John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 13, 195193 N.L.R.B. 778 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation 778 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Order Upon the basis of the entire record in this case, the National Labor Relations Board hereby orders that the petition filed herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed. JOHN HANCOCK MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY and INSURANCE AND ALLIED WORKERS ORGANIZING COMMITTEE , CIO, PETITIONER. Case No. 1-RC--1659. March 13, 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 Robert E. Greene, hearing officer.,' The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed 2 UOPWA has requested oral argument. As the record, briefs, and motion papers adequately present the issues and the positions of the parties, the request is hereby denied. 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 Petitioner, and National Federation of Insurance Agents Council, AFL, an intervenor, herein called AFL, and United Office and Professional Workers of America, an intervenor, herein called i On February 8, 1951 , nearly 2 months after the close of the hearing on December 15, 1950, the UOPWA moved to reopen the hearing to take testimony that on or about December 8, 1950 , a conference of employees in the unit herein involved met to establish a policy for negotiating a wage increase ; that on December 12 and 13 , 1950, negotiations were had with the Employer , and an increase agreed upon ; that the Petitioner conceded UOPWA's status as an appropriate bargaining agent and its right to negotiate ; that an increase was paid to employees on January 17, 1951, and another will be paid before expiration of the contract on June 15 , 1951 ; that in December 1950, and since, many employees have signed new checkoff cards in favor of UOPWA ; and, finally, that the Employer continues to recognize UOPWA and UOPWA continues to administer , the contract. 2 Except for the fact of actual payment of one installment of the wage increase , all the points raised in the motion could have been litigated during the hearing. No request was made to do so, or to continue the hearing for the purpose . The motion is therefore denied. During the course of questioning J. H. Durkin, former president of UOPWA and now secretary -treasurer of DPOWA, the Petitioner requested the minutes of the UOPWA convention at which the merger agreement was approved , and of the DPOWA constitutional convention . Durkin replied that because of the illness of the stenographer , the minutes had not been transcribed . When asked the name of the stenographer by the hearing officer, Durkin refused to answer . The Petitioner moved to strike Durkin's testimony. The motion was referred to the Board. In view of the fact that Durkin offered no adequate explanation for his refusal, the Petitioner 's motion to strike is hereby granted. See National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regulations , Section 102 . 58 (d). 93 NLRB No. 132. JOHN HANCOCK MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 779 UOPWA, are labor organizations 3 claiming to represent certain em- ployees of the Employer. 3. UOPWA contends that an existing collective bargaining agree- ment between it and the Employer constitutes a bar to this proceeding. The Petitioner and the AFL assert that the contract is not a bar for any one or all of the following reasons : (1) UOPWA was expelled from the CIO; (2) a schism within UOPWA has caused confusion and doubt as to the representative status of UOPWA; and (3) UOPWA, by reason of its merger into DPOWA, has ceased to exist as a separate collective bargaining agency. The Employer is neutral. The Employer sells life insurance throughout the United States. For the Employer's administrative purposes, the United States is divided into regions, in each of which are numbers of district offices. Each district office has a manager, several assistant managers, and from 10 to 50 agents. In all, there are about 205 district offices and 5,800 agents. On June 15, 1949, after an election and Board certification,4 United Office and Professional Workers, CIO, executed a contract with the Employer covering all the Employer's agents in a single, Nation-wide bargaining unit. Both the certification and the contract were in the name of UOPWA-CIO. The contract expires on June 15, 1951, but contains a 60-day automatic renewal clause. UOPWA-CIO had as affiliates an undetermined number of insur- ance locals, many of which were amalgamated locals which included under their jurisdiction not only John Hancock agents, but also agents of other insurance companies and, in some cases, several district offices of one or more companies. Other locals were cpextensive with but one Hancock office. On March 1, 1950, UOPWA was expelled from the CIO. There- after, the Insurance and Allied Workers Organizing Committee, CIO, the Petitioner herein, was formed and has since issued charters to groups of former UOPWA members who wished to affiliate with it. The evidence of schism in the record is largely confined to dis- affiliation activities in some 35 locals and district offices in the north- UOPWA contends that the Petitioner is not a labor organization within the meaning of the Act. The record shows that the Petitioner is an organization of insurance company employees formed to represent such employees in matters pertaining to wages, hours, and other conditions of employment . It is affiliated with the Congress of Industrial Organiza- tions. We find that the Petitioner is a labor organization within the meaning of the Act. The Petitioner contends that UOPWA, formerly affiliated with the CIO, later expelled therefrom , and now a division of Distributive, Processing , and Office Workers of America (DPOWA), is no longer a labor organization Without deciding the question of UOPWA's continued existence as an entirely independent union, we find that as a part or division of DPOWA it is a labor organization within the meaning of the Act. 4 John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, 82 NLRB 179. 780 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD eastern United States .5 Of these, about 21 locals disaffiliated with complete formality and with almost complete unanimity. Employees of 11 district offices took individual formal action as there seemed no chance that the locals of which they were parts would act as locals." Most of these district offices and former UOPWA locals have now joined the Petitioner. In addition, 2 or 3 locals met, adopted oral resolutions to disaffiliate, signed CIO membership cards, and applied for charters as CIO affiliates. In sum, the record shows that of 5,800-odd Hancock agents throughout the country, some 2,600 belonged to locals or worked in district offices that took action to disaffiliate from UOPWA and join the CIO. As there are about 1,480 Hancock agents working out of offices which have never been organized or in which the UOPWA local is admittedly defunct, the number of those who have acted to disaffiliate is more than half of the UOPWA mem- bership which was active at or about the time of expulsion. Meantime, in October 1950, UOPWA joined with two other inter- national unions' to form the new Distributive, Processing and Office Workers of America (DPOWA). UOPWA first held a special con- vention of its members, at which time a previously drawn up merger agreement, signed by the three executive boards, was approved. The merger agreement provided inter alia that (1) the three unions "shall- merge and create a single union with one leadership, one headquarters, one treasury and in all respects shall act in a united fashion"; (2) the present membership of "UOPWA shall comprise the Office and Professional Division, and be alternatively known as the, United Office and Professional Workers of America." The officers were to be the president, secretary-treasurer, administrative director, and eight vice presidents, three each from FTA and DWU and two from UOPWA. DWU was to designate the president, FTA the adminis- trative director, and UOPWA the secretary-treasurer. In addition, each union was to designate eight members of the executive board. Following the UOPWA approval of the merger agreement, a con- vention of the DPOWA organizing group was held and a constitution adopted. It declares that "we, the workers in ... this International, having become united, hereby declare ourselves to be an industrial union" named Distributive, Processing and Office Workers of America. 5 There is no showing in the record of how many UOPWA locals existed in the United States before or after the expulsion . UOPWA introduced in evidence a list of 48 locals it claimed were active in October-November 1950 . The Petitioner contested the claim with respect to 15 of the 48 Both parties agreed that another 15 locals, not on UOPwA's list, were defunct or disaffiliated . No testimony was taken as to the number or status of locals on the West Coast, in the south, or in the southwest , and almost none as to locals west of the Mississippi River generally. 6 Such meetings of district office employees were normally called by the chairman of the office "local relations" ( i e. grievance) committee , which existed in each district office. ' Food, Tobacco and Agricultural Workers Union (FTA), and Distributive Workers Union (DWU). JOHN HANCOCK MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 781 It provides in part III that the former unions shall be divisions of DPOWA, alternatively known by their former names, and, with re- spect to their powers, that they may, as subcommittees, meet and make recommendations with reference to collective bargaining and other matters. There is no other mention of the divisions in the constitu- tion. The constitution further provides that the officers and general executive board shall be elected by the convention, and in this part it does not mention the formula set out in the merger agreement for representation on the board of the three divisions as such. Article B of part V gives "supreme authority" between conventions to the gen- eral executive board. Per capita taxes are payable "to the Inter- national Union," and union funds must be deposited by the secretary- treasurer in the name of the union. The CIO Petitioner introduced in evidence, in addition to the merger agreement and new constitution, (1) a letter written by the new presi- dent of DPOWA, who was formerly the president of the Distributive Workers Union, to the Employer herein, requesting a bargaining "conference between management . . . and a committee of this organi- zation"; (2) a notice to all locals to pay their dues to DPOWA; (3) and a canceled check showing that locals receive their remission of checkoff dues directly from DPOWA and not from UOPWA. We need not decide, as the Petitioner and the AFL would have us do, that any single one of the three events, expulsion from the CIO, schism, or merger, is sufficient to prevent operation of the contract as a bar. It is clear that, taken together, they show an intraunion up- heaval of such scope and effect as to create extreme confusion and un- certainty with regard to the status of the contracting union as bargain- ing representative of the Employer's employees. In these circum- stances, to apply the Board's ordinary contract bar rule would impede rather than encourage the practice of collective bargaining that the Act was intended to foster and protect.' Accordingly, we find that the contract Which will terminate on June 15, 1951, is not a bar to a present determination of representatives.' We find that a question affecting commerce exists concerning the representation of employees of the Employer within the meaning of Section 9 (c) (1) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. 4. The parties agree, and we find, that the following employees of the Employer in its district offices in the United States constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the mean- ing of Section 9 (b) of the Act: 8 We have considered , but do not regard as controlling , the cases cited by UOPWA in its supplemental motion dated February 26, 1951. Accordingly , the motion is denied. 'Cf. Slater System, Inc., 93 NLRB 204 ; Radio Station WBNY, 92 NLRB 1561; J. J. Tourek Manufacturing Co., 90 NLRB 5; White Sewing Machine Company, 89 NLRB 1284 ; Airtemp Division, Chrysler Corporation, 89 NLRB 448. 782 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD All district agents, excluding clerical employees, district managers, assistant district managers, and other supervisors as defined in the Act. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication in this volume.] MEMBERS HOUSTON and MURDOCK, concurring : While we join our colleagues in directing an election here, we do so without adopting their reasoning and conclusions with respect to the expulsion from the CIO, the alleged schism and merger as remov- ing the incumbent union's contract as a bar. We believe this case is in such a posture as to make unnecessary any ruling at all on these issues. It has been our practice to proceed with elections when there is left only a short time before an existing contract expires. We have proceeded to direct elections within 30 days of the commencement of the renewal period. In this case, the contract involved will expire on June 15, 1951, and contains a 60-day automatic renewal clause. Con- sequently, an election is now timely, and we see no need to do more than apply this rule and proceed to determine the representation question. UNION STREET RAILWAY COMPANY and AMALGAMATED ASSOCIATION OF STREET, ELECTRIC AND MOTOR COACH EMPLOYEES OF AMERICA, AFL, PETITIONER. Case No. 1-RC-1843. March 13, 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 Joseph Lepie, 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-niem- ber 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 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. The Petitioner was certified by the Board in 1945 as the repre- sentative of the production and, maintenance employees of the„ Em- ployer. Inspectors were not included in this certification. During 93 NLRB No. 119. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation