United Steelworkers v. National Labor Relations Board

WILBUR K. MILLER, Senior Circuit Judge,

dissenting in No. 19,507:

It is my view that the Labor Board’s decision, here under review, is not supported by substantial evidence when the record is considered as a whole in the manner described and prescribed by Universal Camera Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board, 340 U.S. 474, 71 S.Ct. *277456, 95 L.Ed. 456 (1951). Consequently, I cannot agree with my brothers of the majority when they say in their opinion:

“ * * * Our study of the record, however, convinces us that the Board’s findings are supported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole, and that the company’s adamant refusal to consider a union dues checkoff for those employees who individually requested it did indeed frustrate the bargaining.”

The union was just as adamant in refusing to sign a contract which did not contain a checkoff clause or some other means of company aid in collecting union dues. Its representative informed the Company’s negotiator of this firm purpose, and counsel for the Board’s General Counsel (the charging party) told the examiner that his inquiry showed the union would not sign a contract without a checkoff. Thus, the union never intended to bargain on that issue; it simply stated it must have a dues collection provision or there would be no contract. In these circumstances, it is difficult for me to understand how it can be said that the Porter Company’s position on the checkoff issue “did indeed frustrate the bargaining.” Because of the union’s attitude on the issue — its stated determination not to negotiate in good faith with respect to it — bargaining as to a checkoff provision was impossible from the beginning. Yet it is the Company, not the union, which has been found guilty of an unfair labor practice.

The examiner’s decision, adopted by the Board, dwelt on the union’s need for a checkoff which could be granted by the Company without inconvenience to itself. And the majority opinion notes the union’s consistent insistence on a dues checkoff and attempts to justify it by saying:

“ * * * The union maintains no office in Danville, that area being serviced from Roanoke, Virginia, a distance of about 85 miles. Moreover, the 300 company employees live within a radius of from 35 to 40 miles from Dan-ville. Thus without a check-off, or some adequate substitute therefor, the collection of dues would have presented the union with a substantial problem of communication and transportation.”

But the record shows the union has a mailing address at the home of a member in Danville. Members could mail their dues to that address or to the office in Roanoke, or dues could be collected at the monthly union meetings. Moreover, it was shown that the union has a potential income of $1,500 per month from the Danville members, which would seem to justify the establishment of a small office in that town where dues could be paid. Thus there was no real necessity for the union’s unalterable insistence on a checkoff clause.

Nevertheless, the examiner said in his decision :1

“ * * * I f¡nfj an(j conclude that with respect to the issue of checkoff, Respondent [the Company] bargained with the Union from October 23, 1963, through September 10, 1964, in bad faith and thereby violated Section 8(a) (5) and (1) of the Act.”

He also stated:

“ * * * My careful consideration of the entire record convinces me that Plant Manager Jones, Respondent’s chief negotiator, took the position he did with respect to the checkoff issue, for the purpose of frustrating agreement with the Union, and hence engaged in bad-faith bargaining. * * * ”

He said he based the foregoing conclusion upon three “factors,” which I here reproduce, largely in his own words:

1. That the demeanor of T. C. Jones, the Company’s negotiator, while testifying in the present proceeding, “convinced me that his attitude toward *278collective bargaining had not changed since he testified in the prior case.” 2
2. “Jones’ explanation for [sic] his refusal to agree to any of the Union’s suggestions for the collection of its dues, namely, that he did not wish to give aid and comfort to the Union by assisting it in collecting dues, if not actually a false reason, evidences an attitude inconsistent with the obligation imposed upon an employer by the Act.” This reason for refusing to agree to a checkoff tended, the examiner said, to disparage or discredit the union in the eyes of the employees.
3. “In the instant case Respondent seeks to explain away the fact that at other plants it has contracts with unions which provide for a checkoff, by arguing, in substance, that those provisions were brought about by reason of the economic strength of the union there involved, and urges that the Union’s remedy in this ease was to call a strike rather than prosecute an unfair labor practice charge. Not only does such a position by an employer run counter to the objectives of the Act which Congress set forth in its statement of ‘Findings and Policies’ (see Section 1 of the Act), but it also demonstrates that Respondent’s purpose was to forestall reaching an agreement with the Union by the expedient of disparaging the latter in the eyes of the employees. Cf. Sunbeam Plastic Corporation, 144 NLRB 1010. This would seem to be particularly true in view of Respondent’s admission that checking off union dues would impose no burden upon it, and its admitted checkoff for Government Bond and United Givers Fund, neither of which seem particularly necessary for the promotion of Respondent’s business.”

Thus it is apparent the examiner based his conclusion that the Company had bargained in bad faith upon three “factors,” none of which rises to the level of proof: (a) that Jones’s demeanor showed anti-union animus, and (b) that two of the positions taken by the Company during bargaining tended to disparage or discredit the union in the eyes of the employees. Nothing else in the record was pointed out by the examiner as supporting his conclusion, and I have discovered nothing which in the slightest degree supports it. His conclusion, then, stands or falls on the validity of the antiunion animus and union disparagement “factors” which he expressly set forth.

Antiunion animus on the part of an employer, even if shown by the record, is not an unfair labor practice. Metal Processors’ Union, etc. v. N. L. R. B., 119 U.S.App.D.C. 78, 81, 337 F.2d 114, 117 (1964). For that reason, the first of the three “factors” upon which the examiner relied to support his conclusion of bad-faith bargaining falls of its own weight, even if the examiner’s holding of Jones’s alleged antiunion animus had been borne out by the record. But here the examiner did not purport to base his finding of antiunion animus on any evidence in the record, but merely on his own statement that “Jones’ demeanor while testifying in the immediate proceeding convinced me that his attitude toward collective bargaining had not changed since he testified in the prior case.”

The “prior case” to which the examiner referred arose from a complaint charging the Porter Company with bad-faith bargaining because, after 28 bargaining sessions between November 3, 1961, and November 27, 1962, the parties had not reached an agreement. The recommended order of the examiner in the prior case, issued with his decision on September 20, 1963, required the Company, upon request, to bargain with the union. Without waiting for the Board’s decision,3 the Company began almost immediately to bargain with the union as ordered by the examiner in the prior case. The parties met in 21 bargaining sessions, beginning October 23, 1963, and ending September 10,1964. These meetings, the *279subject of the present proceeding, were fruitful. Of the 14 issues which were open and unresolved when the meetings began October 23, 1963, 11 were resolved by the process of bargaining, so that only three remained unresolved at the adjournment of the final session on September 10, 1964. These were wages, health and life insurance, and checkoff.

The examiner in the earlier case did not find that Jones had antiunion animus; the present examiner decided that for himself from a reading of the prior examiner’s decision, and then concluded that Jones’s demeanor in the present proceeding showed he still had that animus. The present examiner said in this connection:

“I fully recognize that because an employer engaged in bad-faith bargaining in one set of negotiations, it does not necessarily follow that the employer’s subsequent bargaining negotiations were conducted in bad faith. I merely hold that an employer’s bad-faith bargaining in the prior negotiations is a factor to be considered, along with the other circumstances of the case, in determining whether his subsequent bargaining was in good faith.”

Although the examiner found that, with respect to the checkoff issue the Company bargained with the union in bad faith and ordered resumption of bargaining, he expressly disclaimed any intention to require the Company to agree to aid in the collection of dues. Footnote 9 to the examiner’s decision contains the following:

“This is not to say that in the resumed bargaining sessions which I shall recommend, Respondent will be required to agree to some form of checkoff. I only find and conclude that on that issue Respondent did not heretofore bargain in good faith, and that it should be required to do so. If after such good-faith bargaining, the parties reach an agreement or an impasse, the requirements of the Act will have been fulfilled. * * *”

Thus the examiner gave lip service to Section 8(d) of the Act, 29 U.S.C. §. 158(d), which is in part as follows:

“For the purposes of this section, to bargain collectively is the performance of the mutual obligation of the employer and the representative of the employees to meet at reasonable times and confer in good faith with respect to wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment * * * but such obligation does not compel either party to agree to a proposal or require the making of a concession * * (Emphasis supplied.)

But his decision that, by not agreeing to a dues collection provision, which he thought the union badly needed and which would cause it no inconvenience, the Company had not bargained in good faith, left no room for doubt that what he termed good-faith bargaining would require the Company to yield on the checkoff issue. This is, of course, contrary to the express provision of the statute quoted above.

This leaves for consideration the other two “factors” upon which the examiner based his conclusion of bad-faith bargaining on the part of the Company. First, as he put it,

“Jones’ explanation for his refusal to agree to any of the Union’s suggestions for the collection of its dues, namely, that he did not wish to give aid and comfort to the Union by assisting it in collecting dues, if not actually a false reason, evidences an attitude inconsistent with the obligation imposed upon an employer by the Act. The very act of bargaining with a union, thus granting it recognition as the representative of the employees, in and of itself gives aid, comfort, assistance and prestige to that Union. But the policies of the Act, and the basic principles upon which it rests, require an employer to give this kind of ‘aid and comfort’ to the designated representatives of its employees. For, as the Board had held in a somewhat comparable situation, it is inconsistent with the bargaining obligation which the Act imposes upon an employer for the latter to conduct *280negotiations with the statutory representative in such a manner as to disparage or discredit the statutory representative in the eyes of its employee constituents. General Electric Company, 150 NLRB No. 36.”

The second “factor” was another statement of the Company, to which I have heretofore referred. The examiner said it showed the employer’s purpose “was to forestall reaching an agreement with the Union by the expedient of disparaging the latter in the eyes of the employees.”

The examiner was indeed hard put to it when he concocted these two “factors” as bases for his conclusion. He confused the union with its members and erroneously thought an employer is somehow required to avoid any act which may disparage or discredit a union in the eyes of the employees. The Act is for the benefit of employees and not unions and, as Mr. Justice Rutledge said, “Nothing in the Act requires an employer to maintain a union’s prestige * * 4

Additionally, I point out that the examiner did not expressly find that the Company said or did anything which actually disparaged or discredited the union; he merely said disparaging or discrediting a union is inconsistent with an employer’s duty under the Act. As Mr. Justice Rutledge said, 326 U.S. at 399, 66 S.Ct. at 216, “Something more than supposition should underlie a conclusion which supports a finding of unfair practice.”

The fact that the examiner’s three “factors” fall so far short of supporting his conclusion of bad-faith bargaining on the part of the Company, and the further fact that the record considered as a whole is devoid of support for his conclusion, lead me to think the examiner was actuated by antimanagement animus. The three-member panel of the Board which rubber-stamped the examiner’s decision either did so without examining the record or, I suggest, shared his antimanagement animus.

Before concluding, I call attention to the following statement in the majority opinion:

“ * * * When bargaining was resumed after the Board’s prior order, some 14 items were open and unresolved. At the time of the final meeting on September 10,1964, only three items remained unresolved, the union having given in on all of the others.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The italicized clause is erroneous. Even the examiner did not go so far; on this subject, his decision said:

“ * * * During the negotiations which followed, each of the parties withdrew certain of its bargaining proposals, so that upon adjournment of the final meeting on September 10, only 3 items remained unresolved. These were wages, health and life insurance, and checkoff. * * * ”

I have heretofore quoted a portion of the examiner’s footnote 9 to show that even he realized he could not order the Company to agree to a checkoff because Section 8(d) of the Act provides that the mutual obligation of an employer and a union to confer in good faith

“ * * * does not compel either party to agree to a proposal or require the making of a concession * *

With respect to this the majority opinion says in footnote 16:

“Footnote 9 in the trial examiner’s findings reads in part:
“ ‘This is not to say that in the resumed bargaining sessions which I shall recommend, Respondent will be required to agree to some form of check off. I only find and conclude that on that issue Respondent did not heretofore bargain in good faith, and that it should be required to do so. If after such good-faith bargaining the parties reach an agreement or an impasse, the requirements of the Act will have been fulfilled. * * * ’ *281This footnote is inconsistent with the trial examiner’s finding that the company’s refusal to grant a check-off was ‘for the purpose of frustrating agreement with the Union and hence [the company had] engaged in bad-faith bargaining.’ To suggest that in further bargaining the company may refuse a check-off for some other reason, not heretofore advanced, makes a mockery of the collective bargaining required by the statute. Since the text of the trial examiner’s decision controls, Footnote 9 should be disregarded.”

Thus, in holding the examiner’s footnote 9 should be disregarded, the majority hold in effect that Section 8(d) of the Act should be disregarded, and that the Company should be held in contempt if, on remand, it does not agree to a contractual provision for some sort of Company aid in the collection of union dues.

I have seldom seen a record so barren of support for the decision of the examiner and the Board, and I earnestly dissent from the majority opinion which upholds that decision.

I concur in the affirmance of No. 19,-492.

. Without discussion or comment, a three-member panel of the Board adopted the examiner’s findings, conclusions and recommendation. So we must turn to the latter’s decision to ascertain the findings and conclusions which the Board adopted as its own.

. The “prior case” is discussed later in this dissent.

. Which for some reason not stated was not issued until April 15, 1964.

. Concurring in part in May Dept. Stores Co. v. National Labor Relations Board, 326 U.S. 376, 398, 66 S.Ct. 203, 216, 90 L.Ed. 145 (1945).