Deluxe Motor StagesDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsApr 17, 195193 N.L.R.B. 1425 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation DELUXE MOTOR STAGES 1425 FRANK ARQUILLO, AN INDIVIDUAL, D/B/A DELUXE MOTOR STAGES, PLYMOUTH COACII DIVISION AND AS DELUXE MOTOR STAGES, DETROIT- CHICAGO DIVISION and LOCAL 1303, AMALGAMATED ASSOCIATION OF STREET, ELECTRIC RAILWAY AND MOTOR COACH EMPLOYEES OF AMERICA, AFL. Case No. 7-CA-.94. April 17, 1951 Decision and Order On January 3, 1951, Trial Examiner Robert E. Mullili 'issued his Intermediate Report in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that the Respondent engaged in and was engaging in certain unfair labor practices and recommending that it cease and desist therefrom and. take certain affirmative action, as set forth in the copy of the Inter- mediate Report attached hereto: Thereafter, the Respondent filed exceptions to the Intermediate Report, a supporting brief, and a request for oral argument. The request for oral argument is denied as the record and exceptions, in our opinion, adequately present the issues and the position of the parties. The Board 1 has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner made at the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed.2 The Board has considered the Inter- mediate Report, the exceptions, and the entire record in the case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner. Order Upon the entire record in the case and pursuant to Section 10 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board hereby orders that : 1. The Respondent, Frank Arquillo, an Individual d/b/a Deluxe Motor Stages, Plymouth Coach Division and as Deluxe Motor Stages, Detroit-Chicago Division, his officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall : 1 Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3 (b) of the Act , the Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three -member panel [Members Houston, Reynolds, and Styles]. 2 Like the Trial Examiner we find no merit to the Respondent 's motion to dismiss because the original charge named as respondent only Deluxe Motor Stages , Plymouth Coach Di- vision , which was Arquillo ' s trade name . This charge was served on an agent of Arquillo and Arquillo did not deny that the charge was brought to his attention nor did he contend that he was in any way misled or otherwise prejudiced by the misnomer . In our opinion, the description of the Respondent in the charge was adequate to put Arquillo on notice that the charge was directed against hint We find , therefore , like the Examiner , that the original charge was effective to toll the 6 months' hnnitation period in Section 10 ( b) of the Act National Works, General Chemical Division . Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation, 91 NLRB No. 181. 93 NLRB No. 251. 943732-51-91 1426 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD A. Cease and desist from : (1) Discouraging membership in Local 1303, Amalgamated Asso- ciation of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees of America, AFL, by discriminatorily discharging any of his employees,, or by discriminating in any other manner in regard to their hire or tenure of employment or any term or condition of employment. (2) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing his employees in the exercise of the right to self-organization, to form labor organizations, to join or assist Local 1303, Amalgamated Asso- ciation of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees of America, AFL, or any other labor organization, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in con- certed activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection, or to refrain from any or all of such activities except to the extent that such right may be affected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organization as a condition of em- ployment, as authorized in Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. B. Take the following affirmative action which the Board finds will effectuate the policies of the Act: (1) Offer to Arthur Karnatz immediate and full reinstatement to. his former or a substantially equivalent position without prejudice to his seniority or other rights and privileges and make him whole in the manner set forth in the Intermediate Report, attached hereto, in the section entitled "The remedy." (2) Upon request, make available to the Board or its agents for examination and copying, all payroll records, social security payment records and reports, and all other records necessary to analyze the amount of back pay and the right of reinstatement under the terms recommended in this Order. (3) Post at his terminal in Plymouth, Michigan, copies of the notice attached to the Intermediate Report marked Appendix A thereof.3 Copies of said notice, to be furnished by the Regional Director of the Seventh Region, shall, after being duly signed by the Respondent or his representative, be posted by the Respondent immediately upon receipt thereof and maintained by him for sixty (60) consecutive days thereafter in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by the Respondent to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. 3 This notice, however, shall be, and it hereby is, amended by striking from line 3 thereof the words "The Recommendations of A Trial Examiner " and substituting in lieu thereof the words "A Decision and Order " In the event that this Order is enforced by a decree of a United States Court of Appeals , there shall be inserted before the words "A Decision and Order" the words "A Decree of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing " DELUXE MOTOR STAGES 1427 (4) Notify the Regional Director for the Seventh Region in writing within ten ( 10) days from the date of this Order what steps the Respondent has taken to comply therewith. Intermediate Report and Recommended Order Mr. Herman Cot enman, for the General Counsel. Mr. Robert A. Snlhvan, of Detroit, Mich., for the Respondent. STATEMENT OF THE CASE Upon charges duly filed by Local 1303 , Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees , AFL (herein called AFL), the General Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board, by the Regional Director for the Seventh Region ( Detroit, Michigan ), issued his complaint dated Septem- ber 18 , 1950, against Frank Arquillo, an individual , cl/b/a Deluxe Motor Stages, Plymouth Coach Division and as Deluxe Motor Stages , Detroit-Chicago Division,' herein called the Respondent . The complaint alleged that the Respondent by his discharge of Arthur Karnatz, an employee , on about July 7, 1949, and his, refusal thereafter to reinstate Karnatz, engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 8 ( a) (3) and (1) and Section 2 ( 6) and ( 7) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, 61 Stat. 136 , herein called the Act. Copies of the complaint , the charges, and notice of hearing thereon were duly served upon the Respondent . In his answer the Respondent denied generally that he was subject to the Act or that he had committed any unfair labor practices? Pursuant to notice , a hearing was held at Detroit, Michigan , on October 17, 18, and 19, 1950, before the undersigned Trial Examiner , duly designated by the Chief Trial Examiner . The General Counsel and the Respondent were repre- sented by counsel. All parties participated in the hearing and were afforded full opportunity to be heard, to examine and cross -examine witnesses, and to introduce evidence bearing on the issues . At the outset of the hearing, the undersigned denied a motion to dismiss made by the Respondent , which in sub- stance challenged the jurisdiction of the Board . A request for a bill of par- ticulars , made by the Respondent at the same time, was granted in part and denied in part. When making this ruling the undersigned advised counsel for the Respondent that in the event he needed further time to prepare a defense the Trial Examiner would entertain a motion for a continuance at the conclusion of the General Counsel 's ease-in-chief . The Respondent , however, made no sub- sequent request for such a continuance . A motion to exclude the witnesses from the hearing room, made by the Respondent , was granted . At the conclusion of the General Counsel ' s case the Respondent moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the Board lacked jurisdiction of the Respondent , that it was error for the Trial Examiner to permit the General Counsel to interrogate the Respondent 's general manager under the procedure set forth in Rule 43 (b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure , that the Respondent was never adequately apprised of the allegations of fact involved in the case , and that the evidence offered by the General Counsel was insufficient to sustain the complaint. This motion was denied. The undersigned likewise denied a motion by the General i Upon motion by the General Counsel, granted by the undersigned. the caption set forth In the complaint was amended with the insertion of the words "as Deluxe Motor Stages' before the word "Detroit 2 The Respondent requested and was granted permission to file his answer during the course of the hearing 1428 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Counsel that the facts be found as set forth in the complaint, because of the Respondent's failure to file an answer until after the General Counsel had rested. Quarles Manufacturing Company, 83 NLRB 697, 707; Consumers Lumber d Veneer Company, 63 NLRB 17, 18. Before the end of the hearing the parties argued orally before the undersigned and were advised of their right to file briefs. Subsequent to the hearing a brief was received from the General Counsel. Upon the entire record in the case and from his observation of the witnesses, the undersigned makes the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. THE BUSINESS OF THE RESPONDENT The Respondent, Frank Arquillo, is an individual with his principal office and place of business in Detroit, Michigan, where he is engaged in the operation of two bus lines : one, known as Deluxe Motor Stages, Plymouth Coach Division (herein called Plymouth Division), operates between Detroit and Plymouth, Michigan, under a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued by the Michigan Public Service Commission ; the other, known as Deluxe Motor Stages, Detroit-Chicago Division (herein called Chicago Division), operates between Detroit, Michigan, and Chicago, Illinois, under a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued by the Interstate Commerce Commission. During the year 1949, revenue for the Plymouth Division totaled approxi- mately $95,000. During the same period, expenditures for gas, oil, equipment, and repairs, made for it by Deluxe Motor Stages, approximated $1,100 per week. Eight drivers, 2 mechanics, 1 bookkeeper, 1 night man and 1 general manager, a total of 13, comprises its personnel. Although the Plymouth Division operates over a short route it is the only intrastate bus line which maintains a regular daily schedule through a highly industrialized area between Plymouth and Detroit. At the time of the com- mission of the unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint, its route was 16 miles long and extended from the city of Plymouth to a point on Grand River Avenue in Detroit. After November 1, 1949, this route was extended to the same terminal of Deluxe Motor Stages in downtown Detroit which is used by the Chicago Division. Plymouth Division coaches make stops directly at or close to a number of plants engaged in extensive interstate operations. Included among these industrial establishments, details as to the out-of-State business of which were received in evidence at the hearing, are those of the Burroughs Add- ing Machine Company,' Evans Products Company,' Whitman and Barnes Division of United Drill and Tool Corporation,' Pilgrim Drawn Steel Division of the Automotive Materials Corporation,' Daisy Manufacturing Company,' and Dunn Steel Products Co .8 In addition to the foregoing, other plants on or near the route of the Plymouth Division include those of the Ford Motor Company, General 3 Purchases in 1949 of $15,800,000, approximately 60 percent from out-of-State and sales of $88,000,000, approximately 90 percent shipped out-of-State 4 Purchases in 1949 of $5,284,000, 75 percent from out-of-State, and sales of $13,953,000, approximately 85 percent shipped out-of-State. 5 Purchases in 1949 of $74,500, 95 percent from out-of-State, and sales of $5,300,000, approximately 88 percent shipped out-of-State. 6 Purchases in 1949 of $1,290,000, approximately 65 percent from out-of-State, and sales ,of $1,050,000 approximately 15 percent shipped out-of-State. 7 Purchases in 1949 of $1,500,000, approximately 30 percent from out-of-State, and sales ,of $3,000,000, approximately 76 percent shipped out-of-State. 8 Purchases in 1949 of $400,000, approximately 80 percent from out-of-State, and sales .of $1,100,000, approximately 20 percent shipped out-of-State. DELUXE MOTOR STAGES 1429 Motors, Nash-Kelvinator, and a number of smaller enterprises. The Plymouth Division also operates as a feeder line to the Detroit Street Railway carrying passengers to and from transfer points of the municipal transit system which intersect the bus route. Counsel stipulated that approximately 50 percent of the 30,000 passengers carried each month by the Plymouth Division are personnel employed either in Detroit or Plymouth or in the various factories along the bus route between the two cities. Upon the foregoing facts, the undersigned con- cludes and finds that the Plymouth Division is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. TV. C. King d/b/a Local Transit Lines, 91 NLRB 623; El Paso-Ysleta Bus Company, Inc., 91 NLRB 590; Clelland Bus Lines, Inc., 85 NLRB 306; Gate City Transit Lines, Inc., 81 NLRB 79. The Chicago Division had approximately $150,000 in gross revenue in 1949, derived from the operation of busses on a regular schedule between Detroit, Michigan, and Chicago, Illinois, and from a charter bus service which it operates throughout the United States and Canada. It is thus plainly engaged in inter- state commerce. In fact, from the record, it does not appear that the Respond- ent contends otherwise. Moreover, it is clear that Arquillo operates the Plymouth and Chicago Divi- sions as one single, integrated enterprise. The certificate of public convenience and necessity from the Michigan Public Service Commission under which the Plymouth Division operates and a similar certificate from the Interstate Com- merce Commission under which the Chicago Division operates were both issued to "Frank Arquillo, d/b/a Deluxe Motor Stages." Complete ownership and control of both divisions of Deluxe Motor Stages lies in and is exercised by Arquillo from his headquarters at the terminal for the two lines in downtown Detroit. Arquillo alone signs the checks and until a date shortly before the hearing payroll taxes were kept in one account and paid from the downtown office in one lump sum. In part, the charter' operations of the two divisions are intermingled. Coaches operating on the Plymouth Division are sometimes used on interstate charter trips under Arquillo's Interstate Commerce Commission permit. Drivers are also interchanged between both divisions where charter work is concerned. Finally, employment practices and policy emanate from and- are controlled by Arquillo alone In view of the above, the undersigned finds that the Plymouth and Chicago Divisions constitute integral parts of a unitary enterprise and that they are a single employer engaged in commerce within the- meaning of the Act. The McMahon Transportation Company, 89 NLRB 1652; Morgan Packing Company, Inc., 91 NLRB No. 104; Illini Coach Company, 80, NLRB 273, 274-275; Hill Transportation Company, et al., 75 NLRB 1203, en- forced without opinion December 7, 1948 (C. A. 1). II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED Local 1303, Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees of America, AFL, is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2 (5) of the Act. III. RESPONDENT'S MOTION TO DISMISS FOR INSUFFICIENT SERVICE OF THE CHARGE The complaint was issued upon a charge and an amended charge. The original charge alleged the commission of unfair labor practices by the "Detroit-Chicago Division of Deluxe Motor Stages : Deluxe Motor Stages, Plymouth Coach Divi- sion." It was sent by registered mail to Arquillo's bus terminal at 1505 Cass Avenue, Detroit, Michigan, on August 25, 1949, where it was accepted by Henry Petrucci, a ticket agent in Arquillo's employ, who signed a postal receipt therefor. 1430 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD At the hearing, Arquillo conceded that Petrucci, who was also his nephew, was authorized to receive the Respondent's mail On July 19 and 20, 1950, an amended charge, alleging the commission of unfair labor practices by "Frank Arquillo, doing business as Detroit-Chicago Division of Deluxe Motor Stages and Deluxe Motor Stages, Plymouth-Coach Division" was duly served by registered mail on agents of Arquillo at both his Detroit and Plymouth terminals. At the outset of the hearing, the Respondent moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the original charge as filed and served did not vest the Board with jurisdiction. In support of this motion the Respondent argued that in August 1949 no entity known as "Deluxe Motor Stages, Plymouth Coach Divi- sion" existed under the laws of the State of Michigan and since the charge was not directed against Frank Arquillo, as such, it was fatally defective. The under- signed denied the motion to dismiss at the time it was made and when it was subsequently renewed during the course of the hearing. This ruling is hereby affirmed. For many years prior to 1949 Arquillo operated his bus line to Chicago as an individual d/b/a Deluxe Motor Stages. In July 1948, he bought the franchise and equipment of the Plymouth Coach Company. From that date until December 23, 1949, Arquillo operated this bus line, as well as the one to Chicago, without making any change in his assumed name certificate which he had filed under the Michigan registration statute many years before. On the latter date, he filed two certificates with the proper Michigan State authorities, one to the effect that he was then conducting a business in Plymouth, Michigan, under the name of "Deluxe Motor Stages, Plymouth Coach Division" and the other that he was conducting a business in Detroit, under the name of "Deluxe Motor Stages, Detroit-Chicago Division." Subsequent to his purchase of the Plymouth line in July 1948 and until about August 1950, Arquillo kept the name "Plymouth Coach Company" on all his busses operating between Plymouth and Detroit in order not to lose any passenger traffic. However, it is clear that as soon as possible after purchase of that company he set out to effect the transition from the old name to the new in the mind of both his own personnel and the public. On August 2, 1948, he issued to his employees a rule book which stated on its face that it was for "the drivers of the Plymouth Division Deluxe Motor Stages." A time table, effective May 16, 1949, which appears in the record as an exhibit, is captioned "Deluxe Motor stages Plymouth Coach Division " And on August 15, 1949, in response to a letter from the Regional Office concerning a pending representation case, coun- sel for the Respondent stated that the proper name of the Plymouth line was "Deluxe Motor Stages, Plymouth Coach Division.",. In the light of the foregoing facts, there is plainly no merit to the Respondent's motion to dismiss because of the asserted nonexistence of a business known as "Deluxe Motor Stages Plym- outh Coach Division" on August 25, 1949, the date on which Arquillo's agent, Petrucci, accepted service of the original charge Arthur J. Wiltse, d/b/a Ann Arbor Press, 85 NLRB 58, 59-60; Vulcan Forge Company, 85 NLRB 621, 625-626; Lee E. Stine, d/b/a Fairchild Cafeteria, 92 NLRB 809; see also N. L. R. B. v. O'Keefe and Meriatt Mfg. Co., 178 F. 2d 445, 447 (C. A. 9).10 This letter appears in the recoid as General Counsel's Exhibit 8 Although signed "'Vern B Em.niett, General Mgr ," counsel for the Respondent stated on the record that he had prepared the text himself. 10 The Respondent also argued that the amended charge was defective in that the unfair labor practices alleged therein had occurred more than 6 months prior to its filing This argument is likewise without support since the original charge, alleging all the unfair labor practices set forth in the amended charge, as well as others, was filed and served within the time limitation prescribed in Section 10 (b) of the Act DELUXE MOTOR STAGES IV. TIRE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A Inti odicction 1431 After his purchase of the Plymouth Coach Company in July 194S Arquillo immediately assumed control. All those employed by the previous owner weie retained but Arquillo hired a new general manager, Vern B Emmett, to exercise o'. er-all supervision of the line. Under the previous owner the employees had been represented by the International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, CIO (herein called CIO), which had negotiated a union shop contract with the employer in May 1947. Among the terms of this contract was one which provided that in the event of any change in the ownership of the Plymouth Coach Company the then owner would make it a condition of the sale that the purchaser be fully bound by the existing contract with the CIO. Whether Arquillo agreed to such terms when negotiating the purchase of the bus line does not appear in the record. In any event, the ,employees assumed that their contract did remain in effect and during the early months after Arquillo and Emmett took over the operation of the line the employees made this position clear. The first occasion for their doing so arose early in July when the employees learned that Arquillo planned to pay them on a twice-monthly basis. Pursuant to their CIO contract the previous owner had paid them every 10 days. Several of the bus drivers, including Arthur Karnatz, brought this fact to Emmett's attention, insisting that their contract was still in effect and that their old schedule of paydays should be maintained. Emmett, however, told the employees that because Arquillo's employees in the Chicago Division were being paid on a biweekly basis no change would be made. When Edward Sinta, then a book- keeper for the line, told Arquillo that under the union contract with the prior owner the employees were to be paid three times monthly, Arquillo told him that "he bought out a company, lie didn't buy out no contract" and that "As far as he was concerned, he didn't want no union there and he was going to do every- thing he could to get rid of it." " A few weeks thereafter Emmett issued a new set of rules for the bus drivers, one of which foibade smoking by the driver while passengers were aboard his coach. A clause in the CIO contract, however, provided that the management would "continue to permit smoking."'' Numerous protests arose from the em- ployees, because of the apparent conflict between the union agreement and the new rules. Several, including Karnatz, alleged in their conversations with Emmett that their new employer was seeking to abrogate another provision of their contract. The rule was not changed but Emmett testified that he "bent over backwards to give [the drivers] a little consideration" 13 and that after a time he permitted smoking for a short distance at the Plymouth end of the route when there were no passengers aboard. However, he also testified that during the period from July to December 1948, he had occasion to reprove most of his drivers for infractions of the rule. Another dispute arose in connection with Arquillo's rate of pay for charter bus trips and Emmett's method of selecting drivers for them Under the previous owner the drivers had only infrequent opportunities to make charter trips. Ar- quillo, however, carried on extensive charter operations and after taking over the Plymouth Coach Company began to use its equipment and drivers on this 11 This finding is based on the credited , undenied testimony of Sinta. The quotations are from his testimony 12 The quotation is from, the contract 11 The quotation is from Emmett's testimony. 1432 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD type of work, in addition to the maintenance of the regular intercity schedule. When Emmett announced that the drivers would be paid a flat rate of $8 25 per clay on what was known as "short runs" 14 the drivers objected to him that they were entitled to an hourly rate A further objection was voiced when Emmett made no effort to post announcements of pending charter trips or to follow seniority in selecting the drivers needed. As a result, the shop committee for the union protested to Emmett about these practices and in September 1948 he agreed to post subsequent charter opportunities and to assign drivers on a senior- ity basis. Sometime in the fall of that year the union committee sought a wage raise for the Plymouth Division employees. This demand, coupled with the union's insistence that Plymouth comply with all provisions of the CIO contract, es- pecially the overtime and chartered runs provisions, finally reached the Mich- igan State Mediation Service. In November, a committee appointed by the Gover- nor of Michigan held a hearing on the matter. At that time the CIO, in addition to pressing its demand for a wage raise, alleged that Arquillo was violating some of the contract provisions and bypassing past practices instituted under the old management. On November 19. the mediation committee recommended that Arquillo recognize all provisions of the contract which the CIO and the former owner had executed; and it further recommended that Arquillo grant his employees a wage raise. In December, Emmett signed a contract with the CIO granting all employees a 10-cent an hour raise. Subsequently, the CIO com- mittee, of which Karnatz was a member, E mmett, and Robert A. Sullivan, counsel for the Respondent, met several times to negotiate the remaining terms of a new contract, but insofar as the record indicates no agreement was reached as to any of the terms discussed'" Early in May 1949, following protests from the employees that Emmett was no longer posting notices of pending charter trip opportunities or assigning drivers to them on a seniority basis, Karnatz, along with Alfred Brewer, the shop steward, and Roy Moore, president of the CIO local, demanded and obtained a conference with Emmett. At this meeting Emmett agreed that thereafter he would post charter trip announcements but when Karnatz asked that this agree- ment be reduced to writing Emmett refused to do so. Later in May, Karnatz and other union representatives met with Emmett and Sullivan to demand that Arquillo adhere to a clause in the CIO agreement providing for paid vacations. The Respondent's representatives refused to do so, pleading financial inability to bear the cost, and the meeting ended abruptly after a sharp verbal exchange between Karnatz and Sullivan. In the spring of 1949 the employees of the Plymouth Division became dis- satisfied with what they considered to be ineffectual support from the CIO. The shop committee therefore solicited the help of the AFL and when this was forth- coming the committee endeavored to enroll the employees in that union. The first organizational meeting, held at Karnatz' home on the evening of May 17, was attended by all the employees of the Plymouth Division, with the excep- tion of two drivers then on duty. All those in attendance signed cards in the AFL and paid their initiation fees that night. On June 9, its organizational campaign having been carried into the ranks of the Chicago Division as well, the AFL notified Arquillo by letter that it had organized a majority of his employees and requested recognition as well as a meeting to discuss the matter. No reply to this letter was ever received. On the same day the AFL filed with 14 These were charter trips which might last for as little as 4 or as much as 16 hours 15 At some time in December, however, the Respondent put into effect the checkoff pro- vision of the CIO contract. - DELUXE MOTOR STAGES 1433 the Board a representation petition looking toward certification as the bargaining agent for Arquillo's employees. Early on the morning of July 8, 1949, as he reported for work, Karnatz found a letter from Emmett on the bulletin board in which the general manager in- formed him that he was being terminated as of July 7, for "laxity in performing regular duties, disobedience and [a] discourteous sai castle attitude toward the passengers." Karnatz (lid not leave immediately but waited for Emmett's ar- rival to obtain an explanation for the discharge However, after some time had elapsed anc$ Emmett had not appeared, Karnatz left the terminal. B. The discharge of Karnatz The General Counsel contends that Karnatz was discharged by the Respondent because of his participation in concerted activities and his membership in the AFL The Respondent, on the other hand, earnestly contends that Karnatz was dismissed for justifiable cause and only after a series of incidents had trans- pired which rendered intolerable his continued employment 36 At the time of his discharge Karnatz had been employed as a bus driver by the Plymouth Division and its predecessors for almost 6 years. Only two drivers had more seniority with the line than he and Karnatz credibly testified that at no time during the course of his employment under Emmett had the latter repri- manded him for any of the conduct which allegedly served as the basis of his discharge." Karnatz' assertion that he was never reprimanded prior to his dis- missal is supported by the credited, undenied, testimony of Alfred Brewer, union steward for the Plymouth Division. As noted above, Karnatz did not see Emmett on the day he received notice of his discharge. Later that day, however, Brewer sought out Emmett to ascertain the reasons for Karnatz' dismissal. After Em- mett told him it was for "failing to change a large denomination bill and [not] leaving people off at designated stops," Brewer asked whether Emmett had ever reprimanded him. Emmett gave only a noncommittal response to this question and ended the conversation with the statement that "a man of his age who has been in business for himself knows right from wrong." Prior to July 1948, Karnatz had been a member of the CIO shop committee and after Arquillo assumed control of the Plymouth Division, Karnatz quickly distinguished himself in the eyes of the new management by the aggressive manner in which he insisted that Arquillo recognize the existing CIO contract. Although Arquillo finally yielded to the demands of his employees for a wage increase, pursuant to the recommendation of the Michigan Mediation Service, it appears that he never gave full acceptance to the contract which the CIO had negotiated with the former owner. His failure to grant his employees any vacation pay as provided for in the contract and Emmett's disposition to ignore its seniority provisions in the assignment of charter trips were a source of continuing irritation to the drivers and in May and June 1949 Karnatz vigorously presented their views on these matters to the management. When 10 At the hearing the Respondent offered to prove that in proceedings before the Michi- gan State Unemployment Commission that body, in passing upon Karnatz ' claim for un- employment benefits, found that he had been discharged for cause . An objection to this testimony by the General Counsel was sustained by the Trial Examiner . "The decisions of [a state agency] are not binding upon the Board, which has paramount initial juris- diction over the subject matter herein " Horn Manufacturing Company, 83 NLRB 1177, footnote 4, Union. Screw Products, 78 NLRB 1107-1108, 1125, footnote 18; see also N L. R B v Hearst Publications, Inc, 322 U. S 111, 123, and Myers et al v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp Ltd, 303 U. S 41. 17 Karnatz , by his demeanor on the stand , impressed the undersigned as a frank and truthful witness 1434 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD employee dissatisfaction with the CIO resulted in a shift to the AFL, Karnatz was likewise a leader in the transition and it was at his home that the first AFL organizational meeting was held on May 17. It is plain from the record that the Respondent was acquainted with Karnatz' union activities and affiliations. Shortly after Deluxe Motor Stages began operation of the Plymouth Division both Arquillo and Emmett questioned their bookkeeper, Edward Smta, to determine the union leadership among the employees. Sinta gave them the names of Karnatz, Arthur Calhoun, and twa others. At the time, Arquillo advised Emmett that he had "better get rid of those guys " 18 Subsequently, in Karnatz' active representation of the em- ployees as a member of the union's shop committee, it was to Emmett, as the general manager, that Karnatz and the committee presented their requests and grievances. Emmett conceded that lie was aware of Karnatz' identification with the CIO but he denied any knowledge of Karnatz' affiliation with the AFL. It appears, however, that Emmett was apprised of the employee shift of allegiance to the AFL and that he was aware of Karnatz' prominence in the movement. Emmett testified that he knew the AFL was seeking to organize the employees although not until he was "notified by the boys that they were going to petition for an election." Y9 Further, he testified that during this period several of the drivers asked him what he thought of the AFL. It is clear that the movement met with his strong disapproval and that he sought to discover through interrogation of the employees how far the trend had progressed. During the period he questioned Ray Goodman, one of the drivers who was most active in the AFL campaign, to find out whether Goodman had joined the AFL When Goodman replied in the affirmative, Emmett stated, "If the union does come in and there is any trouble, we'll just lock the doors; there wont's be any Plymouth Coach ; that will be the end of it that day.'0 In the light of the foregoing, Emmett's denial that he knew of Karnatz' role in the transi- tion to the AFL is unconvincing It is made even more so because Emmett's knowledge of Karnatz' union activities is reasonably inferable from the fact that at the time the Plymouth Division had only a small gioup of employees, with all of whom the general manager was in close daily contact. N. L. R. B. v. Abbott Worsted Mills, 127 F. 2d 438, 440 (C A 1) ; Quest-Sh.on Mark Bgasseere Company, 80 NLRB 1149, 1150, enforced November 9, 1950, 185 F. 2d 285 (C. A. 2). For some time prior to Karnatz' discharge, General Manager Emmett main- tained a notebook record " of employee irregularities. From this, in support of his assertion that Karnatz was discharged for cause, Emmett testified that: (1) On March 25, 1949, a passenger complained to him that Karnatz had been rude to her and had refused to make change on a $10 bill; (2) on May 18, Karnatz complained to bus passengers that a new time table which had just become effec- tive was difficult to maintain; (3) on May 31, Emmett observed Karnatz arrive 4 minutes ahead of schedule at one bus stop and 3 minutes ahead of schedule at another; (4) on June 23, a passenger complained that Karnatz refused to let her off his coach at Ohio Street and that later three people told Emmett they had quit riding Plymouth coaches because Karnatz would not let them off at Ohio Street; (5) on June 28, Emmett received a complaint that Karnatz had failed to let a colored passenger off at her stop; and (6) on July 7, Emmett observed "This finding is based on the credited ,testimonv of Sinta The quotation is from his testimony Emmett's denial that he interrogated Sinta regarding the union affiliations of the employees was not convincing Arquillo did not testify with respect to this incident. 19 The quotation is from Emmett's testimony. 20 This finding is based on Goodman's credited, undenied testimony. 11 Referred to thioughout the hearing as Emmett's "black book " DELUXE MOTOR STAGES 1435 Karnatz smoking while he had passengers aboard his bus. The testimony offered with respect to these incidents will now be considered. March 25: According to Emmett, on this day a Mrs. Kisibeth telephoned him to complain that Karnatz had been rude to her, refused to make change on a $10 bill, and told her she would have to leave his bus. Emmett had an extensive entry in his notebook on the matter, including the statement that he "warned" Karnatz about his conduct on this occasion At the hearing, however, Emmett did not claim to have reprimanded Karnatz but asserted only that he had spoken to Karnatz about having received a complaint. On the other hand, Karnatz credibly testified that Emmett never mentioned such an incident to him. May 18: On May 16, Emmett put into effect a new timetable which shortened the schedule between Plymouth and Detroit from 1 hour to 45 minutes. On May 18, Emmett wrote in his notebook that "Karnatz claimed to passengers that sched- ule was too fast, that he could not stop everywhere Karnatz told about this again " Emmett testified that on this occasion he spoke to Karnatz because the passengers were complaining to the other drivers that Karnatz was telling them that it was impossible to maintain the new schedule. It clearly appears from the record, however, that all of the drivers were having difficulty adhering to the new schedule, especially during the early morning rush hours. Karnatz credibly testified that, as a union committee member and on behalf of all the drivers, he met with Emmett both before and after the new timetable went into effect to protest that it would be difficult for the drivers to adhere to it. Accord- ing to Karnatz, at these meetings Emmett. while refusing to change the new schedule, assured Karnatz that it would work out satisfactorily after the drivers grew accustomed to it May 31: Emmett testified that on this particular morning he went to the Detroit end of the line and parked about a block from the bus stop to check on whether the drivers were complying with the new timetable. While there he observed that Karnatz arrived at the terminus 4 minutes ahead of schedule and left 1 minute late. Sometime thereafter that morning and at the other end of the line he noted Karnatz arriving at a stop 3 minutes ahead of schedule. Although Emmett insisted that he had not made these observations for the sole purpose of building a record on Karnatz and that he had checked on two other drivers: that same morning, he could not recall with certainty who those drivers were, Emmett did not assert that he had talked with Karnatz about this incident and the latter credibly testified that Emmett never had. June 23: Emmett testified that on this day he received a phone call from a -woman who claimed to have been a passenger on Karnatz' bus that day and who alleged that he had refused to let her off at Ohio Street near the Detroit terminus of the line. On either that day or the following morning Emmett went to this point on the route and there, by chance, met three people who told him they had quit riding Plymouth Division busses because Karnatz refused to let them off at Ohio Street.22 Emmett testified that shortly thereafter lie mentioned to Kar- natz that he was not letting off passengers at this intersection, but that Karnatz did not give him "much of an answer " 23 Karnatz, on the other hand, credibly testified that Emmett never discussed the matter with him. n Emmett testified that he had merely talked with these three people at the time and that he was relying on their statement that Karnatz had refused to stop at Ohio Street for them Prior to the hearing before the undersigned, however, Emmett had given a contradictory account of this incident. This was at a hearing before the Michigan Unem- ployment Compensation Commission to which Karnatz appealed in October 1949 There, Emmett testified , under oath , that on the morning in question lie had personally observed Karnatz refuse to let these three people off his bus at their desired stop. 23 The quotation is from Emmett ' s testimony. 1436 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD June 28: Emmett had a statement in his notebook under this date to the effect that "again Driver Karnatz displayed his unwillingness to cooperate with the passengers." This was followed by an entry describing in some detail an occasion on that date when Karnatz allegedly carried a passenger some distance beyond the point where she wanted to alight. Emmett testified that he first heard about the matter on receiving a written complaint from a Air Stacey, and that later he learned the details of the occurrence in a conversation with Stacey. According to Emmett, he spoke to Karnatz about the matter the next day but the latter could not recall having any such passenger the day before, although he could recall an incident 2 weeks previously when he had carried a colored pas- senger several blocks past her stop. Karnatz credibly testified, however, that about this time in a brief conversation with Emmett, the latter asked him if he recalled forgetting to leave a colored lady off his coach, and that when he told Emmett he could not recall such an occasion nothing more was said. July 7: Emmett testified that at about 11 a. in. on this date he observed Karnatz smoking while on duty, thus violating a strict company rule, and that as a result, later that day, he resolved to discharge him. He then prepared the letter, quoted above, which Karnatz found on the bulletin board the following morning. Since Karnatz was never reprimanded for any of the alleged deficiencies which Emmett purportedly observed over a period of several months, Emmett's compila- tion of incidents assigned as the reason for the dismissal is far from convincing. It is true that several of the alleged irregularities, if supported, would have been' ground for reprimanding Karnatz. For instance, smoking by the driver while passengers are aboard is forbidden by the company as well as by the rules of the Michigan Public Service Commission. On the other hand, it is clear from the record that many, if not all, of the drivers violated the rule at one time or another and that although several had been reprimanded for doing so, no one had ever been discharged. Likewise, if Karnatz had deliberately refused to let off passengers at a scheduled stop a severe reprimand might have been anticipated. This could not be the case with respect to the Ohio Street incident, however, for the Respondent had never designated that intersection as one at which all drivers were required to stop. Emmett conceded that it was not necessary to stop there "automatically." ^ The drivers often discharged pas- sengers at Ohio Street but since it was less than a block from the end of the line, several Plymouth Division employees testified that it was sometimes more con- venient for the greater number of passengers aboard a crowded coach to stop only at the end of the route. From the testimony of other drivers as well as that of Karnatz it appears that the decision as to where to discharge passengers at such points was left up to the discretion and good judgment of the driver, who was expected to satisfy the passengers, if possible, and at the same time comply with all traffic and safety regulations. It is clear from the record that Karnatz' practice in connection with stopping at this particular intersection was in keeping with the practice of the other drivers and that he had never been told to do otherwise. The same is true with respect to the allegation that Karnatz had carried a passenger by her stop, for Emmett gave no convincing testimony that Karnatz had ever done this deliberately. He might have done so inadvertently, but from the record it plainly appears that this would riot have been out of the ordinary. Emmett himself conceded that this happened "now and again" 26 and that no one had ever been fired for it. As to Karnatz' alleged rudeness to Mrs. Kisibeth on March 25, it appears that although Emmett 23 The quoted word is from Emmett's testimony. 26 The quotation is from. Emmett's testimony DELUXE MOTOR STAGES 1437 never spoke to Karnatz about the matter , late in March , Edward Sinta, the bookkeeper for the terminal office, casually mentioned to Karnatz that a pas- senger had complained to the office that he had ordered her off his coach. At the time, Karnatz denied doing anything of the sort , but he did recall that during a period on the preceding day when he did not have an appropriate amount of change, a woman had proffered a $10 bill in payment of her fare on boarding his bus . Karnatz credibly testified that he did not ask her to leave the bus. Instead , lie permitted her to remain aboard and ride free. In doing so, he was following a common practice of the drivers , a practice which, from Emmett ' s testimony , the Respondent approved . If Emmett had been earnestly concerned about the incident it is inconceivable to the undersigned that he would have passed the matter by without bringing the complaint to Karnatz ' attention and demanding an explanation . The same conclusion applies with respect to Emmett ' s assertion that on May 31, he had observed Karnatz 3 to 4 minutes ahead of schedule . Here also , in the view of the undersigned, if Emmett had been honestly disturbed about the matter he would have asked Karnatz to account for his conduct immediately instead of never mentioning the matter to him. Finally , to the undersigned , Emmett 's testimony that Karnatz had a "discourteous sarcastic attitude toward the passengers ," as alleged in his letter of dismissal , is unpersuasive , not only because of the manner in which it was given at the hearing but for the further reason that throughout the period when Emmett was compiling his record of complaints about Karnatz the latter was never reprimanded or given an opportunity to meet any such allegations of misconduct. The good faith of Emmett 's record-keeping on Karnttz ' alleged misconduct was further impugned by the testimony of Edward Sinta. According to Sinta, on several occasions during the summer of 1949 while he was at work in the terminal office, Arquillo and Emmett discussed , in his presence , the union activi- ties of certain employees then active in the AFL campaign . In one of these conversations , Arquillo told Emmett to get rid of Goodman because he was soliciting union members at Arquillo's garage in Detroit, whereupon Emmett assured Arquillo that he had "quite a little bit on Goodman " but that it would be necessary to have more to justify his discharge . On another occasion, in May, Arquillo , after observing Arthur Calhoun in conversation with the other em- ployees, asked Emmett, `How has he been behaving himself as far as union ac- tivity'? " Emmett replied that Calhoun 's conduct in this respect was not "too bad" but at the same time he added, with a reference to his black book, that he had a lot against Calhoun . On still another occasion , from 4 to 6 weeks before Karnatz ' discharge , Emmett mentioned to Arquillo that he had some complaints on Karnatz , one being to the effect that he had refused to make change for a passenger . Arquillo then demanded why he had not been fired and Emmett re- plied that "You can't get rid of a man for something like that ; you have got to have something more definite on him." After showing Arquillo his black note- book , however, Emmett added, "I'm getting it, just take a little more time, I'm getting it on him. " Later, at about the time that Emmett testified a passenger had telephoned to complain that Karnatz refused to let her off at Ohio Street, Sinta was present during another conversation between Emmett and Arquillo. Emmett stated at the time , "Well, I think that is as good a thing as anything to let him go." In fact, however , Karnatz was not discharged until almost 2 1438 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD weeks thereafter. In the meantime, Emmett trained some extra bus drivers. e Emmett's abrupt dismissal of Karnatz, without warning or reprimand, con- trasts sharply with the method in which lie effected other discharges during the first 8 months of 1949. In March, Emmett discharged a driver named Robert- son, but the dismissal was neither abrupt nor unexpected. On numerous oc- casions during the preceding 6 months Emmett had reprimanded Robertson and once had laid him off for 5 days for offenses that included frequenting a tavern while on duty, leaving his bus unattended, not wearing a regulation uniform, mishandling of fares, leaving his bus motor running at a dangerous speed, and failing to follow the prescribed bus route. In August 1949, Emmett dismissed a driver named Wells for numerous irregularities including the failure to report for work but here again the employee was discharged only after he had been reprimanded and laid off for 3 days. C. Conclusions In view of Karnatz' experience as a bus driver, Emmett's failure to reprimand him for any of the alleged irregularities which Emmett carefully noted, the insubstantial character of several of the alleged acts of misconduct, even if Emmett's testimony is credited, and the fact that no employee had ever before been discharged for any of them, the undersigned does not believe that Karnatz was dismissed for the reasons assigned. When consideration is given to Karnatz' prominence in concerted activities, his leadership in the AFL campaign of which the Respondent was aware, and the fact that it was not until the day after the organizational meeting at Karnatz' home that Emmett began to note that Karnatz' attitude and work were intolerable, the undersigned is convinced that, absent his union activities, Karnatz would not have been discharged without reprimand or warning when on July 7, Emmett allegedly saw him smoking while on duty. Further, when consideration is given to Emmett's threat to Goodman that if any trouble accompanied the advent of the AFL he would "lock the doors ; there won't be any Plymouth Coach," and the interrogation of employees as to their union interests and those of other employees conducted by both Arquillo and Emmett, as well as the antiunion attitude of the owner and the general manager of the Plymouth Division, the undersigned is convinced and finds that Karnatz was dismissed for his participation in concerted activities and for his active leadership in the AFL campaign. In so doing the Respondent discrimi- nated with regard to Karnatz' hire and tenure of employment in order to dis- courage membership in a labor organization and thereby interfered with, re- strained, and coerced the Plymouth Division employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act. V. THE EFFECT OF THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES UPON COMMERCE The activities of the Respondent, set forth in Section IV, above, occurring in connection with the operations of the Respondent, set forth in Section I, above, 26 The quotations in this paragraph are from Sinta's testimony. Sinta had been the manager of the Plymouth Coach Company when it was operated by Arquillo's predecessor. When Emmett took over the management he kept Sinta as a bookkeeper in his office. Sinta's credibility was heavily assailed by counsel for the Respondent who asserted that by his testimony Sinta was seeking to avenge his displacement from the manager's position. In weighing the credibility of Sinta's testimony the undersigned has considered this possibility but is satisfied that it is without foundation, for Sinta, while on the stand, impressed the undersigned as being completely honest and forthright Emmett denied generally Sinta's version of his conversations with Arquillo, but his denial was not per- suasive. Arquillo was not questioned as to this aspect of the case. DELUXE MOTOR STAGES 1439 have a close, intimate, and substantial relation to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States, and tend to lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free flow thereof. VI. THE REMEDY Having found that the Respondent has engaged in certain unfair labor prac- tices, the undersigned will recommend that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act. Having found that the Respondent has discriminated in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of Arthur Karnatz, it will be recommended that the Respondent offer him immediate and full reinstatement to his former or substantially equivalent position 27 and make him whole for any loss of pay he may have suffered by reason of the Respondent's discrimination against him by payment to him of a sum of money equal to that which he normally would have earned as wages from the date of his discharge to the date of the Respond- ent's offer of reinstatement, less his net earnings during said period .2' Loss of pay shall be computed on the basis of each separate calendar quarter or portion thereof during the period from the Respondent's discriminatory action to the date of a proper offer of reinstatement. The quarterly periods, herein called quarters, shall begin with the first day of January, April, July, and October Loss of pay shall be determined by deducting from a sum equal to that which each employee would normally have earned for each such quarter or portion thereof, his net earnings, if any, in any other employment during that period. Earnings in one particular quarter shall have no effect upon the back-pay liability for any other quarter29 It will also be recommended that the Respondent, upon reasonable request, make available to the Board and its agents all payroll and other records pertinent to an analysis of the amount due as back pay. Since a discriminatory discharge "goes to the very heart of the Act" (N. L. B. B. v. Entwistle Mfg Co., 120 F. 2d 532, 536 (C. A. 4) ), the undersigned will recommend that the Respondent be ordered to cease and desist from in any manner infringing upon the rights of employees as guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act. See May Department Stores v. N. L R. B., 326 U. S. 376, 386-392. Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact and upon the entire record in the case, the undersigned makes the following : CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1 Local 1303, Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees of America, AFL, is a labor organization admitting to membership employees of the Respondent. 2 By discriminating in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of Arthur Karnatz, the Respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor prac- tices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (3) and (1) of the Act. 3. The aforesaid unfair labor practices are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. [Recommended Order omitted from publication in this volume.] 27 The Chase National Bank of the City of New York, San Juan, Puerto Rico, Branch, ,65 NLRB 827. 28 Crossett Lumber Company, 8 NLRB 440. 29 P. W. Woolworth Company, 90 NLRB 289. 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