Inyo Lumber Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsJan 11, 195192 N.L.R.B. 1267 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation rya In the Matter of INYo LUMBER COMPANY, EMPLOYER and INTER- NATIONAL UNION OF OPERATING ENGINEERS, LOCAL No. 12, AFL, PETITIONER In the Matter Of INYO LUMBER COMPANY, EMPLOYER, and TEAMSTERS, CHAUFFEURS, WAREHOUSEMEN & HELPERS LOCAL UNION 87, INTER- NATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF TEAMSTERS, CHAUFFEURS, WAREHOUSE- MEN & HELPERS OF AMERICA, AFL In the Matter of INYO LUMBER COMPANY, EMPLOYER, and LUMBER AND SAWMILL WORKERS UNION, LOCAL 3181, UNITED BROTHERHOOD OF CARPENTERS & JOINERS OF AMERICA, AFL Cases Nos. 00-RC1027, 2O-RC-1033, and 00-RC-1042.Decided January 11, 1951 DECISION, ORDER, AND DIRECTION OF ELECTION Upon petitions duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a consolidated hearing was held before Harry Bamford, -hearing officer. The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. 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 [Chairman Herzog and Members Murdock and Styles]. Upon the entire record in this case, the Board finds : 1. The Employer is a partnership comprised of William I. Moffett and Carl B. Goldstein, doing business as Inyo Lumber Company. It is engaged in the logging, manufacturing, and selling of lumber. and box shook. Its logging operations are conducted in Mono County, California, approximately 60 miles from Bishop, California; its sawmill, dry yard, and box factory are in Inyo County 9 miles from Bishop. A retail lumberyard is maintained by the Employer at Bishop, California. In 1949 the Employer's purchases of raw materials, principally logs and lumber, totaled $431,097.27, of which amount approximately 33 percent was shipped to the Employer from points outside the State of California. During the same period, the Employer's sales of fin- ished products, consisting of lumber and box shook, totaled $1,004,- 877.31, of which amount approximately 15 percent was shipped to 92 NLRB No. 185. 1267 1268 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD points outside the State. In addition to these direct shipments, an undetermined but substantial quantity of the Employ er's sales to purchasers within the State were transshipped to points outside =the State by purchasers thereof. We find that the Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the National Labor Relaions Act, and, in view of the fact. that the Employer's out-of-State shipments for 1949 exceeded .$25,000, that it will effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction., 2. The labor organizations involved claim to represent certain employees of the Employer. 3. A question affecting commerce exists concerning the representa- tion of employees of the Employer within the meaning of Section 9 (c) (1) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act 2 4. The Engineers and Lumber Workers both seek an over-all unit of production and maintenance employees, including the woods, mill, yard, box factory, and retail yard employees. The Teamsters seeks a unit of truck drivers, mechanic's helpers in the repair shop, and all -men under the supervision of the yard foreman. The Employer, in its brief, contends that only an over-all unit is appropriate because of the almost complete integration of its operations. The Employer operates a comparatively small logging and saw- mill plant. All timber is procured from its own logging operation which is located about 65 miles north of the mill. There the trees are felled, limbed, bucked, and skidded to the landing, where they are loaded on the Employer's trucks by a crane. They are then trucked to the mill where they are dumped into the pond, floated to the slip, lifted to the log deck, cut by the band saw, trimmed, sent down the green chain, .graded, and plat on blocks where the cut lumber is then carried to the dry yard by the Ross carrier and there piled for drying. A:ftr the lumber is dried it is regraded, placed on Employer's. trucks or on independent contractors' trucks, -and hauled to the Employer's -markets. The box factory uses ]umber, which is not otherwise market- able. In addition, the Employer merchandises some of its lumber through its retail lumberyard. At the time of the hearing approxi- mately 125 employees were employed by the Employer. ' Stanislaus Implement and Hardware Company , Limited, 91 NLRB 618. 2 The Employer, in its brief , objects to any election being directed in this case until after unfair labor practice charges filed by the Employer have been disposed of and their effects dissipated . No waiver was filed by the Employer . The Regional Director entered into a settlement agreement , providing for the posting of notices by the labor organization, and dismissed the charges on August 14. 1950, which action was thereafter sustained by the General Counsel . Such ,dismissal disposes of the charge insofar as it concerns this representation case. We shall direct the Regional Director not to conduct the election hereinafter provided for until after January 13, 1951, the expiration date of the period for posting notices. INYO LUMBER COMPANY 1269 All operations are directly supervised by William I. Moffett, the managing partner. Under Moffett are six working foremen, all of whom are stipulated by the parties to be supervisers : woods, box fac- tory, sawmill, yard, retail yard, and shop foremen. The employees sought by the Teamsters work in the shop, retail yard, and yard sec- tions. Under the shop foreman are 12 truck drivers (heavy), 8 mechanic's helpers (also called lube men and grease monkeys)., 2 welders, an electrician, a, machinist, and a "cat" (heavy duty) mechanic. Of these, the Teamsters seeks to represent only the truck drivers and the me- chanic's helpers. The shop services, repairs, and maintains all the equipment of the Employer used in both the woods and mill opera- tions. The employees in this section, as is true in the Employer's other sections, are used as a common working pool for various tasks. The truck drivers also help load and unload the trucks and are employed on other jobs, such as crane operating and grading. During ap- proximately five winter months the truck drivers are kept busy doing, maintenance work on the equipment used in the woods operations and in doing any other work that may be found for them at the, sawmill, in the box factory, or around the yard or shop: The mechanic's helpers perform maintenance work directly under the instructions of the shop foreman or assist the machinist, electrician, or welders in their work. They also unload logs from logging trucks into the pond. Working in the retail yard are several yard boys (laborers), a truck driver who makes retail lumber deliveries in a light truck, and an office girl. They are under the supervision of the retail yard fore- man. The Teamsters would include only the truck driver in its unit. The Teamsters seeks all. the men under the yard foreman. These employees include the Ross carrier operator, two lumber pilers, the lift truck driver and his helper, and from two to six lumber. handlers. In the yard the two lumber pliers, who are paid on a piecework basis,. stack and stick the green lumber in piles where it stands, in the sum until dried. It is then repiled by the dry lumber handlers, after which it is. moved-.to the box factory or upon over-the-road trucks as the business requires. The lumber is moved about the yard by the Ross carrier. Piles are raised and lowered by the lift truck. The operator of the lift truck is assisted by a swamper. There is constant interchange of jobs between all operations in addition to those already indicated. During the winter months the woods employees are shifted to the mill operations. Helpers who handle the logs in the pond may come either from the shop, box fac- tory, or-sawmill. Mechanic's helpers also work in the sawmill, woods, or sprilk1e roads. The truck drivers sometimes fell their own trees 1270 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD and limb them and then load them on the trucks. The Ross carrier operator has piled lumber, worked on the pond, and in the retail yard. In addition to the widespread use of all employees as a common labor pool, there is a considerable history of permanent transfer between the different operations of the Employer. Employees who are hired as common laborers may progress to any of various classifications. The record shows that during the past year three mill workers were promoted to truck drivers. Present truck drivers have heretofore worked in the woods, in the shop, driven graders, cranes, or hauled timber, driven a cat, worked in the garage, and as lumber handlers. The employees sought by the Teamsters are paid on the same hourly basis, have the same hours of work, overtime provisions, hiring pro- cedure, common supervision, and share the same company-wide in- surance benefits. From the above facts, and from the complete record, it appears that the working conditions -and interests of the employees sought by the Teamsters are not essentially different from those of other pro- duction and maintenance employees .3 In the light of the integration of these employees with the Employer's production process, the his- torical pattern of bargaining in the lumber industry, and the result- ing mutuality of interests and working conditions of all employees, we believe that only a single unit of all production and maintenance employees is appropriate for purposes of collective bargaining.4 Ac- cordingly, we shall dismiss the petition of the Teamsters for separate - representation of the truck drivers, mechanic's helpers in the repair shop, and the yard employees, and we shall include those employees in the production and maintenance unit hereinafter found appropriate. We find that all production and maintenance employees 5 of the Employer, including the woods, mill, yard, box factory, and retail yard employees, but excluding clerical employees, guards, and all supervisors as defined in the Act, constitute a unit appropriate for e For approximately 10 years the Employer has had oral contracts with the Teamsters covering only the truck drivers. These agreements were made in April of each year. There has never been an election of any type conducted among the employees involved and there Is no other bargaining history. We find this bargaining history inconclusive and not determinative of the issues. * See Weyerhaeuser Timber Company ( Springfield Lumber Division ), 87 NLRB 1076, and 88 NLRB 155 . Also, White River Lumber Company, 88 NLRB 158. 6 We shall include the woods janitress in the unit found appropriate . This employee works and lives at the logging operation , where she cleans the bunkhouse and community 'washroom facilities . She is supervised by the woods foreman and performs her duties during the day. The parties are in dispute as to the office janitress . This employee is the wife of Moffett's brother-in-law. She usually works 3 or 4 hours a night after the other employees have gone home, and is directly supervised by Moffett . In view of her close relationship to management , we shall exclude her from the unit. See Wm. P. McDonald Corporation, 83 NLRB 427. INYO LUMBER COMPANY 1271 the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act. ORDER IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the petition filed in Case No. 20-RC-1033 be and it hereby is dismissed. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication in this volume.] Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation