J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsApr 17, 195193 N.L.R.B. 1513 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation J. P. STEVENS & Co., INC. 1513 (a) Public utilities or transit systems; (b) companies which function as instrumentalities and channels of interstate and foreign commerce and their essential links; or (c) enterprises engaged in producing or handling goods destined for out-of-State shipment, or performing services out of State, in the value of $25,000 per annum or more." 6 While the reasonably expected volume of sales to be made to firms out of State does not exceed $25,000 and the volume of sales to firms within the State which meet the requirements of Section (c) cited above, does not exceed $50,000, alternative minimum requirements established for these categories, the projected sales figures, expressed as a percentage of the required minimum figures established for each of the afore-mentioned categories, totals at least 100 percent when added to each other. Accordingly, we find that it will effectuate the policies of the Act for the Board to assert jurisdiction over the opera- tions of this Employer 7 2. The labor organization involved claims to represent certain em- ployees 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. 4. We find a unit composed of all production and maintenance employees employed at the Employer's Atlanta, Georgia, plant, ex- cluding executive, professional, clerical employees, guards, and super- visors as defined by the Act, to be the appropriate unit for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication in this volume.] ° See. Hollow Tree Lumber Company , 91 NLRB 635 ; Justrite Press, 93 NLRB 786. The Rutledge Paper Products, Inc., 91 NLRB 625. In view of the fact that the instant case meets the requirements promulgated in our Rutledge Paper Products decision, weconsider it unnecessary to determine whether or not some other aspect of our announced policy would also be applicable. J. P. STEVENS & CO., INC., REPUBLIC COTTON MILLS DIVISION and TEXTILE WORKERS UNION OF AMERICA, CIO, PETITIONER . Case No. 10-RC-884. April 17,1951 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 John C. Carey, Jr., hearing 93 NLRB No. 259. 1514 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 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 [Members Houston, Reynolds, and Styles]. 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.2 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. 4. The appropriate unit : The Petitioner and Intervenor seek a unit of all production and maintenance employees in the Employer's mills Nos. 1, 2, and 3 in Great Falls, South Carolina, excluding office clericals, guards, pro- fessional employees, and supervisors as defined in the Act. The Em- ployer contends that the appropriate unit consists of all its employees, including office clericals, and excluding only supervisors and con- fidential employees. - The Employer, a division of J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc., operates three plants at Great Falls, South Carolina, where it is engaged in the manufacture of cotton textiles. The Employer employs approximately b00 workers in mill No. 1, 500 in mill No. 2, 700 in mill No. 3, and 150 in its office and elsewhere. Each mill completely processes cotton from its raw state to cotton cloth, which is shipped out from the cloth room located in mill No. 3. In 1946, the Board, pursuant to a consent election, certified the Inter- venor as representative of a single bargaining unit of production and 'At the hearing the United Textile Workers of America, AFL, moved to dismiss the petition because a charge filed by it against the Employer of refusal to bargain was then pending. Since the hearing the General Counsel has sustained the Regional Director's refusal to issue a complaint. The motion to dismiss is therefore denied The Employer at the hearing questioned the adequacy and currency of the Petitioner's showing of interest. The determination of these questions is an administrative matter. Ballantine Produce Co ., Inc., 81 NLRB 629. The Employer further offered to prove, and moved to dismiss the petition on the ground, that the Congress of Industrial Organizations, with which the Petitioner is affiliated, had not complied with the filing requirements of Section 9 (f), (g), and (h) of the Act. The hearing officer rejected the offer of proof and reserved ruling on the motion to dismiss for the Board. For the reasons set forth in J. H. Rutter-Rex Manu- facturing Co., Inc, 90 NLRB 130, the hearing officer's rejection of the offer of proof is sustained and the motion to dismiss is denied It may be added that the Board's records show that the CIO was in compliance with the filing requirements of the Act at the time the petition was filed and is currently in compliance. Stowe Spinning Company, 93 NLRB No. 139. 2 The motion of United Textile Workers of America, AFL, herein called the Intervenor, to intervene, was granted by the hearing officer without objection. J. P. STEVENS & CO., INC. 1515 maintenance employees at the Employer's three Great Falls mills. From 1946 until July 1, 1949, the Employer and the Intervenor main- tained contractual relations on a multimill basis. Labor relations for the three mills are handled by the same official. None of the parties herein has indicated a desire for separate units. We find, therefore, that a single unit of the employees in the Employer's three Great Falls, South Carolina, mills is appropriate. The parties are in disagreement over the following employees, who would be included by the Employer and excluded by the Petitioner and Intervenor, except as noted : (1) O)fte clericals: In accordance with customary Board policy, we shall exclude all office clerical employees, including the following specific categories of employees : General payroll men, payroll clerks including Ford Jackson, production statistics man (Gene Campbell), accounts payable clerk, supply clerk typist, switchboard operators, secretary to the general manager, and general typists. (2) Factory clericals: The factory clerical employees include nine production and statistical clerks who gather and tabulate data in the factory, nine supply clerks and three reserve supply clerks, the yarn supply checkers, the inventory clerk, the raw material clerk, and the shipping clerks. In accordance with our customary policy, we shall include the factory clericals in the unit. (3) Designers: The Employer employs a head designer and one assistant, who work under the planning supervisor. The designers do no original work, but lay out patterns for styles, draw patterns, and perform other duties of a technical nature. Their work involves little contact with production employees, and we shall exclude the two designers from the unit.' (4) Costs and standards men: These employees, who work under the costs and standards supervisor, run time tests on particular jobs and run time studies on groups of jobs. During the prior bargaining with the Intervenor, the costs and standards men represented the Company in timing particular operations in order to determine rates. Seventy-five percent of the time of these employees is spent in the mill in timing operations and the remainder is spent in calculating rates, which are subject to the approval of the mill overseers before being put into effect. It appears from the testimony that the interests of these employees are dissimilar to those of the production and main- tenance employees, and we shall exclude them from the unit .4 (5) Laboratory technician: This employee runs quality tests on yarn samples and also grades yarn. In addition he prepares yarn tints for use in the mills. The laboratory technician spends two-thirds of his time in the laboratory and visits the mills only to deliver yarn 8 Botany Worsted Mills, 53 NLRB 920; Mooresville Mills, 90 NLRB No. 48. 4 Southern Desk Company, 92 NLRB No. 137. 1516 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD .1 tints. As the task performed is technical, and as this employee has little contact with production and maintenance employees, we shall exclude him from the unit.' (6) Cloth salesgirl: This employee is stationed at the Great Falls Community Center where the Employer maintains a booth to sell cloth to employees and to certain townspeople. We shall exclude the cloth salesgirl from the unit because she has no common interests with the production and maintenance employees. (7) Janitors: There are three or four janitors who clean up in the mills and one who works exclusively in the office building. In agree- ment with the parties,° we shall include the mill janitors in the unit. We shall exclude the office janitor who works under the office super- visor and has no contact with the production and maintenance em- ployees.7 (8) Warehouse and allied personnel: These employees all work under the warehouse supervisor. The freight truck drivers haul freight between the railroad station and the mills and from mill to mill. One of these drivers also spends part of his time in the yards of the mills driving a tractor. The cloth truck driver hauls cloth from mills No. 1 and No. 2 to the cloth room in mill No. 3.8 The 6 warehouse laborers load, unload, and stack cotton in the warehouse located in mill No. 3. The 10 yardmen receive cotton, load and unload cars, and clean up the' mill grounds. Because the interests of these employees are closely allied to those of the production and mainte- nance employees, we shall include the freight truck drivers; the cloth truck driver, the warehouse laborers,1° and the yardmen 11 in the unit. (9) Timekeeper: This employee sits in an automobile in the yard and keeps the time of the warehouse employees and the yardmen. The timekeeper is supervised by the engineer. His data is used for cost analysis purposes. The record does not show that the activities of the timekeeper differ from those of similar employees who have been included in production and maintenance units. We shall include this employee in the unit in accordance with our usual policy 12 Wm. P. McDonald Corporation , 83 NLRB 427 , 432 Union-Buffalo Mills , 93 NLRB No 105. The laboratory technician has a clerk who records test results and on occasion assists the technician For the reasons adduced above, we shall also exclude the clerk from the unit . Mooresville Mills , supra ( Par. 4 (9) of Decision). 0 At the hearing the Intervenor took the position that all of the janitors should be excluded from the unit . In its brief , however, the Intervenor indicated its desire to represent the mill janitors as part of the production and maintenance unit Stowe Spinning Company, supra. Cf. Southern Desk Company, supra. ° At the hearing the Intervenor took the position that all of the janitors should be In its brief , however , the Intervenor indicated that it wished this employee excluded. 0 Southland Manufacturing Company, 91 NLRB No. 3,8 ; Glazer Steel Corporation, 81 NLRB 530. 10 Edgar F . Hurff Company , 77 NLRB 762. 11 Glazer Steel Corporation, supra. 12 H. 0. Canfield Company, 76 NLRB 606. The Petitioner took no position regarding the inclusion of the timekeeper in the unit. J. P. STEVENS & CO., INC. 1517 (10) Garage mechanic: This employee fixes the Employer's 12 trucks and the 1 company automobile. He works under the super- vision of the master mechanic, who supervises other employees in- cluded in the unit herein found appropriate, and is located in the garage adjoining one of the mills. We shall include the garage me- chanic in the unit.13 (11) Painters and Plunnbers: These employees, who would be in- cluded by the Petitioner, work in the mills doing repair work and also do some work in houses owned by the Employer. Inasmuch as the painters and plumbers primarily are engaged in maintenance work in the Employer's plants, we shall include them in the unit. (12) Dye plant employees: The dye plant, a new operation for the Employer, employed about three men as of the date of the hearing. When in full operation the dye plant will employ nine men who will be engaged in matching colors and dyeing cloth.. The dye plant em- ployees take a direct part in the Employer's production operations. We, therefore, shall include them in the unit. (13) Filter plant employees: The three filter plant employees op- erate the filter plant and test the water used in the mills. The tests performed are relatively simple and require little training and al- though the filter plant is geographically separated from the rest of the production and maintenance employees, we shall include the three filter plant employees in the unit 14 (14) Plant protection employees: (a) Firemen: These nine employees watch the boilers in each mill. They work in boiler rooms, which in the case of each mill are located within 50 yards of the mill. On week ends the firemen patrol the mills and'punch watch boxes. We shall include the firemen in the unit, because less than 50 percent of their time is spent in guard duty.15 (b), Gatemen: These four employees are stationed at gate houses near the entrance of each mill. They check persons coming in and out of the mills. Although the gatemen perform some work on leather binders, the record shows that their predominant duty is that of a guard as defined in the Act. We shall therefore exclude the gatemen from the unit.- The parties are also in disagreement as to the supervisory status of the loom fixer instructors, the nine mechanics,17 and the head slasher tenders, all of whom would be included by the Employer and ex- cluded by the Petitioner and Intervenor. 13 Enid Co - Operative Creamery Association, 79 NLRB 444. 19 Wm. P. McDonald Corporation , supra. u Wm. P. McDonald Corporation, supra; Morowebb Cotton Mills Company, 75 NLRB 987. 16 Mooresville Mills, supra. 17 The Employer concedes and we find that the two master mechanics , Locklear and Hammett, are supervisors within the meaning of the Act. 1518 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD There is one loom fixer instructor in each mill. These employees spend one-third of their time training prospective loom fixers. The rest of their working time is spent in the mills, either instructing or in the actual fixing of looms. Although the loom fixer instructors partic- ipate in a pension plan not available to production workers and are, paid 15 to 20 percent more than fixers, they possess none of the indicia of supervisors. In accordance with the customary Board policy, we will include the loom fixer instructors in the unit.18 There are three mechanics in each mill who work under the supervi- sion of the master mechanics. On the first shift these employees spend 25 percent of their time in keeping the time of, and laying out work for, machinists, and 75 percent of their time on their own manual work. On the second and third shifts they work alone. The mechanics have no authority to hire, fire, or discipline any other employees or effec- tively to recommend such action, nor do they responsibly direct any other employees. In these circumstances we find that the mechanics are not supervisors, and we shall include them in the unit.- The nine head slasher tenders work under the general slasher over- seer who is in charge of the slasher rooms in all of the mills involved herein. There is one head slasher tender on each shift in control of the slasher room of each mill. This employee keeps the time of the other slasher tenders and directs their work in the absence of the overseer. The record shows that the head slasher tenders have no authority to hire or fire and that they spend only 30 minutes a day in keeping records of the employees under them. However, but for these head slasher tenders, there would be only one person in authority over all the slasher tenders for three large mills. In these circumstances in- cluding the fact that each head slasher tender controls the slasher room operations on his staff, we find that the head slasher tenders responsibly direct other employees and we will exclude them as supervisors 20 Accordingly, on the basis of the stipulations among the parties, and our findings set forth above, we find that all production and mainte- nance employees of J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc., Republic Cotton Mills Division, Great Falls, South Carolina, with the following specific inclusions and exclusions, constitute a unit appropriate for the pur- poses of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act : Inclmasions : Factory clericals, production and statistical clerks, sup- ply clerks, reserve supply clerks, yarn supply checkers, inventory clerk, raw material clerk, shipping clerks, mill janitors, freight truck drives, warehouse laborers, cloth truck driver, yardmen, garage mechanic, painters and plumbers, dye plant employees, filter plant employees, " Stokely Foods, Inc., 91 NLRB No 29; Rockwood Pottery , Division of Sperti, Inc., 89 NLRB 1349. 19 Mooresville Mills, supra. 20 Morowebb Cotton Malls Company, supra ; Stowe Spinning Company, supra. STANT MANUFACTURING COMPANY 1519 firemen, loom fixer instructors, mechanics, machinists, head over- haulers, color grader, head grader and other graders, card room com- bination man, section men, machinery movers, and loomfixers. Exclusions: Office clericals, general payroll men, payroll clerks,, production statistics man, accounts payable clerk, supply clerk typist, switchboard operator, general typists, timekeeper, head designer, as- sistant designer, costs and standards men, laboratory technician, cloth salesgirl, office janitor, gatemen, head slasher tenders, secretary to gen- eral manager, personnel clerks, standards typists, raw material and inventory supervisor, paymaster, waste control man, personnel super- visor, assistant personnel supervisor, overseers, shift foremen (second hands), master mechanics, warehouse supervisor, machinery mover superintendent, production and standards supervisor, supply super- visor, planning supervisor, guards, professional employees, and other supervisors as defined in the Act. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication in this volume.] STANT MANUFACTURING COMPANY and LOCAL 70, METAL POLISHERS, BUFFERS, PLATERS & HELPERS INTERNATIONAL UNION, A. F. L., PETITIONER STANT MANUFACTURING COMPANY and AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR, PETITIONER . Cases Nos. 35-IBC-413 and 35-IBC-454. April 17 , 1951 Decision and Direction of Elections Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before William A. McGowan, 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. 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. 4. The appropriate unit : The Employer is engaged in the manufacture of automobile parts and accessories, and employs approximately 550 employees. From 93 NLRB No. 253. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation