Carpenters Union Local 180Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMay 9, 1969175 N.L.R.B. 927 (N.L.R.B. 1969) Copy Citation CARPENTERS UNION LOCAL 180 Carpenters Unign'- Local 180, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America , AFL-CIO (Golden State Runway and Engineering Company, et al.) and Richard A. Allen. Case 20-CB-1438 May 9, 1969 SUPPLEMENTAL DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MCCULLOCH AND MEMBERS JENKINS AND ZAGORIA On January 16, 1967, the National Labor Relations Board issued a Decision and Order in the above-entitled case, finding, inter alia, that Respondent had caused discrimination against Paul C. Allen, Richard A. Allen, and Dick J. Look in violation of Section 8(b)(2) and (1)(A) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, and directing Respondent to make whole these individuals for any pay losses they many have suffered thereby.' Thereafter, on April 19, 1968, the Board's Order was enforced by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.' On July 26, 1968, the Regional Director for Region 20 issued and served on the parties a backpay specification and notice of hearing, and Respondent filed an answer to the backpay specification. Pursuant to notice, a hearing was held before Trial Examiner George H. O'Brien on November 25, 1968, for the purpose of determining Respondent's backpay obligations to Paul C. Allen, Richard A. Allen, and Dick J. Look. On February 10, 1969, the Trial Examiner issued the attached Supplemental Decision, in which he found the three discriminatees herein to be entitled to backpay in the amounts specified. Thereafter, Respondent filed exceptions to the Trial Examiner's Supplemental Decision and a supporting brief, and the General Counsel filed limited cross-exceptions, and a brief in support of the Trial Examiner's Supplemental Decision. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the Act, as amended, the Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three-member panel. The Board has reviewed the rulings made by the Trial Examiner at the. supplemental hearing and finds no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the entire record in this case, including the Supplemental Decision, the exceptions and briefs, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner.' '162 NLRB 950. 'After the Board filed a petition seeking enforcement of its Order, Respondent consented to the entry of a decree enforcing the Board's Order. 'The General Counsel excepts to the Trial Examiner's alleged findings with respect to the absence of a contractual seniority provision and the ORDER 927 Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended , the Board hereby orders that Respondent , Carpenters Union Local 180, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America , AFL-CIO, its officers , agents, and representatives , shall pay to Paul C . Allen, Richard A. Allen, and Dick J . Look, as net backpay, the amounts set forth in the attached Trial Examiner's Supplemental Decision. TRIAL EXAMINER'S SUPPLEMENTAL DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE GEORGE H. O'BRIEN , Trial Examiner: This supplemental proceeding under Sections 102.52 through 102.59 of the Rules and Regulations of the National Labor Relations Board was heard in San Francisco, California , on November 25, 1968, on an Amended Backpay Specification ' issued by the Regional Director, Region 20 , on October 2, 1968 , and the Answer of Carpenters Union Local 180, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America , AFL-CIO, herein called the Union . The purpose of the proceeding is to determine the precise sums of money due and owing from the Union to three individuals under a decree of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. At the hearing the parties who appeared , as noted above, were afforded a full opportunity to examine and cross-examine witnesses , to introduce evidence , to present oral argument and to file briefs. Upon consideration of the entire record in this supplemental proceeding , including briefs filed by counsel for the General Counsel appearing in this matter as counsel for the Regional Director and by counsel for the Union, and in reliance upon the Board 's Decision and Order in the above-entitled matter issued January 16, 1967, reported as 162 NLRB No. 92, of which I take official notice, I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT A. The Board Order and Court Decree On April 19, 1968, The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in a matter entitled National Labor Relations Board, Petitioner v. Carpenters Union Local 180, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America , AFL-CIO, Respondent , No. 22,296 entered its consent decree enforcing the Board 's order of January 16, 1967, herein. The Board's order directs the Union to, inter alias Make whole Paul Allen , Richard A. Allen and Dick Look for any pay losses they may have suffered as a result of the discrimination which Respondent Union probability that Paul C Allen would have been selected for early layoff because of his age The Trial Examiner 's Supplemental Decision reflects, however, that he made no such findings , but merely repeated the contentions of Respondent as argued in its brief. 'The original Backpay Specification which issued July 26, 1966, was followed by a number of motions, responses, answers, and orders, all of which were superceded and rendered moot by the Amended Backpay Specifications on which issue was joined herein. 175 NLRB No. 150 928 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD caused to be practiced against them , in the manner set forth in the "remedy" section of this decision. The "remedy" section, incorporated by reference in the Board's order reads, in pertinent part: Pursuant to Respondent Union's discriminatory policy and practices , Paul Allen, Richard Allen and Dick Look were denied registrations for work promptly upon request, and as a result were denied dispatch to available work . . Respondent Union [shall] make these complainants whole for any losses of pay, or other incidents of the employment relationship, which they may have suffered by reason of the discrimination practiced against them with respect to employment registration and dispatch, by the payment to each of them of sums of money equal to the amount which each normally would have earned as wages for millwright work, had they been registered for work, promptly upon request, and had they been dispatched for work pursuant to contractually -sanctioned procedures thereafter. Such payments should cover the sums which each complainant designated would have earned between August 23rd or August 30, 1965 respectively - whichever date may be applicable - and the date or dates when the jobs for which they would have been dispatched, absent discrimination, were terminated, less their net earnings, if any during that period. In computing the sums due, the Board ' s customary formula - which F. W. Woolworth Company, 90 NLRB 289, sets forth - with 6 percent interest added, which Isis Plumbing and Heating Co., 138 NLRB 716, requires, shall be followed. The findings of fact on which the Board predicated its order include the following: The Union was party to a contract with Associated General Contractors, Northern and Central California Chapters which contained hiring provisions which establish an exclusive referral system for dispatching "qualified and competent" workmen pursuant to requests from construction contractors. Golden State Runway and Engineering Company , the Employer herein, was bound by its subcontract with Bigge Drayage, an A.G.C. member to abide by the hiring provisions of the union contract. On August 23, 1965, for discriminatory reasons, the Union refused to register on its out-of-work list, two millwrights, Paul C. Allen and Richard A. Allen, father and son . On the morning of August 30, 1965 the Union for discriminatory reasons refused to register a third millwright, Dick J. Look. On the afternoon of August 30, the Union did register, on its out-of-work list the name of a fourth millwright, Arthur D. Cook. About 5 p.m. on August 30, Merl Ross, millwright foreman for Golden State Runway, asked the Union to dispatch two millwrights to its American Home Products' Vacaville Construction Project. Cook was dispatched and went to work on August 31. Onest Wadley, who was currently employed as a carpenter , and whose name was not on the Union's out-of-work list, was issued a referral to Golden State and reported as a millwright on the Vacaville project on September 1. B. The Backpay Hearing The Amended Backpay Specification recites that Paul C. Allen is entitled to backpay for the period from August 23, 1965, through June 3, 1966, the date on which Golden State last employed millwrights on the American Home Products construction project, and that an appropriate measure of the hours Paul Allen would have worked is the number of weekly hours worked by the most senior employee for Golden State in place of Paul Allen during each week of the backpay period. These hours are computed by taking (1) all the hours worked by Arthur Cook, whose first day of employment was August 30, 1965, and whose last day of employment was September 30, 1965, by adding thereto (2) all the hours worked by Onest Wadley from October 4, 1965, through November 8, 1965, when Wadley ceased to be employed, and (3) by adding thereto all the hours worked by John McGuigan from November 11, 1965, through March 30, 1966, when his employment ceased. McGuigan had started work on the project on September 15, 1965, and after the departure of Wadley, on November 8, 1965, was the only millwright on the job until about March 1, 1966. The Specification concludes that, absent discrimination, Paul Allen would have been paid for a total of 960 hours (includes adjusted overtime) and that the backpay due to him (after allowing the Union a credit of $3,424 interim earnings ) and excluding interest is $1,564.2 Using the same formula, the Amended Specification allocated to Richard A. Allen the number of hours worked by the second most senior millwright on the job during the period from August 23, 1965, through March 25, 1966. After allowance for interim earnings, the total backpay claim of Richard Allen is $162. Again using the same formula, the Amended Specification allocated to Dick J. Look the number of hours worked by the third most senior millwright on the job during the period from August 30, 1965, through March 12, 1966. After allowance for interim earnings and excluding interest, the total backpay claim of Dick J. Look is $336. The Union's answer denies generally that any backpay is owing , denies that the specification describes an appropriate measure of the hours any discriminatee would have worked, and disclaims any knowledge of the number of hours worked or pay received by any millwright on the job. At the opening of the hearing the General Counsel moved to strike certain paragraphs of the Union's answer and moved, pursuant to Section 102.54 of the Board's Rules, that the allegations of the Amended Specification be deemed to be admitted to be true and found by the Trial Examiner to be true , basing these motions on the failure or refusal of the Union to comply with the requirements of Section 102.54 of the Board's Rules, which states: . The respondent shall specifically admit, deny or explain each and every allegation of the specification, unless the respondent is without knowledge, in which case the respondent shall so state, such statement operating as a denial .... As to all matters within the knowledge of the respondent , including but not limited to the various factors entering into the computation of gross backpay, a general denial shall not suffice. As to such matters, if the respondent disputes either the accuracy of the figures. . .or the premises on which they are based, he shall specifically state the basis for his disagreement, setting forth in detail his position as to the applicable premises and furnishing the appropriate 'Calculations in the specification are on a quarterly basis as required by the express terms of the decree which incorporates by reference the Board's Woolworth formula. The specification , for completeness, lists all millwright hours worked during the second quarter of 1966, and asserts that they should be allocated to Paul Allen. Since no backpay is claimed for the period, I have disregarded the 8 hours worked by W. T. Meek during the week ending April 22 and the 56 hours worked by T Ables in the weeks ending May 27 and June 3 in the foregoing summary CARPENTERS UNION LOCAL 180 929 supporting figures.: ` Based on the representations of the Union's counsel that the Union did not know, and could not by reasonable diligence ascertain the precise hours worked by and amounts of wages paid to millwrights on the job to which the discriminatees were denied employment, I denied the motion of the General Counsel. Under well established authority, the burden is on the General Counsel to establish by a preponderance of the evidence the factors c0:::::: _::: r. "oa= k :k 00 N eq BOO- NN N^.-- ^ --^ et-^ NO 0000-.--- ----- Cook Wadley Holly McGuigan Newman Cronhardt Meek Ables X XX X]NXX XX Prior to the receipt of testimony, the Union's counsel conceded the accuracy of the figures in the Amended Specification as they related to Richard Allen and Dick Look and stated that my recommended order could include a finding that the Union owed to Richard Allen the sum of $191.16 and to Mr. Look the sum of $392.15. The sums stated by counsel for the Union include interest at 6 percent per annum computed to September 30, 1968. Paul Allen, under questioning by the Union's counsel, testified that he was 71 years old, and had retired in March 1967, having filed his pension application with the carpenters' pension fund in January 1967. At the close of the General Counsel's presentation of evidence it was stipulated that Paul Allen actively sought work during the entire period from August 23, 1965, through June 3, 1966, and that his interim earnings during that period were as set forth in the Amended Specification. C. Arguments of Counsel The amounts of backpay owing to Richard Allen and Dick Look having been conceded by the Union, the only matter here to be decided is the amount of backpay owing to Paul Allen. Since the accuracy of the figures in the Amended Specification relating to Paul Allen's backpay and figures which enter into the computation of "gross backpay". The General Counsel met this burden by offering in evidence through the bookkeeper of Golden State Runway and Engineering Company, original payroll records of all millwrights employed by Golden State on its American Home Products' Vacaville construction project. The following chart shows the name of each millwright so employed and the pay periods during which he worked on the project. Cook Wadley Holly McGuigan Newman Cronhardt Meek Ables "00 C4 ^fV 00h.. M^1N O^[^ M00 ^ lC O""N M00* NNN M CLN NMMMM M M M M der d'Q^ Y1\O'-0\0 °'HHv^3wrn 3w 0^0t~N '^o X X X X X X X X X X X C X X X X X have not been challenged, the only issue remaining is the propriety of the formula used in the Amended Specification to determine the amount of pay Paul Allen would have received from the employer, absent discrimination , i.e., "gross backpay." The General Counsel argues that Paul Allen should receive credit for gross backpay for the entire period when any millwright was employed on the job and that his assumed earnings should be measured by those of the most senior millwright then working. This is the "comparable" or "representative employee" formula which has been judicially approved by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in N.L.R.B. v. East Texas Steel Casting Co., 255 F.2d 284, and N.L.R.B. v. Charlie Toppino & Sons Inc., 358 F.2d 94. The Union's Counsel argues in his brief, that the gross backpay of Paul Allen should be measured by the actual earnings of Arthur Cook; i.e., for a strict "counterpart" formula. It was Cook who obtained the precise job which was denied to Paul Allen. There is no evidence that Cook was discharged or that he voluntarily quit. It must be assumed , therefore, that he was laid off for lack of work. Seniority is not recognized in the union contract and is not observed in practice in the construction industry. In any layoff for lack of work, the first to be let go would be Paul Allen, who is an elderly man and was close to retirement. In any layoff for lack of work, the man 930 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD certain to be retained would be McGuigan , who was a permanent employee of Golden State and who worked on other Golden State jobs before, during, and after the completion of the American Home Product Vacaville Construction project. The Union 's theory was not stated in its Answer which, to that extent , fails to meet the requirement of Section 102.54 of the Board' s Rule that respondent shall, "specifically state the basis for his disagreement , setting forth in detail his position as to the applicable premises . . ." The Union's counsel , though reminded of his obligation under the Board' s rule, did not enunciate his "counterpart" theory at the supplemental hearing , nor did he tender evidence in support thereof (other than the testimony of Paul Allen that he is 71 years old and presently retired). D. Conclusions I find that the formula adopted in the Amended Specification is reasonably designed to obtain as close an approximation as possible of the amount of backpay which should be awarded to Paul Allen, and that the method selected is not, in the circumstances involved, either arbitrary or unreasonable .' The General Counsel was not obliged to establish the identity of any particular replacement or any exact equivalence of jobs or skills. The General Counsel has established that during the backpay period designated , millwright work was being performed, and this is prima facie evidence that, but for the discrimination , Paul Allen would have been retained.' Once the fact of discrimination has been found, the respondent in a backpay proceeding , if he asserts that the discriminatee would have been separated at some later date, must sustain the burden of proof.' Since the Union has tendered no evidence controverting either the figures in the Amended Specification or the premises on which they are based, I find that the Amended Specification correctly states the amount of backpay which the Union is required to pay to Paul Allen. Upon the entire record herein I find that the Union's obligations to the following named employees will be discharged by the payment to each of the sum or sums set forth opposite each respective name: Paul C. Allen $694.00 plus 6% interest from Sept. 30, 1965 Paul C. Allen $394.00 plus 6% interest from Dec. 31, 1965 Paul C. Allen $476.00 plus 6% interest from Mar. 31, 1966 Richard A. Allen $162.00 plus 6% interest from Sept. 30, 1965 Dick J. Look $47.00 plus 6% interest from Sept. 30, 1965 Dick J. Look $289.00 plus 6% interest from Dec. 31, 1965 RECOMMENDED ORDER It is recommended that the Board adopt these findings and conclusions and order Carpenters Union Local 180, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, AFL-CIO to pay the sums indicated. 'N.L R.B. v Brown & Root , Inc, 311 F.2d 447, 452 (C.A. 8) 'Flora and Argur Construction Company, 149 NLRB 583. 'N L R B. v. Biscayne Television Corp., 337 F.2d 267, 268 (C.A 5), N L.R.B. v. Mastro Plastics Corp., 354 F 2d 170, 175-176 (C.A 2); Buncher Company v. N.L.R.B. 316 F.2d 928 (C.A 3); Opinion on Rehearing January 20, 1969. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation