Norris-Laguardia Act 47 Stat. 70 (1932)

AuthorDavid Gordon
Pages1825-1826

Page 1825

Reeling from a string of adverse court decisions, labor saw the Norris-LaGuardia Act of 1932 as Congress's long overdue remedy for Supreme Court antipathy. A panel of experts, including Professor FELIX FRANKFURTER, helped to draft a bill to end the abuse of labor INJUNCTIONS, and, as eventually passed by large majorities in Congress, the act greatly diminished the use of federal injunctions in labor disputes. The act recognized the need for COLLECTIVE BARGAINING and encouraged union formation, ending years of misinterpretation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the CLAYTON ACT. One of the key provisions of the new act (section 4) outlawed the issuance of federal injunctions against those who "whether acting singly or in concert" might strike, aid, or publicize strikes, join unions, or assemble peacefully. YELLOW DOG CONTRACTS, sustained in HITCHMAN COAL COKE COMPANY V. MITCHELL (1917), were also rendered unenforceable (section 3). In DUPLEX PRINTING PRESS COMPANY V. DEERING (1921) the Court had unjustifiably declared that the Clayton Act provision covering labor disputes applied only to related parties, employer and employee, not to those engaged in a secondary boycott. Section 13 rewrote that practice by redefining "labor dispute" so that the parties need no longer be in "proximate relation" to each other. Although the act divested federal courts of injunctive power, it provided exceptions where illegal acts or injury were likely. Moreover...

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