Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsJun 23, 194132 N.L.R.B. 1056 (N.L.R.B. 1941) Copy Citation In the Matter of JOSEPH E. SEAGRAM & SONS, INC. AND CALVERT DIs-' TILLING COMPANY and UNITED DISTILLERY WORKERS - LIU #914, AFFILIATED WITH THE CONGRESS OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATIONS and AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR, ACTING FOR AND ON BEHALF OF DISTILLERY WORKERS' LOCAL UNIONS, No. 20270; No. 21449; AND No. 21635, PARTIES TO THE CONTRACT and DISTILLERY WORKERS' LOCAL UNION No. 20270, AFFILIATED WITH THE AFL, PARTY TO THE CON- TRACT and DISTILLERY WORKERS' LOCAL UNION No. 21449, AFFIL- 'IATED WITH THE AFL, PARTY TO THE CONTRACT and DISTILLERY WORKERS' LOCAL UNION' No. 21635, AFFILIATED WITH THE AFL, PARTY TO THE CONTRACT and AMERICAN FEDERATION OF DISTILLERY, RECTIFYING AND WINE WORKERS, NATIONAL COUNCIL, AFFILIATED WITH THE AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR, PARTY TO THE CONTRACT Case No. C-1699.-Decided June 23,1941 Jurisdiction : whiskey distilling industry. Unfair Labor Practices In General: employers not responsible for activities of supervisory employees, although of kind normally attributable to employer and found to be unfair labor practices, where evidence indicates that such activities do not reflect desires of employers. Interference, Restraint, and Coercion: charges of, not sustained. Discrimination: discharges pursuant to valid closed-shop contract held not discriminatory. - Practice and Procedure : complaint dismissed. Mr. Herbert O. Eby and Mr. Lester M. Levin, for the Board. White cf Case and Mr. Thomas Kiernan, of New York City, Mr. Morris Rosenberg, of Baltimore, Md., Mr. Sidney Wurmser, of Louis- ville, Ky., and Mr. Leonard Gordon, of Relay, Md., for the respond- ents. Mr. Joseph A. Pathway, by Herbert S. Thatcher, of Washington, D. C., and Mr. Hugh Gormley, of Indianapolis, Ind., for the A. F. of L. and the A. F. of L. locals. Mr. Joseph Gillis and Mr. W. M. Porter, of Baltimore, Md., for the Relay local. Mr. Joseph Kovner, of Washington, D. C., for the United. Mr. Eugene R. Thorrens, of counsel to the Board. 32 N. L. R. B, No. 166. 1056 JOSEPH E. SEAGR.AM & SONS, INC. 1057 DECISION AND ORDER STATEMENT OF THE CASE Upon charges and amended charges duly filed by the Congress of Industrial Organizations, herein called the C. I. 0., and by United Distillery Workers Local Industrial Union #914, affiliated with the C. I. 0., herein called the United, the National Labor Relations Board, herein called the Board, by the Regional Director for the Fifth Region (Baltimore, Maryland), issued its complaint dated June 29, 1940, against Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc., herein called Seagram, and Calvert Distilling Company, herein called Calvert,' and the American Federation of Labor, herein called the A. F. of L., acting for and on behalf of Distillery Workers' Local Unions Nos. 20270, 21449, and 21635, parties to the contract, herein collectively referred to as the A. F. of L. locals, and Distillery Workers' Local Union No. 20270, party to the contract, herein called the Relay local, and Distillery Workers' Local Union No. 21449, party to the contract, herein called the Lawrenceburg local, and Distillery Workers' Local Union No. 21635, party to the contract, herein called the Louisville local, and American Federation of Distillery, Rectifying and Wine Workers, National ' Council, party to the contract, herein called the National Council, alleging that the respondents had engaged in and were engaging in unfair labor practices affecting commerce, within the meaning of Section 8 (1) and (3) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the National Labor Relations Act,'49 Stat. 449, herein called the Act. Copies of the complaint accompanied by notice of hearing were duly served upon the respondents, the United, the A. F. of L., the A. F. of L. locals, and the National Council. With respect to the unfair labor practices, the complaint alleged, in substance, (1) that since on or about November 1, 1937, Calvert has engaged in a continuous plan and course of action of interference with the self-organization of its employees at its plant at Relay, Maryland; (2) that this plan and course of action (a) was intended to encourage and has encouraged membership in the Relay local, (b) was intended to discourage and has discouraged membership in the United, and (c) was intended to interfere and has interfered with the freedom of choice of its Relay, Maryland, employees concerning representatives for purposes of collective bargaining; (3) that in furtherance of the plan and course of action as alleged above, the Seagram and Calvert jointly are referred to herein as the respondents 1058 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD respondents, at the Relay, Maryland, plant, have by their officers, agents, and employees, and particularly by the superintendent, man- ager, and foremen, openly encouraged membership in the Relay local and discouraged membership in the United by numerous acts includ- ing, but not limited to, the following: (a) notifying and encouraging their Relay employees to attend meetings of the Relay local, particu- larly from on or about January, 1, to May 1, 1938; (b) threatening their Relay employees with the loss of their jobs unless they at- tended meetings of, and joined, the Relay local; (c) directing their Relay foremen to attend meetings of the Relay local; and (d) de- nouncing the United, its leaders and members, before the Relay em- ployees; (4) that in furtherance of the afore-mentioned plan and course of action, the respondents, on or about April 15, 1938, nego- tiated an agreement with the A. F.-of L., acting on behalf of the A. F. of L. locals, requiring, as a condition of employment at the respondents' Relay, Louisville, and Lawrenceburg plants, membership in the respective locals; (5) that on May 4, 1939, the respondents renewed the afore-mentioned contract with the National Council, successor to the A. F. of L., acting on behalf of the afore-mentioned locals; (6) that by reason of the afore-mentioned acts and other acts of interference by the respondents at the Relay plant, the Relay local, on or about January 1, 1938,' and at all times thereafter, has been a labor organization aided, promoted, and assisted by the respondents, and therefore is not and,never'has been the representative of the respondents' employees within the proviso of Section 8 (3) of the Act; and (7) that by reason of the matters set forth above, the agreement made by the respondents and the A. F. of L., acting on behalf of the A. F. of L. locals, in 1938 and the renewal thereof en- tered into on May 4, 1939, are illegal and invalid in their entirety. The complaint further alleged that Calvert discharged nine named employees,2 on or about December 27, 1998, and refused and continues to refuse to reinstate them because of their membership in and affilia- tion with'the United, and-because they engaged in concerted activities with other employees for purposes of collective bargaining. On July 16, 1940, the respondents filed a joint answer to the com- plaint, denying the commission of any unfair labor practices, and alleging affirmatively that on or about April 15, 1938, a closed-shop contract was negotiated with the A. F. of L. acting on behalf of the A. F. of L. locals; that the closed-shop contract was concluded upon proof submitted by the A. F. of L. that the locals represented a ma- jority of the respondents' employees in a bargaining unit consisting of the production employees of all three plants; that the contract 2 Lester Arnold, Lee L. Baker, John Blasey, Kenneth Elliott, William Fosler, Mae Harding, Florence Zuck, Charles Peddicord , and William Riedel JOSEPH E. SEiAG'RAM & SONS, INC. 1059 was not negotiated in pursuance of a plan or course of action of inter- ference as set forth in the complaint; that Calvert discharged the persons listed in the complaint pursuant to the closed-shop contract upon the request of the Relay-local, and cannot reinstate them because that local has not advised it that it would be proper to do so. - ' On July 16, 1940, the A. F. of L., the A. F. of L. locals, and the National Council filed a joint answer denying the allegations of the complaint in so far as it alleged that Calvert discouraged membership in the United or encouraged membership in the Relay loc tl. The answer admitted the execution of the afore-mentioned closed-shop contract, but denied specifically that it was entered into in furtherance of any plan or course of action as set forth in the complaint; admitted the renewal of the contract as alleged in the complaint; denied that the Relay local ever had been a labor organization aided, promoted, and assisted by the respondents; denied the allegation that the Relay local is not or 'never-has been a representative of the respondents' employees within the meaning of the Act; on information and belief, affirmatively alleged that the discharges were made at the request of the A. F. of L., the A. F. of L. locals, and the National Council, pur- suant to a valid closed-shop contract, and that the reason for the request that the respondents discharge the named employees was that they were engaging in dual organizational activities on behalf of a rival labor organization; that over the bitter opposition of the re- spondents and without any assistance from them, the A. F. of L. locals obtained a majority of the employees in the respective plants of the respondents and a majority of the employees in all plants of the re- spondents even though A. F. of L. adherents at the Relay plant be excluded from computation; that an appropriate bargaining unit is one consisting of the production employees of the respondents at the Louisville, Lawrenceburg, and Relay plants; and that the contract of April 15, 1938, is valid, legal, and binding. Pursuant to notice, a hearing was held in Baltimore, Maryland, from July 18 to August 2, 1940, before Martin Raphael, the Trial Examiner duly designated by the Chief Trial Examiner. The Board, the respondents, the A. F. of L., the A. F. of L. locals, and the National Council were represented by counsel and participated in the hearing. Full opportunity was afforded all parties to be heard, to examine and cross-examine witnesses, and to introduce evidence bearing on the issues. -During the course of the hearing the respondents moved to strike certain testimony given by Board witnesses. The Trial Examiner re- served ruling thereon and denied the motions in his Intermediate Report. At the close of the hearing, the Board moved to conform the complaint, and the respondents, the A. F. of L., the A. F. of L. 448692-42-vo1 32--68 1060 DECISIONS -OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD locals, and the National Council moved to conform their respective answers, to the proof. The Trial Examiner granted these motions. After the close of the hearing, counsel for the A. F. of L. filed with the Trial Examiner a letter in the nature of a brief, dated August 19, 1940. Thereafter the Trial Examiner issued and duly served upon the parties his Intermediate Report, dated October 4, 1940, finding that the respondents had engaged in and were engaging in unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 8 (1) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act, but had not engaged in 'and were not engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (3) of the Act. More specifically, the Trial Examiner found that the respondents had interfered with, restrained, and coerced employees at the Relay plant in the exercise of the right to self-organization ; he further found that the respondents discharged the nine employees whose names are listed in the complaint pursuant to the provisions of the closed-shop contract, dated April 15, 1938, with the A. F. of L. and that such contract was valid, albeit the respondents assisted the Relay local by unfair labor practices, ' on the ground that it was made with the representatives of an uncoerced majority of employees in an appropriate bargaining unit consisting of employees at the re- spondents' three plants.' For the same reason the, Trial Examiner found that the May 5, 1939, renewal of the 1938 contract was valid. He recommended that the respondents cease and desist from engaging in interference, restraint, and coercion and that the complaint be dis- missed in so far as it alleged the commission of unfair labor practices in violation of Section 8 (3) of the Act. Thereafter the respondents, the United, the A. F. of L., the A. F. of L. locals, and the National Council filed exceptions to portions of the Intermediate Report and the respondents and the A. F. of L. submitted briefs in support thereof. Pursuant to notice served upon all parties, a hearing for the purpose of oral argument was held before the Board in Washington, D. C., on December 3, 1940. The respond- ents, the United, the A. F. of L., the A. F. of L. locals, and the National Council were represented by counsel and participated in the argument. The Board has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner on mo- tions and on objections to the admission of evidence and finds that no prejudicial errors were committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the exceptions to the Intermediate Report and the briefs submitted by the parties, including the brief filed with the Trial Examiner and, save as the exceptions are consistent with the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order set forth below, finds them to be without merit. JOSEPH E. SE'AGRAM, & SONS, n c. 1061 Upon the entire record -in the case, the Board'makes the following: FINDINGS OF FAC,r 1. THE BUSINESS OF THE RESPONDENTS Calvert Distilling Company, a Maryland corporation, owns and operates a plant at Relay, Maryland, where it bottles, distills, barrels, and distributes whiskies and kindred products." Joseph E. Sea-, gram & Sons, Inc., an Indiana corporation, operates two plants, one at Lawrenceburg, Indiana, the other, at Louisville, Kentucky. At the Lawrenceburg and Louisville plants, Seagram bottles, dis- tills, barrels, and distributes whiskies and kindred products. The Iespondents are wholly owned subsidiaries of Distillers Corpora- tion-Seagram's Limited of Montreal, Canada. Since 1934 the three plants -have been operated, maintained, and controlled by a common management. The principal materials used by the respondents at all three plants are the same,-and consist of corn, rye, and barley malt. Ap- proximately 90 to 95 per cent of the grain is purchased outside the States of Maryland, Kentucky, and Indiana. The annual gross sales of the respondents amount to approximately $85,000,000. About 95 per cent by value of the total products of each plant is shipped outside the States of Maryland, Kentucky, and Indiana to other- States of the United States and to Canada The normal complement of production employees at ' Relay, Maryland, is about 500, at -Louisville, Kentucky, about 85, and at Lawrenceburg, Indiana, about 550. II. THE ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED United Distillery Workers LIU #914 is a labor organization affiliated with the Congress of Industrial Organizations. It admits to membership employees who work at the respondents' Relay, Mary- land, plant. The American Federation of Labor is a federation of labor organizations. Distillery Workers' Local Union No. 20270 is a labor organization affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. It admits to membership production workers employed at the respondents' Relay, Maryland, plant. Distillery Workers' Local Union No. 21449 is a labor organization affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. It admits to membership production workers employed at the respondents' Lawrenceburg, Indiana, plant. . 1062 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Distillery Workers' Local Union No. 21635 is a labor organization affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. It admits to membership production workers employed at the respondents' Louis- ville, Kentucky, plant. American Federation of Distillery, Rectifying and Wine Workers, National Council, is a labor organization affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. - The National Council acts on behalf of dis- tillery workers' locals affiliated with the A. F. of L. III. THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Chronology of events The*A. F. of L. at its 1934 convention adopted a plan to organize distillery workers throughout the United State's. Pursuant to this resolution, in February 1935, Joseph Gillis, a national representative of the A. F. of L., endeavored to organize employees at the respond- ent's Relay plant. Meeting with little success, this organizational drive was terminated in 1935, and was not resumed until the late summer of 1936, when William Green, president of the A. F. of L., instructed Francis Dillon, president of A he National Council, to -resume efforts to organize distillery workers on a national scale. Accordingly, employees at the Relay plant were, during the summer of 1936, again solicited to join the A. F. of L. The Relay local was chartered on July 24, 1936. Its attempt to obtain members met with strong opposition by Calvert. On August 10, 1936, Calvert discharged 11 members of the Relay local. On August 12, Calvert initiated an Employee Representation Plan. Two days later, the Relay local called a strike and in September, the Baltimore Federa- tion of Labor, affiliated with the A F. of L., instituted a boycott of Calvert products. On October 22, 1936, Calvert and the A. F. of L. entered into a written agreement which provided, among other things, for the settlement of the strike, the reinstatement of employees, and for the discontinuance of the boycott. However, Calvert failed to reinstate all employees covered by the agreement. As a result, the A. F. of L. filed a charge with the Board claiming that the afore-mentioned Employee Representation Plan was a com- pany-dominated union and that Calvert had unlawfully discharged 11 employees. The Board issued a complaint based on these charges, and a hearing was held, resulting In a Decision and Order by the Board dated August 2, 1937.3 The Order directed Calvert, among other things, to reinstate certain employees and disestablish the Employee - Representation Plan. 'Matter of Maryland Distillery, Inc., et al, and Distillery Workc) s Union 20270, et al, 3 N. L. R. B. 176. JOSEPH E. SEAGRAM & SONS, INC. 1063, Meanwhile, during 1937, the A. F. of L. had continued its efforts to organize the Relay plant, but was unsuccessful in obtaining a foot- hold there. The Employee Representation Plan, though informally "disestablished" after the issuance of the Intermediate report on Feb- ruary 23, 1937, in the first proceeding against Calvert, was followed on or about, May 19, 1937, by the establishment 'of another union, the Calvert Distilling Company Employees Association of Relay, Mary- land, Inc., which, about that time, obtained from Calvert a 1=year contract containing a check-off provision." The C. 1.0. made its first, appearance at the Relay plant about June 1937. On three occasions, in June, September, and December 1937, C. I. O. organizers distributed literature and application blanks for membership `.outside the, gates. There was "C.. I. O. talk" in the plant and about 15 Relay employees joined the C. I. O. By January 1, 1938, however, neither the C. I. O. nor the Relay local had in excess of 15 or 20 members among the approximately 500 Relay employees. While the C. I. O. confined its efforts to. the Relay plant, the A. F. of L. spread its drive, sometime in July 1937, to the Lawrenceburg plant, where organizational activities were conducted under the direction, first of Hugh Gormley and later Arnold Nahand. Throughout the summer and fall of 1937, the respondents opposed the A. F. of L:'s attempt to obtain members, and i_ the early part of January 1938 the Lawrenceburg local called a strike and instituted a boycott to prevent the union from "becoming demoralized." On or about- January 15, 1938, Nahand requested a conference with Reed, the Lawrenceburg plant manager, to negotiate a contract; on or about January 22, 1938, Reed sent Nahand a telegram refusing this request. On February 12, 1938, the Lawrenceburg local filed a charge with the Board alleging that Seagram had engaged in unfair labor practices in violation .of Section 8 (1), (3), and (5) of the Act.,' ' Late in 1936 or in the early part of 1937, Dillon began organiza- tional activity amoung Seagram employees at Louisville. At that time there existed at the Louisville plant an inside organization known as the Seagram Protective Association which continued to function until, about January 1, 1938. Dillon made slow progress in organizing the Seagram employees. By spring of 1937 only four or five employees at the Louisville plant belonged to A. F. of L. Local 20560 which embraced employees of companies, including ' Seagram, ' The A. F. of L. filed a charge alleging that the employees ' association at the Relay plant was employer -dominated but withdrew . it in November 1937. - 5In March 1938 , just prior to the negotiations leading to the closed -shop contract, the A. F. of L. terminated the boycott , withdrew the pickets, and the strikers returned to work. The charges relating to the Lawrenceburg plant ,were dismissed by the Board's Director for the Eleventh Region in September 1939. 1064 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD operating distilleries in the Louisville area.6 In the latter part of 1937, Dillon conferred with Harry Bronfman, Louisville plant man- ager, concerning the reinstatement of employees discharged because, according to Dillon, the management suspected that they belonged to the A., F. of L. Apparently Dillon failed to obtain satisfaction. At his request, the Central Labor Union of Louisville, affiliated with the A. F. of L. instituted against Seagram products a boycott which continued in effect until the beginning of bargaining negotiations in April 1938 which led to the making of the closed-shop contract. By April 1938, however, the A. F. of L. claimed to represent a majority of the production employees at the three plants. On or about April 15, 1938, after a series of conferences beginning on April 1, 1938, the. respondents entered into a closed-shop contract with the A. F. of L. on behalf of the A. F. of L. locals.7 Thereafter, a substantial number of Relay employees, beginning in July 1938, shifted their affiliation to the C. I. O. which established Local #914 for them in November 1938. In December 1938 the Relay local expelled from membership the nine employees, whose names are listed in the complaint, for dual unionism and requested Calvert to discharge them. Leonard Gordon, the personnel manager at the Relay plant, conferred with William M. Aicher, the Board's Regional Director for the Fifth Region, concerning the request of the Relay local, and asked whether Calvert was compelled under the contract to comply with it. Aicher advised Gordon that the C. I. O. had filed, under Section 9 (c) of the Act, a petition with respect to the Relay plant, and that if the Board dismissed the petition Calvert could lawfully discharge the nine employees. On December 27, without further advice from Aicher, Calvert discharged them. On the follow- ing day Aicher notified Gordon that the Board had dismissed the petition filed by the C. I. O. On December 29, 1938, the C. I. O. filed the charges which give rise to the complaint in this proceeding. The complaint alleges in substance that the closed-shop contract, and its renewal on May 5, 1939, were invalid because Calvert assisted the Relay local during the period from November 1937 to May 1938, 6 Because of intra-union difficulties, the-A.'F of L. suspended the charter of Local 20560 Local 21635, which was chartered about May 14, 1938 absorbed into its ranks Seagram, employees who had belonged to Local 20560 7In the contract the respondents recognized the A. F. of L. locals as the sole collective bargaining representatives for all production employees of the respondents and by its terms the contract provided , among other things , that all production employees should be, or within 60 days become , members of such locals. The contract was to expire June 1, 1939, automatically renewable in default of notice . On May 5, 1939 , the respondents and the National Council, successor to the A. F. of L. locals, renewed the contract with modifica- tions not here material . Except for the substitution of the National Council for the locals, the renewal contract , however, in substance retained the exclusive recognition and the closed-shop provisions of the original contract. JOSEPH E. SIEiAGRAM & SONS, INC. 1065 and that by discharging the nine employees named in the complaint, the respondents discriminated against them because of their union membership and activities. The respondents deny giving 'assistance to the Relay local and rely upon the closed-shop contract as justifica- tion for the discharges. B. Alleged interference, restraint, and coercion The activities alleged to constitute interference, restraint,'and co- ercion took place only at the Relay plant, and principally during January 1938. The evidence of it consists, for the most part, of state- ments by foremen to employees that they should join the Relay local if they wanted to retain their jobs. In the latter part of December 1937, Daniel Garlock, plant superin- tendent and chief engineer at the Relay plant, in the presence of Fore- men Raymond Wright, Adam Gregoski, and Walter Johnson, warned L. W. Cassell, a maintenance-department employee, according to Cas- sell's testimony, that he would lose his job unless he joined the A. F. of L. Prior thereto, Superintendent Garlock had openly opposed the A. F. of L. Cassell further testified that when he expressed surprise over Garlock's change in attitude toward the A. F. of L., Garlock disclosed that Mr. Willkie s belonged to the A. F. of L. and it would be better if we would join because he thought we would get more out of it . . . [that Willkie] belonged to the A. F. of L. . . . Boiler- makers Union . . . that he was coming in [with-the company] or was already there .. . Wright and Gregoski asserted at the hearing that they did not recall that Garlock made such statements and Johnson testified that he did not hear Garlock make such, statements. Garlock did not appear as a witness. We find that Garlock made the statements above attributed to him by Cassell. William Fosler was employed by Calvert in the labor department where he worked under Ed Nugent, a "strawboss" from whom Fosler took orders. Fosler testified that he was called aside on the afternoon of January 18 shortly before quitting time by Nugent who told Fosler that there was going to be a meeting at 1222 St. Paul Street 9 that night - at 8 o'clock and, in I+osler's words, if I'thought anything of my job 8 Robert T . Willkie became associated with the respondents as the assistant to the vice president in charge , of production in the latter part of 1937 . While employed as a youth by the American Sheet and Tin Company he had belonged to the Amalgamated Associa- tion of Sheet and Iron Workers , then affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, and- later , at an unstated time, he had held a working card in the "cook 's union." Sub- sequent to the execution of the closed -shop contract of April 15, 1938, the A. F. of L boilermakers ' union conferred upon Willkie an honorary membership cird. IA. F of L. headquarters in Baltimoi e 1066 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD that I should go there." Fosler further testified to the effect that in the conversation Nugent indicated that he was acting on orders received from Garlock that afternoon. Fosler's testimony was not denied and we find that Nugent made the statements and acted as Fosler testified. According to the testimony of Lee Baker, who was employed in the maintenance department and in the labor gang, in the first part of January 1938, Foreman Adam Gregoski came 'to the storeroom at the Relay'plant where most of the maintenance employees reported for work in the morning and told them that he had just left the chief's office (referring to Daniel Garlock, the plant superintendent and chief engineer) . . . and that he was instructed to tell the men that they would have to go in the A. F. of L. union if they thought anything of their jobs. Gregoski denied making thin statement. • The Trial Examiner ob- served in his Intermediate Report that Baker appeared to be a credible witness while Gregoski was evasive. We find, as did the Trial Examiner, that Gregoski made the statement above attributed to him by Baker. Baker further testified without contradiction and we find that about January 14, 1938, Mash Foreman James O'Connor, under whose direction Baker sometimes worked, talked to him about the A. F. of L. during working hours in the still house and told Baker that if he "wanted to continue working [he would] have to go in." Later during the same month, according td the testimony of Baker, he was instructed by Raymond Wright, millwright foreman, to re- port to O'Connor in the still house. When Baker reported, he was told by O'Connor to collect A. F. of L. membership applications and initiation fees from men working on the night shift in the still house, take a company automobile, and deliver the applications and money to Lithuanian Hall, A. F. of L. headquarters in Baltimore. Baker further testified that, pursuant to these instructions he collected seven applications and $14 in initiation fees from employees Leppo, Ray, and others, and, after obtaining permission from Foreman Wright to use the company car, took the applications and the money during his working hours to Lithuanian Hall. When Baker reached the curb outside the Hall, he found Foremen Wright, John- son, and Gregoski stationed there. One of them unidentified in the record, stepped forward as Baker emerged from the car, and said : "Well, I see you arrived, Bake." Baker entered the hall, deposited the money and applications,, including his own, with an A. F. of L. representative,, and returned to' the plant. He was not docked in pay for the time so spent. While in his testimony Wright denied sending Baker to O'connor, he failed to deny specifically that he JOSEPH E. SEAGRAM & SON'S!, INC. 1067 gave Baker permission to use the company car for A. F. of L. pur- poses; and O'Connor, Leppo, and Ray, did not testify. In their testimony Wright, Johnson, and Gregoski, who were working fore- men and A. F. of L. members, admitted attending the A. F. of L. meeting in Baltimore;- they were not interrogated, 'however, with respect to their presence outside the hall when Baker arrived there that night. Under these circumstances, we do not credit Wright and find, as did the Trial Examiner, that Baker's testimony as set forth above is substantially accurate. Florence B. Zuck worked in the bottling department at Calvert. During January 1938, seven lines were running in that department, each under the supervision of a line leader. About,30 to -40 girls worked on each line. Zuck testified without contradiction that on January 18, 1938, after lunch, her line leader, Nellie Forgan, went "down each line" and told each girl to go to the A. F. of L. meeting that night and join the union if they thought anything of their jobs, and that she had been instructed so to advise them at a meet- ing of foreladies held that day before lunch. May Harding corro- borated this testimony. She testified that on the morning of January 18, she heard Jack Slusher, foreman of the male employees in the bottling department, tell Line Leader Erby that there was to be a meeting of line leaders in the dressing room ; and that all the line leaders, including Erby, went to this meeting at about 11 a. m. Upon returning from lunch, Harding and six other girls who had gathered near her were told by Erby that they were supposed, to join the A. F. of L. at 1222 St. Paul Street at 8 o'clock that night. This is not denied. We credit' the testimony of Florence B. Zuck and May Harding, as did the Trial Examiner, and we find • in conformity therewith. A similar round-up of male employees took place on January 18, 1938. William Riedel testified that on the morning of January, 18 his foreman, Charles Weigand, called all the men in one corner of 'the rectifying building and told them that if they wanted to retain their jobs they had better join the A. F. of L.' that night. Then he ap- pointed Riedel to go to the bottling and shipping departments and get in touch with Hopkins,10 foreman of the bottling department, and Elmer Wagner, foreman of the shipping department, so that he could advise the employees in those departments to go to the A. F. of L. meeting that evening. Acting on these instructions, Riedel left his work and went to the bottling house, where he asked Forelady Blanche Watson, supervisor of the line leaders, for per- mission to speak to the female employees about joining the A. T. of L. "Hopkins' first name is not disclosed by, the record. 1068 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Watson told Riedel that she had already been instructed "to that effect" but that he should come back in the afternoon. When Riedel returned to his work immediately thereafter, Weigand asked him how he had "made out." He reported to Weigand that he was sup- posed to return to the bottling house after lunch. When he returned to the bottling house and spoke to Watson, she told him to see Line Leader Forgan. Riedel spoke to Forgan, who advised him that "they had been instructed they all had to go to the A. F. of L., and she informed all the,girls." Riedel then went to the shipping depart- ment, where he spoke to two men who worked under Wagner but, .Riedel testified, they too had been "instructed" to.join the A. F. of L. Riedel then went back to work. Weigand denied making the state- ments attributed to him by Riedel. Neither Watson, Forgan, Hop- kins, nor Wagner testified. William C. Freburger, who worked with Reidel under Weigand, corroborated Riedel's testimony respecting the statements alleged to have been made by Weigand. In view of the corroboration of Riedel's testimony by Freburger and the positive character of the testimony of each, we are not persuaded by-Wei- gand's denials, and find, as did the Trial Examiner, that Weigand made the statements attributed to him by Riedel and that Riedel's -activity described above was carried out at Weigand's instructions. John Meyers, a still-house employee, testified without contradic- tion, and we find, that about January 17, 1938, his superior, Head Foreman Steffen," told several night-shift employees as they were leaving work that "if we thought anything of our jobs we had better get off and get into the A. F. L." Instead of attending the meeting on the night of January 18, these employees promptly went to A. F. of L. headquarters and joined the Relay local. Similar state- ments were made to employees on or before January 18, 1938, by Elmer Wagner, head foreman of the shipping department, S. B. Shaw, head foreman of the labor department, Supervisor Goodwin '12 captain of the guards, and by Gregoski, Johnson, and Wright. Before and after the meeting of January 18, 1938, notices appeared on bulletin boards at the Relay plant advertising A. F. of L. meetings. W. M. -Porter, financial secretary and treasurer of the Relay,local from August 1936 to January 1939 and the business representative of the local at the time of the hearing, admitted in his testimony that he prepared two or three notices for the January 18 meeting and posted them on the morning of the 18th in the rack house, and that during the period of his membership in the Relay local and prior to April 1938, he "put up" a considerable number of notices, without protest from the management. n Steffen ' s first name is not disclosed by the record. 11 Goodwin's first name is not disclosed by the record. JOSEPH E. SIEiAGRAM, & SONS, INC. .1069 Widespread solicitation for members on behalf of the A: F: of L. also took place in the Relay plant during working hours. Between January 4 and 18, 1938, the A. F. of L. distributed about 1,000 appli- cation blanks, many of them in the plant. George Wellschlager, an A. F. of L. representative of the accounting department, solicited members for the Relay local during the first 3 months of 1938 in the office during working hours in the presence of Office Manager N. Whitmore, and obtained' signed applications from about 75 per cent of the 45, office employees. Edward Young, another A. F. of -L. representative of office workers; also solicited memberships in the office. Porter, who was employed in the maintenance department, "gave out quite a few applications" during "working time," including a "handful" to an employee who worked in another department. Foreman Gregoski saw two or three employees from departments of the plant other than his own, soliciting memberships in the plant and he signed an application for ,membership in the Relay local at their instance. ,There is also evidence that foremen made derogatory statements about the United shortly after the C. I. O. had distributed literature at the Relay plant in December 1937. In commenting upon the liter- ature, according to L. W. Cassell, his superior, Walter Johnson, a working foreman in charge of the machinists and member of the A. F. of L., stated that "there never would be a C. I. O. around here," told Cassell not to joint the C. I. 0., and warned him that he would lose his job if he joined. Cassell further testified that Adam Gregoski, a working foreman who had charge of the welders, burners, and coppersmiths, and member of the A. F. of L., made similar statements to him on two or three occasions in the latter part of December 1937-. Johnson and Gregoski denied making such state- ments. We are not persuaded by their denials and find that John- son and Gregoski made the statements attributed to them by Cassell. In addition, foremen were active on behalf of the Relay local after January 18. Lester Arnold, a still-house employee, testified without contradiction, and we find, that about January 24, his superior, Foreman Chris Loper, told a group of four or five em- ployees, including Arnold, as they were going on shift, "Well boys, you have a limited time to join the A. F. of L., so you better go up, and pay your dues." Kenneth Elliott, a warehouse employee, testified that he joined the Relay local on January 24, 1938, shortly after he heard his foreman, Joseph Wunder, tell a gang of warehouse employees who were awaiting orders at the time that "if we thought anything of our jobs . . . to go down to the [A. F. of L.] union meeting at Lithuanian Hall . . . and join the A. F. of L." The statement attributed to Wunder was not denied and we find that he made it. 1070. DECISIONS " OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD • In the latter part of December 1 937 word had circulated through the Relay plant that the existing management would be replaced and beginning in the early part of January 1938 a rumor spread that the new management , intended to supplant current employees with college men. Edwin , M. Fleischman , the president of Calvert , called a meeting of about 25 supervisors about 2 o'clock on January 18, 1938, and announced the retirement of -the existing management, including Fleischman , Vice-President Herman, and Garlock. That night about 500 Calvert employees attended the meeting at A. F. of L: headquarters in Baltimore and joined the Relay local. At the hearing many of Ahem testified that they joined the Relay local to protect themselves against replacement by college men and that they did not fear discharge at the hands of -the supervisors at whose instance they affiliated with the Relay local. C. Conclusions As described ,above, foremen and foreladies took part in the mem- bership drive of the Relay local in January 1938. Although super- visory employees are eligible to membership in a labor organization, the Act forbids them, in their capacity as the employer's agents, to interfere in the selection of employee bargaining representatives. We are satisfied from the record , however, that the foremen and fore- ladies did not aid in the enlistment of A. F . of L. members as agents of the respondents and that the employees did not regard them, in so doing, as acting in such capacity. As we have noted above, with the initiation of the , organizational drive of the Relay local in July 1936,-the respondents opposed the A. F. of L. Discharges and the establishment of an employee representation plan were followed by .a strike, picketing, and a boycott of the respondents' products; and in August 1937, the. Board, in a proceeding based on charges preferred ' by the A. F. of L., found that the discharges were dis- criminatory , and among other things , ordered the disestablishment of the employee representation plan. In May 1937, after the Trial Examiner had issued his Intermediate Report in the prior case recommending disestablishment of the employee representation -plan, an employees ' association came into being and obtained from Calvert a 1-year contract containing a check-off provision . At the Lawrence- burg plant , where the A. F. of L. initiated organizational activity in the summer of 1937, employees belonging to the A. F. of L. con- ducted an unauthorized strike in September to protest against em- ployer interference with self -organization ; alleged discriminatory dis- charges occurred in November and December 1937; in the early part of January 1938, the A.'F. of L. struck the plant and picketed; after the Lawrenceburg plant manager , on January 22, 1938, refused to JOSEPH E. SEAGRAM & SONS, INC. 1071 meet with A. F. of L. representatives to negotiate a contract, the A.Y. of L. renewed its boycott and, in February 1938, filed charges that Seagram had engaged in unfair labor practices within the mean- ing of Section 8 (1), (3), and (5) of- the Act. Similarly, at the Louisville plant, an inside organization functioned during 1937. and in the latter part of that year an A. F. of L. central body in Louis- ville instituted a boycott against Seagram products. Furthermore, beginning in the early part of January 1938, a rumor to the effect that an incoming new management planned to replace the employees with college-trained persons spread at the Relay plant, and about January 18, 1938, the president of Calvert announced his retirement and that of other-' plant officials. Moreover, the slight degree of C. I. 0. activity at the Relay plant in January 1938 does not con- vince us that it provided a motivation for employer favoritism toward the A. F. of L.13 Rather, we believe, as the respondents, and the A. F. of L. contend, that the supervisory employees who joined the Relay local and participated in its organizational drive at the Relay plant, were motivated in -engaging in such conduct solely by a desire to obtain protection against the new management's supposed favor- itism for college-trained employees and that the employees who joined at the behest of the supervisors, were likewise so motivated. Since the employees knew of the prospective change in management, it is not unlikely that they anticipated the retirement of Superintendent Garlock and that they, therefore,,no longer regarded Garlock as a genuine spokesman for management. While we normally hold an employer responsible for conduct of supervisory employees of the character involved herein, we think that the Relay employees did not regard the activities of the super- visors, taken in their setting, as a reflection of the'wishes of manage- ment, and that the respondents did not interfere with, restrain, or coerce the employees in their choice of representatives. We so find. We further find that- the Relay local was not assisted by any action of the respondents defined in the Act as or constituting thereunder an unfair labor practice. The record establishes, as the respondents maintain, that the re- spondents discharged the nine employees listed in the' complaint in performance of the terms and conditions of the closed-shop contract. However, the requirement of membership, in a particular labor or- ganization as a condition of employment constitutes an unfair labor practice within the meaning of Section'8 (1) and (3) of the Act unless the imposition and enforcement of the condition are excused by the "In this connection , it is important to note , that the United filed a petition under Section 9 (c) of 'the Act with respect to the Relay plant on September 10, 1938, and that the United apparently did not consider these actibities at the Relay plant as unfair labor practices until December 29, 1938, when it first filed such charges in this proceeding. 1072 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD proviso clause of Section 8 (3). Accordingly we must inquire whether the respondents, in carrying out the terms and conditions of the closed- shop contract with the A. F. of L., proceeded within the framework of immunity-afforded by the proviso clause. The proviso to Section 8 (3) of the Act permits an employer to make an agreement requiring mem- bership in a labor organization if that labor organization has not been established, maintained, or assisted by any action defined in the Act as an unfair labor practice and if such labor organization is the represent- ative of a majority of the employees in the appropriate bargaining unit covered by such agreement when made. The complaint alleged that the closed-shop contract was invalid because the A. F. of L. was as- sisted by unfair labor practices of the respondents which we found above was not sustained. The complaint did not allege that the A. F. of L. did not represent a majority of the employees in the appropriate bargaining unit at the time of the making of the closed- shop contract. We find therefore that the closed-shop contract with the A. F. of L., dated April 15, 1938, and its renewal fall within the proviso clause of Section 8 (3) of the Act. • We further find that by discharging the nine employees listed in the complaint in performance of the terms and provisions of the contract, the respondents did not discriminate in regard to their hire and tenure of employment within the meaning of Section 8 (3) of the Act. We will therefore dismiss the complaint in its entirety. Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact, and upon the entire record in the case, the Board makes the following : CONCLIISIONS OF LAW 1. The American Federation of Labor, the Distillery Workers' Local Unions Nos. 20270, 21449, and 21635, each, respectfully, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, and American Federation of Distillery, Rectifying and Wine Workers, National Council, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, and United Distillery Workers LIU #914, affiliated with the Congress of Industrial Organizations, are labor organizations within the meaning of Section 2 (5) of the Act. 2. The operations of the respondents, Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc., and Calvert Distilling Company, occur in commerce within the meaning of Section 2 (6) of the Act. 3. The respondents, have not interfered with, restrained, or coerced their employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act, within the meaning of Section 8 (1) of the Act. 4. The respondents have not discriminated in regard to hire and tenure of employment or any term or condition of employment, within the meaning of Section 8 (3) of the Act. JOSEPH E. SEiAG1AM & SONS, INC. 1073 ORDER Upon the basis of the above findings of fact and conclusions of law and pursuant to Section 10 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, the National Labor Relations Board hereby orders that the complaint' against Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc., and Calvert Distilling Com pany, be, and it hereby is, dismissed. MR. EDWIN S. SMITH , dissenting : I dissent from the decision to dismiss this complaint. The major- ity opinion finds that the respondents' supervisory employees openly engaged in solicitation in behalf of the A. F. of L., that employees were herded into membership in the Relay local by the warnings and threats of their supervisors, and that management representa- tives, without restraint by the respondents, made plain to the work- ers that their continued employment could be insured only through their affiliation with the A. F. of L. I concur in these findings. Upon such findings, however, to conclude, as the majority does, that the respondents did not interfere with their employees' freedom of self-organization seems to me without warrant either in the facts or the law. The activities of supervisory employees, as fully disclosed in the majority opinion, are of a character which both the Board and the courts have consistently proscribed as violative of the Act and de- structive of the employees' right to a free choice of representatives 14 To hold that the supervisory employees were not acting in their ca- pacity as management representatives and that the employees gen- erally understood that their supervisors had assumed the role of fellow employees and equals requires, in my opinion, both a distortion -of the plain evidence in the record and the equally plain realities of employer-employee relationships. The majority finds that the em- ployees had knowledge that the ranking management of the Relay plant was being displaced and that therefore the activities of all the supervisory staff could not be considered coercive ; that the employees were impelled to join the A. F. of L. not by their supervisors, but by a rumor to the effect that the new management intended to sup- plant current employees with college graduates. The record, I be- lieve, warrants no such conclusion. The evidence shows that the 14 See International Association of Machinists , et al v. National Labor Relations Board, 311 U. S. 72, aff'g 110 F. (2d) 29 (App D. C ), enf'g Matter of The Serrick Corporation and International Union, United Automobile Workers of America , Local No. 459, 8 N. L. R B 621 ; National Labor Relations Board v Link-Belt Co , 311 U S 584. rev'g 110 F (2d) 506 (C. C. A. 7) and enf'g Matter of Link Belt Company and Lodge 1604 of Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers of North America, through the Steel 'Workers Organizing Committee affiliated with the Committee for Industrial Organization, 12 N. L. R. B. 854. 1074 DECISIONS. OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD rumor of a change in management had been initiated in the latter part of December 1937 and the rumored plan to use college-trained persons as replacements had come to the attention of the employees in the •forepart of January 1938. Although the Relay local had started an intensive drive for members on January 4, not a single employee was recruited as a member until January 17 or 18. It is unlikely-that the great mass of production workers, including such employees as bottlers and common laborers, feared replacement by college-trained people, and it is significant that the Relay employees flocked to join the A. F. of L. only after-the supervisors had inter- vened. Indeed, the far-reaching consequences of the activities of the supervisors can plainly be seen by a comparison of attendance of Calvert employees at meetings of the Relay local on January 4 and January 18. Only 5 employees attended the January 4 meeting. On the night of January 18, however, approximately 500 Calvert employees crowded the Baltimore meeting hall of the A. F. of L. and joined the Relay local. Accordingly, the existence of the rumor played no substantial part in inducing the employees to join the Relay local. Even if it be assumed, moreover, that the prospective change in management induced a belief in the minds of the employees that their jobs were thereby jeopardized and that they thereupon searched for some means of protecting their jobs, these facts or infer- ences do not absolve the respondents from the coercive effect of the statements and conduct of the supervisory employees. While the rumor of the intention to hire college men may have stimulated the desire of the employees to join the A. F. of L., the statements and conduct of management representatives were plainly coercive to the same end. In view of the coercive conduct of the respondents' su- pervisors, it is immaterial that other factors played a part in induc- ing the employees to take the same course of action.15 The reasoning advanced by the majority in reaching its conclusions seems to me both insubstantial and disingenuous. Moreover,' it affords a dangerous precedent whereby the Board seeks to read the minds of employees in order to discover whether the acts and words of supervisors are more likely to be interpreted by employees as per- sonal or official. The step here taken by the majority of the Board opens the road to future exploration of highly speculative inferences rather than continued acceptance of the now firmly established prin- ciple that indications by the employer to his employees as to what their choice of a labor organization should be are a clear interference with self-organization. This legal principle is not to be dissipated by a supposed haziness in the employee's mind in the given situation as to whether the supervisory cloak has been shed and the man rather 11 See National Labo Relations Boa) d Y. Link-Belt Co, 311 U. S. 584 JOSEPH Fa. SEIAGRAM & SIONSl, INC. 1 1075 than the supervisor is the speaker. Certainly, where the interference takes place in the working place, is indulged in by numerous super- visors in no uncertain fashion, as in the present case, for the Board to find that the employees would hold that such interference was not managerial in its character but rather individual, seems to me pre- posterous. I would find, that the respondents, by the activities of supervisory employees, as set forth in the majority opinion, interfered with, restrained, and coerced the employees at the Relay plant in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act and that the respondents thereby aided, promoted, and assisted the Relay local of the A. F. of L. The respondents and the A. F. of L. have advanced the contention that a closed-shop contract made with an employer-assisted labor organization may operate under the proviso clause of Section 8 (3) of the Act as a defense to otherwise discriminatory discharges, pro- vided that the assistance accorded the labor organization had no effect upon the acquisition of the majority representation by such labor organization. In this connection the A. F. of L. sought to show that it represented a sufficient number of 'employees at the Lawrenceburg and Louisville plants 16 to confer upon it majority status with respect to the three plants even if all A. F. of L. adherents at the Relay plant be excluded from the .1 7 The position urged is un- tenable. Since the respondents interfered with, restrained, and coerced the Relay employees in the exercise of the rights of self- organization and since the membership of the Relay local is attrib- utable to the respondents' unfair labor practices, the closed-shop contract was made with a labor organization assisted by action de- fined in the Act as an unfair labor practice. The effect or extent of the assistance upon the majority status of the A. F. of L. is clearly not relevant in considering whether the- closed-shop contract was .made with an unlawfully assisted union. Since the A. F. of L. was assisted by the respondents' unfair labor practices, I would accord- ingly find that by making the closed-shop contract with the A.,F. of L., the respondents did not proceed within the framework of immunity afforded by the proviso clause of Section 8 (3) of the Act and that the discharges which were made pursuant to the contract were discriminatory. I would issue an appropriate order invali- dating the original contract and the renewal thereof, and reinstating the employees discriminated against with back pay. 11 The complaint contains no allegation that the respondents engaged in any unfair labor practices at the Lawrenceburg or Louisville plants 17 A review of the evidence shows that the A. F. of L. did not in fact have such majority. I assume, however, for the purposes of this opinion, that the A. F. of L. represented a majority of the employees in the appropriate collective bargaining unit covered by the closed-shop contract when made. 448692-42-vol 32--09 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation