Court Opinion

ID: 9446510
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-03 21:57:09.893695+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:30:40.968066
License: Public Domain

MAGRUDER, Chief Judge.
We have before us a petition by the National Labor Relations Board, pursuant to § 10(e) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, 61 Stat. 136, 29 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq., seeking enforcement of its order of December 18, 1957, against respondent. Hannaford Bros. Co., the respondent, is a wholesale grocery distributor. Its main office is located in Portland, Maine, but in October, 1955, it acquired through purchase the assets and business of T. R. Savage Co. of Bangor, Maine, and has since operated that business as a branch or division.
The Board’s order required the respondent to bargain collectively with Local Union 340 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America (hereinafter referred to as the Union) as the exclusive representative of its employees working in the Bangor division, and to cease threatening economic reprisals if those employees joined the Union and promising economic benefits if the Union was repudiated. The Board found that the Company’s letter of February 20, 1956, rejecting the Union’s demand for recognition on the ground that the Bangor division was not an appropriate unit for collective bargaining and also on the ground that it doubted whether the Union represented a majority of the Bangor employees, was not written in good faith. The Board consequently concluded that respondent’s refusal to bargain with the Union was an unfair labor practice under §§ 8(a)(5) and 8(a)(1) of the Act. It was further found by the Board that respondent had utilized the delay in negotiations to embark upon a campaign to undermine the Union by interrogating its employees concerning their Union activities, by threatening them with reprisals if they supported the Union, and by promising economic benefits in return for repudiation of the Union, thus committing additional unfair labor practices under § 8 (a)(1) of the Act.
Counsel for respondent frankly stated that the evidence adequately warranted so much of the Board’s order as was predicated upon a finding of various acts of interference by respondent’s manager, in violation of § 8(a)(1). It is true that these acts of interference were unnecessary from respondent’s point of view, and indeed illegal. But we think it is wholly illogical to infer from these acts of interference alone that the Company was also guilty of a refusal to bargain, in violation of § 8(a)(5), when it sent the letter of February 20, 1956, rejecting the Union’s formal demand to be recognized as the exclusive bargaining representative of the employees in the Bangor plant. That rejection was predicated upon two grounds:
“First, we seriously question whether you do represent the majority of our employees in Bangor and, second, we do not consider Bangor as a separate unit but as part of the Company and we certainly know that you are not representing the majority of all of our employees. Under the circumstances, we prefer to wait for the decision of the National Labor Relations Board who now have that problem before them.”
*640The reference in this letter to waiting for “the decision of the National Labor Relations Board” is to the fact that there was then pending before the Board, undecided, a representation proceeding instituted by petition of the Union dated January 16, 1956, in which the Union had claimed that a majority of the employees at Bangor had selected the Union as its bargaining representative, and that the Bangor Division constituted a separate “appropriate” bargaining unit; wherefore the Union asked the Board to conduct an election among the Bangor employees. The Company had opposed this petition upon the ground that the whole group of employees, both at Portland and at Bangor, constituted a single “appropriate” bargaining unit. Just before writing the letter to the Union of February 20, 1956, the Company had completed participation in three days of hearings held by the Board on that very question. Certainly there were rational grounds for this contention, and until it was resolved by decision of the Board, the Company was justified in its refusal to proceed on the contrary assumption, namely, that the Bangor plant itself was an appropriate bargaining unit.*
On April 12, 1956, the Board handed down its decision in this representation case, finding that the warehousemen, truck drivers and helpers at the employer’s Bangor plant were a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining, within the meaning of § 9(b) of the Act, and directing an election to be held among the employees in such unit. This directed election has never been held, for the Union on February 17, 1956, filed with the Board its original charges of unfair labor practices which became the basis of the complaint filed by the General Counsel in the present case, No. 1-CA-2069-Bangor, and on July 6, 1956, the Board entered its order permitting the Union to withdraw, with prejudice, its petition in the pending representation proceeding.
In processing the instant complaint, in Case No. l-CA-2069-Bangor, the Board found again that the employees at the Bangor plant constituted a separate appropriate unit for purposes of collective bargaining. On the basis of cards signed by a majority of the Bangor employees and held in the possession of the Union organizer, the Board found as a fact that the Union was the chosen bargaining representative of a majority of the employees in the appropriate unit. It also found as a fact that the two reasons advanced by respondent in its letter of rejection of February 20, 1956, were not made in good faith. Accordingly the Board concluded that the Company’s letter of February 20, 1956, amounted to a refusal to bargain, in violation of §§ 8 (a)(5) and 8(a)(1) of the Act.
We have already indicated the reasonableness of the Company’s position in refusing to bargain separately with the Union as representing the Bangor employees until such time as the Board should determine the pending representation proceeding and should determine also whether the group of Bangor employees was a separate appropriate bargaining unit. We shall now say something about the Company’s “good faith” in questioning whether the Union represented the majority of the employees even in the Bangor unit alone.
We do not say that the Board should never, in the absence of a secret election, determine that a majority of the employees in an appropriate unit have selected a particular labor organization as its bargaining representative. But we *641do point out that there is a vast difference between such a choice registered as a result of a secret ballot, and such a choice established by the introduction into evidence of signed cards, collected at the behest of the Union organizer.
In the present case there is no evidence that representatives of the Company ever saw these signed cards, or that there was any answer to the letter of February 20, 1956. There is no reason to doubt the finding by the trial examiner, which the Board accepted, to the effect that, prior to the writing of the letter of February 20, it had been reported to the Company management that a number of employees at the Bangor plant were dissatisfied with the Union, desired to defect from it, and intended to vote against it at the forthcoming election. There is no finding that this dissatisfaction was caused by the acts of interference, and indeed, in so far as the timing appears from the record before us, it seems to have arisen before the acts of interference. It is also undisputed that, at three Board-conducted elections which had been held at the Portland plant, in 1948 and again in 1955, this same Union had been rejected by a majority of the voters. On the basis of the evidence in the record as a whole, we think it obvious that the Company had every reason to doubt that the Union was the uncoerced choice of a majority of the employees in the Bangor plant.
The trial examiner argued that the Company, by its unlawful acts of interference, “had prevented the election from resolving the very issue on which Respondent purported to entertain doubts. Stated differently, Respondent’s illegal conduct destroyed the efficacy of the very method whose outcome it insisted on awaiting.” But it is not suggested that the Board has made an order for the interim recognition of the Union as an appropriate remedy for dissipating the adverse effects of the acts of interference, in violation of § 8(a)(1), until such time as a free election can be properly held. The Board has predicated its order to bargain collectively with the Union solely upon a finding that the Company had been guilty of an unfair labor practice of refusing to bargain collectively, in violation of § 8(a)(5), which finding we hold to be unsupported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole. Cf. N. L. R. B. v. Fansteel Metallurgical Corp., 1939, 306 U.S. 240, 59 S.Ct. 490, 83 L.Ed. 627; Franks Bros. Co. v. N.L.R.B., 1944, 321 U.S. 702, 706, 64 S.Ct. 817, 88 L.Ed. 1020.
Accordingly a majority of the court is of opinion that we should not enforce so much of the Board’s order as is predicated upon a finding that respondent was guilty of unfair labor practices under §§ 8(a)(5) and 8(a)(1) of the Act, in that it had refused, on and after February 20, 1956, to recognize and bargain with the Union as the exclusive representative of its employees working at its Bangor warehouse.
A decree will be entered enforcing paragraphs 1(b) and 1(c) of the Board’s order. With respect to subsection 2(b) of the order, requiring the posting of notices, we shall enforce so much of the order only as relates to the § 8(a)(1) violation by acts of interference. We shall also direct the Company to notify the Regional Director for the First Region, in writing, within fifteen (15) days from the date of the decree, what steps it has taken to comply therewith. The remainder of the order will be set aside.

 We. think it hardly necessary to mention that the Board seems to have found some indication that the Company’s claim of lumping together the employees at its Portland and Bangor plants into one all-inclusive unit was not made in “good faith”, in that the Company continued to bargain collectively with a committee of its employees at Portland. There was no inconsistency here. The Portland committee was the bargaining representative of the employees at the Portland plant, as a result of a consent election conducted by the Board in June, 1955, in which the Union participated, and lost.