Century Electric Motor Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsAug 23, 1971192 N.L.R.B. 941 (N.L.R.B. 1971) Copy Citation CENTURY ELECTRIC MOTOR CO. 941 Century Electric Motor Company and International `Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, and its Local 768, AFL-CIO- CLC. Case 8-CA- 5778 August 23, 1971 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MILLER AND MEMBERS BROWN AND, JENKINS On May 21, 1971, Trial Examiner Alba B. Martin issued his Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that the Respondent had not engaged in the unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint and recommending that the complaint be dismissed in its entirety, as set forth in the attached Trial Examiner's Decision. Thereafter, the Charging Party filed exceptions, to. -the ' Trial Examiner's Decision and a supporting brief, and the Respondent filed an answering brief. - Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a ' three- member panel. The Board has, reviwed the rulings of the Trial Examiner made at, the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Trial Examiner's Decision, the exceptions and .briefs, and the =entire record in the case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner.' filed by the Union on March 6, 1970, and a complaint issued December 4, 1970 ,1 involves whether Respondent violated Section 8(aX5) and (1) of the Act2 by bargaining in bad faith with a closed mind before withholding the 1969 Christmas bonus and by refusing the Union's request for financial information . After the hearing excellent briefs were filed by the General Counsel , Respondent, and. the Union, all of which have been duly considered.3 During the hearing I reserved decision on Respondent's motions to dismiss the complaint. I hereby decide them in accordance with the findings and conclusions herein 4 Upon the entire record and my observation of the witnesses, I hereby make the following: FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS 1. THE BUSINESS OF RESPONDENT Respondent, Century Electric Motor Company, an Ohio corporation with its principal office and place of business in St . Louis, Missouri, is engaged in the manufacture and We of electrical motors. During the year prior to the issuance of the complaint, in the course and conduct of its business operations-at its Gettysburgh, Ohio, plant, which alone is involved in this proceeding, it shipped products valued in excess of $50,000 directly from said plant to points outside the,State of Ohio . Respondent admitted and I find that at all times material herein Respondent was and is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, and its Local 768, AFL-CIO-CLC, herein called the Union, is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. HL THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations, Board hereby orders, that the complaint herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed in its entirety. 3 In adopting the TniafExaminer's Decision with respect to the Union's request for financial data, we rely solely on the fact that such request occurred substantially rafter the Employer had satisfied his statutory obligation to,bargain as to that issue. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE ALBA B. MARTIN, Trial Examiner: This case , heard at Greenville, Ohio , on March 4 , 1971 , pursuant to a charge i The Regional Director refused to issue complaint on April 23, 1970. The General Counsel - sustained the Union's appeal to this refusal on November 18, 1970,, and the Regional Director then issued the complaint. 2 "The Act" refers to, the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, 29 U.S.C. Sec, 151, et seq. 3 Certain obvious errors appear in the transcript of the hearing. These errors are hereby corrected as follows: P. 46, 1. 7, change "the Central" to A. Background Facts For about 10 years Respondent's predecessor in the operation of the Gettysburg plant, Tait Manufacturing Company, gave the employees at that plant,a Christmas bonus . Respondent purchased the plant in about June 1967, and gave the employees a Christmas bonus in December 1967. Respondent withheld the 1968-bonus, and on August 12, 1969, Trial Examiner Stanley N. Ohlbaum found that it did so unilaterally in violation of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. Judge, Ohlbaum's Decision was upheld by the Board on February 3,1970 (180 NLRB' No. 174). This case is now before the Court of Appeals for the Eighth. Circuit upon Respondent's petition for review (Civil Action No. 20,636). Respondent's actions in connection with its nonpayment of the 1969 Christmas bonus are under scrutiny herein . Respondent paid its employees a "Century"; p. 50,1.3, change "Central" to "Century"; p. 110, change lines 2 and 3 so they will read , "The reason he refused to issue a complaint is in the record." 4 At p. 126 of the transcript of-the hearing I erroneously received in evidence G. C. Exh. 11. At p. 154 the General Counsel stated he did "not wish to offer G. C. Exh ., 11. The discussion on the record indicated the reasons for this. I hereby correct my error by rejecting G. C. Exh. 11. 192 NLRB No. 144 942 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL -LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 1970 Christmas, bonus. - Industrial Relations Director Muenster credibly, testified that Respondent paid the 1970 bonus for several reasons including the fact that the Union was "filing charges against us every year:' The -Union was certified September 30, 1968. Respon- dent and the Union are parties to a, collective-bargaining agreement covering the Gettsburg plant, effective from November 22, 1968, through November 22, 1971. Respon- dent and the Union= hold -regular monthly .meetings with each, other. Respondent's Director, of Industrial Relations, William H. Muenster, credibly testified that on the whole Respondent's relations with the Union have been "all right." During the December 2, 1969,,bargaining meeting the Union's president, Berton, told Muenster that the employees at the Gettysburg plant "are a good group of people . . . they are not like some groups that give the Company heck at the-union meetings." B. The December 2 Meeting: Bargaining in Good Faith or in Bad Faith with a Closed Mind The parties held only one meeting concerning the 1969 Christmas' bonus, the meeting of December 2, 1969.5 The evidence on the subject is convincing that this meeting resulted' from an initiative taken by Industrial Relations Director Muenster. The meeting lasted around 2 hours. The meeting opened with discussions and language agreed upon concerning amending the existing pension plan covering the employees. 1here was no claim or proof that on this subject the Company bargained in bad faith with the Union. Then the discussion turned to the main topic for which the meeting had been set up, whether Respondent should pay'or not pay the 1969 Christmas bonus. According to the credited testimony of Industrial Relations Director Muenster, who by, his demeanor and his testimony impressed me as an honest and'credible witness, Muenster told the union representatives that the Company was "desirous of foregoing" the Christmas bonus that year. In support of this desire, Muenster stated that there had been substantial price rises in copper and steel, that for the Gettysburg ' plant `the Company needed to purchase new machinery ^ and a truck and repair old machinery. He reminded the union representatives that he had told-them during the negotiation of their contract that when the Company had acquired the Gettysburg plant it was a marginal operation and that the Company wanted to "make a go of it.", " Credible oral and written, "testimony introduced by Respondent showed' factual' support for' the position Muenster took with the Union. This testimony showed that gross sales from ,the plant increased in 1969 and 1970 over the-, previous year but' that, according to the credited testimony of Plant Manager Dunaway, profit from the plant was "in the red" in 1968 and 1969 and "in the black" in 1970. Respondent's testimony showed also that Respon- dent spent $71,670 in 1970 for repairs and new machinery °5' An appropriate unit consists of all production and maintenance employees including group leaders employed by Respondent at the Gettysburg plant , but excluding all office clerical employees, plant clerical employees, technical employees, watchmen, guards, professional, and all other employees and supervisors as defined in the Act. This is the unit for as against $12,130 in 1969. Dunaway credibly testified that gross sales from the plant in 1969 ' were down in, October and November from September, and that in December "it really looked bad and it turned`outto bebad" He stated, "Things were tight, tighter than must people knew at that time. For morale reasons I really didn't like to let it be known around too much." Members of the union negotiating committee corrobo- rated Muenster's testimony concerning-his references to the high cost of materials and,the necessity of spending money -on new' machinery and improving the, old. They also quoted him as referring to the highly competitive business they were in, as referring several times to the plant's "marginal profit operation," and as saying business was not up to their expectations that year. On the entire record I credit this testimony. The president of Local.768, Charles B. Berton, testified that Muenster said at this meeting that Respondent was not obligated to pay the bonus, and that "the Company was in a financial position where the, bonus could not be paid." Union Committeeman Marinich's'version of this alleged statement was that Muensters'aid "he didn't think that the Company, was obligated to pay the Christmas bonus because it was not in written form' in this contract and, at the, time it would be difficult to pay, several things, and in a 2 1f2 hour meeting, why-" Union Committeeman Eberwein testified Muenster said "that , the Company wasn't going to pay the Christmas bonus this year as it had in the past." The reason he allegedly gave was "marginal profit" and "that they didn't feel they could pay the Christmas bonus." Muenster credibly denied most -of--this testimony. He, denied saying the Company was, not in' a financial position to pay the bonus. He denied saying the Company was not obligated to pay the bonus because it was'-not. in the contract. He denied saying the Company was not,going to pay the bonus. Of these four witnesses Muenster was the only one who by his demeanor and his testimony was convincing that he clearly remembered what he said at this meeting and was able correctly to articulate it. He was a strong and sure witness, and a credible one. Berton was not sure of his testimony and he sometimes resorted to the phrase, "I think" when he was uncertain. On these controversial matters Marinich and Eberwein did not seem to me to be as certain of their testimony as Muenster was of his. Of these four, by their demeanor and in all, their testimony Muenster impressed me as the most credible , witness, and I credit his denials. After Muenster said the Company wished to forego, the bonus that year, Berton asked if the , Company was eliminating it entirely. Muenster replied in the negative and restated that the Company wished to forego it in 1969 and that the Company was. here to bargain about the 1969 bonus. Early in the meeting Berton proposed'three alternative ways, of paying the bonus, each of which, according, to Muenster's credited testimony, would have cost the Company as much as the bonus. Muenster credibly which the Union was certified by the Regional Director and the unit covered by the collective -bargaining Agreement. Th6-Boird found this unit toy be appropriate in can 180 NLRB No. 74. This was the unit for which the parties were bargaining on December 2,1969. CENTURY ELECTRIC MOTOR CO. testified that if the Union had suggested something the Company considered economically feasible, the Company would have entertained it. In view of this credible testimony and upon the entire record I do not credit Berton's testimony that after Berton presented his alterna- tives Muenster stated "he felt as though they [of the Company] just were not in the frame of mind even of considering the Christmas bonus." In this connection I note that on direct -examination Berton testified that following Berton's alternative proposals Muenster said nothing except to ask for a caucus. Not until redirect examination did Berton quote Muenster as stating the above. Berton's three alternatives were that the payment of the -bonus- could, be made in the form of a 3-cents-an-hour wage increase , that the bonus could be paid in quarterly installments, or in the form of profit sharing at the end of the` year. Muenster replied that giving a wage increase on an-hourly basis would be an increase in the middle of the contract and would mean opening the contract which the Company,did not wish- to do. He also said this would increase the Company's costs, which it didn't want to do. He also rejected the suggestion of quarterly payments. Muenster said that profit sharing worked well when there were good profits, but that when it "goes in reverse" it creates a morale problem. He said some companies he knew had expressed this point of view. The parties discussed employee morale at some length. To meet the Union's concern that there would be a morale problem -if the bonus was not paid that year, after a caucus Respondent suggested a ham or turkey to each employee in lieu of the bonus.; Muenster credibly testified that the idea of a turkey arose between him and Dunaway during the caucus and that prior to that he had had no discussion with anybody concerning giving a ham or turkey. Although the union negotiators were not warm to this substitute, Berton agreed to submit, the matter to the meeting of the union members scheduled for that afternoon and to let Respon- dent know their reaction. He did this and the union members turned down the offer and Berton so informed Plant Manager Dunaway over the telephone. At the December 2 meeting the Union uttered no hint that it questioned the accuracy or truthfulness of the reasons Muenster gave for wishing to forego the bonus that year: The rise in the cost of materials, the need for new machinery and refurbishing the old, the highly competitive nature of the business, and the fact that the Company had bought a marginal operation and wanted to make a go of it. At the meeting the Union did not request any information or the right to inspect any records of the Company to test the accuracy of Muenster's statements. Berton and one member of the Union's negotiating committee, Marinich, testified that at the meeting Berton requested that a date be set for another bargaining meeting on the bonus and the Company did not set a date. Upon the preponderance of the evidence in the entire record I do not credit this testimony. It was contradicted by another member of the Union's committee, Eberwein, who was also called as a witness by the General Counsel, who testified that his pretrial affidavit was correct where it said, "I do 943 not think that Berton asked for another bargaining meeting on the Christmas bonus at that meeting." Berton's unconvincing testimony on this subject was that "I think before we left the meeting of December 2 ... that I made a statement that . . . I thought that it should be reconsidered . . . ." Then he testified that "I think in one of my letters to Mr. Muenster I stated that-we should continue this here discussion .... " Neither of his two letters in evidence, dated December 8, 1969, and January 7, 1970, expressed any such thought, and the record contains no suggestion he wrote any other letters. When he was confronted with his two letters on cross-examination, Berton changed 'his ground and testified that on'December 2 or 3 he asked Muenster or Dunaway to' meet again. Both Muenster and Dunaway credibly testified that at the December 2 meeting Berton did not request the Company to meet with 'them again to discuss the bonus. Muenster testified that Berton did not ask that any date be set or suggest any tentative date. The parties knew that right after, this meeting the Union was having its monthly meeting. Berton said he would present Respondent's offer of a ham or turkey to the employees at the union meeting and asked if Muenster wanted to meet again that evening. Muenster replied that he could not, that he was leaving for St. Louis and had another obligation. Berton said he would get in touch with Dunaway. This was the only reference in thee session to meeting again. The following day, December 3, Berton telephoned Dunaway and told him the employees had turned down the Christmas turkey as a substitute for a bonus and that he was sorry. Dunaway ' said he was sorry too, and that he would notify Muenster. Dunaway credibly testified that Berton said nothing about a further meeting to discuss the bonus. General Counsel's witness, Paul Marinich, testified that normally the regular monthly union meeting, of union members employed at the plant was held on the Tuesday following the first Monday, and that the regular monthly meeting between the Union and the Company occurred the following Thursday. In December 1969 the union meeting was held on December, 2 and the union-company meeting would normally have occurred on, December 4. The record is silent as to whether this, December 4 meeting was held, and there was no showing that at any such meeting there was any further discussion of the bonus or any talk of requesting information from Respondent. On December 8, 1969 Berton wrote Muenster as follows: Having attended the Union meeting December 2, 1969, of the membership of the Century Electric Motor unit, a full discussion was held concerning the meeting with management together ,with the Shop Committee. There is a strong feeling that the year 1969 has been the best year in history of the Gettysburg plant. Also there is a strong feeling that a turkey is- a very poor supplements for the Christmas bonus. I consequently have no other alternative than to say that a Christmas bonus should be paid as it has been in past years. I have suggested different methods of 6 Berton testified "supplement" was intended to be "substitute." DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD payment such as quarterly payments, a profit sharing plan, etc. I think -the majority, of your employees' morale and feeling towards the Company will be revivedif in some manner this Christmas bonus can be continued. I am asking again that you give this matter your immediate attention for reconsideration. Of note is that although this letter requested the Company to reconsider the matter, it did not request another meeting to discuss the bonus. Muenster replied to Berton's letter on December 17, 1969,7 as follows: On December 2, 1969, we met with you to bargain about the Christmas Bonus or,its possible termination. I would note, too, that the Company and the Union reached agreement on the amendment to the Pension Plan during that December 2, meeting. We went on to explain the unsatisfactory, profit position of the plant along with the need to purchase new equipment and refurbish some of the old. It is surprising, indeed, in light of the circumstances, that you should choose to bargain"uphill. " You started from the top and went up, rather than seek realistic settlement. Your, suggestions , such as quarterly payments, profit sharing plan, or a general wage increase, would have'no relation to the Company's purpose or intent in giving a Christmas Season ' gift, or as a sign of good will towards its employees. Rather, your suggestion would "supplement" (add to) as your letter indicates, and this would lock the Company in to mid-contract, term wage increase . This is ' disheartening, especially when you know the Company is struggling ' hard to make a success of the Gettysburg operation. I had hoped that you could see your way clear to a more reasonable position than upgrading the Christmas bonus. From your letter of December 8, 1969, I can only understand that the Union's position is that you simply want the Company to pay a Christmas Bonus, anyway, regardless of circumstances. However, your letter is not clear on whether or not you are opposed' to our December 2 suggestion that the Company give a gift of a Christmas Turkey to each- employee as a Christmas Season gesture of sincere-good will. The Company does not feel that a ,Christmas Bonus, this year, is either appropriate or justifiable. The Company is, however, very much interested in main- taining good employee morale, and is appreciative of the efforts and cooperation by the Gettysburg employ- ees during 1969. Accordingly, we have decided to give each employee a Turkey as a Christmas gift from the Company. This Christmas gift may or may not be repeated in future years, and is not to be construed as a new form of remuneration, or as a new term or condition of employment. Best Wishes to you and your family this Christmas Season. r Berton testified that mad from St. Louis to his office in Dayton, Ohio, is sometimes slow and that this letter, mailed on Wednesday; December 17, may not have reached his offi:- until Monday or Tuesday, December 22 or On December 19 Respondent.wrote an appreciative, note to each employee saying that Respondent, would give -a turkey to each employee . at, the end; of the, shift on December 23. On December 23 it,.did this, and all employees but two accepted the turkeys. C. Refusal of Financial Information On January 7, 1970, inwhat was admittedly the Union's first request for financial information, Berton wrote Muenster as follows, in pertinent part: During our meeting on December 2, 1969 concerning the Christmas bonus, you indicated that the Company could not afford to pay the Christmas bonus because' of unsatisfactory profits at the Gettysburg Plant during 1969. You said that the bonus could - not - be paid because the Gettysburg operation was a marginal profit operation. Employees who have been employed at the Gettysburg Plant for many years inform me that the Gettysburg operation, from a production -standpoint, , should, be showing increased profits for 1969, as compared with previous years. Under the circumstances set forth above, I request the following: -I request permission for a qualified expert from the International of'the IUE and me to check the financial books and records as, they pertain to the Gettysburg operation, in order to ascertain whether the Company's plea of poverty is supported,, by the financial ^ records previously mentioned. I request the opportunity to check the financial records for the years 1967, 1968, and -1969 in Gettysburg, Ohio, atnthe plant. Please' advise the date when a representative of the ,International of the IUE and I check the aforemen- tioned books and records. Muenster replied to Berton's request on February 3, 1970, as follows, in pertinent, part: This letter, is in response to your recent letter by which you are apparently renewing your i11,-disguised cam- paign of harassment of this Company. From your letter, I was frankly amazed to see the extent to,which you are apparently willing to mis-state and/or simply ignore the actual facts in order to serve your own ends. First of all, with respect to the issue of, the so-called "Christmas Bonus," at no time during my-meeting with you on December 2,1969, .or at any other time before or since that date, did -I or any representative of the Century' Electric Motor Co. ever state or imply that the Company "could not afford to pay the Christmas Bonus.,, Secondly, again, contrary to the self-serving allegations of your January 7, 1970 letter, I did not state on December 2, "that the bonus could not be paid because the Gettysburg operation was a marginal profit operation." Thirdly, during that meeting I did .not claim that the Gettysburg plant had "lost money" during calendar year '1969. During our meeting on December 2,1969, I did point 23. He testified his secretary did not stamp it'"in. He testified that at times mail from at . Louis arrives sooner. I-find this testimony unconvincing as to when the December 17 letter arrived. CENTURY ELECTRIC MOTOR CO. 945 out to you and your committee that 1969 sales of Gettysburg plant products had been substantially less than the Company had planned for and expected them to be during last year . I also pointed out that the costs to the Company for copper, steel and other materials purchased by the Company nevertheless have contin- ued to increase substantially . I then called attention to the fact that much= of the machinery and equipment in the Gettysburg plant was in need of repair or replacement. In that connection I explained to you that it was the Company's policy that the costs of repairing equipment or purchasing new equipment should come out of the profits generated by the plant for which modernization or repair expenditures were required and that this should have top priority for the Gettys- burg plant. I then explained that as neither the 1969 business or profits from the Gettysburg plant operation had satisfactorily met the Company's expectations and in view of the serious need for repair and moderniza- tion of the Gettysburg plant and equipment, the Company did not feel that a bonus or alternative form of mid-contract wage increase such as you then proposed was justified or warranted. In short, it was and still is the Company's position that any profits produced by our Gettysburg plant should be applied toward repairs and improvements needed to make that operation more successful in the future rather than to be distributed as bonuses or additional wage increases such as you were demanding . This is certainly no "plea of poverty." During our meeting on December 2, 1969 , I also made it clear to you that the Company was certainly very desirous of maintaining good employee morale, and to meet your objection that morale would suffer if no Christmas bonus were to be paid in 1969, I offered to have the Company give turkeys to each of our employees as a Christmas gift. At that time, you agreed to consider my Christmas turkey gift offer and to take the matter up with your full committee. I in turn said that I would discuss with the Company's management your various proposals for alternative type wage increases or wage supplements. By a very ambiguous letter to me dated December 8, 1969, you referred to my offer to supply a turkey to each employee as "a very poor supplement for the Christmas Bonus," and then repeated your demands of December 2, either that a Christmas Bonus be paid or that the Company agree to a mid-contract term wage increase in some form. I then replied by letter to you dated December 17, 1969, in which I advised you that your alternative demands for various types of mid-contract term wage increases were not acceptable to the Company, but that the Company had decided to give each employee a Christmas turkey as I had offered to do on December 2, in lieu of a Christmas Bonus. Since the Company heard nothing further from you or your union, such turkeys were in fact distributed to and accepted by the Gettysburg employees the following week. Under these circumstances, your attempt at this late date to now raise a question concerning the Company's profit picture as allegedly pertinent to the Christmas Bonus - Christmas turkey issue is certainly untimely. Secondly, even if you had made a timely request, for the reasons set forth , there is no valid basis in fact to justify your request to engage in the kind of "fishing expedition" you demand, since this Company at no time made any such "plea of poverty" as you erroneously allege. Accordingly, your request to see all Company financial books and records for a three-year period obviously constitutes only another form of harrassment by you and your union , and it is denied. As has been seen above, the Union filed the charge on March 6, 1970, after all of the above had transpired. D. Conclusions Upon the preponderance of the credible evidence I conclude that in its bargaining with the Union concerning the bonus and in its refusal to let the Union inspect its books and records Respondent did not violate the Act. In the earlier case Judge Ohlbaum's decision directing Respondent to bargain in good faith with the Union concerning any proposed change in the "Christmas bonus system" was issued on August 12, 1969 . I find credible Muenster's testimony that Respondent decided to bargain with the Union concerning the 1969 bonus, even though Respondent is challenging the Ohlbaum and Board Decisions in the court . Avoiding future litigation by initiating bargaining talks does not say to me that Respondent entered the talks with a closed mind. At the only bargaining session on the subject, initiated by it, Respondent stated its desire to forego payment of the bonus that year and gave its economic reasons behind the desire, which were not questioned by the Union and which had bases in fact. The Union did not question the correctness of Respondent's statements concerning its increased costs and need for new and refurbished machin- ery at the Gettysburg plant. The Union did not ask to check the Company's books. Respondent did not claim poverty or inability to pay but was concerned with the proper allocation, by its lights, of the available funds. In the long meeting Respondent listened to and considered the Union's counterproposals, none of which would have relieved the pressure on costs which Respondent was seeking, and gave its reasons for rejecting them. Convinced from the long discussion that foregoing the bonus might cause a morale problem, Respondent counter-offered a Christmas ham or turkey to each employee in lieu of the bonus. This idea arose to Respondent during its caucus, a fact which tends to show good-faith bargaining. The Union submitted the question that afternoon to a meeting of the plant's union members and promptly informed Respon- dent that they had rejected the offer. Thus at this point Respondent had presented two propositions and the Union had rejected them both. I find on all the evidence that Respondent was bargaining in good faith. In his letter of December 8, 6 days after the meeting, the Union's president wrote Respondent that "I . . . have no other alternative than to say that a Christmas bonus should be paid . . . I have suggested different methods of payment such as quarterly payments, a profit-sharing plan, etc. . . . I am asking again that you give this matter your 946 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD immediate attention for reconsideration." Of note is that Berton did not ask for another meeting and did not state or hint that the Union had any further proposals to suggest. In fact the purport of the letter was that the Union had no more ideas or proposals and that its only and final position was that the bonus should be paid. At this point the Union dropped the matter. It did not communicate further with Respondent about the bonus until January 7, a month later. At this point the negotiations on the subject of the bonus were at an impasse, Respondent's position being 'that it desired not to- pay it, the Union's position being that Respondent should pay it. The issue had been discussed at length at a long meeting called primarily to discuss it, and Respondent had negotiated "at least to the extent appropriate to the gravity of the situation." (See Simpson Lee Paper Company, 186 NLRB No. 109.) In his December 17 letter Muenster informed the Union well in advance of December 23 that the Company was going to give each employee a turkey. In addition, around December 16 Dunaway told Union Negotiator Marinich that "we have been authorized to give a Christmas turkey. " On December 19 Respondent gave each employee a written announcement that it would present each employee with a turkey on December 23. It is a fair inference, which I reach, that with all this communication, word reached the Union well in advance of December 23 that the Company was going to give the turkeys. Remaining silent, the Union took no steps to convene another meeting with the Company on the subject of the bonus, to make other proposals, or otherwise to break the deadlock . Under all the circumstances Respondent had bargained in good faith to impasse on the subject of bonus and was free to withhold it and to give the turkeys in lieu of it. There is, a timeliness about bargaining for a Christmas bonus. When, as, here, the matter was first discussed extensively on December 2, in the absence of extenuating circumstances , the Union should have requested any information it wished much sooner than 2 weeks after Christmas. It could have requested it on December-4 if the regular union-company monthly meeting , was -held that day. It could have made its request for information any time between December 2 and December 25, a matter bf 23 days. Instead its request came 2 weeks lacking I day after Christmas . Under all the circumstances I hold that its request was made too late. Further, there was no valid basis upon which the Union's request was justified. As Muenster's letter of February 3 correctly stated, the Company had not claimed poverty or inability to pay the bonus. Upon the preponderance of the evidence in the entii4e record considered as a whole I find and hold that Respondent did not violate the Act in its bargaining concerning and withholding of the 1969 Christmas bonus, and in its refusal of information to the Union. Accordingly this is my recommended: ORDER The complaint is dismissed in its entirety. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation