A business conducted by the owner himself without employees was
peacefully picketed by a labor union to compel compliance with a
demand for a union shop.
Held: a state court injunction against the picketing,
challenged as infringing the right of freedom of speech as
guaranteed by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment,
is affirmed. Pp.
339 U. S.
471-474,
339 U. S.
481.
33 Wash. 2d 646, 666, 207 P.2d 206, 216, affirmed.
The State Supreme Court in these two cases sustained permanent
injunctions against picketing of places of business. 33 Wash. 2d
646, 666, 207 P.2d 206, 216. This Court granted certiorari. 338
U.S. 903.
Affirmed, p.
339 U. S.
481.
Page 339 U. S. 471
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER announced the judgment of the Court and
an opinion in which THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE JACKSON and MR.
JUSTICE BURTON concurred.
These two cases raise the same issues, and are therefore
disposed of in a single opinion. The question is this: does the
Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution bar a State from use of
the injunction to prohibit the picketing of a business conducted by
the owner himself without employees in order to secure compliance
by him with a demand to become a union shop?
In No. 309, respondents A. E. Hanke and his three sons, as
copartners, engaged in the business of repairing automobiles,
dispensing gasoline and automobile accessories, and selling used
automobiles in Seattle. They conducted their entire enterprise
themselves, without any employees. At the time the senior Hanke
purchased the business in June, 1946, which had theretofore been
conducted as a union shop, he became a member of Local 309 of the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters, which includes in its
membership persons employed and engaged in the gasoline service
station business in Seattle. Accordingly, the Hankes continued to
display in their show window the union shop card of their
predecessor. Local 309 also included the Hankes' business in the
list of firms for which it urged patronage in advertisements
published in the Washington organ of the International Brotherhood
of Teamsters, distributed weekly to members. As a result of the use
of the union shop card and these advertisements, the Hankes
received union patronage which they otherwise would not have
had.
Automobile Drivers and Demonstrators Local 882, closely
affiliated with Local 309 and also chartered by the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters, includes in its membership persons
engaged in the business of selling
Page 339 U. S. 472
used cars and used car salesmen in Seattle. This union
negotiated an agreement in 1946 with the Independent Automobile
Dealers Association of Seattle, to which the Hankes did not belong,
providing that used car lots be closed by 6 p.m. on weekdays and
all day on Saturdays, Sundays and eight specified holidays. This
agreement was intended to be applicable to 115 used car dealers in
Seattle, all except ten of which were self-employers with no
employees.
It was the practice of the Hankes to remain open nights,
weekends, and holidays. In January, 1948, representatives of both
Locals called upon the Hankes to urge them to respect the
limitation on business hours in the agreement or give up their
union shop card. The Hankes refused to consent to abide by the
agreement, claiming that it would be impossible to continue in
business and do so, and surrendered the union shop card. The name
of the Hankes' business was thereafter omitted from the list
published by Local 309 in its advertisements.
Soon afterwards, the Local sent a single picket to patrol up and
down peacefully in front of the Hankes' business between the hours
of 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m., carrying a "sandwich sign" with the words
"Union People Look for the Union Shop Card" and a facsimile of the
shop card. The picket also wrote down the automobile license
numbers of the Hankes' patrons. As a result of the picketing, the
Hankes' business fell off heavily, and drivers for supply houses
refused to deliver parts and other needed materials. The Hankes had
to use their own truck to call for the materials necessary to carry
on their business.
To restrain this conduct, the Hankes brought suit against Local
309 and its officers. The trial court granted a permanent
injunction against the picketing and awarded the Hankes a judgment
of $250, the sum stipulated by the parties to be the amount of
damage occasioned
Page 339 U. S. 473
by the picketing. The Supreme Court of Washington affirmed. 33
Wash. 2d 646, 207 P.2d 206.
The background in No. 364 is similar. George E. Cline engaged in
the used car business in Seattle, performing himself the services
of his business here relevant. He was induced by the threat of
picketing to join Automobile Drivers Local 882 in 1946, and in that
year he also became a member of the Independent Automobile Dealers
Association of Seattle, which negotiated with Local 882 the
agreement as to business hours to which reference has been
made.
In August, 1947, Cline advised Local 882 that he did not intend
to continue membership in the union, and that he was no longer a
member of the Independent Automobile Dealers Association. He
announced that he did not consider himself bound by the agreement
as to business hours, and that he intended to operate on Saturdays.
When Cline proceeded to do so, Local 882 began to picket his
business.
The picketing was conducted peacefully, normally by two pickets
who patrolled up and down carrying "sandwich signs" stating that
Cline was unfair to the union. The pickets took down the automobile
license numbers of Cline's patrons, and when inquiry was made by
patrons as to why they were doing so, their reply was: "You'll find
out." Because of interference by the pickets with the use of one of
Cline's driveways, he was forced to close it to avoid the
possibility of one of the pickets being run over. As a result of
the picketing, Cline's business fell off, and, as in No. 309,
drivers for supply houses refused to deliver parts and other needed
materials. Cline had to use his own vehicle to call for supplies
necessary to carry on the business.
Local 882 reached a new agreement with the Independent
Automobile Dealers Association in April, 1948. As a condition to
removal of the picket line, the union
Page 339 U. S. 474
demanded that Cline agree to keep his business closed after 1
p.m. on Saturdays and to hire a member of the union as a salesman
to be compensated at the rate of seven percent of the gross sales
regardless of whether they were made by Cline or this employee.
Suit by Cline to restrain patrolling of his business resulted in a
permanent injunction against the union and its officers -- Cline
waived his claim for damages -- and the Supreme Court of
Washington, relying on its decision in the
Hanke case,
affirmed. 33 Wash. 2d 665, 207 P.2d 216.
On both these cases, we granted certiorari to consider claims of
infringement of the right of freedom of speech as guaranteed by the
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. 338 U.S. 903.
Here, as in
Hughes v. Superior Court, ante, p.
339 U. S. 460, we
must start with the fact that, while picketing has an ingredient of
communication, it cannot dogmatically be equated with the
constitutionally protected freedom of speech. Our decisions reflect
recognition that picketing is "indeed a hybrid." Freund, On
Understanding the Supreme Court 18 (1949).
See also Jaffe,
In Defense of the Supreme Court's Picketing Doctrine, 41
Mich.L.Rev. 1037 (1943). The effort in the cases has been to strike
a balance between the constitutional protection of the element of
communication in picketing and "the power of the State to set the
limits of permissible contest open to industrial combatants."
Thornhill v. Alabama, 310 U. S. 88,
310 U. S. 104.
[
Footnote 1] A State's judgment
on striking
Page 339 U. S. 475
such a balance is, of course, subject to the limitations of the
Fourteenth Amendment. Embracing as such a judgment does, however, a
State's social and economic policies, which in turn depend on
knowledge and appraisal of local social and economic factors, such
judgment on these matters comes to this Court bearing a weighty
title of respect.
These two cases emphasize the nature of a problem that is
presented by our duty of sitting in judgment on a State's judgment
in striking the balance that has to be struck when a State decides
not to keep hands off these industrial contests. Here, we have a
glaring instance of the interplay of competing social-economic
interests and viewpoints. Unions obviously are concerned not to
have union standards undermined by non-union shops. This interest
penetrates into self-employer shops. On the other hand, some of our
profoundest thinkers from Jefferson to Brandeis have stressed the
importance to a democratic society of encouraging self-employer
economic units as a counter-movement to what are deemed to be the
dangers inherent in excessive concentration of economic power.
"There is a widespread belief . . . that the true prosperity of
our past came not from big business, but through the courage, the
energy, and the resourcefulness of small men . . . , and that only
through participation by the many in the responsibilities and
determinations of business can Americans secure the moral and
intellectual development which is essential to the maintenance of
liberty."
Mr. Justice Brandeis, dissenting in
Liggett Co. v. Lee,
288 U. S. 517,
288 U. S.
541.
Whether to prefer to union or a self-employer in such a
situation or to seek partial recognition of both interests, and, if
so, by what means to secure such accommodation, obviously presents
to a State serious problems. There are no sure answers, and the
best available solution
Page 339 U. S. 476
is likely to be experimental and tentative, and always subject
to the control of the popular will. That the solution of these
perplexities is a challenge to wisdom, and not a command of the
Constitution, is the significance of
Senn v. Tile Layers
Protective Union, 301 U. S. 468.
Senn, a self-employed tile layer who occasionally hired other tile
layers to assist him, was picketed when he refused to yield to the
union demand that he no longer work himself at his trade. The
Wisconsin court found the situation to be within the State's
anti-injunction statute, and denied relief. In rejecting the claim
that the restriction upon Senn's freedom was a denial of his
liberty under the Fourteenth Amendment, this Court held that it lay
in the domain of policy for Wisconsin to permit the picketing:
"Whether it was wise for the state to permit the unions to do so is
a question of its public policy -- not our concern." 301 U.S. at
301 U. S.
481.
This conclusion was based on the Court's recognition that it was
Wisconsin, not the Fourteenth Amendment, which put such picketing
as a "means of publicity on a par with advertisements in the
press." [
Footnote 2] 301 U.S.
at
301 U. S. 479.
If Wisconsin could permit such picketing as a matter
Page 339 U. S. 477
of policy, it must have been equally free as a matter of policy
to choose not to permit it, and therefore not to "put this means of
publicity on a par with advertisements in the press." If Wisconsin
could have deemed it wise to withdraw from the union the permission
which this Court found outside the ban of the Fourteenth Amendment,
such action by Washington cannot be inside that ban. [
Footnote 3]
Washington here concluded that, even though the relief afforded
the Hankes and Cline entailed restriction upon communication that
the unions sought to convey through picketing, it was more
important to safeguard the value which the State placed upon
self-employers, leaving all other channels of communication open to
the union. The relatively small interest of the unions considerably
influenced the balance that was struck. Of 115 used car dealers in
Seattle maintaining union standards, all but ten were
self-employers with no employees. "From this fact," so we are
informed by the Supreme Court of Washington,
"the conclusion seems irresistable that the union's interest in
the welfare of a mere handful of members (of whose working
conditions no complaint at all is made) is far outweighed by the
interests of individual proprietors and the people of the community
as a whole, to the end that little businessmen and property owners
shall be free from dictation as to business policy by an outside
group having
Page 339 U. S. 478
but a relatively small and indirect interest in such
policy."
33 Wash. 2d 659, 207 P.2d at 213.
We are, needless to say, fully aware of the contentious nature
of these views. It is not our business even remotely to hint at
agreement or disagreement with what has commended itself to the
State of Washington, or even to intimate that all the relevant
considerations are exposed in the conclusions reached by the
Washington court. They seldom are in this field, so deceptive and
opaque are the elements of these problems. That is precisely what
is meant by recognizing that they are within the domain of a
State's public policy. Because there is lack of agreement as to the
relevant factors and divergent interpretations of their meaning, as
well as differences in assessing what is the short and what is the
long view, the clash of fact and opinion should be resolved by the
democratic process, and not by the judicial sword. Invalidation
here would mean denial of power to the Congress as well as to the
forty-eight States.
It is not for us to pass judgment on cases not now before us.
But when one considers that issues not unlike those that are here
have been similarly viewed by other States [
Footnote 4] and by the Congress of the United States,
[
Footnote 5] we cannot conclude
that Washington, in holding the picketing
Page 339 U. S. 479
in these cases to be for an unlawful object, has struck a
balance so inconsistent with rooted traditions of a free people
that it must be found an unconstitutional choice. Mindful as we are
that a phase of picketing is communication, we cannot find that
Washington has offended the Constitution.
We need not repeat the considerations to which we adverted in
Hughes v. Superior Court that make it immaterial, in
respect to the constitutional issue before us, that the policy of
Washington was expressed by its Supreme Court, rather than by its
legislature. The Fourteenth Amendment leaves the States free to
distribute the powers of government as they will between their
legislative and judicial branches.
Dreyer v. Illinois,
187 U. S. 71,
187 U. S. 83-84;
Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line Co., 211 U.
S. 210,
211 U. S. 225.
"[R]ights under that amendment turn on the power of the state, no
matter by what organ it acts."
Missouri v. Dockery,
191 U. S. 165,
191 U. S.
170-171.
Nor does the Fourteenth Amendment require prohibition by
Washington also of voluntary acquiescence in the demands of the
union in order that it may choose to prohibit the right to secure
submission through picketing. In abstaining from interference with
such voluntary agreements, a State may rely on self-interest. In
any event, it is not for this Court to question a State's judgment
in regulating only where an evil seems to it most conspicuous.
What was actually decided in
American Federation of Labor v.
Swing, 312 U. S. 321;
Bakery & Pastry Drivers & Helpers Local v. Wohl,
315 U. S. 769, and
Cafeteria Employees Union v. Angelos, 320 U.
S. 293, does not preclude us from upholding Washington's
power to make the choice of policy she has here made. In those
cases, we held only that a State could not proscribe picketing
merely by setting artificial bounds, unreal in the light of
modern
Page 339 U. S. 480
circumstances to what constitutes an industrial relationship or
a labor dispute. [
Footnote 6]
See Cox, Some Aspects of the Labor Management Relations
Act, 1947, 61 Harv.L.Rev. 1, 30 (1947). The power of a State to
declare a policy in favor of self-employers and to make conduct
restrictive of self-employment unlawful was not considered in those
cases. Indeed, in
Wohl, this Court expressly noted that
the State courts had not found that the picketing there condemned
was for a defined unlawful object. 315 U.S. at
315 U. S.
774.
When an injunction of a State court comes before us, it comes
not as an independent collocation of words. It is defined and
confined by the opinion of the State court. The injunctions in
these two cases are to be judged here with all the limitations that
are infused into their terms by the opinions of the Washington
Supreme Court on the basis of which the judgments below come before
us. So read, the injunctions are directed solely against picketing
for the ends defined by the parties before the Washington court and
this Court. To treat the injunctions otherwise -- to treat them,
that is, outside the scope of the issues which they represent -- is
to deal with a case that is not here, and was not before the
Washington court. In considering an injunction against picketing
recently, we had occasion to reject a similar claim of infirmity
derived not from the record, but from unreality. What we then said
is pertinent now:
"What is before us . . . is not the order as an isolated,
self-contained writing, but the order with the gloss of the Supreme
Court of Wisconsin upon it."
Hotel & Restaurant Employees' International Alliance v.
Wisconsin E.R.B., 315 U. S. 437,
315 U. S. 441.
Our affirmance of these injunctions is in conformity
Page 339 U. S. 481
with the reading derived from the Washington court's opinions.
If astuteness may discover argumentative excess in the scope of the
injunctions beyond what we constitutionally justify by this
opinion, it will be open to petitioners to raise the matter, which
they have not raised here, when the cases on remand reach the
Washington court.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK concurs in the result.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK dissents for substantially the reasons given
in his dissent in
Carpenters & Joiners Union v. Ritter's
Cafe, 315 U. S. 722,
315 U. S.
729-732.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS took no part in the consideration or
decision of these cases.
* Together with No. 364,
Automobile Drivers &
Demonstrators Local Union No. 882 et al. v. Cline, also on
certiorari to the same court, argued February 9-10, 1950.
[
Footnote 1]
It is relevant to note that the Alabama statute held
unconstitutional in the
Thornhill case had been construed
by the State courts to prohibit picketing without
"exceptions based upon either the number of persons engaged in
the proscribed activity, the peaceful character of their demeanor,
the nature of their dispute with an employer, or the restrained
character and the accurateness of the terminology used in notifying
the public of the facts of the dispute."
310 U.S. at
310 U. S.
99.
[
Footnote 2]
The Court said: "In declaring such picketing permissible,
Wisconsin has put this means of publicity on a par with
advertisements in the press." 301 U.S. at
301 U. S. 479.
To assume that this sentence is to be read as though the picketing
was permitted by Wisconsin not as a matter of choice, but because
the Fourteenth Amendment compelled its allowance, is to assume that
so careful a writer as Mr. Justice Brandeis, the author of the
Court's opinion, meant the above sentence to be read as though it
contained the bracketed insertion as follows:
"In declaring such picketing permissible, Wisconsin [recognized
that the Fourteenth Amendment] has put this means of publicity on a
par with advertisements in the press."
In other words, it is suggested that the bracketed interpolation
which Justice Brandeis did not write is to be read into what he did
write, although thereby its essential meaning would be altered.
[
Footnote 3]
Of course, the true significance of particular phrases in
Senn appears only when they are examined in their
context:
"Clearly, the means which the statute authorizes -- picketing
and publicity -- are not prohibited by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Members of a union might, without special statutory authorization
by a state, make known the facts of a labor dispute, for freedom of
speech is guaranteed by the Federal Constitution. The state may, in
the exercise of its police power, regulate the methods and means of
publicity, as well as the use of public streets."
301 U.S. at
301 U. S.
478.
[
Footnote 4]
See, e.g., Bautista v. Jones, 25 Cal. 2d
746, 155 P.2d 343;
Dinoffria v. International Brotherhood
of Teamsters and Chauffeurs, 331 Ill.App. 129, 72 N.E.2d 635;
Saveall v. Demers, 322 Mass. 70, 76 N.E.2d 12.
[
Footnote 5]
Section 8(b)(4)(A) of the National Labor Relations Act, as
amended by the Labor Management Relations Act, 1947, makes it an
unfair labor practice for a union
"to engage in . . . a strike . . . where an object thereof is:
(A) forcing or requiring any employer or self-employed person to
join any labor or employer organization."
61 Stat. 141, 29 U.S.C. (Supp. III) § 158(b)(4)(A).
See
also § 10(
l) of the National Labor Relations
Act, as amended, and § 303 of the Labor Management Relations
Act.
[
Footnote 6]
As to the Court's duty to restrict general expressions in
opinions in earlier cases to their specific context,
See Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S.
399-400;
Armour & Co. v. Wantock,
323 U. S. 126,
323 U. S.
132-133.
MR. JUSTICE MINTON, with whom MR. JUSTICE REED joins,
dissenting.
Petitioners in each of these cases were "permanently restrained
and enjoined from in any manner picketing" the places of business
of respondents. The picketing here was peaceful publicity, not
enmeshed in a pattern of violence as was true in
Milk Wagon
Drivers Union v. Meadowmoor Dairies,; nor was there violence
in the picketing, as in
Hotel & Restaurant Employees'
International Alliance v. Wisconsin E.R.B., 315 U.
S. 437. The decrees entered in the instant cases were
not tailored to meet the evils of threats and intimidation, as
Cafeteria Employees Union v. Angelos, 320 U.
S. 293,
320 U. S. 295,
indicates they might have been; nor were they limited to restraint
of picketing for the purpose of forcing the person picketed to
violate the law and public policy of the state, as were the decrees
in
Giboney v. Empire Storage & Ice Co., 336 U.
S. 490, and
Building
Page 339 U. S. 482
Service Employees Union v. Gazzam, post, p.
339 U. S. 532. The
abuses of picketing involved in the above cases were held by this
Court not to be protected by the Fourteenth Amendment from state
restraint.
It seems equally clear to me that peaceful picketing which is
used properly as an instrument of publicity has been held by this
Court in
Thornhill v. Alabama, 310 U. S.
88;
Carlson v. California, 310 U.
S. 106;
American Federation of Labor v. Swing,
312 U. S. 321;
Bakery & Pastry Drivers & Helpers Local v. Wohl,
315 U. S. 769, and
Cafeteria Employees Union v. Angelos, 320 U.
S. 293, to be protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. I
do not understand that, in the last three mentioned cases, this
Court, as the majority in its opinion says,
"held only that a State could not proscribe picketing merely by
setting artificial bounds, unreal in the light of modern
circumstances, to what constitutes an industrial relationship or a
labor dispute."
If the states may set bounds, it is not for this Court to say
where they shall be set, unless the setting violates some provision
of the Federal Constitution. I understand the above cases to have
found violations of the federal constitutional guarantee of freedom
of speech, and the picketing could not be restrained because to do
so would violate the right of free speech and publicity. This view
is plainly stated by this Court in
Cafeteria Employees Union v.
Angelos, 320 U.S. at
320 U. S.
295:
"In
Senn v. Tile Layers Union, 301 U. S.
468, this Court ruled that members of a union
might,"
"without special statutory authorization by a state, make known
the facts of a labor dispute, for freedom of speech is guaranteed
by the Federal Constitution."
"301 U.S. at
301 U. S. 478. Later cases
applied the
Senn doctrine by enforcing the right of
workers to state their case and to appeal for public support in an
orderly and peaceful manner regardless of the area
Page 339 U. S. 483
of immunity as defined by state policy.
A.F. of L. v.
Swing, 312 U. S. 321;
Bakery
Drivers Local v. Wohl, 315 U. S. 769."
All the recent cases of this Court upholding picketing, from
Thornhill to
Angelos, have done so on the view
that "peaceful picketing and truthful publicity" (
see 320
U.S. at
320 U. S. 295)
is protected by the guaranty of free speech. This view stems from
Mr. Justice Brandeis' statement in
Senn that
"Members of a union might, without special statutory
authorization by a State, make known the facts of a labor dispute,
for freedom of speech is guaranteed by the Federal
Constitution."
301 U.S.
468,
301 U. S. 478.
In that case, Justice Brandeis was dealing with action of Wisconsin
that permitted picketing by a labor union of a one-man shop. Of
course, as long as Wisconsin allowed picketing, there was no
interference with freedom of expression. By permitting picketing,
the State was allowing the expression found in "peaceful picketing
and truthful publicity." There was in that posture of the case no
question of conflict with the right of free speech. But, because
Wisconsin could permit picketing, and not thereby encroach upon
freedom of speech, it does not follow that it could forbid like
picketing, for that might involve conflict with the Fourteenth
Amendment. It seems to me that Justice Brandeis, foreseeing the
problem of the converse, made the statement above quoted in order
to indicate that picketing could be protected by the free speech
guaranty of the Federal Constitution. Whether or not that is what
Justice Brandeis meant, I think this Court has accepted that view,
from
Thornhill to
Angelos. It seems to me too
late now to deny that those cases were rooted in the free speech
doctrine. I think we should not decide the instant cases in a
manner so alien to the basis of prior decisions.
The outlawing of picketing for all purposes is permitted the
State of Washington by the upholding of these broad
Page 339 U. S. 484
decrees. No distinction is made between what is legitimate
picketing and what is abusive picketing.
"[H]ere, we have no attempt by the State through its courts to
restrict conduct justifiably found to be an abusive exercise of the
right to picket."
Angelos case, 320 U.S. at
320 U. S.
295.
Because the decrees here are not directed at any abuse of
picketing, but at all picketing, I think to sustain them is
contrary to our prior holdings, founded as they are in the doctrine
that "peaceful picketing and truthful publicity" is protected by
the constitutional guaranty of the right of free speech. I
recognize that picketing is more than speech. That is why I think
an abuse of picketing may lead to a forfeiture of the protection of
free speech. Tested by the philosophy of prior decisions, no such
forfeiture is justified here.
I would reverse the judgments in these two cases.