Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass CompanyDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsJan 30, 193910 N.L.R.B. 1470 (N.L.R.B. 1939) Copy Citation In the Matter of LIBBEY-OWENS-FORD GLASS COMPANY and FEDERA- TION OF FLAT GLASS WORKERS OF AMERICA Case No. R-1028.-Decided January 30, 1939 Glass Manufacturing Industry-Investigation of Representatives: controversy concerning representation of employees : rival organizations ; refusal of em- ployer to bargain collectively with union whose majority status uncertain ; controversy concerning appropriate unit: employer questions appropriateness of unit proposed by union and refuses to bargain collectively-Unit Appropriate for Collective Bargaining: production and maintenance employees, including janitors, firemen, power employees, truck drivers, watchmen, and subforemen, and excluding window-glass cutters, supervisory employees, timekeepers, and clerical employees not directly connected with production ; inclusion of all plants of company in unit; history of union organization and collective bar- gaining; separate organization and collective bargaining for one plant resulting from company's previous non-ownership of plant no reason to exclude it from unit; desire of union with majority at one plant for separate unit for plant not controlling under circumstances of case-Representatives: proof of choice : majority of union ; union records showing members and dues paid-Certification of Representatives: upon proof of majority representation. Mr. Philip C. Phillips, for the Board. Mr. E. J. Marshall and Mr. Leland L. Lord, of Toledo, Ohio, for the Company. Mr. Julius Holuberg, of Cincinnati, Ohio, for the Federation. Mr. James A. Glenn, of Coshocton, Ohio, for the National. Mr. J. E. Mayeur, of Columbus, Ohio, for the League. Mr. Robert Kramer, of counsel to the Board. DECISION AND CERTIFICATION OF REPRESENTATIVES STATEMENT OF THE CASE On June 14, 1938, Federation of Flat Glass Workers of America, herein called the, Federation, filed with the Regional Director for the Ninth Region (Cincinnati, Ohio) ' a petition alleging that a ques- tion affecting commerce had arisen concerning the representation of employees of Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company, Toledo, Ohio, herein called the Company, at its plants situated in Ottawa, Illinois; 10 N. L R. B., No. 134. 1470 DECISIONS AND ORDERS 1471 Shreveport, Louisiana; Charleston and Parkersburg, West Virginia; and East Toledo and Rossford, Ohio, and requesting an investigation and certification of representatives pursuant to Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, 49 Stat. 449, herein called the Act. On August 19, 1938, the National Labor Relations Board, herein called the Board, acting pursuant to Section 9 (c) of the Act and Article III, Section 3, of National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regulations-Series 1, as amended, ordered an investigation and authorized the Regional Director to conduct it and to provide for an appropriate hearing upon due notice. On September 9, 1938, the Regional Director issued a notice of hearing, copies of which were duly served upon the Company and the Federation, and upon National Flat Glass Workers Union of America of the American Federation of Labor, herein called the National, and Window Glass Cutters' League of America, herein called the League, labor organizations claiming to represent em- ployees directly affected by the investigation. On September 16, 1938, the Regional Director granted a petition by the National to intervene in this proceeding. Pursuant to the notice, a hearing was held on September 22 and 23, 1938, at Columbus, Ohio, before Gustaf B. Erickson, the Trial Examiner duly designated by the Board. The Board, the Company, the Federation, the National, and the League were represented by counsel and participated in the hearing. Full opportunity to be heard, to examine and cross-examine wit- nesses, and to introduce evidence, bearing on the issues was afforded all parties. During the course of the hearing, the Trial Examiner made several rulings on motions and on objections to the admission of evidence. The Board has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner and finds that no prejudicial errors were committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. After the hearing, the Company, the Federation, and the National filed briefs, which the Board has considered. Upon the entire record in the case, the Board makes the following: FINDINGS OF FACT I. THE BUSINESS OF THE COMPANY The Company is engaged in the manufacture, sale, and distribu- tion of many types of flat glass . It has plants at Shreveport, Louisiana; Ottawa, Illinois; East Toledo and Rossford, Ohio; and Charleston and Parkersburg, West Virginia. Its principal office is at Toledo, Ohio. In 1937, the total sales of the Company amounted to approximately $40,000,000. More than 50 per cent of the products of each of the Company's plants are shipped to points outside the 1472 NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD State in which the plant is situated, and more than 50 per cent of the raw materials used at each plant are shipped to it from points outside the State in which it is situated. There were 3,974 employees- on the Company's pay rolls for September 1-15, 1938, at all its plants. The Shreveport plant, employing 347 men, is engaged solely iii the production of window glass. The Charleston plant, employing 693 men, makes window glass and also rough plate glass. It does not finish this rough plate glass for sale by grinding and polishing it. The Ottawa plant, employing 1,279 men, makes rough plate glass, part of which is there ground and polished for sale as finished plate glass, and part of which is there made into safety glass. Some of the rough plate glass made at the Charleston plant is also sent to Ottawa to be processed further for sale as finished plate or safety glass. At East Toledo, there are two plants, one of which, employing 292 men, is engaged solely in the processing of rough plate glass sent there from Charleston, Ottawa, and Rossford, into finished plate glass; the other, employing 537 men, is engaged solely in the production of safety glass from rough plate glass sent there from Charleston, Ottawa, and Rossford. The Rossford plant, employing 692 inen, manufactures rough plate glass, only part of which is there finished for sale by grinding and polishing. The Rossford plant also makes a structural building glass known by the trade name of vitrolite. Only black vitrolite can be produced at Rossford. The Parkersburg plant, employing 134 men, is engaged solely in the production of vitrolite. Any vitrolite requiring bending, polishing, or grinding, whether made at Rossford or Parkersburg, must be sent to Rossford for these operations. All vitrolite, regardless of where it has been made or finished, is sent to Parkersburg for cutting and marketing. H. THE ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED Federation of Flat Glass Workers of America is a labor organiza- tion affiliated with the Committee for Industrial Organization. It admits to its membership all production and maintenance employees at all the plants of the Company, including watchmen, janitors, fire- men, power employees, subforemen, and truck drivers, and excluding window-glass cutters, supervisory employees, timekeepers, and clerical employees not directly connected with production. National Flat Glass Workers Union of America is a labor organiza- tion affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, admitting to its membership the same employees of the Company as the Federation. Window Glass Cutters' League of America is a labor organization affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, admitting to its membership window-glass cutters employed in the Company's plants. DECISIONS AND ORDERS III. THE QUESTION CONCERNING REPRESENTATION 1473 The Federation, from its founding in 1933 until 1936, was affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. In 1936 the Federation and all its locals at each plant of the Company, including Parkersburg, affiliated with the Committee for Industrial Organization. In De- cember 1937, the Federation's Parkersburg local affiliated with the National and the American Federation of Labor. Since then both the Federation and the National have sought to bargain collectively with the Company for the employees at the Parkersburg plant, but the Company has refused to bargain with either organization because of its uncertainty as to which organization represents a majority of the Parkersburg employees. The Federation in its petition and at the hearing sought to have the employees at all the plants of the Company, including Parkersburg, designated as a single unit appro- priate for the purposes of collective bargaining. The Company re- fused to consent to such a bargaining unit, at least in so far as it involved grouping the employees at Parkersburg with the employees at the other plants. We find that a question has arisen concerning representation of employees of the Company. IV. THE EFFECT OF THE QUESTION CONCERNING REPRESENTATION UPON COMMERCE We find that the question concerning representation which has arisen, occurring in connection with the operations of the Company described in Section I above, has a close, intimate, and substantial relation to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States, and tends to lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free flow of commerce. -V. THE APPROPRIATE UNIT Tl,e Federation admits to its membership all production and maintenance employees of the Company, including watchmen, jani- tors, firemen, power employees, truck drivers, and subforemen, and excluding window-glass cutters, supervisory employees, timekeepers, and clerical employees not directly connected with production. The Federation claims that this classification of employees may be prop- erly adopted as a definition of the classes of employees to be included in the unit or units found to be appropriate. Neither the Company, the National, nor the League objected at the hearing to this classi- fication of employees. All window-glass cutters employed by the Company are members of the League, and all parties at the hearing 1474 NATIONAL TABOR RELATIONS BOARD stipulated to the exclusion of window-glass cutters. We see no reason for departing from this classification of employees. The Federation seeks to include all the employees at all the plants of the Company-or in lieu thereof, as many of the plants as pos- sible-in a single unit for the purposes of collective bargaining. The Company and the National desire to have either a separate bargain- ing unit for the employees at each plant, or one bargaining unit for the employees at Parkersburg and another for the employees at all the other plants. The Federation was formed in 1933 after the passage of the National Industrial Recovery Act and at that time was affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. In November 1933 it entered into a written agreement with the Company for its members who were employees at the Shreveport and Charleston plants, and in May 1934, it signed an agreement with the Company for its members em- ployed at the Rossford and East Toledo plants. In November 1934, the Company and the Federation entered into a written contract for all employees in the Rossford, East Toledo, Shreveport, and Charles- ton plants, who were members of the Federation. Inasmuch as the Company did not then own or operate the Parkersburg plant, this contract, which expired in November 1935, included all the Com- pany's plants. Meanwhile, the Federation had begun organizing the employees at the Parkersburg plant, which was then owned and op- erated entirely independently of the Company, and in March 1935, the Federation and the Vitrolite Company, the owner of the Parkersburg plant, signed an agreement, expiring in March 1936, for the Federa- tion's members employed at the plant. A few months later the Com- pany purchased the Parkersburg plant and succeeded to the rights and duties of the Vitrolite Company under its contract with the Federation. In December 1935, the Federation and the Company executed a contract for the ensuing year covering all the plants except Parkersburg, where the existing contract did not terminate until March 1936. In March 1936, the Parkersburg contract was extended until July 1936, when the Company, and the Federation signed an agreement for Parkersburg only, expiring in July 1937. The evi- dence is conflicting as to whether or not the Federation sought to have this Parkersburg contract terminate in December 1936, in order then to include Parkersburg in the contract covering the other plants, and was unable to do so because of the Company's objections. Mean- while, the Federation and all its locals, including the one at Parkers- burg, affiliated with the Committee for Industrial Organization. In January 1937 the Federation and the Company signed a contract covering all the plants except Parkersburg, and in February 1938, this contract was renewed for another year. In July 1937, the Federation DECISIONS AND ORDERS 1475 and the Company entered into a written agreement for Parkersburg only, for the following year. In December 1937, the Parkersburg local affiliated with the National which was then being organized by the American Federation of Labor. At the expiration of the Parkers- burg agreement in July 1938, the Company refused the requests of both the Federation and the National to enter into an agreement for the employees at this plant. Excluding from our consideration at this point the Parkersburg plant, we are unable, after a careful examination of the entire record, to, find any substantial reason why the request of the Federation to have the employees at all the other plants of the Company grouped into one unit for the purposes of collective bargaining should not be, granted as the best method of insuring to employees of the Company,, , the full benefit of their right to self-organization and collective bary, gaining under the Act. Almost from the time of its formation, the,, Federation has successfully organized these employees and bargained,, collectively for them with the Company by treating all these plants, as one unit. Although the National asserted at the hearing that it had begun organizing the employees at these plants in 1938, it pre- sented no evidence showing the extent, if any, of its membership among the employees at these plants, and admittedly has never bar- gained collectively for the employees at any of these plants. Under these circumstances we see no reason to modify the unit which has been in effect.' The Company and the National in support of their contention that the employees at the Parkersburg plant constitute a separate unit emphasize the fact that the Parkersburg employees were separately organized and have always been separately bargained for by the Federation ; that of the 134 employees at this plant, none, at present, belong to the Federation, and 133 belong to the National; and that these 133 employees through their present membership in,the National currently express a desire for a separate unit. This separate organi- zation of and collective bargaining for the employees at Parkersburg by the Federation, as we have pointed out above, were fortuitous, originally caused merely by the Company's non-ownership of this plant when the Federation first organized the employees there and bargained for them, and continued after the Company purchased the plant solely because the Parkersburg contract always expired several months after the contract covering the employees at the Company's other plants. We believe, therefore, that this history of separate organization and bargaining is not an adequate reason for denying 1 C. Matter of American Hardware Corporation and United Electrical and Radio Workers of America, 4 N. L R B 412; Matter of Tennessee Copper Company and A F. of L Federal Union No. 91161,, 5 N. L. R B 768 1476 NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD the Federation's request to include the employees at Parkersburg in a single unit with the employees at the other plants-a request by which it seeks to reestablish the employer unit on the basis of which it originally organized and bargained for the employees at the Com- pany's plants. There, is no evidence that Parkersburg's previous independent organization and bargaining will impede or obstruct its bargaining together successfully with the other plants. Nor is there anything in the history of its separate organization and bargaining to indicate that an employer.unit would not be feasible and desirable both for it and the other plants. On the contrary, the evidence con- vinces us of the importance to the Federation, its members, and the employees at all the Company's plants, of presenting a united front when bargaining collectively with the Company. In Section I, above, we have described the relationship between these plants and have shown how partially manufactured products are continually being sent from one plant to another for further processing. Parkersburg is as firmly interlocked with the other plants as they are with each other, for all Rossford vitrolite is cut and marketed at Parkersburg. and all Parkersburg vitrolite requiring bending, grinding, or polish- ing, must be sent to Rossford for these operations. The functional interdependence of plants inevitably results in an interdependence of the interests of the employees at these plants. To grant the request of the National and its 133 Parkersburg members, who constitute but a very small minority of the 3,640 employees of the Company here involved, for a separate bargaining unit at Parkersburg would seriously impede and obstruct the efforts of the far larger number of employees at the other plants effectively to organize and bargain collectively.' Under all the circumstances of this case, we do not regard the fact that the majority of the Parkersburg employees through their present membership in the National have expressed a 2 In England and Sweden collective bargaining agreements are now commonly nego- tiated on the basis of an industry -wide unit. Report of the Commission on Industrial Relations in Sweden ( 1938),_p. 4; Report of the Commission on Industrial Relations in England ( 1938 ), p. 4. The Report of'the Commission on Industrial Relations in' England, in regard to the effect of such large bargaining units upon strikes and other forms of industrial unrest and strife , and the process of collective bargaining itself , states (pp. 23-24) : We can , however, state with certainty that among the persons we conferred with there was a common feeling of confidence in the existing method of handling industrial relations , and that in those industries where collective bargaining be- tween national unions and national associations of employers have long been established, strikes have been rare, and in a few instances non-existent (with the exception of the general strike in 1926 ) since the very beginnings of the collective bargaining arrangements . . . . . . the acceptance and general practice of collective bargaining on an industry basis places upon the employers ' and workers ' organizations , because of sheer numbers of men and the magnitude of interests involved, a peculiarly heavy responsibility calculated by its very nature to call forth patience, understanding, and a desire to make and keep agreements and to achieve industrial peace. DECISION'S AND ORDERS 1477 current desire for a separate unit as being decisive of the issue here presented.8 Almost without exception the other reasons advanced by the Com- pany and the National as to why the Parkersburg plant would function better as a separate bargaining unit apply with equal if not greater force to any one of the Company's other plants which have bargained together successfully in one unit since 1934.4 Parkers- burg was acquired by the Company at a different time than its other plants, but each of the other plants was acquired by the Company at a different time from the rest. The distances separating some of the other plants, such as Ottawa, Shreveport, and Charleston, are much greater than the distances between Parkersburg and these plants. The Parkersburg plant superintendent has no more inde- pendence in the operation of this plant than the other plant superin- tendents have. The Company stresses the unique nature of colored vitrolite, the product of the Parkersburg plant, as a reason for holding that the employees of this plant constitute a separate bargaining unit. How- ever, the Rossford plant employees who are engaged in the pro- duction of black vitrolite have experienced no difficulty in bargain- ing in one unit', together with the other flat-glass workers employed at this and the Company's other plants. Also, the Federation's members who are employees of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, the Company's leading competitor, and who are engaged in the production of carrara, a product similar to vitrolite, have bargained collectively with the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company since 1934 in one unit with the other flat-glass employees at the various plants of that company. Moreover, the other plants of the Company make products-plate, safety and window glass-whose manufacturing processes and uses differ as much from each other as vitrolite does from any of them. Such differences as there are between Parkers- burg and the other plants in regard to processes and products are no greater than the differences found among the Company's other-plants, and inasmuch as the employees of these plants have bargained to- gether successfully since 1934 despite these differences, we are unable to see any reason why the Parkersburg employees should experience difficulty, because of any such differences, in bargaining together with the employees at the Company's other plants. 8 Cf Matter of Tennessee Electric Power Company and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, 7 N L R. B . 24; Matter of Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company and Federation of Flat Glass Workers of America, Af}lltated with C 1 G , 10 N L R B 1111; Matter of Admiar Rubber Company and American ( Federation of Labor on behalf of Em- ployees of Company, 9 N L R B 407 '' Cf Matter of American Steel and Wire Company and Steel and Wvi e Workers Protce- tiv+e Association , 5 N L. R B 871 ; Matter of Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company , supra, foctnote 3, and decisions cited in that case. 1473 41---39-vol 10-94 1478 NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD We find that the production ' and maintenance employees of the Company, including iratclinien, janitors, firemen, power employees, truck drivers, and subforemen, and excluding window-glass cutters, supervisory employees, timekeepers, and clerical employees not di- rectly connected with production, at its plants situated in Shreveport, Louisiana; Ottawa, Illinois; Charleston and Parkersburg, West Vir- ginia; and Rossford and East Toledo, Ohio, constitute a unit appro- priate for the purposes of collective bargaining and that said unit will insure to employees of the Company the full benefit of their right to self-organization and to collective bargaining and otherwise effectuate the policies of the Act. VI. THE DETERMINATION OF REPRESENTATIVES At the hearing, the Company introduced in evidence its pay roll at each plant for September 1 to September 15, 1938. Both the Federation and the National checked the, names on these pay rolls. The Federation's witnesses testified that a certain number of em- ployees, ' in the case, of -'several''of these`plant ' lay ' rolls, should be excluded because their work made them ineligible for inclusion in the appropriate bargaining unit. At the hearing, neither the Na- tional nor the Company objected to the exclusions proposed by the Federation. The Federation introduced in evidence its records show- ing the names of its members at each plant of the Company and the dues paid by such members. The names of such members who were in good standing, either because they had paid dues within the preceding 3 months or had been' excused from payment of dues because of unemployment during this period, were then checked by the Federation against the names of the employees in the appropriate unit listed on the Company's pay rolls. Neither the Company nor the National, both of whom had full opportunity to inspect the Federation's records and cross-examine the Federation's witnesses, objected to this method of proving the Federation's membership. The following table shows the number of employees in the appro- priate unit at each plant, the number of Federation members in good standing at each plant, the total number of employees 'in the appropriate unit, and the total number of Federation members in good standing at all the plants : Plant Number of eligible Number of Federation employees members ingood standing Ottawa 1,267 997 Charleston ---------------------------------------------------------------=-- 496 445 Parkersburg--------------------------------------------------------------- 134 0Ros',ford 692 211 East Toledo (Plate) ----------------------------------------------------------- 292 174East Toledo (Safety) -------------------------------------------------------- 512 260 Shreveport ----------------------------------------------------------------- 250 200 Totals ------------------------------------------------------------------ 3, 643 2,97- DECISIONS AND ORDERS 1479 The National asserted that it had members at all the Company's plants, but, except for Parkersburg, presented no evidence regard- ing its membership. The National proved by its records of dues payments that 133 of the 134 eligible employees at the Parkersburg plant were members of the National in good standing. This does not affect the showing of the Federation that it represents a majority of all the employees in the appropriate unit. We find that the Federation has been designated and selected by a majority of the employees in the appropriate unit as their repre- sentative for the purposes of collective bargaining. It is, therefore, the exclusive representative of all the employees in such unit for the purposes of collective bargaining, and we will so certify. Upon the basis of the above findings of fact and upon the entire record in the case, the Board makes the following: CONCLUSIONS OF LAIN' 1. A question affecting commerce has arisen concerning the repre- sentation of employees of Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company, Toledo, Ohio, at its plants situated in Shreveport, Louisiana; Ottawa, Illinois; Charleston and Parkersburg, West Virginia; and Rossford and East Toledo, Ohio, within the meaning of Section 9 (c) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the National Labor Relations Act. 2. The production and maintenance employees of the Company, in- cluding watchmen, janitors, firemen, power employees, truck drivers, and subforemen, and excluding window-glass cutters, supervisory employees, timekeepers, and clerical employees not directly con- nected with production, at its plants situated in Shreveport, Loui- siana ; Ottawa, Illinois ; Charleston and Parkersburg, West Virginia ; and Rossford and East Toledo, Ohio, constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining, within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the National Labor Relations Act. 3. Federation of Flat Glass Workers of America is the exclusive representative of all the employees in such unit for the purposes of collective bargaining, within the meaning of Section 9 (a) of the National Labor Relations Act. CERTIFICATION OF REPRESENTATIVES By virtue of and pursuant to the power vested in the National Labor Relations Board by Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Rela- tions Act, and pursuant to Article III, Section 8, of National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regulations-Series 1, as amended, IT IS HEREBY CERTIFIED that Federation of Flat Glass Workers of America has been designated and selected by a majority of the pro- duction and maintenance employees of Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass 1480 NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Company, Toledo; Ohio, including watchmen, janitors, firemen, power employees, truck drivers, and,subforemen, and excluding win- dow-glass cutters, supervisory employees, timekeepers, and clerical employees not directly connected with production, at its plants situ- ated in Shreveport, Louisiana ; Ottawa, Illinois ; Charleston and Parkersburg, West Virginia; and Rossford and East Toledo, Ohio, as their representative for the purposes of collective bargaining, and that, pursuant to Section 9 (a) of the Act, Federation of Flat Glass Workers of America is the exclusive representative of all such em- ployees for the purposes of collective bargaining in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, and other conditions of em- ployment. MR. DONALD WAKEFIELD SMITH took no part in the consideration of the above Decision and Certification of Representatives. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation