Continental Tire and Rubber Co., Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsNov 14, 1955114 N.L.R.B. 982 (N.L.R.B. 1955) Copy Citation 982 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Continental - Tire and Rubber Company, Inc. and United Rubber Cork , Linoleum & Plastic Workers of America , CIO, Petitioner. Case No. 10-RC-2913. November 14,1955 SECOND SUPPLEMENTAL DECISION AND ORDER On December 22, 1954, the Board issued its Decision and Direction of Election 1 pursuant to which an election was held on January 14, 1955, among the employees in the unit found appropriate. The tally of ballots cast at this election showed that 6 ballots were cast for, and 2 against, the Petitioner. As 13 ballots were challenged, a number sufficient to affect the results of the election, the Regional Director in- vestigated the issues raised by the challenges and on February 15, 1955, issued his report recommending that challenges to 9 of the ballots be sustained and that the challenges to the remaining 4 be overruled and these ballots be opened and counted. To this report the Petitioner filed timely exceptions. Upon consideration of the report and the exceptions, the Board adopted the Regional Director's recommenda- tions, and on April 29, 1955, issued its Supplemental Decision and Di- rection,2 ordering the opening and counting of the four challenged ballots. The Regional Director accordingly caused these ballots to be opened and counted, and on May 5, 1955, issued a revised tally of ballots showing that of the 12 valid ballots 6 had been cast for, and 6 against, the Petitioner. Thereafter, on May 11, 1955, the Regional Director issued a certification of results, based upon the revised tally, showing that the Petitioner had failed to receive a majority of the valid votes cast in the election. On August 8, 1955, the Petitioner filed a "Request for Allowance of Filing of Exceptions to Regional Director's Report on Challenged Ballots" and, in support thereof, a copy of a printed pamphlet pur- porting to be a prospectus for the sale of stock issued by the Employer, which the Petitioner avers calve into its hands subsequent to the is- suance of the revised tally of ballots in this proceeding. This pam- phlet lists the names of individuals said to be directors of the Em- ployer corporation, including therein the names of Ray Pressley and Milton D. Roth, whose challenged ballots were among those opened and counted as reported in the revised tally. It further denominates Pressley as superintendent. The Petitioner requests that on the basis of this evidence the Board should now find that, as of the time of the election, these two individuals were representatives of manage- ment, and should declare their ballots to have been null and void. The Board has considered the Petitioner's motion, the additional evidence it seeks to adduce in this proceeding, and the entire record in 1 Not reported in printed volumes of Board Decisions and Orders. a 112 NLRB 557. 114 NLRB No. 96. CONTINENTAL TIRE AND RUBBER COMPANY, INC. 983, the case. Upon consideration, the motion is hereby denied. The record discloses that at the original hearing,in this case,' the Petition-, er's representative raised a question concerning the supervisory status and unit inclusion of several individuals, including Pressley and Roth whose ballots the Petitioner now seeks again to place in question, and pursued this issue by cross-examination of the management representa- tive called as a witness by the Board. Following this evidence, and further testimony developed by the Employer's representative at the hearing,4 the Petitioners representative indicated his desire not to pursue the matter further, and stated his agreement with the Em- ployer's request that the individuals be included in the unit, in the following terms : I don't want to delay the matter to the point of us getting into a controversy over the unit. I realize that these stockholders are not apt to vote for our union, but if the company insists that these three people be allowed to vote, all of them being stockholders, I'll go along with that understanding, that I have three votes against me, in order to expedite this matter and get the order of an election that much quicker. Again, upon completion of the testimony relating to the composition of the unit, the Petitioner's representative specifically indicated his agreement to inclusion of Pressley and Roth in the unit. However, despite its explicit agreement to the inclusion of these employees, the Petitioner, as above set forth, challenged their ballots at the election. As the result of his investigation of these challenges, the Regional Director reported that the Petitioner had then submitted some evidence at variance with that adduced at the hearing upon which the Board had based its decision. He recommended, however, that in the light of the Petitioner's specific agreement, above described, and its election to withhold available evidence until after the election, the Board should, in the interest of an orderly disposition of the issues, adhere to its decision upon the record of the hearing. Thereafter,. upon consideration of the entire record, including the Petitioner's agreement at the hearing and the additional evidence disclosed by the Regional Director's investigation, the Board concluded that there was insufficient reason to void its original finding, and affirmed the Re- gional Director's report. It is apparent that, as the Petitioner has already once filed timely exceptions to the Regional Director's report on challenged ballots, its 3Held on November 15 following the filing of the petition on October 15, 1954. 4 Upon the basis of this testimony , and further testimony subsequently elicited by the hearing officer , the Board found that Pressley, Roth, and one other employee, who together* owned 18 percent of the Employer' s stock , were not in fact supervisors within the meaning of the Act Accordingly, as the mere ownership of a minor amount of stock was not in itself sufficient to require their exclusion , the Board included them in the unit and per-, witted them to vote in the election. 984 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL. LABOR RELATIONS BOARD present request' is in substance a motion that the Board reconsider its decision on the challenges as to these two individuals. As more fully set forth above, the Board, in the course of its regular procedure, has twice considered and determined the issue as to the status of these individuals-once upon the record of the original hearing, and again upon challenges to their ballots.5 Under all the circumstances, we are not persuaded that the Petitioner's motion presents sufficient reason for us now to reopen and relitigate these issues.6 [The Board denied the motion.] MEMBER MUItDOCK, dissenting : I disagree with my colleagues' conclusion that Petitioner's motion does not present sufficient reason for the Board to reconsider its earlier adoption of the Regional Director's report on challenged ballots which overruled challenges to the ballots of Pressley and Roth and sustained their right to vote in the election which the Petitioner lost. It seems clear to me that in the light of the newly discovered evidence presented in Petitioner's motion the only course open to us is to direct a full hear- ing on the supervisory status of these individuals. To deny the motion and do nothing in the face of these new facts is to leave unremedied what would now appear to be a successful fraud under which the, rights of the majority of the rank-and-file employees of this Employer to have a collective-bargaining representative have been thwarted be- cause of the decisive votes of two directors of the corporation who were falsely represented to be ordinary employees and thus permitted to vote. The supervisory status of Pressley and Roth was not fully litigated at the original hearing in this case. , Instead, upon the insistence of the Employer that they were eligible to vote, on the evidence of its witnesses, the Petitioner agreed to their inclusion in the unit in order to expedite the proceeding. On the basis of this agreement, and'the limited evidence at the hearing, the Board included them in, the unit. Although noting that they were stockholders, the Board's decision then stated, "As the record shows that they have no effective 5 We have considered the Worth Food Markets and New York Shipping Association eases cited by our dissenting colleague , but do not regard the principle of those decisions as requiring a reopening here In neither of those cases was it sought to have the Board reopen and reconsider the issue of challenged ballots by request filed after the Board had made its determination of such challenges and a certification of the results of the election had been issued. The latter is the posture of the case before us here. 6 We note, inter alla, that the "Offering Circular " for the sale of stock upon which the' Petitioner 's motion is solely based , is dated as of May IT, 1955, some 4 months after the election in this case. Although Ray Pressley is therein described as plant superintendent, the record was undisputed as of the time of the hearing that not Ray Pressley but his brother William Pressley occupied this position The Petitioner has offered no evidence to show that the circular , assuming that it may correctly describe the status of the questioned individuals as of the date of its issue , is also necessarily indicative of their status as of the earlier date of the election. CONTINENTAL TIRE AND RUBBER COMPANY, INC._ 985 voice in determining corporate policy, we shall include them and per-, mit them to vote in the election." On the subsequent investigation of the challenges to their ballots- the Regional Director's report stated, that, evidence had been submitted by the Petitioner in conflict with the Employer's testimony at the hearing that- Roth had no authority except to carry out in a routine fashion President William Pressley's orders when the latter was absent_ from the ,plant, and_ in conflict with the testimony, that Ray Pressley was only a diemaker_ and mechanic. The Regional Director did not undertake to resolve credibility on conflicting evidence as to the supervisory authority ' of Roth, and Pressley, but pointed out that Petitioner's evidence presented to him was not newly discovered, that it had agreed at the hearing to their inclusion in the unit, and that under the circumstances the -Petitioner should be bound by the record made at the hearing and the challenges to their ballots should be overruled. The Board adopted the Regional Director's report. Now, however, the -Petitioler has submitted newly discovered evidence in the form of a prospectus for the sale of $200,000 of stock, issued by the Employer itself,? which prospectus lists Pressley as both a director of the Employer and plant superintendent, and lists Roth as both a director and inventory control manager. Such evi- dence, which was not disclosed either at the hearing or by the 'Regional Director's investigation of the challenges, appears to be prima facie evidence that Pressley and Roth were supervisors as defined in the Act .8 At the very least, as directors of the corporation they would have an "effective voice in determining corporate policy," the absence of such a voice on the evidence in the original record being one of the reasons they were permitted to vote in the direction of election.9 Despite an original stipulation of the parties to include certain individuals in the unit, the Board has held that it is necessary to reopen a record in a case for further evidence even after a hearing and an election, where newly discovered evidence indicates that such individuals are supervisors within the meaning of the, Act, because the Board is precluded under the Act from finding that such indi- viduals are employees eligible to vote in an election.10 Moreover, 7 The prospectus is dated May 17, 1955, a date subsequent to all prior proceedings herein ; and thus there can be no question that it is newly discovered evidence. 8I note too, as the majority does, that the prospectus is dated some 4 months after the election in this case , and is therefore not necessarily indicative of the status of Pressley and Roth at the time of the election. However, it seems very unlikely that rank-and-file employees become director-plant superintendent and director -inventory control manager, respectively, of the Employer in the short space of only 4 months. In any event, I believe that the prospectus listings of Pressley and, Roth are sufficiently close in time to the election to constitute prima facie evidence that their status was the same at the time of the election , and therefore that for the reasons set forth below the record should be reopened for a determination of this issue. 9It may be noted that the prospectus further shows that Pressley owns more stock than his brother, William Pressley , who is president. 10 Worth Food Market Stores, Inc., d/b/a Worth Food Markets, 103 NLRB 259. 986 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD the Board has held that where under similar circumstances there is prima facie evidence of supervisory authority, the Board has no alternative but to direct a hearing to resolve this issue, despite a spe- cific agreement to include such persons in the unit, because supervisors are expressly excluded from the coverage of the Act, and therefore a serious issue is raised which the Board cannot obviate because of technical, procedural, or other considerations.ll It is clear, therefore, under this Board precedent, that despite the original agreement of the Petitioner to include Pressley and Roth in the unit, and despite any other technical or procedural considerations,12 the newly discovered prima facie evidence submitted by the Petitioner requires the Board to reopen the record for further evidence on the supervisory status of Pressley and Roth, and if such evidence reveals that they were in fact supervisors or directors of the corporation prior to the election to sustain the challenges to their ballots. Accordingly, I would grant the petitioner's motion to reopen the record for this purpose. "New York Shipping Association , 109 NLRB 791. 32 Such as the fact , which is relied on by the majority, that the Board in the course of its regular procedure has already twice considered and determined the status of Pressley and Roth on limited and different evidence ; or the fact , also relied on by the majority, that the Board has made its determination of the challenges and a certification of the results of the election has been issued on the basis of such limited and different evidence. Although the new evidence was earlier discovered and presented in the two cited cases, as noted by the majority , the principle laid down in them is none the less apposite here. Wildwood Lumber Company and International Woodworkers of America, CIO, Petitioner . Case No. 20-RC-2818., November 14, 1955 DECISION AND DIRECTION OF ELECTION Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before Robert J. Scolnik, hearing officer. The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. Upon the entire record in this case, the Board finds : 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act.' 2. The labor organizations involved claim to represent certain em- ployees of the Employer. 1 As set forth in the Decision , the Employer operates an integrated enterprise. For the first 6 months of 1955 the Employer made shipments directly out-of-State from its Red Bluff operations of products amounting in value to approximately $50,000. Project- ing this amount for the entire year, it is clear that the direct outflow requirement estab- lished in the case of Jonesboro Grain Drying Cooperative , 110 NLRB 481, is met 114 NLRB No. 159. 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