently. Thus,
there is no conspiracy to violate the Act if the purpose of the
defendants is actually to perform the services in return for the
money, but there is a punishable conspiracy if their plan is to
obtain money without doing the work. The doubtful case arises where
the defendants agree to tender their services in good faith to an
employer and to work if he accepts their offer, but agree further
that the protection of their trade union interests requires that he
should pay an amount equivalent to the prevailing union wage even
if he rejects their proffered services.
Page 315 U. S. 535
We think that such an agreement is covered by the exception. The
term "wages," "
bona fide employee," and "
bona
fide employer" are susceptible of more than one meaning, and
the background and legislative history of this Act require that
they be broadly defined. We have expressed our belief that Congress
intended to leave unaffected the ordinary activities of labor
unions. The proviso in § 6 safeguarding "the rights of
bona fide labor organizations in lawfully carrying out the
legitimate objects thereof," although obscure indeed, strengthens
us somewhat in that opinion. [
Footnote 12] The test must therefore be whether the
particular activity was among or is akin to labor union activities
with which Congress must be taken to have been familiar when this
measure was enacted. Accepting payments even where services are
refused is such an activity. The Circuit Court has referred to the
"standby" orchestra device, by which a union local requires that
its members be substituted for visiting musicians, or, if the
producer or conductor insists upon using his own musicians, that
the members of the local be paid the sums which they would have
earned had they performed. That similar devices are employed in
other trades is well known. It is admitted here that the standby
musician has a "job" even though he renders no actual service.
There can be no question that he demands the payment of money
regardless of the management's willingness to accept his labor. If,
as it is agreed, the musician would escape punishment under this
Act even though he obtained his "standby job" by force or threats,
it is certainly difficult to see how a teamster could be punished
for engaging in the same practice. It is not our province either to
approve or disapprove such tactics. But we do believe that they are
not "the activities of
Page 315 U. S. 536
predatory criminal gangs of the Kelly and Dillinger types" at
which the Act was aimed, and that, on the contrary, they are among
those practices of labor unions which were intended to remain
beyond its ban.
This does not mean that such activities are beyond the reach of
federal legislative control. Nor does it mean that they need go
unpunished. The power of state and local authorities to punish acts
of violence is beyond question. It is not diminished or affected by
the circumstance that the violence may be the outgrowth of a labor
dispute. The use of violence disclosed by this record is plainly
subject to the ordinary criminal law.
As we have said, the evidence with respect to the crucial issues
was conflicting. Thus, the jury might have believed that, in some
instances, the defendants refused to do any driving or unloading
when requested to do so, that, in other cases, they did not offer
to work, that, in other cases, their offers were rejected, and
that, in still other cases, they actually did some or all of the
driving and unloading. In the early stages, written contracts were
not in existence; later, a number of the owners signed contracts
and the defendants performed the services for which they
called.
The jury's task was difficult. The trial lasted six weeks. The
jury required two days in which to reach a verdict, and twice
during that period it sought further instructions from the Court,
particularly with reference to the law relating to labor activity.
In such circumstances, where acts of violence naturally would
influence the minds of the jury, the instructions were of vital
importance, especially as they affected the question of whether the
payments which the defendants conspired to obtain fell within the
exception contained in § 2(a). The trial judge made a number
of statements which were
Page 315 U. S. 537
relevant to this issue, but we agree with the Circuit Court that
the following were decisive:
"If the jury find that the sums of money paid by the truck
operators were not wages so paid in return for services performed
by such defendants, but were payments made by the operators in
order to induce the defendants to refrain from interfering
unlawfully with the operation of their trucks, then the sums in
question may not be regarded as wages paid by a
bona fide
employer to a
bona fide employee."
"The fact that any defendant may have done some work on a truck
of an operator is not conclusive as to whether payments received by
such defendants were wages; the jury may consider the performance
of work by a defendant as evidence of the nature of the
relationship between the defendant and the operator as establishing
the status of a
bona fide employer and a
bona
fide employee. If, however, what the operator was paying for
was not labor performed, but merely for protection from
interference by the defendants with the operation of operator's
trucks, the fact that a defendant may have done some work on an
operator's truck is not conclusive."
These instructions embody the rule for which the government
contends, and which we think is erroneous for the reasons we have
given. Under them, the jury was free to return a verdict of guilty
if it found that the motive of the owners in making the payments
was to prevent further damage and injury, rather than to secure the
services of the defendants. Whether or not the defendants were
guilty of conspiracy thus became contingent upon the purposes of
others, and not upon their own aims and objectives. Moreover, the
charge failed correctly to explain the legal consequences of proof
that the owners had rejected
bona fide offers by the
defendants to perform
Page 315 U. S. 538
the services. As we have said, the jury was bound to acquit the
defendants if it found that their objective and purpose was to
obtain by the use or threat of violence the chance to work for the
money, but to accept the money even if the employers refused to
permit them to work. While the 48th, 49th and 58th instructions
requested by the defendants, all of which were refused, do not
constitute a complete exposition of the rules which we regard as
applicable to this case, they cover a good deal of the ground, and
should have been granted. The 48th states that
"it is not an offense under the Anti-Racketeering Act for anyone
to obtain employment by the use or threat of violence if the
intention is to actually work for the pay received, and to give an
honest day's work for a day's wage."
The 49th declared that
"it is not the purpose of the Anti-Racketeering Act to prevent
labor unions from attempting to obtain employment for their
members, . . . and that the use of violence or the threat of
violence for such purposes, while punishable under the laws, is not
punishable under the Anti-Racketeering Act."
The 58th requested charge read as follows:
"I charge you that, in order that the defendants herein may be
convicted under any one of the four counts of the Anti-Racketeering
indictment, you must find a conspiracy under such counts, and that,
in order to sustain the charge of conspiracy under any one of the
counts under the Anti-Racketeering indictment, the proof must show
not only that individual defendants obtained money without
rendering adequate service, but that it was the aim and object of
the conspiracy that . . . [they] [
Footnote 13] should obtain money without rendering
adequate service therefor. "
Page 315 U. S. 539
Since the instructions denied and the misleading instructions
actually given go to what is indeed the heart of the case, we hold
that the convictions cannot stand, and that the judgment of the
Circuit Court of Appeals must be
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
* Together with No. 132,
Local 807 of International
Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffers, Stablemen & Helpers of
America et al. v. United States, also on writ of certiorari,
314 U.S. 596, to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit.
[
Footnote 1]
48 Stat. 979, U.S.C. Title 18, § 420a. Local 807 and the 26
individuals were also convicted of conspiracy to violate § 1
of the Sherman Act, 26 Stat. 209, U.S.C. Title 15, § 1. The
Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the convictions under this
indictment as well, but the government does not seek review of this
part of its judgment.
[
Footnote 2]
This exception does not appear in § 2(b). But we agree with
the Circuit Court of Appeals that it too is subject to the
exception. The trial judge's instructions show that he shared this
view. And the definition of terms in § 3(b) was apparently
intended to achieve this result.
[
Footnote 3]
S.Res. 74, 73d Cong., 1st Sess.
[
Footnote 4]
See 78 Cong.Rec. 457, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 5]
S.Rep. No. 532, 73d Cong., 2d Sess. The report included a
memorandum from the Department of Justice in which it was
stated:
"The provisions of the proposed statute are limited so as not to
include the usual activities of capitalistic combination,
bona
fide labor unions, and ordinary business practices which are
not accompanied by manifestations of racketeering."
[
Footnote 6]
78 Cong.Rec. 5735, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 7]
78 Cong.Rec. 5859, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 8]
"
Provided, That no court of the United States shall
construe or apply any of the provisions of this Act in such manner
as to impair, diminish, or in any manner affect the rights of
bona fide labor organizations in lawfully carrying out the
legitimate objects thereof, as such rights are expressed in
existing statutes of the United States."
U.S.C. Title 18, § 420d.
[
Footnote 9]
H.Rep. No. 1833, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 10]
78 Cong.Rec. 10867, 11402-11403, 11482, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 11]
S.Rep. No. 1440, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 12]
See note 8
supra.
[
Footnote 13]
The words "all of the conspirators," rather than "they,"
appeared in the requested instruction as submitted to the trial
judge. We think that, as so expressed, the charge would have been
erroneous, but that, with this change, it states the correct
rule.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE STONE, dissenting.
I think the judgment should be reversed, and the convictions
affirmed, subject only to an examination of the sufficiency of the
evidence as to some of the respondents, and to a consideration of
whether the union itself is a "person" within the meaning of the
statute.
Respondents, who are members of a labor union, were convicted of
conspiracy to violate the Anti-Racketeering Act. They, or some of
them, lay in wait for trucks passing from New Jersey to New York,
forced their way onto the trucks, and, by beating or threats of
beating the drivers, procured payments to themselves from the
drivers or their employers of a sum of money for each truck, $9.42
for a large truck and $8.41 for a small one, said to be the
equivalent of the union wage scale for a day's work. In some
instances, they assisted or offered to assist in unloading the
truck, and in others they disappeared as soon as the money was
paid, without rendering or offering to render any service.
The Anti-Racketeering Act condemns the obtaining or conspiracy
to obtain the payment of money or delivery of property by "the use
of . . . force, violence, or coercion. . . ." To this definition of
the offense Congress added two -- and only two -- qualifications.
It does not embrace the "payment of wages by a
bona fide
employer to a
bona fide employee," and the provisions of
the Act are
Page 315 U. S. 540
not to be applied so as to
"affect the rights of
bona fide labor organizations in
lawfully carrying out the legitimate objects thereof, as such
rights are expressed in existing statutes of the United States.
"
There is abundant evidence in the record from which the jury
could have concluded that respondents, or some of them, conspired
to compel by force and violence the truck drivers or their
employers to pay the sums of money to respondents or some of them;
that the payments were made by the drivers or truck owners to
purchase immunity from the violence of respondents and for no other
reason, and that this was the end knowingly sought by
respondents.
I can only conclude that such conduct, accompanied by such a
purpose, constitutes a violation of the statute even though the
defendants stood ready to unload the trucks in the event that they
were hired to do so. Unless the language of the statute is to be
disregarded, one who has rejected the proffered service and pays
money only in order to purchase immunity from violence is not a
bona fide employer, and is not paying the extorted money
as wages. The character of what the drivers or owners did and
intended to do -- pay money to avoid a beating -- was not altered
by the willingness of the payee to accept as wages for services
rendered what he in fact intentionally exacted from the driver or
owner as the purchase price of immunity from assault, and what he
intended so to exact whether the proffered services were accepted
or not. It is no answer to say that the guilt of a defendant is
personal, and cannot be made to depend upon the acts and intention
of another. Such an answer, if valid, would render common law
robbery an innocent pastime. For there can be no robbery unless the
purpose of the victim in handing over the money is to avoid force.
Precisely as under the present statute, the
Page 315 U. S. 541
robber's use of force and its intended effect on the victim are
essential elements of the crime, both of which the prosecutor must
prove. Under this statute, when both are present, the crime is
complete, irrespective of other motives which may actuate the
offender, if he is also aware, as we must take it the jury found,
that the money is not in fact paid as wages by a
bona fide
employer. It is a contradiction in terms to say that the payment of
money forcibly extorted by a payee who is, in any case a
lawbreaker, and paid only to secure immunity from violence, without
establishment of an employment relationship or the rendering of
services, is a good faith payment or receipt of wages.
Even though the procuring of jobs by violence is not within the
Act, and though this includes the "standby" job, where no actual
service is rendered, the granted immunity, unless its words be
disregarded, does not extend to the case where the immediate
objective is to force the payment of money regardless of the
victim's willingness to accept and treat the extortioner as an
employee. It was for the jury to say whether such was the objective
of respondents and whether they were aware that the money was paid
because of their violence, and not as wages.
When the Anti-Racketeering Act was under consideration by
Congress, no member of Congress and no labor leader had the
temerity to suggest that such payments, made only to secure
immunity from violence and intentionally compelled by assault and
battery, could be regarded as the payment of "wages by a
bona
fide employer," or that the compulsion of such payments is a
legitimate object of a labor union, or was ever made so by any
statute of the United States. I am unable to concur in that
suggestion now. It follows that all the defendants who conspired to
compel such payments by force and violence, regardless of the
willingness of the
Page 315 U. S. 542
victims to accept them as employees, were rightly convicted.
If I am right in this conclusion, there was no error in the
instructions to the jury. All the counts of the indictment were for
conspiracy to violate the statute. The jury was told that, to
convict, it must find conspiracy or agreement by respondents to
violate the statute, and that they must have the purpose or
intention to commit the crime which it defined. As I have said, the
intention to commit the offense includes the intention to use force
and violence on the victim, and the intention that the victim shall
pay because of it. The jury was then instructed that the offense
defined by the statute was the obtaining of money or property by
force and violence, but that
"the jury may not find the defendants guilty on any count of the
Anti-Racketeering Act indictment if the money which they are
charged with having obtained from truck owners through the use of
force and violence or threats of force and violence was paid as
wages, and if the defendants who received the money were
bona
fide employees and the truck operators who paid the money were
bona fide employers . . . If the jury find that the sums
of money paid by the truck operators were not wages so paid in
return for services performed by such defendants, but were payments
made by the operators in order to induce the defendants to refrain
from interfering unlawfully with the operation of their trucks,
then the sums in question may not be regarded as wages paid by a
bona fide employer to a
bona fide employee . . .
If, however, what the operator was paying for was not labor
performed, but merely for protection from interference by the
defendants with the operation of the operator's trucks, the fact
that a defendant may have done some work on an operator's truck is
not conclusive."
Respondents' 48th and 49th requests were rightly refused. So far
as they involved a ruling that the obtaining
Page 315 U. S. 543
of employment by force and violence does not constitute the
offense, the court had already ruled specifically that there could
be no substantive offense unless the payment of money or property
had been obtained by force. But, in any case, both requests were
erroneous, because they made respondents' willingness to work the
test of guilt, regardless of the intended and actual effect of the
violence on the victims in compelling them to pay the money not as
wages, but in order to secure immunity from assault. The first part
of the 58th request likewise had already been charged. The rest was
plainly defective, since it required an acquittal unless it was the
aim and object of the conspiracy that "all of the conspirators
should obtain money without rendering adequate service therefor."
Upon any theory of the meaning of the statute, it was not necessary
for the Government to show that it was the object of the conspiracy
that "all the conspirators" should receive payments of money. They
would be equally guilty if they had conspired to procure the
payments to some.