Court Opinion

ID: 6853
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2010-04-25 05:22:02+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:34:49.834038
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals,

                          Fifth Circuit.

                           No. 93-4057.

 MARSHALL DURBIN POULTRY COMPANY, Petitioner, Cross-Respondent,

                                v.

  NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Respondent, Cross-Petitioner.

                          Dec. 16, 1994.

Petition for Review and Cross Application for Enforcement of a
Decision of the National Labor Relations Board.

Before REAVLEY, GARWOOD and HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judges.

     GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

     Marshall Durbin Poultry Company (the Company) petitions for

review of a decision of the National Labor Relations Board (the

Board or NLRB), which held that the Company violated §§ 8(a)(1),

(3), and (4) of the National Labor Relations Act (the Act), 29

U.S.C. §§ 158(a)(1), (3), and (4), following a union organizing

campaign at its Hattiesburg, Mississippi, plant.    The Board has

filed a cross-petition for enforcement of its order. We affirm the

Board's decision in part and reverse it in part.

                   Facts and Proceedings Below

     The Company employs approximately four hundred workers at its

poultry processing plant in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.    In March

1989, several plant employees met with a representative of the

United Food and Commercial Workers International Union (the Union)

to discuss organizing a union among the Company's Hattiesburg

employees.   In early 1990, the Union petitioned for an election.

Thereafter, on February 22, the Board conducted a representation

                                1
hearing at which Myrtle Temple (Temple), Rebecca Cole (Cole), Ruth

Powell     (Powell),     Charlene       Jones      (Jones),    and    Patricia    Walker

(Walker) testified on behalf of the Union.                    After the hearing, the

Board set the election for May 3, 1990.                            On the day of the

election, however, the Union withdrew its petition and the election

was cancelled.

      In June 1990, the Union filed a complaint with the NLRB

alleging     that    the    Company      engaged       in    numerous    unfair    labor

practices.1       An evidentiary hearing was held thereon before an

administrative law judge (ALJ), who issued lengthy findings of fact

and conclusions of law.            Following exceptions by the Company and

the General Counsel, the NLRB affirmed the majority of the ALJ's

conclusions and found that the Company had violated section 8(a)(1)

of   the    Act     by   (1)     interrogating         employees     regarding     Union

activities;       (2) threatening employees with discharge, reduced

wages, and other reprisals if they supported the Union;                              (3)

coercively soliciting employees to withdraw support for the Union;

and (4) discharging supervisor Johnson for his refusal to commit

unfair labor practices.           The Board also found that the Company had

violated sections 8(a)(1) and (3) by reducing its employees' work

hours.     In addition, the Board found that the Company had violated

sections     8(a)(1),      (3)    and   (4)       of   the   Act   by:    (1)    issuing

disciplinary write-ups to Walker, Barney Chisholm (Chisholm), Cole,

Temple, and Jones;         (2) constructively discharging Union activist

      1
      This complaint was later consolidated with a complaint
filed by Company supervisor Billy Johnson (Johnson) on October 9,
1990.

                                              2
Powell;     and (3) discharging Union activist Jones.

     The Board differed with the ALJ on two points.                First,

contrary to the ALJ, the Board held that the Company had violated

sections 8(a)(1) and (3) "in February 1990" by "delaying" a wage

increase to the Hattiesburg plant employees.           Second, the Board

disagreed with the ALJ's decision regarding supervisor Johnson's

back pay.     The ALJ had concluded that although Johnson's sexual

misconduct was a bar to reinstatement, it was not a bar to his

receiving back pay until he found similar employment.         The Board,

however, determined that Johnson's back pay would terminate as of

the date the Company learned of the misconduct.

     The Company, asserting that the Board's decision is not

supported by substantial evidence, petitioned this Court for review

of the NLRB decision. The NLRB cross-petitioned for enforcement of

its order.

                               Discussion

I. Standard of Review

      "In reviewing the Board's decisions, this court determines,

on the basis of the record taken as a whole, whether substantial

evidence supports the Board's findings."        Texas World Service Co.

Inc. v. NLRB, 928 F.2d 1426, 1430 (5th Cir.1991) (emphasis in

original) (citing Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 U.S. 474, 71
S. Ct. 456, 95 L. Ed. 456 (1951)).        Substantial evidence "means such

relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to

support a conclusion."    Universal Camera, 340 U.S. at 477, 71 S.Ct.

at   459.       "When   findings   of    fact   rest   upon   credibility

                                    3
determinations, we defer to the NLRB's findings and will overturn

them only in rare circumstances." NLRB v. McCullough Environmental

Services, Inc., 5 F.3d 923 (5th Cir.1993).

II. Discharge of Johnson and Other Section 8(a)(1) Violations

         Section 8(a)(1) of the Act provides that it is an unfair

labor practice "to interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in

the exercise of the rights guaranteed in section 157 of this

title."    29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1).    Section 7 of the Act, 29 U.S.C. §

157, provides, in relevant part, that "[e]mployees shall have the

right    to   self-organization,    to   form,    join    or    assist    labor

organizations, to bargain collectively through representatives of

their own choosing, and to engage in other concerted activities for

the purpose     of   collective   bargaining     or   other    mutual    aid   or

protection...."      An employer also violates section 8(a)(1) of the

Act by discharging a supervisor in retaliation for his refusal to

engage in unfair labor practices.         See Oil City Brass Works v.

NLRB, 357 F.2d 466, 470-71 (5th Cir.1966).

A. Evidence Regarding Johnson's Discharge

     The ALJ credited the testimony by supervisor and ten-year

employee Johnson that he was directed by Company officials to

commit numerous unfair labor practices.           Johnson testified that,

pursuant to instructions by Company officials, he interrogated

employees under his supervision about their Union sentiments and

reported his findings to Company management.2             However, Johnson

     2
      For example, on the day before the election, Johnson was
ordered to write down the names of any employees wearing Union
buttons. Johnson found six employees wearing buttons but gave

                                     4
refused to carry out management directives concerning reprisals to

be taken against known Union supporters under his supervision.

Johnson testified that he was told to (1) follow up on the work of

pro-Union employees Temple and Cole to get something on them3 and

(2) plant Company property in the possession of Cole and Temple so

they could be fired. In response to these requests, Johnson warned

Cole and Temple about the management directives and then reported

to McDonald that he could find nothing wrong with Cole's and

Temple's work.    Johnson stated that on one occasion after he

refused to follow the Company's instructions to "cold shoulder"

pro-Union employees, he was warned by his immediate supervisor,

James Sanders (Sanders), that Varner wanted to get rid of him.

     On May 3, 1990, Johnson was called to McDonald's office and

told that Varner had ordered that he be discharged. Johnson stated

that McDonald commended Johnson on his skills and stated he did not

know the reason for the discharge.   Johnson stated that he left the

plant that morning without being advised of any reason for the

discharge.   The next day Johnson was told by a fellow supervisor

that the Company was stating that it fired him because he was

them an opportunity to remove their buttons before he turned his
list over to Plant Manager Malcolm McDonald (McDonald). Two
employees removed their buttons, so Johnson only turned in four
names.
     3
      Johnson testified that on one occasion he was told that
Temple had harassed another employee, Renee Bonner (Bonner). He
stated he was then directed by Vice-President Scott Varner
(Varner) to issue a warning. Johnson testified that after he
questioned Bonner about the incident and was told that everything
was "okay" between her and Temple, he refused to issue the
warning. Thereafter, Varner issued the warning himself.

                                5
observed by Personnel Director Mel Dupre (Dupre) with his hands in

the   pants     of    fellow    employee    Annette     Fairley   (Fairley).4

Thereafter, Johnson filed a charge with the Equal Employment

Opportunity Commission (EEOC).5             While investigating the EEOC

charge, the Company discovered that Johnson had engaged in repeated

on-the-job sexual misconduct.6

      The NLRB credited the testimony of both Fairly and Johnson

that the particular alleged incident of sexual misconduct with

Fairley never happened.         The NLRB, noting that the Company never

investigated Dupre's allegation against Johnson, concluded that

Johnson was fired for his refusal to take punitive actions against

pro-Union employees.        Based on the Company's later discovery of

sexual     misconduct,    the   NLRB   determined     that   Johnson   was   not

entitled to reinstatement due to his past sexual misconduct and

should only receive back pay up to the time the Company discovered

his sexual misconduct.

          Credible testimony disclosed that Johnson was fired after he

refused to:          (1) find something wrong with the work of two

      4
      The Company states that immediately after Dupre reported
the incident to Varner, Johnson was fired.
      5
      Johnson, a white man, filed the EEOC complaint because he
contended he was fired not only for his refusal to commit unfair
labor practices, but also due to Company warnings about his
dating of African-American women.
      6
      The investigation revealed that Johnson had (1) engaged in
rough horseplay with employees under his supervision; (2) made
sexual comments towards female employees; (3) touched the
breasts and buttocks of female employees under his supervision;
and (4) attempted to put his hands down the shirt of another
female employee.

                                        6
pro-Union employees;             (2) plant Company property on pro-Union

employees;    and (3) "cold-shoulder" pro-Union employees.                        Further,

the ALJ found that both Fairley and Johnson credibly denied the

incident of sexual misconduct alleged by the Company.                         Hence, we

find that there is substantial evidence to support the NLRB's

determination that Johnson was fired for his refusal to commit

unfair labor       practices      in   violation      of    section       8(a)(1).       In

addition, we affirm the NLRB's determination that the Company owes

Johnson    back    pay     for   the   period    of    time       until    the    Company

discovered his sexual misconduct.                  See John Cuneo, Inc., 298
N.L.R.B. 856, 857 (1990) (terminating an employee's pay on the date

that the Company first acquired knowledge of the misconduct).

B. Interrogation, Threats and Other Section 8(a)(1) Violations

         The NLRB relied on the testimony of several witnesses to

support its conclusion that the Company had committed numerous

violations of section 8(a)(1) through interrogation and threats.

Credited testimony included:             (1) statements of Johnson and two

other former supervisors that in March 1990 Varner and two other

Company officials met with Hattiesburg supervisors and told them to

interrogate employees about their Union sympathies;7 (2) Johnson's

statement    that,    in    accordance     with    instructions           from    Company

officials,    he    informed      employees     that       they   could     get    in   the

     7
      The three supervisors stated that they were given notebooks
with which to record employee responses. They testified that
after they reported the employee responses to Varner, he used a
computer-generated worksheet to rank employees according to their
pro- or anti-Union sentiment. During the hearing, Johnson
produced the original notebook he used to record the employee
comments.

                                          7
Company's "good graces" by sending a letter withdrawing their

support;8     (3) statements by employees Cole, Temple, Jones, and

Eloise Phillips that Varner declared in several employee meetings

that the Union could cause pay to go back to minimum wage, which

would result in employees losing various benefits;             and (4) Cole's

statement that in February 1990 McDonald warned her she could lose

her job because of her Union activities.

     We     find   that   the   credited    testimony   of   these    witnesses

provides substantial evidence to support the NLRB's conclusion that

the Company violated section 8(a)(1) by threats, interrogation, and

coercive solicitation.

III. Reduction in Employee Working Hours

         The Company argues that the Board decision regarding a

general reduction in employee working hours is not supported by

substantial evidence.       The Company contends that the Board failed

to adequately address its unrebutted evidence, which showed that

plant hours regularly fluctuated throughout the course of the year

in Hattiesburg.      The Company also argues that its reduction in the

"kill rate" (the number of chickens being processed) was due to a

record-breaking      freeze,    which   reduced   the   number   of    chickens

hatched during the spring of 1990.          The Company maintains that the

Board focused too much on the reduction in the kill rate, rather

than evidence regarding actual employee hours.

     8
      Johnson told the employees to send the letters registered
mail, return receipt requested, and give him the receipt. At the
hearing McDonald acknowledged that he had received several copies
of returned receipts from Johnson.

                                        8
     The NLRB credited the testimony of former supervisors Johnson

and James Gurlach (Gurlach) regarding the Company's intent to

reduce plant working hours.    Johnson and Gurlach both testified

that, in February 1990, Assistant Sales Manager Allan Wilburn told

them that the Company was cutting back on the kill rate because of

the Union.   Johnson stated that the next day he questioned Sales

Manager Levon Williamson (Williamson) about the reason for the kill

rate reduction and Williamson replied that it was because of the

Union.9 Johnson further testified that in mid-April 1990, McDonald

told him the Company was going to "starve" the employees to defeat

the Union as they had done in a prior union campaign at one of the

Company's other plants.10

     Documentary evidence supporting the NLRB decision includes

reports which   establish:    (1)       a   substantial   decrease   in   the

Hattiesburg kill rate during March and April 1990 in comparison to

the previous year;   (2) a substantial decrease in the Hattiesburg

kill rate in comparison to a similar Company plant in Jasper,

Alabama;   (3) a number of day-long plant closings during the three

months preceding the election;11    and (4) a significant decrease in

     9
      At the ALJ hearing, Williamson acknowledged that he may
have made such a statement to Johnson. He further stated that
his supervisor told him the kill rate was being reduced because
of "trouble" in Hattiesburg and he assumed that meant "union
trouble."
     10
      During the last three weeks of April 1990, the kill rate
decreased by approximately twenty-four percent, twenty-one
percent, and twelve percent from the kill rate for those same
three weeks in April 1989.
     11
      The Company had a total of eleven day-long closings at the
Hattiesburg plant. In the three months preceding the Union

                                    9
working hours of Union activists Temple and Cole in March and April

in comparison to their hours during those months the previous year.

     The NLRB responded to the Company's arguments by observing

that the freeze did not appear to affect the Company's plant in

Jasper.    In addition, the NLRB also concluded that "when we have

evidence   of   an   announced   intent   to   discriminatorily   reduce

production and evidence of such reduced production, we decline to

treat even minor reductions in employee working hours as merely

"negligible.' "

     While the issue is not free from doubt, we ultimately conclude

that there is substantial evidence to support the NLRB's decision

that the Company violated sections 8(a)(1) and (3) by reducing

employees hours.     The Company's expressed intent to "starve" the

employees, coupled with the management reports showing several

day-long plant closings and substantial decreases in the kill rate,

are adequate support for the NLRB's conclusion.

IV. Disciplinary Write-Ups and Discharge of Pro-Union Employees

      Section 8(a)(3) provides that it is an unfair practice to

discriminate "in regard to hire or tenure of employment or any term

or condition of employment to encourage or discourage membership in

election, the plant closed on February 21 (a day before the
representation hearing), March 7, April 11, and April 18. The
Company also had closings after the scheduled election on June 27
(two days after the Union complaint), July 4, November 19, 20,
21, 22, and December 25. Although the Company has not offered an
explanation for any of these closings, we observe that six of the
closings appear to be associated with national holidays. One
closing was on Independence Day, one was on Christmas Day, and
four were during the week of Thanksgiving. The other plant
closings, however, are not as easily explained.

                                   10
any labor organization."        29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3).        Section 8(a)(3)

proscribes employer reprisals against an employee for engaging in

Union activity.       NLRB v. Delta Gas, Inc., 840 F.2d 309, 311 (5th

Cir.1988).      Section 8(a)(4) prohibits discrimination against an

employee "because he has filed charges or given testimony under

this subchapter."        The    NLRB   found   that   the   Company    violated

sections 8(a)(1), (3), and (4) by unlawfully retaliating against

Walker, Chisholm, Cole, Temple, Powell, and Jones because of their

union activities.12

A. Walker

        Walker, a trimmer who testified on behalf of the Union at the

representation hearing, was given a disciplinary write-up on April

6, 1990.       The write-up was for leaving the line and taking a

five-minute bathroom break.       Prior to April 1990, Walker had never

received a write-up. The Board credited Walker's testimony that on

that    date   she   followed   Company     procedures   by   asking   another

       12
      The Board noted that five of these six employees testified
on behalf of the Union at the representation hearing and after
the hearing had been labeled "ringleaders" by McDonald. The
sixth employee, Chisholm, actively campaigned and distributed
handbills on behalf of the Union. The violation as to Chisholm
was based only on sections 8(a)(1) and (3). In concluding that
the Company unlawfully retaliated against these employees, the
NLRB observed that these six active Union supporters received the
following "punishments" during the months preceding the scheduled
election: (1) Cole and Temple were given reduced hours; (2)
Walker was given one disciplinary write-up; (3) Cole was given
two disciplinary write-ups between April 1990 and May 1990; (3)
Temple was given three disciplinary write-ups between April 1990
and May 1990; (4) Chisholm was given a disciplinary write-up and
warned he would be fired for hanging around Company property
after work; (5) Jones was given three disciplinary write-ups and
then discharged; and (6) Powell was transferred to more
strenuous tasks and subjected to verbal abuse resulting in her
leaving the Company due to stress.

                                       11
employee, Tressie Thomas (Thomas), to find the foreman and ask if

she could go to the bathroom. Further, the Board credited Thomas's

testimony that she obtained permission from the foreman for Walker

to go to the bathroom and then took her place in line.13   The Board

noted that the Company did not have the foreman testify to rebut

Walker's and Thomas's testimony.       The unrebutted testimony of

Thomas and Walker constitutes substantial evidence to support the

Board's conclusion that the Company issued Walker a disciplinary

write-up in retaliation for her union activities.

B. Chisholm

        Chisholm, an employee of the Company from July 1985 to July

1990, was an active Union supporter.    For six months prior to his

discharge,14 Chisholm participated in distributing handbills on

behalf of the Union and often talked to employees about signing

Union cards.    Chisholm, who is going blind, stated that over the

years of his employment, he often sat in the Company break room or

in a relative's car in the Company parking lot waiting for his ride

home.     Chisholm testified that in May 1990, he was told by Dupre

that he could no longer sit in the break room or the parking lot

after work.    After the warning, Chisholm stated he observed other

employees who had finished their shifts sitting in the break room.

On May 7, 1990, Chisholm was issued a disciplinary write-up "for

staying on Company property after getting off work."   In addition,

     13
      Thomas often replaced workers on the line when they needed
to take breaks.
     14
      Chisholm did not assert, and the Board did not find, that
his discharge was a violation.

                                 12
to Chisholm's testimony, the Board credited Johnson's statement

that he was specifically told to run off pro-Union employees

Chisholm, Temple, and Cole from the break room after work.                   The

credited testimony of Chisholm and Johnson constitutes substantial

evidence    to    support     the   Board's   conclusion   that    the   Company

unlawfully       retaliated    against    Chisholm,    contrary    to    sections

8(a)(3) and (1), by excluding him from the Company premises and

giving him a disciplinary write-up.

C. Cole and Temple

       On April 12, 1990, Temple, a scaler who had been employed by

the   Company     for   twenty-two     years,    was   given   a   disciplinary

write-up.     Temple testified that she was handed the write-up by

Dupre.     Dupre informed her that he had received a complaint about

her harassing Bonner and "bad talking employees."15                Dupre warned

her that if she received three write-ups she would "be out the

gate."

      On April 30, Cole and Temple were both given written warnings

by Sanders without their knowledge.             The write-up was for placing

improper dates on the product labels.               Cole testified that she

remembered having a conversation with Sanders about the labels.

She stated that she told Sanders that she could not be held

responsible for the incorrect dates since she was no longer allowed

      15
      The ALJ noted that Varner had directed Temple's
supervisor, Johnson, to give Temple the write-up, but Johnson
refused.

                                         13
to prepare the labels.16   Temple stated that on April 30 she met

with Sanders, Dupre, and Bonner about the inaccurate labels.

Temple testified that she also reminded Sanders that Varner had

taken this job duty away from her and reassigned it to Bonner.

Sanders testified that he had written up the disciplinary notice

before he talked with Cole, Temple, and Bonner.      He stated that

after he talked to them, he decided they were right and did not

deserve a write-up.   He stated he just put the write-ups in their

files as documentation of the incident.17

     On May 17, Temple and Cole were both given disciplinary

write-ups by Sanders for allegedly weighing boxes of chickens with

"missing giblets in whole birds."    Again the write-ups were placed

in Temple's and Cole's personnel files without their knowledge.

Sanders testified that the write-ups were not disciplinary, but

rather simply memorializations placed in their files for future

reference.

     Other testimony at the ALJ hearing established that (1) Cole

and Temple were given substantially reduced hours in comparison to

other scalers in March 1990;   (2) Cole was threatened by McDonald

with discharge due to her Union activities;    (3) Johnson had been

     16
      During March 1990, Cole and Temple were given reduced
hours after the Company officials no longer allowed them to do
preparatory work such as scale testing and label preparation.
Their former preparatory work duties were reassigned to Bonner.
     17
      The ALJ did not credit Sanders' testimony that the
write-ups were written before his meetings with Cole and Temple
since the write-ups reflect their responses to Sanders' warning.
In addition, the ALJ did not believe Sanders' explanation that
the write-ups were mere documentation since they were also signed
by Dupre.

                                14
told by McDonald to find fault with Cole's and Temple's work;                 and

(4) Johnson was told by Dupre to plant Company property on Cole and

Temple.

      We     hold   that   substantial   evidence      supports    the    Board's

conclusion that the Company unlawfully retaliated against Cole and

Temple by giving them disciplinary write-ups due to their union

activities.

D. Powell

           In May 1990, Powell, a thirty-year Company employee, was

transferred from her relatively nonstrenuous job of making nets and

stapling prices to the more arduous job of making boxes.18                Powell,

who   is     sixty-three,    testified   that    the   boxing     job    required

significantly greater effort and involved the lifting and folding

of heavy corrugated boxes.           Powell's former supervisor Bobby

Boutwell (Boutwell) testified he switched employee Dallas Meyers

(Meyers) to the net room and Powell to Meyers' place in the box

room based on orders from Sanders.        Boutwell stated that on a prior

occasion he had been instructed by Varner to get Powell out of the

net room but he had not complied.               Boutwell testified that he

resisted both Varner's and Sanders' instructions to remove Powell

from the net room because she did good work and he needed her

there.

      On June 18, Powell was transferred from the box room to the

eviscerating line as a heart and liver cutter.             This job required

      18
      Powell had worked in the net room approximately three or
four years prior to her transfer.

                                     15
constant motion, which soon led to shoulder problems for Powell.

Powell's injury caused her to miss work between June 26 and July 5.

Upon her return, Powell was reassigned to "dirty parts," which

caused her pre-existing allergies to flare up.                Powell once again

left work due to her recurring shoulder pain and her allergic

condition.

     On July 30, Powell returned to work and was reassigned to the

washout    station,     which    involved    washing   out    soiled    chickens.

During that week, Powell asked Dupre if she could return to her net

room job.    Dupre replied that there was no longer any net room job.

Thereafter, Dupre told Powell he was taking her off workman's

compensation      and   stated    he   was   going   to   tell   the    workman's

compensation doctor, Dr. Conn, that she had said she could do

anything in the plant.          Powell then informed Dupre she would not

return to work until after she saw Dr. Conn.                 Powell stated that

then she was subjected to verbal abuse from Dupre, who told her

that she was senile and should think about retiring.

     Powell left work on August 3 and saw a doctor.                    The doctor

recommended that she seek treatment at Pine Belt Mental Health

Services    for    severe   anxiety     and    depression      about    her   job.

Thereafter, Dupre learned of Powell's condition from her daughter.

On August 21, Dupre wrote Powell a certified letter asking her to

contact him within two weeks about returning to work or she would

be considered as having quit.           On September 4, Powell's attorney

responded to the request by informing the Company that Powell was

undergoing treatment for work-related anxiety and depression and

                                        16
that she was temporarily disabled.        On September 7, the Company

again wrote Powell19 and told her she should contact them by

September 12 or be terminated.      Powell, who was still undergoing

treatment, did not reply and was terminated.

     After Powell testified at the representation hearing, she was

switched to a more strenuous job based on the orders of Varner and

Sanders.      Powell's immediate supervisor resisted the efforts of

Varner and Sanders to transfer her because he needed her in the net

room.     Thereafter, Powell was subjected to more unpleasant tasks,

which eventually resulted in her leaving her job of thirty years

due to mental anxiety and depression.      Boutwell testified that the

net room job still existed.

     We hold that substantial evidence supports the Board's finding

that Powell was given more strenuous work and constructively forced

her out of her job due to her union activities.

E. Jones

        Jones, a fourteen-year employee, was discharged in June 1990

for having three disciplinary write-ups. She had worked as a heart

and liver cutter for seven years.       Part of Jones' job as a cutter

was to remove the gallbladders of chickens without their bursting.

Jones testified that prior to her testimony at the representation

hearing she had never been warned about excessive "gall bursting".

She testified that after the hearing, however, her supervisor, Bill

Helton (Helton), was constantly "riding her for gall" even though

her frequency of bursting gall remained unchanged.           Jones also

     19
          The Company wrote directly to Powell personally.

                                   17
testified that an average of ten to fifteen times a day chickens

already had gall on them from employees in the line in front of

her.        Jones stated that she was also warned about cutting and

working ahead of her place in line.                 She testified that cutting

line was a common practice for which she had never been reprimanded

in the past.         Two other employees likewise testified that cutting

line    was     a    common    practice,    one     also   stating    that   Jones'

replacement "cut line" more than Jones ever did.20

       On April 10, 1990, Jones was given a reprimand for poor

workmanship and bursting too much gall.              On June 18, Jones met with

Helton, who warned her about bursting gall.                Later that day, Jones

was called into Dupre's office and told she had three write-ups

concerning either bursting gall or cutting line.21                     Dupre then

informed her that it was Company policy to terminate employees who

had three write-ups within twelve months and discharged her.                   The

Company failed to produce any written memorialization of the rule

regarding three write-ups.          Evidence at the hearing revealed that,

unlike Jones, four other employees had received three disciplinary

write-ups within a twelve month period without being discharged.

       We     hold    that    substantial       evidence   supports    the   NLRB's

determination that Jones was unlawfully discharged by the Company

in retaliation for her union activities.

       20
      One employee even testified that Jones's replacement cut
line more than Jones ever did.
       21
      Jones was given a write-up on June 18 by Helton. Two
other cutters testified that Jones had not burst an unusual
amount of gall that day.

                                           18
V. Delay of the Wage Increase

          In late 1989 and early 1990, Varner discussed with other

members of management the conferral of a general wage increase on

the employees at all of its six plants.       Varner stated that the

Company did not have a schedule of wage increases but had granted

raises in March and November 1987 and February 1989.     He testified

that although the employees of five other plants received the wage

increase during February and March 1990, the Company delayed a wage

increase for the employees at the Hattiesburg plant based on the

advice of outside legal counsel (the law firm of Kullman, Inman,

Bee, Downing and Banta).22    The ALJ specifically credited Varner's

testimony that he was advised by counsel "to delay granting of the

wage increase pending the election so as to avoid any possibility

of [the Company's being accused of] an unfair labor practice or any

undue influence of an election."23      After the employees asked why

they were not receiving a raise, the Company posted a notice on the

bulletin board with excerpts from a legal publication which stated

that unilateral wage increases during an organizing campaign have

been held illegal.24    Although the ALJ credited Johnson's testimony

     22
      The Hattiesburg plant did not receive a wage increase
until after the Union withdrew its petition for an election.
     23
      The Board expressly refused to reverse any of the ALJ's
"credibility findings."
     24
          The posted bulletin stated:

                  "§ 11. Increases in wages and other benefits and
             promises thereof. [citation omitted] The granting of
             unilateral wage increases or other increases in
             benefits during union organizing campaigns is regarded
             as a prime form of illegal interference with the

                                   19
     employees' right to organize. In the leading
     pronouncement on this tactic, the U.S. Supreme Court
     said:

          There could be no more obvious way of interfering
          with these rights ... than by grants of wage
          increases upon the understanding that they [the
          employees] would leave the union in return. The
          action of employees with respect to the choice of
          their bargaining agents may be induced by favors
          bestowed by the employer as well as by his threats
          or domination.

     Medo Photo Supply Corp. v. NLRB, 321 U.S. 678 [64 S. Ct.
830, 88 L. Ed. 1007] 14 LRRM 581 (1944).

          In numerous decisions, unilateral wage increases
     were found to constitute illegal interference when
     granted during an organizing campaign with intent to
     induce the workers to decide against the union. NLRB
     v. Cen-Tennial Cotton Gin Co., 193 F.2d 502, 29 LRRM
     2288 (CA 5 1952); NLRB v. Valley Broadcasting Co., 189
F.2d 582, 28 LRRM 2148 (CA 6 1951); Stow Mfg. Co., 103
N.L.R.B. 1280, 31 LRRM 1635 (1953), enforced, 217 F.2d 900,
     35 LRRM 2210 (CA 2 1954), cert. denied, 348 U.S. 964
     [75 S. Ct. 524, 99 L. Ed. 751], 35 LRRM 2612 (1955);
     Wood Mfg. Co., 95 N.L.R.B. 633, 28 LRRM 1358 (1951);
     Lancaster Garment Co., 78 N.L.R.B. 935, 22 LRRM 1310 (1948)
     [citation omitted].

          Likewise, the promise of a wage increase "at a
     crucial point' in an organizing campaign, an increase
     that in this instance was subsequently put into effect,
     constitutes illegal interference. Coca Cola Bottling
     Co. v. NLRB, 195 F.2d 955, 30 LRRM 2046 (CA 8 1952).
     Similarly, the promise of an increase if the union is
     defeated in an NLRB election is unlawful. NLRB v.
     Howell Chevrolet Co., 204 F.2d 79, 31 LRRM 2462 (CA 9
     1953), affirmed, 346 U.S. 482 [74 S. Ct. 214, 98 L. Ed.
215], 33 LRRM 2225 (1953) [citation omitted]."

The Board does not contest the legal accuracy of these
statements.

     We also note (without expressing our agreement or
disagreement with the Board and Circuit Court decisions
discussed) the following from Gorman, Labor Law (West 1976),
a recognized text:

     "The United States Supreme Court has stated that the

                          20
actual grant of benefits during an election campaign,
given with the intention of inducing employees to
reject the union, is unlawful.... NLRB v. Exchange
Parts Co. [375 U.S. 405, 84 S. Ct. 457, 11 L. Ed. 2d 435]
(U.S.1964)....

....

... The decided cases do indeed tend to invoke the
Exchange Parts test of "intention of inducing the
employees to vote against the union.' But there are
several cases where the finding of such an intention is
dubious at best and where what is articulated as
antiunion animus is in truth a finding that the
employer has failed completely to explain to the Board
why the benefits were granted or a finding that the
asserted employer justification is insubstantial. See
NLRB v. Styletek [520 F.2d 275] (1st Cir.1975) (prima
facie violation is established by showing that benefits
were granted while election is pending, and burden
shifts to employer to explain; "It is obvious that the
closer a wage benefit comes to the day of the election,
the harder it will be for the union to answer, and the
greater the danger that the benefit will be manipulated
to sway the election.'). In substance then, the
Board—generally with court approval—does appear to be
balancing the discouragement of a vote for the union,
stemming from the grant of benefits, against the
employer's business reasons for the grant (with the
hoped-for defeat of the union not being a substantial
business reason). The analysis in the cases is the
same regardless whether the employer unconditionally
promises that a benefit will be granted or
unconditionally grants such a benefit.

....

     It is also doubtful that union animus is essential
when the employer actually implements an improvement in
benefits in the course of an election campaign. Thus,
in J.C. Penney Co. v. NLRB (10th Cir.1967), the
employer had a practice of granting a wage increase
every 12 to 15 months, and granted such an increase 14
months after the previous one but soon after an
election petition had been filed by a union. Although
the inference that the increase was motivated by a
desire to defeat the union—rather than by a desire to
perpetuate the past practice—was by no means
compelling, the Board and court drew such an inference,
and held that the employer could have waited another

                     21
that in March 1990 Varner told him that he "hoped" that employees

gave Union supporters Temple and Cole "hell about the loss of the

wage increase," he concluded that, as the wage increase was not

scheduled or finalized as to particulars (including amounts and

dates) prior to the advent of the election (a finding that the

Board did not dispute), the Company's withholding of the wage

increase was not a violation of sections 8(a)(1) and (3) of the

Act.

       The Board reversed the ALJ's conclusion regarding the delayed

wage increase.     The Board concluded that the Company "violated

Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act in February 1990 by delaying the

grant of a wage increase to Hattiesburg employees because of their

support for the Union."     The Board noted that an employer must

grant benefits as if a union were not involved.   See Great Atlantic

& Pacific Tea Co., 166 N.L.R.B. 27, 29 (1967).      While the Board

acknowledged that there is an exception for employers who delay a

wage increase during a union campaign if their pattern of wage

            month until the election had been held before granting
            the increase while remaining within the practice. The
            Board has in fact found illegal the announcement of a
            benefit during an election campaign even though the
            company decision was made before the advent of the
            union. Hineline's Meat Plant, Inc. (1971). Indeed, it
            has been held that benefits granted by the employer
            immediately after it prevailed in a representation
            election may violate section 8(a)(1). Even though the
            employer's motive could not have been to induce the
            employees to vote against the union in that election,
            the likely imminence of the Board's overturning that
            election and ordering a new one was deemed sufficient
            to warrant a finding of illegal conduct. See Luxuray
            of N.Y. v. NLRB [447 F.2d 112] (2d Cir.1971)...." Id.
            at 165-166.

                                 22
increases    is   haphazard,25   it   noted   that    to    fall   within   that

exception, the employer must not seek "to place the onus for the

[delay of the wage increase] on the union."                Borman's, Inc., 296
N.L.R.B. 245, 248 (1989).        In reversing the ALJ, the Board ruled

that in two communications with employees, the Company blamed the

Union for the denial of the wage increase.                  The Board in this

respect pointed to Varner's statement to Johnson that he hoped the

employees would give Union supporters "hell," and to supervisor

Robert Gaines' (Gaines) statement in the presence of four or five

employees, responding to a question by one of them as to why they

had not gotten a raise and employees at other plants had, that it

was "thanks to the union you all didn't get a raise."                 The Board

held that these statements demonstrated that the Company's actions

were a campaign tactic to place the onus for the delayed wage on

the Union.

     We   hold    that   the   Board's     decision   is    not    supported   by

substantial evidence. Varner's causal comment was made only in the

presence of another management level employee who was not a part of

the Union campaign.       Thus, Varner's private remark that he hoped

Union supporters "caught hell" is not evidence that the Company

blamed the Union in its communications with unionizing employees

(there is no evidence Johnson ever said anything of this kind to

employees). Further, Varner's comment was made in March, while the

challenged decision had been made the previous month.                   Gaines'

     25
      Neither the Board nor the ALJ found that the Company's
pattern of wage increases was not haphazard.

                                      23
comment was made in late April or early May 1990, also after the

Company's decision to delay the wage increase.                    Nor is there any

evidence     Gaines'   remark    was       made   before        the   election       was

cancelled.26      Gaines was a mid-level plant supervisor who was not

shown to have any authority or influence with respect to the wage

decision or knowledge (apart from the posted notice) of why it was

taken.     We conclude that the Board's decision that the Company's

delayed wage increase was unlawfully motivated is contradicted by

the unrebutted evidence establishing that (1) the Company wage

increases were not regularly scheduled;              (2) Varner was advised by

outside legal counsel not to grant the wage increase to Hattiesburg

employees in order to avoid the risk of unfair labor practice

charges;        and (3) the posted bulletin reflected, and informed

employees, that the Company's reason for the wage delay was to

avoid     illegal   interference      with     the      Union    campaign.27         The

statements by Varner and Gaines well after the decision was taken

do not, considering the record as a whole, constitute substantial

evidence that it was unlawfully motivated.               One comment was made in

private    to    another   supervisor      and    the    other    comment      was    an

isolated,    passing    remark   of    a     mid-level     supervisor     made,       in

     26
      The only evidence is it was made "around late April of
1990 or early May 1990"; the election was cancelled May 3, 1990.

     27
      Under the Board's decision, employers would be caught
between the proverbial "rock and a hard place." On the one hand,
if they grant an unscheduled wage increase, they will be accused
of trying to unfairly influence the employees. On the other
hand, if the Company delays the wage increase in its plant where
employees are organizing, the Board will allege they delayed the
increase to influence the employees.

                                        24
response to an employee question and in the presence of only four

or five employees.      Nor is either remark inconsistent with the

Company's having made the decision on the basis of counsel's

advice.

     We set aside this part of the Board's decision.

                              Conclusion

     The Board's decision is set aside insofar as it finds that the

Company violated sections 8(a)(1) and (3) by delaying the wage

increase.   In all other respects, the Board's decision is affirmed

and ordered enforced.    The matter is remanded to the Board for an

appropriate order consistent herewith.

     AFFIRMED in part;    REVERSED in part;   REMANDED.

                                  25