McLaughlin, J.:
The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is a membership corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York; that its membership is made up exclusively of master horseshoers, conducting the business of horseshoeing in the boroughs of Manhattan and The Bronx, in the city of New York; that its- objects, among other things, are to elevate the character and skill of the craft, to protect and foster mutual interests of horseshoers in such localities, and to act in conjunction with members of the Journeymen Horseshoers- and have the articles manufactured by it used by its membership,
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and to help and protect the interest of its individual members; that the defendant is a voluntary unincorporated association, composed of more than seven persons, and at the time stated in the complaint the defendant Quinlivan was the president thereof; that prior to the 8th of December, 1902, the defendant association, on behalf of its members, demanded of the plaintiff that an increase in wages j and a shortening of the hours of labor be granted by members of! the plaintiff to members of the defendant, and that, in addition/ thereto, an alleged stamp or trade mark of the defendant association should be recognized by the plaintiff to the extent that plaintiff / should require its members to allow such stamp or trade mark to be/ affixed to the horseshoes put" on in the shops of any of plaintiff’s members; that plaintiff was ready and willing and agreed to accede , to the defendant’s demands as to wages and the hours of labor,
hut« refused and still refuses and intends to continue to refuse to concede to the alleged stamp or trade mark of the defendant association, and that thereafter the defendant association declared a strike against the plaintiff and required all of its members to leave the employment of the plaintiff’s members, and thereupon the members of the defendant association obeyed such requirement and went out on a strike, and that such strike has since continued; that the plaintiff and its members have for many years employed in the boroughs of Manhattan and The Bronx, in the city of New York, a stamp or trade mark which consists of a mark representing a horseshoe inserted between the letters N and A, which by its constitution and by-laws its members are required to affix to each horseshoe fitted by them, and that the right to use such trade mark is a valuable property right belonging to the plaintiff; that the strike ordered by the defendant association is to impair, diminish or destroy the value of
' such stamp and the plaintiff’s property rights therein; and on information and belief that since the commencement of such strike the defendant maliciously and with intent to injure and destroy the plaintiff and its property rights, and to impair its membership by compelling them to close their shops and seek other lines of business, has committed and is now engaged in committing, and intends to continue to commit acts of violence against the plaintiff, its members and their employees. Certain specific acts are then alleged in which the time and place are stated where plaintiff’s members and
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persons employed by them have been assaulted and brutally beaten by members of the defendant, and property of some of the plaintiff’s members was interfered with or destroyed; and that persons in the employ of the plaintiff’s members have been threatened with personal violence if they continued in such employment.
The complaint further sets out that each and all of the acts of violence and intimidations stated have been and are committed and done in furtherance of the wrong and unlawful purpose of the defendant association, acting through its members, to injure plaintiff and force it to accede to the demands of the defendant association ; that the defendant threatens and intends to continue its acts a.f said violence and intimidation unless restrained.
I ' The judgment demanded, among other things, is that the defendant be enjoined from resorting to any species of personal violence ■ upon any member of the plaintiff or workmen employed by any j member of it, or resorting to any species of threats, intimidations, force or fraud against any of its members or interfering by violence with any of the property of the plaintiff or its members in yiolation of law.
Upon the complaint and affidavits of persons who have been assaulted by the members of the defendant, setting forth the time when and the place where and by whom such assaults were committed, the plaintiff applied for and obtained an injunction pending the return of an order to show cause, enjoining and restraining the defendant from in any manner interfering with the objects and business of the plaintiff and its members by resorting to any species-of threats, intimidations, force or fraud upon plaintiff’s members or upon any employees or customer of any member of the plaintiff.
Upon the return of the order to show cause, affidavits were presented of the different persons alleged to have committed the • assaults, which, in substance, denied that -the assaults were com-j mitted as alleged in the affidavits upon which the injunction was • granted. An affidavit was also presented by- the defendant Quinlivan, which admitted that the defendant had ordered a strike against the plaintiff and in which he alleged that it nowhere appeared from the affidavits submitted by the plaintiff by which it could be shown that the defendant association had in any way ordered or directed any of the acts to be done, of which the plaintiff com
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plains, but be nowhere denied that the defendant had in fact ordered and directed such acts to be done, nór did he or any other officer or member of the defendant deny any of the allegations of the complaint to the effect that the defendant, with the intent to injure and destroy the plaintiff, had committed and was then engaged in committing and intended to commit acts of violence against the plaintiff and its members and their employees. Notwithstanding this fact the court refused to continue the injunction and vacated the ' one which had been granted pending the return of the order to show cause upon the ground, as appears from the opinion delivered, that if it was not proper to grant an injunction in the case of
National Protective Association v.
Cumming (
53 App. Div. 227;
170 N. Y. 315), it would not be proper in this case, and the plaintiff has appealed. The principle announced in the
Cumming case has no application whatever to the facts here presented. There, the 1 issues involved were whether one labor organization had the right j to refuse to permit its members to work with fellow-servants who ! were members of a rival organization, while here, .the ..real issue is ", whether the defendant, because the plaintiff will not accede to its demands, has the right to resort to physical force for the purpose of destroying the plaintiff by impairing its membership and injuring it in its property rights. It is alleged in the complaint and nowhere denied that the defendant “is now engaged in committing, and intends to continue to commit acts of violence against the plaintiff, its members and their employees ” for the sole purpose of compelling the plaintiff to comply with the demands which the defendant has made. Whether or not such demands are reasonable, or whether the plaintiff should comply with them is a question which must be , determined in the regular and orderly way of a trial of the issues formed by defendant’s answer to the complaint. It is no answer to ‘ the plaintiff’s contention that it has a right to maintain the action to say that each member of its association could maintain an action in his own behalf to recover the damages which have been inflicted upon him by the members of the defendant, or to enjoin defendant from participating in such acts of violence by advising or approving what its members are doing. The plaintiff has been duly incorporated under the laws of the State and as such has rights in the nature of property which are entitled to the protection of the court.
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It has a right to exist and when its destruction is sought by unlawful I means, no matter in what way or by what methods, it has sufficient '■ standing in an action brought to prevent that result to enable a court of equity to exercise the powers which it possesses. The defendant has no right, either directly or indirectly, acting in its corporate capacity or through its individual members, to resort to physical force for the purpose of enforcing its alleged rights. This, as I read the complaint, is precisely what it is doing and it should be enjoined until the action has been tried, especially in view of an allegation in the .;complaint, which is not denied, to the effect that the defendant has . ¡no property and cannot..answer in damages to the plaintiff or its members.
For these reasons I think the order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to continue the injunction during the pendency of the action granted, with ten dollars costs.
O’Brien and Laughlin, XL, concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., and Ingraham, J., dissented.