Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 7, 1972195 N.L.R.B. 725 (N.L.R.B. 1972) Copy Citation MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., INC. Montgomery Ward & Co., Incorporated and Olin Wagoner . Case 3-CA-4339 March 7, 1972 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MILLER AND MEMBERS FANNING AND JENKINS On October 13, 1971, Trial Examiner Sidney D. Goldberg issued the attached Decision in this proceed- ing. Thereafter, Respondent filed exceptions and a sup- porting brief, and the General Counsel filed a brief in support of the Trial Examiner's Decision. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the Na- tional Labor Relations Board has delegated its au- thority in this proceeding to a three-member panel. The Board has considered the record and the Trial Examiner's Decision in light of the exceptions and briefs and has decided to affirm the Trial Examiner's rulings, findings, and conclusions and adopt his recom- mended Order.' ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Re- lations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board adopts as its Order the recommended Order of the Trial Examiner and hereby orders that Respondent, Montgomery Ward & Co., Incorporated, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall take the action set forth in the Trial Examiner's recommended Order. ' Respondent urges that the Board 's Decision in Collyer Insulated Wire, A Gulf and Western Systems Co., 192 NLRB No. 150, requires a reversal of the Trial Examiner's Decision. We do not perceive the relevance of Collyer to the facts of this case. The issue here is not whether the Board should require the parties to utilize available grievance and arbitration procedures, as it was in Collyer. To the extent that any arbitration issue is properly before us in this case at all (Respondent did not clearly affirma- tively plead a deferral-to-arbitration defense in its answer), it is a question of whether the decision which was made here by the Joint Grievance Com- mittee should be deferred to pursuant to our Spielberg rule. Like the Trial Examiner, we are not satisfied that the statutory issue of discriminatory discharge had been either raised or resolved in the arbitration proceeding. Airco Industrial Gases, 195 NLRB No. 120. However, we do not adopt the Trial Examiner's finding that the award by the Joint Grievance Committee presupposes that any of the company representatives thereon believed that Wagoner had not falsified company records, which was the issue litigated before the committee. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION SIDNEY D. GOLDBERG, Trial Examiner; This case was tried before me at Albany, New York, on June 9 and 10, 1971. The complaint,' issued pursuant to Section 10(b) of the Na- tional Labor Relations Act, as amended (the Act), alleges that Montgomery Ward & Co., Incorporated (the company), discharged Olin Wagoner, a technician in its appliance ser- vice unit at Menands, New York, because he engaged in concerted activities. The company answered, denying that its ' Issued March 22, 1971, on a charge filed January 4, 1971. 195 NLRB No. 136 725 discharge of Wagoner was for concerted activities and stating that, pursuant to the grievance procedure in its collective- bargaining contract with Warehouse, Retail and Mail Order Employees, Local 7942 (the union), the company had offered to reinstate him but that he had refused. The issues so raised came on for trial before me as set forth above. All parties were represented; were afforded an oppor- tunity to adduce evidence, cross-examine witnesses, and to argue on the facts and law. Briefs filed by the General Coun- sel and by counsel for the company have been considered. For the reasons hereinafter set forth in detail, I find that the real reason for the company's discharge of Olin Wagoner was his participation in concerted activities affecting condi- tions of employment and that its assigned reason was a pre- text. Upon the entire record herein,' as well as the demeanor of the witnesses, I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. The parties The company is a national organization over which the Board has exercised its jurisdiction innumerable times. The union represents certain of the company's employees, includ- ing those in the service unit at Menands, and is a labor organization within the meaning of the Act. 2. Summary of events Olin Wagoner was a "road technician" for the company. His job was to repair the appliances it sold, usually washing machines and dryers, in the homes of its customers in the Albany, New York, area. He worked out of the service build- ing in Menands, immediately north of Albany. In early March 19701 most of the road technicians in the Menands unit met in the employee lunchroom to discuss what they considered inadequacies in their working condi- tions. Wagoner was one of the three men most vocal at the meeting and, during a part of it, a company supervisor was in the room. One week later, James Gray, the central service manager for the area, called all technical employees of the unit into a meeting. After completing some preliminaries and excusing the shop employees, Gray told the road technicians that there were three "agitators" among them; that he knew who they were, and that he intended to discharge them-one in June, one in July, and one in August. Gray conceded in this testimony that one of those he had in mind was Wagoner. Although shortly thereafter Gray gave him a salary increase, Wagoner's performance ratings, which had theretofore been fairly good, became unsatisfactory. In July, Wagoner was discharged for having too many extra parts, used and unused, in his truck but the next day, through the intercession of a representative of the union, Wagoner was reinstated-on pro- bation. On Friday, August 7, Wagoner completed his last call at 5 p.m. at the home of a customer in Copake, New York, about 50 miles from Albany. It required about an hour and a half for him to drive back to the plant. He arrived there about 6:30 p.m., parked and locked his truck in the proper area, and left for the weekend. On Monday morning he wrote on his time- card, as his quitting time on Friday, 7 p.m. ' Affiliated with Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America. ' Typographical errors in the transcript of proceedings have been cor- rected by order dated September 23, 1971. All dates not otherwise designated are 1970. 726 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Gray, who had seen Wagoner entering the parking lot Friday evening, checked the timecard on Monday and circled the 7 o'clock quitting time Wagoner had written in. He then looked at Wagoner's "route sheet", i.e., itinerary, for Friday and turned the matter over to the internal security depart- ment for investigation. A few days later, Wagoner was dis- charged. Wagoner filed a grievance over his discharge and, in Febru- ary 1971, a committee consisting of two representatives of the union and two representatives of the company recommended that Wagoner be reinstated, but without backpay and on condition that he withdraw the charge which he had filed with the Board. Wagoner refused and this Board case pro- ceeded. 3. The issues The General Counsel contends that Wagoner was dis- charged as a result of his effort, together with some of his fellow road technicians, to improve their working conditions and that his entries on his route sheet and timecard were justified by custom and practice. The company contends that Wagoner's discharge was based solely upon his falsification of records in an attempt to obtain pay for time not worked. 4. Discussion and conclusions a. Preliminary At the trial respondent assigned as its reason for the dis- charge of Wagoner his falsification of company records. Ac- cordingly, an adequate discussion of the issues in this case requires u description of the data and records involved and, in some respects, findings concerning them. The basic employee record is, as usual, the timecard. Each morning the road technician reports to the service building to receive his assignment of service calls to be made that day and to obtain the parts and materials necessary for the day's work. On entering the building, he will "punch in" in the customary fashion: the clocking apparatus stamping the day of the week and the time of days If the employee completes his day's work and returns to the service building before it closes about 6 p.m., he will also "punch out" on the clock. If, however, as often happens, the employee completes his calls at a place so far away that he cannot reach the service building before it closes, he will return there nevertheless and park and secure his truck before leaving for the day. On the following work day, when he clocks in, the employee will write his quitting time for the previous day on his timecard and will initial it. This handwritten checkout time is required to be initialed also by the employee's supervisor. The other record required to be kept by the service techni- cians is the "daily route sheet", his record of the day's work. One of these sheets, printed with lines, columns, and other spaces for insertion of particular data, is given to each of the men the first thing in the morning. On it when he receives it are typed only the names, addresses, and telephone numbers of the customers whose appliances are to be serviced that day and an indication of the type of appliance to be serviced The men are required to keep in touch, by telephone, with the service department so that additional service calls may be assigned to them during the day. With respect to each customer, the road technician is re- quired to make entries in appropriate columns to show, re- spectively, the mileage to the residence of the customer, the amount of time required to reach the location, the time of day when the work was commenced, the time of day when it was completed, and the total time devoted to the call. These en- tries are all made in hours and tenths of hours. Other entries in columns on the same line as the name of the customer provide the store with billing and other information. At the bottom of the route sheet there are printed boxes with spaces for entries of "time off route", i.e., nonworking time, and for the speedometer readings on the truck at the beginning and end of each day. There is also a printed box for a summary of the employee's time entries: viz, when he timed in, when he left the building to begin making his calls, when he finally timed out, and the total and net hours worked.' In connection with the entries required to be made on these records by the employees, this case requires particular consid- eration of the regulations of the company concerning the rest periods and eating time allowances, as well as the manner in which they were to be entered on the route sheets. The collec- tive-bargaining contract provides for morning and afternoon breaks and, in the box on the route sheet labeled "time off route", spaces are provided for entry of these breaks and for lunch. There is no dispute that the morning and afternoon breaks were 15 minutes each and that they were paid time; there is also no dispute that the lunch period was one-half hour and that it was not paid time. Moreover, all seven of the road technicians who were witnesses in this case testified that they had been trained, for the sake of simplicity, to put down the time of their breaks immediately preceding or following a call rather than at the actual time of taking it, since the actual break time might occur during travel from one call to another and meticulous entries of the times of these breaks would unnecessarily increase the number of entries. James Gray, the company service manager, did not dispute this testimony and I find that this method of entering breaks was the accepted procedure. One of the major issues in this case concerns the details of a second afternoon break, sometimes called a "supper" break, allowed the road technicians when their work continued after the normal quitting time. The questions that need to be an- swered concerning this break are (a) whether it is paid or unpaid, (b) when the employee becomes entitled to take it, (c) its length, and (d) how it should be reported. The existence of the late break is indisputable because the collective-bargaining contract provides as follows- Section 7.2. When an employee works eleven (11) or more hours in one day he shall receive an additional rest period. The question next to be resolved is whether this break, if taken, was paid or unpaid time. David Opitz, one of the other road technicians, testified that, on the occasions when he worked late and took a supper break, the only deduction he made from the total hours on his route sheet was the half hour lunch period and that he was paid in accordance with his entries. The other road technicians who testified on this matter appear to have assumed that the late break, when appropriately taken, was a paid break and the reference to it as a "second afternoon break" by Italo Piccolo, the immedi- ate supervisor of the road technicians at Menands, indicates that he also regarded it as paid time. Gray, however, testified that the late break was not paid time and that any employee ' The timeclock involved in this case records time on the basis of 24 hours, i e, 4 p in appears as 16 00, and the hours are divided into hun- dredths instead of minutes, e g , 4 45 p in appears as 16.75 ' Most of the route sheets show changes, in handwriting different from that of the technician, usually reducing the hours of compensated work, but the record does not show who made the changes or their significance MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., INC. 727 whose timecard showed that he worked after 7 p.m. would automatically have an hour deducted: 30 minutes for lunch and 30 minutes for supper. As shown below, any effort to determine, from the route sheets and related timecards in evidence, what was the company's actual method of opera- tion prior to Wagoner's discharge is impossible. The only timecards in evidence are those of Opitz for the weeks ending October 7 and 14 and that of Wagoner for the week ending the day before he was discharged. Wagoner did not work after 6 p.m. during that week except on August 7, the day involved in this case. Analysis of the entries on Opitz' timecards for the 11 work days on them shows that, on the five occasions he worked until 9:15 p.m. or later, approxi- mately an hour was deducted from the total time elapsed between his checking in and checking out; on the 3 days when he quit between 5 p.m. and 5:15 p.m., slightly more than half an hour was deducted; and, on the day he quit at 7:30 p.m., 42 minutes was deducted. Oii one of the 2 remaining days he worked from 8:30 a.m. until 2:45 p.m. and on the other from 8:30 a.m. until 11 a.m.; on neither of these days was there any deduction. These figures are in conformity with Gray's testimony, but it is to be noted that the period represented by these timecards is long after Wagoner's discharge and also after there had been, in September, the first step hearing on the grievance Wagoner had filed over his discharge. Accordingly, the me- chanics of the supper break procedure presented by Wago- ner's case must have been very much in Gray's mind at the time. Gray was manager of the unit and the fact that Opitz' time records in evidence were then carefully kept in accord- ance with Gray's view of how they should be kept does not make any substantial contribution to the resolution of this issue or to Gray's general credibility as a witness. The late break is expressly provided by the contract and appears immediately following the provision for the admit- tedly paid a.m. and p.m. breaks. The lunch break, however, which is admittedly an unpaid one, is not mentioned in the contract at all. The reasonable implication of the contract, therefore, is that the late break is paid time. The testimony of all the technicians, and of Piccolo, indicates that that was how they regarded it. Accordingly, whatever was the com- pany's actual practice following Wagoner's discharge, I find that, at the time prior thereto, the men believed that it was paid time. The third question concerning the late break is when the men believed that taking it was justified. It must be recog- nized, at the outset, that the quoted section of the collective- bargaining contract, in effect since February 27, 1969, pro- vides for the late break "when an employee works eleven (11) or more hours in one day". This provision, however, is less than absolutely clear: it does not state whether the 11 hours must be hours actually worked or whether the two paid breaks and the unpaid lunch period, or any of them, are parts of the eleven. Some of the technician witnesses, and Gray himself, referred to 7 p.m. as the time that must be reached before the late break could be taken and, since the evidence shows that most clock-in times were about 8 a.m , it is a fair inference that the contract provision contemplated the pas- sage of 11 clock hours from the commencement of the work- ing day. Moreover, ^ as set forth below, some of the men be- lieved that they were entitled to a late break whenever they went into overtime, i.e. after 5 p.m. b. The concerted activity Turning now to the evidence of the events which the Gen- eral Counsel contends led to Wagoner's discharge, there is no serious dispute that, in early March, the road technicians met at a diner near the service building and discussed their desire for wage increases' and other improvements in their working conditions. As a result of this discussion, David Opitz, the union steward for the road technicians, went to the office of James Gray, the service manager. Sam Burgio, the company's metropolitan regional manager and O'Grady, a union official, were there at the time. Opitz said that the road technicians wanted to have a meeting and that he wanted it to be held on company premises, "not behind anybody's back". Burgio asked what the meeting would be about and Opitz said the men would write up a list of "demands". Burgio answered that he would not accept any "demands" but would look at the men's "requests". O'Grady said that that was the proper way to do things. The company officials gave their permission, and a notice that a meeting would be held the following morning was posted on the bulletin board. The next morning the road technicians met in a room which Gray called the "training room" and which some of the employees referred to as "the cafeteria". This room was, the parties agreed, approximately 30 feet square and contained some coffeemaking apparatus used by the office and managerial staff. - As union steward, Opitz presided and practically all of the six or seven road technicians were present. Wagoner, Daniel Sullivan, Michael Walsh and Opitz were the most outspoken. While Wagoner was speaking about their need for better wages, sick leave, and hospitalization, Keith Acker, the act- ing parts manager, came into the room for a cup of coffee and remained there for about 5 minutes, during all of which time Wagoner held the floor. At the end of the meeting, Opitz prepared a list of requests to be submitted to management and announced, for reasons not clear on this record, that he was resigning as union stew- ard. c. The March meeting About a week after the meeting of the road technicians, Service Manager Gray called a meeting of the service em- ployees, both shop and road technicians, in the cafeteria. After some brief cake cutting ceremonies to honor Bingham, one of the road technicians who had completed 10 years of service, Gray dismissed the shop employees but kept the road technicians in the room. According to Gray's own testimony, as well as that of all the road technicians who testified, Gray said that there were three "agitators" in the group who were, among other things, "creating dissatisfaction": that he was going to fire them- one in June, one in July, and one in August.' Gray conceded that, although at that time he did not name-those he meant, Wagoner was one of them. Gray also told the men that when he made a statement he always stuck to it. There is also no dispute that Gray referred to the road technicians' custom of meeting in a diner near the service building. He said he favored their meeting to talk over their problems and t6 exchange information concerning the techni- cal difficulties they encountered in their work. He also said ' The collective-bargaining contract does not set wage rates for the road technicians ' Gray, in his testimony, added that it was his intention to fire them "if things didn't shape up" No other witness appears to have heard these words at the meeting and I find that they were not in Gray's statement when he made it 728 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD that, while he, himself, had "pros and cons about manage- ment", he never teed to "offset" management. He followed this by saying that the diner was a good place to solve prob- lems, but he didn't want to catch any of the three "agitators" in the diner or he would have them fired "for misuse of Company vehicles". Several of the road technicians also tes- tified that Gray said that, if anything was done to counteract these intended firings, he would close down the unit and farm out the work. Gray, who testified after these men, did not contradict their testimony.' d. Wagoner's performance reports Wagoner had been employed by the Company as a road technician for 5 years prior to his discharge There is no reliable evidence in this record of any disparagement of his work, honesty, or conduct prior to his participation in efforts to improve the conditions of employment of the road techni- cians. Italo Piccolo, the supervising field manager in the Menands service center and the immediate supervisor of the road tech- nicians, testified that each man was give a performance re- view every 6 months and that these reviews were shown to and discussed with the individual employees. In addition to these performance reviews, he testified, at the beginning of each month he checked over the technicians' daily route sheets for the previous month and prepared a "monthly'per- formance rating sheet" on the basis of five specific areas of performance. Piccolo's rating of Wagoner for the month of March 1970 gives him perfect ratings and "very good" com- ments with respect to "customer relations" (15 points); "cooperation-dependability" (10 points); and "accuracy" (10 points). In the area labeled "recovery", Wagoner was given next-to-top rating with 30 out of a possible 40 points and the comment (not there explained) "sell service contracts". Fi- nally, in the area labeled "output", he was given just-below- middle rating of 10 out of a possible 25 points, showing an output of 4.0 to 4.99 and the comment (also unexplained) "at least-6 completes". Wagoner's total on this rating was 75 out of a possible 100 points and a composite rating of "4 plus" out of a 5 maximum. Piccolo testified that 4 plus is "just on the border of going to 5", the top rating Moreover, Wagoner testified that at the beginning of April he told Gray that he had heard from other employees that Gray had said he, Wag- oner, was completing more calls than any other technician and that, if that was so, he should be paid top rate Gray confirmed this and testified that, after looking at Wagoner's performance sheet, he said that Wagoner did not sell con- tracts and that he did not complete the required number of calls." When Wagoner answered that he was given the tougher calls and assigned to cleaning up "other peoples' garbage", Gray said that he would give him the "top rate" and challenged him to prove that he'was as good, if not better, than the other employees. Gray testified that he then made out a wage increase card to give Wagoner the highest rate, effective immediately This monthly performance rating and Gray's favorable reaction to Wagoner's request for top pay are the only objec- tive indications of the character of Wagoner's work at or about the time of his participation in the road technician's meeting. The company was unable to produce any of the monthly performance ratings reasonably prior to this one for 9 Although under these circumstances there can be no doubt that Gray made this threat, it occurred more than 6 months prior to the filing of the charge and is not alleged as a violation of the Act 10 These comments clearly indicate that Gray was looking at the monthly performance evaluation sheet summarized above and his remarks appear to explain the comments on it March 1970" nor was it able to produce any of the "Perform- ance Review"sheets prior to the one for May 1970 discussed below. Piccolo conceded, however, that Wagoner's rating had never dropped below 4 and, although he first testified that he had spoken to Wagoner "many times" about his shortcom- ings, he later conceded that he had never done so prior to late March or early April." On May 8, Piccolo brought Wagoner into his office to discuss the "Performance Review" of his work for that date. Three items: "understanding of present job and necessary related work", "familiarizing and encouraging customers to use crediting buying", and "accuracy in handling cash", were marked "satisfactory", but on all the other elements he was graded as "less than satisfactory".The detailed "suggestions for improvement" on the performance rating sheet consisted of a list of Wagoner's alleged shortcomings, including "im- proper diagnosis of service problems", "cust. complaints on over-charges", and failing to return new and used parts. Wag- oner disagreed with the rating of "unsatisfactory" given to him and refused to sign the sheet. As a result of this rating, Wagoner was put on probation and the date of his'next review was set for June 8, 1970 There is no evidence of a performance review of Wagoner's work in June, as scheduled in the May 8 rating, and the next one is dated July 7. This time none of the items received a satisfactory rating. the "suggestions for improvement" repeat some of the previous criticisms but emphasis this time was laid on the condition of his truck and his handling of new and used parts. The comments end with the statement that his service is terminated "as of 7/7/70" but the word "ter- minated" is crossed out and the word "probation" written under it." The date of next review is marked "indefinite" and there is again a notation that Wagoner refused to sign. e. The July discharge of Wagoner Field Manager Piccolo testified that on July 7, 1970, while Wagoner was on vacation, he and Acker, the acting parts manager, inspected the company truck used by Wagoner in his work. They were looking for new parts which had been ordered for repairs on customers' appliances. He testified that in Wagoner's truck they found the new parts mixed in with old parts removed in the course of repairs and which should have been turned back to the parts department so that claims for refunds could be made from the company's suppliers for parts still in warranty. The following day, Piccolo testified, when Wagoner came back from his vacation, he "ter- minated" Wagoner's service with the company. Asked for his reasons for this action Piccolo, on the stand, read them from the Performance Review sheet dated July 7. " Another monthly performance sheet, for November 1967, shows a total of 70 points out of a possible 100 and a rating of 4 The report also indicates the same lack of "promotional" work for the company that appears in the March 1970 sheet and a similar slightly low output, but otherwise very good performance is Gray's testimony, that Piccolo began complaining about Wagoner in August 1969 and kept complaining about him until he was discharged, is inconsistent with the only reliable documentary evidence in the record dealing with that period, the March 1970 monthly performance rating sheet, which was prepared by Piccolo. Other testimony by Gray, that Wagoner consistently made errors in completing his route sheets but that this fact was not discovered until after Wagoner's discharge, is in hopeless conflict with his and Piccolo's testimony that monthly performance ratings are prepared each month on the basis of an examination of the completed route sheets and is rejected These statements may be, to company counsel, mere hyper- bole, but to me they are indicia of Gray's disregard for truth in pursuit of his objective-to brand Wagoner as a generally incompetent employee, looking toward this rating, or some other incident, to justify his discharge " The incident set forth immediately below is the probable explanation for this change and for this entire rating sheet MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., INC. According to Wagoner's testimony, however, Gray called him into the office and questioned him about the parts in his truck. Wagoner explained that they were all useless parts taken from machines under repair which the men were accus- tomed to keeping with them so that they could remove small parts and sections, such as clamps and bolts, for use in mak- ing other repairs. He testified that he was familiar with the need to turn in parts still in warranty but that the material he had in his truck was not of that type and that, if he turned this material in, the parts clerks would discard it at once in his presence. He testified that Gray then told him he was going to discharge him because of the parts kept in the truck. Gray testified that on July 7 Piccolo came to him, told him that Wagoner "would not cooperate", that his truck was in "deplorable" condition, that he had changed his vacation plans after the schedule had been approved, that he had refused calls "and so forth", and that he should be dis- charged. Gray testified that he instructed Piccolo to proceed at his own discretion and that Piccolo discharged Wagoner. Upon being discharged, Wagoner went to the union office and a representative, O'Grady, returned to the service center with him. O'Grady spoke with Gray and Gray, according to his own testimony, referred O'Grady to Piccolo, saying that it was Piccolo who had determined to discharge Wagoner and it was only Piccolo who could change the situation. After O'Grady talked with Piccolo and again with Gray, it was decided to reinstate Wagoner on probation and O'Grady Told Wagoner to return to work and, according to Wagoner's testimony, to "be careful"." Opitz and Sullivan both testified concerning company policy on the disposition of parts removed during repairs. They agreed with company policy, and with Wagoner, in recognizing the need to return parts still in warranty and they agreed with Wagoner that their understanding of current policy did not require that other, useless, parts be turned in. They also testified that they kept removed parts in their trucks to obtain clamps and bolts for use in making repairs. Since Wagoner was reinstated and no issue is presented by the complaint on this incident, no findings need be made concerning it. The General Counsel, however, argues that it is additional evidence of company animus against Wagoner for his involvement in the concerted activity. The company, in offering its evidence on the matter, contended that it shows that Wagoner was an unsatisfactory employee and that this was an element properly to be considered when it made its judgment to discharge him on August 13. I am unable to accept either view: I recognize the difficulty of maintaining controls and supervision over men who work long hours, alone, and away from their employer's premises. However, the judgments claimed to have been formed on the basis of the intricate route sheets prescribed by the company and the unspecified "customer complaints" referred to, tend to con- tain a large element of subjectivity, and they appear to do so in this incident. Piccolo testified that, looking for specific repair parts in Wagoner's truck during his vacation, he found the truck in a condition he considered "deplorable". On the basis of this reaction, he prepared a Performance Review sheet declaring Wagoner "unsatisfactory" in every aspect of his employment, from his accuracy in making repairs- which, as far as this record shows, had never been questioned -to his personal appearance and ability to deal with custom- ers-which also do not appear to have been questioned. The intricacy of the company forms in evidence herein indicates a need for considerable discrimination in rating but there is " This reinstatement is probably why, on the Performance Review sheet of July 7 for Wagoner, the word "terminated" is crossed out and the words "on probation" written in. 729 little evidence of it here; it appears more likely that Piccolo, upset because he had to search for some missing parts, finding them in Wagoner's truck, and irritated by what he considered its untidy condition, "threw the book" at Wagoner," and prepared the performance review to justify Wagoner's dis- charge. Moreover, the discharge was rescinded and I cannot find that it constitutes evidence that Wagoner was an in- competent or marginally competent employee entitled to less than the full protection of the Act.16 f. The August discharge of Wagoner The discharge in issue herein begins with Wagoner's daily routine on Friday, August 7. His timecard for that day shows that he clocked in at 7.93 (7:56 a.m.) and his route sheet states that he "timed in" at 8.0. His route sheet also shows that he "left store at 8.7" (8:42); that he took his "a.m. break" from 8.7 to 9; and that, after traveling for .3 (18 minutes) he made his first call at 9.3 (9:18 a.m.). The route sheet shows that, after several calls in the Albany area, he took lunch from 1.2 until 1.7 (1:12 to 1:42 p.m.) and then drove to Hudson, ap- proximately 30 miles south, in 54 minutes, where he made a service call from 2.6 until 3.4 (2:42 to 3:24 p.m.). He took his afternoon break from 3.4 to 3.6 (3:24 to 3:36) and then drove to his final call of the day at Copake, New York, about 20 miles southeast of Hudson. He noted the commencement of that call as 4.3 (4:18 p.m.) and, according to Wagoner's route sheet, his work there continued until 5 p.m. On a separate line on his route sheet, Wagoner wrote "sup- per-5.0 to 5.4" (5 to 5:24 p.m.). On another line he wrote "to shop-5.4 to 6.0" and, in the column on that same line headed "travel time", he entered ".6". He also wrote, on an unoccupied line, "over time per Gray". In the "time" box at the bottom of the sheet, Wagoner wrote, next to the printed words "timed out at", the number "7", and listed his total and net hours as "10.5", which was the proper total, based upon his entries for working from 8 a.m. until 7 p.m. (11 hours), less the half-hour unpaid lunch period. Wagoner testified, in agreement with the entry on his route sheet, that he completed his Copake call at 5 p.m. He testified, however, that he started back to the shop at once; that he was on back roads around Copake and lost his way, and that it took him until about 6:35 to reach the shop. He also testified that it required 5 to 10 minutes for him to park and secure his truck for the weekend, which brought his working time to 6:40 or 6:42, and that he then mentally allowed himself the 20-minute supper period to which he felt he was entitled. Wagoner's testimony shows that it was according to this reasoning that he entered the quitting time of 7 p.m. on both his route sheet and his timecard on Monday morning. Wagoner's arrival at the company parking lot at approxi- mately 6:35, as he testified, rather than at the 6 o'clock en- tered on his route sheet, is abundantly established by Gray's testimony that he noted the time to be 6:25 as he drive out of the parking lot and observed Wagoner driving in. Al- though there is no evidence of the distance from the place where Gray observed Wagoner to the place where Wagoner parked the truck and no evidence of the steps or time neces- " Gray testified that he had ignored many complaints against Wagoner by Piccolo, regarding them as "just a personality conflict." 16 This is not a rejection of the argument made on this point by company counsel, which, as I understand it, is that an employer, who may forgive a transgression justifying discharge when it is committed by a valued or competent employee, may not be required by the Act to do so when the transgressor is a troublesome or incompetent one. The test I am endeavoring to apply in this case is the standard one: was the real reason for the em- ployee's discharge his protected activity or was it the alleged transgression assigned by the employer as the reason? 730 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD sary to secure the truck for the weekend, Wagoner testified that he really quit work at 6:40 or 6:42 p.m. and I accept this as an accurate statement." Corroborative of Wagoner's statement, that he started from Copake immediately after 5 to reach the shop about 6:35, is the fact that on Friday, October 2, Opitz went from his last call back to the shop to pick up Piccolo, that they went directly to the home of the customer in Copake visited by Wagoner on August 7, and after a 6-minute'stop there, returned directly to the shop. The record does not show why Piccolo made the trip but, in testifying, he called attention to the fact that it took them one hour to complete the return trip of 50 miles. Piccolo, however, made no reference to the fact that Opitz' route sheet, which records the trip, also shows that it took them 1.8 hours, or an hour and 48 minutes, to travel the 49 miles indicated from the shop to the home of the customer in Copake. A return trip, with the knowledge of the road gained on the trip out, is likely to take less time than the initial trip. When Wagoner went to Copake he went from Hudson, and it was as he was trying to return directly to Menands, he testified, that he became lost. Accordingly, his trip from Copake to Menands in one hour and 35 minutes compares favorably with the outbound leg of the test trip by Piccolo and Opitz, which took an hour and 48 minutes. On the basis of this evidence, I credit Wagoner's testimony and find that he began his return trip from Copake immediately after completing his work there and that he made no stop on the way for a supper break. Wagoner's timecard shows that he worked Monday, Tues- day, and Wednesday, August 10, 11, and 12, as usual. He testified that, on Thursday morning, Piccolo told him not to leave the building because Gray wanted to see him. He went into Gray's office and found him with some men from the internal security department of the company. Gray asked Wagoner whether the entry on the timecard he had written in for the previous Friday was correct. Wagoner said he believed it was and Gray thereupon said he was fired because he had falsified his route sheet and taken "two supper breaks". Wagoner testified that he then told Gray that he had not actually taken the break shown on the route sheet but had merely written it in adjacent to a customer's call because they had been trained to do it that way: that Gray disregarded his explanation and said he was fired. Gray's account of the incident was as follows: he saw Wag- oner drive into the parking lot as he was leaving it; he asked another employee with him, not otherwise identified, whether he recognized the driver, which he did, and to note the time as 6:25. On Monday afternoon, he testified, he was routinely going through the timecards "to look for write-ins", which the timekeeping section "does not ... like to approve without the supervisor's initials". When he saw Wagoner's card with the written in quitting time of 7 p.m. for the past Friday night, he "immediately circled that timecard and wrote on the timecard, `check out' " . Gray testified that he then called "Protection" and was told that a man would be up from Baltimore in a day or so and he would handle it. Gray then put the timecard back and, he testified, "Mr. Wagoner continued to work until Protec- " Wagoner's testimony that he reached the service building at 6:35 is, for reasons set forth below, quite credible and his testimony that he performed services until 6:40 or 6:42 was not contradicted. Respondent's counsel was invited, on cross-examination, to question Wagoner precisely concerning his work in parking and securing the truck but did not do so. The two entries on Wagoner's route sheet: travel time of 36 minutes for the 50 miles from Copake to the service building, and his arrival at the service building at 6 p.m., cannot be reconciled with any of his other other entries or, with any version of the facts. Respondent makes no argument on the basis of these entries and I disregard them. tion Department came in and interviewed Mr. Wagoner in regard to the unauthorized time he put on his timecard".18 Gray conceded that Wagoner, when called into his office on the morning of the 13th, first explained that he had made the "supper break" entries on his route sheet in the manner he had been instructed and that he explained the hour and 35 minute return trip from Copake by saying he had gotten lost. Gray's testimony on this subject then became vague and con- clusionary in expression, stating that Wagoner "changed his story several times" but again conceding that Wagoner re- turned to his explanation that the 20-minute supper break noted on his route sheet was part of his return travel time. Gray testified that "protection" then advised him to "release" Wagoner under a code designation for falsification of com- pany records. From Burgio's testimony on certain aspects of the incident, it appears that Gray's version was considerably slanted to enlarge the scope of the authority which he could exercise in this matter. Burgio testified that Gray called him and said that he thought he had a "problem". When asked what it was, Gray said he had "an employee who falsified work orders and apparently stated he had performed his duties in excess of an 8-hour day but was, in essence, stealing a half hour from the company" but that Gray did not name the employee. Burgio testified that he told Gray to advise the security department and that he next heard about the matter when Gray called him to say that the security department had recommended that Wagoner be "released". Burgio further testified that he alone had the final authority to effect discharges on matters involving security and that, even when the security depart- ment recommended a discharge, he had the right to retain the employee if he thought the matter involved was "marginal" and that the employee was basically honest but had made a mistake. He also testified that he then was informed that Wagoner was the employee involved and that he directed that the "work order" be brought to him. Burgion testified that he "checked the work order, saw where it was almost impossible for the man to have worked the period of time. . . " since Gray told him that he was Wagoner come in at 6:30. He testified that it was then that he told Gray to "release" Wag- oner. While it may make little difference which company official made the actual decision to discharge Wagoner, the differ- ences between the descriptions of the process by Burgio and Gray reinforce my conclusion that Gray was not a credible witness. Another important element in Burgio's testimony was his statement that he had, and presumably exercised, authority to retain an employee despite an unfavorable report by the internal security department in cases where he believed that the incident was "marginal", or a mistake, and that the employee was basically honest. Questions left unanswered in the foregoing statement-and critical to the decision herein-are: (a) whether Wagoner honestly believed he was entitled to the 18 or 20 minutes between the time he completed securing his truck and 7 p.m. on August 7 as a supper break and (b) the ultimate question: whether Gray instigated Wagoner's discharge because of the alleged "falsification" of his records or because of his earlier concerted activities. These are held in abeyance until some events following Wagoner's discharge have been described. 18 There is no evidence that Wagoner was interviewed by anyone during this period. No agent of the security department testified and there was no reference to any written report. Moreover, Gray testified that it was the day of Wagoner's discharge "when protection came down" and, since Wagoner testified without contradiction that he went to Gray's office between 8:30 and 9 a.m., there was little, if any, time for "investigation". MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., INC. g. Relevant events following Wagoner's discharge (i) The phone call A day or two after Wagoner was discharged, Regional Manager Burgio testified, Wagoner called him on the tele- phone and asked why he had been discharged. Burgio an- swered "you stole $2.00 from the Company".Wagoner re- plied, according to Burgio, "I have been here five years and this is the first time I have done anything wrong". To Burgio's remark that it was "cut and dried" Wagoner answered, ac- cording to Burgio 's testimony, For your own good, for the Company's good, you better put me back on the payroll, because the union and the Company will save a lot of money because they are going to put me back to work. and that he, Burgio, thereupon hung up on him. Wagoner did not testify to rebut Burgio's testimony and it stands uncon- tradicted. Although the company's brief does not mention it, and makes no argument based upon the foregoing conversation, it contains two items which, in a full evaluation of the evi- dence in this case, require discussion: an apparent admission of wrongdoing and an apparent threat. However, I am not persuaded that Wagoner's first statement can properly be construed as an admission of wrongdoing. Wagoner, as his testimony and demeanor indicate, is a rather simple person. This flat statement that he had "stolen $2", therefore, made by a very high company official on a matter not without some vagueness , as will be seen, might well result in a defensive reaction on his part. The language and circumstances, together, are insufficient to convince me that Wagoner then and there admitted any guilt, particularly in view of his active prosecution of his claim thereafter. The second statement Wagoner made indicates a certain pugnacity, also possibly defensive, but probably based upon his July experience in reversing his dismissal. His reference in this latter statement to the involvement of the union carries no explanation in the record, either directly or by permissible inference, although the fact that the charge in this case, when ultimately filed, was filed by Wagoner personally and not by the union may have been foreshadowed by some reluctance on the part of the union to represent him this time. (ii) The grievance Wagoner testified that he filed a grievance based upon his discharge, that he attended a hearing in February before four men, two from the company and two from the union, and that after hearing all the testimony they decided in his favor to the extent that they said he was to be reinstated-but without backpay and on condition that he withdraw the charge he had filed with the Board. Wagoner testified that he refused to abide by this decision. Burgio described the course of Wagoner's grievance in greater detail: testifying that there was a "second step" meet- ing in September in Gray's office and a "third step" meeting in February.19 At the meeting in February, the company men 19 Although I am convinced that Burgio made a sincere effort to testify accurately, his statement concerning those present at the meeting in Sep- tember is incompatible with the grievance procedure specified in the con- tract. The second step, as described, is in the nature of an appeal from the "unit manager" to the "Metro District Manager" and Burgio is so described by his signature to the collective-bargaining contract. Accordingly, he would have been the person involved in the September meeting and it would have been, as he stated, "step 2" under the contract, but he would have been the only one officially present. His references to the meeting at which Meehan, Bub, and O'Grady were also present were, I am convinced, to the "step 3" meeting in February at which, under the contract, 731 on the panel were Burgio and Meehan;20 the union men were O'Grady and Charles W. Bub". Burgio testified that Meehan questioned Wagoner concerning his route sheet and timecard for August 7; that Wagoner first stated that he took a supper break between 5 and 5:20 p.m. and then, when asked why, after returning to the plant at 6:30, he wrote 7 as his quitting time, Wagoner changed his story to say that he had not taken his supper break between 5 and 5:20, and that it took him so long to return from Copake because he "sort of got lost". Wagoner, on rebuttal, denied that he had first conceded tak- ing a supper break from 5 to 5:20 and, in view of the above findings on this point, I accept his denial. Burgio also testified that at no time in the hearing before the Joint Grievance Committee did Wagoner make any men- tion of his concerted activities. No company argument is based upon this evidence22 but it is to be noted that, at the time of this hearing, Wagoner had already filed the charge in this case claiming that his discharge, on August 13, was for activities on behalf of the union and the decision of the Joint Grievance Committee recognized the existence of that charge by requiring Wagoner to withdraw it as prerequisite to his reinstatement. An important point, however, in connection with the deci- sion of the Joint Grievance Committee, is that the union contract, under which Wagoner filed his, grievance, provides as follows: DISCHARGES - Section 18.1 18.1.1. Employees shall not be discharged except for just cause. A grievance that an employee was discharged without just cause shall be filed within ten (10) calendar days from the date of discharge and shall be subject to the grievance procedure of Article 17 hereof. * * * Section 18.2. In the event it is determined an employee was discharged without just cause, the employee may be reinstated with or without backpay as the circumstances warrant ... and that Article 17 provides that the majority vote of a Joint Grievance Committee shall be "final and binding". It follows, from the foregoing, that the decision of the Joint Grievance Committee that Wagoner be reinstated necessarily presupposes a finding on its part that Wagoner had been discharged without just cause, since not otherwise could it order his reinstatement, even on terms. Although Wagoner's refusal to accept the decision of the Joint Grievance Commit- the grievance was directed to be heard by two representatives of the com- pany and two of the union. 30 Meehan is not specifically identified but Burgio testified that it was Meehan who conducted the interrogation of Wagoner and William C. Mee- han, of Baltimore, appeared as counsel for the company in this case. " As appears from his signature to the collective-bargaining contract, Bub is secretary-treasurer of the union. " Although the answer herein states that there was a griveance proceed- ing and that Wagoner was offered reinstatement, the company has not contended that the Board should defer to the panel's decision as an arbitra- tion award. It appears that the matter before the Joint Grievance Committee was the propriety of Wagoner's 7 p.m. checkout entries on his timecard and route sheet and that its resolution of that matter necessarily included dispo- sition of the question whether he believed he was entitled to take the supper break. Although these are questions which must also be decided herein, they are not the ultimate issues in this case. Here, the principal question is whether Wagoner's concerted activity, regardless of the propriety of his checkout entries, was the real reason for the company's action in discharging him. Accordingly, the issue in this case is not the same as the one involved in the grievance proceeding and deference to arbitration is not involved in this case (See: Raytheon Company, 140 NLRB 883; and note that the Board's recent decision in Collyer Insulated Wire, etc., 192 NLRB No. 150, does not appear to affect the applicability of that decision to this case). 732 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD tee appears to release the company from the binding effect of this finding, it is clear evidence that at least one of the com- pany officials on the committee believed that Wagoner had not falsified the company records. (iii) The employee meetings There was evidence concerning two employee meetings subsequent to the discharge of Wagoner that appears to con- tain matters of relevance. Sullivan testified that, at a meeting of the road technicians within a month after Wagoner's dis- charge, Gray declared that a certain diner, where the men had been accustomed to taking coffeebreaks, was "off limits" and that anyone seen traveling in that direction without an official need to do so would be fired for "misappropriation of company vehicles". Gray also said, according to Sullivan, that: He thought he had made his point in August, and that if he wanted you to work here no one could fire you and if he didn't want you, no union or person in the world could save you. Gray, whose principal testimony followed that of Sullivan, did not deny having made this statement and I find that he did. It also appears, without dispute, that in January of 1971 there was a meeting of the technicians, as well as other per- sonnel in the service unit, at which officials from the Chicago headquarters of the company explained the employee rating system about to be adopted; that Walsh asked a question concerning overtime work which Gray answered by saying that the method was not up to him but that the company wanted it that way. The next morning, Gray called Walsh and Sullivan into his office: he first "kicked" the door shut, then kicked a chair and said to Walsh "You son-of-a-bitch, if you ever embarrass me in front of people like that I will kill you"; that he then set forth his "favorite pastimes", allitera- tively and obscenely, and including "to fish and to fight"; that he then shouted that he "had about all of you" and pointed at Sullivan, saying: "You are number one" and then at Walsh, saying "You are number two", but the men did not answer him. Gray did not explain or deny the foregoing outbursts; the company brief, accepting them as having occurred as de- scribed, characterizes them as showing Gray's "bluntness" and his penchant for speaking in hyperbole, as if those were synonomous with truthfulness. I regard the incident as evi- dence of Gray's persistent belligerence and his bullying char- acter. h. Conclusions The two critical questions in this case, reserved for this final discussion, are whether Wagoner honestly believed he was entitled to the supper break and whether Gray's real reason for instigating Wagoner's discharge was his concerted activities. In deciding these questions, a major determinative element in each is my estimate of the credibility of the major witnesses: Wagoner in the first and Gray in the second. Wagoner, as indicated above, appears to be a simple per- son, of modest intellectual capabilities, and probably as petty and quarrelsome as most people. He was, admittedly, nervous and confused under the pressure of testifying in this case and the evidence indicates that he was also nervous and confused when subjected to pressure by his employment supervisors. He does not appear on this record, however, as a deliberately untruthful person and his evidence concerning his actions, however he may have characterized them under pressure, is generally consistent with the evidence given by other wit- nesses and with documentary evidence. Moreover, although I regard Wagoner, in the main, as a credible witness, almost all of the evidence supporting the conclusions I reach herein is either undisputed, based upon records, or derived from other credible witnesses. Gray's demeanor and testimony supply the strongest ele- ment in my conclusion that he regarded the March effort of the road technicians to improve their working conditions as a personal affront and that his subsequent actions, with re- spect to Wagoner at least, were directed toward carrying out the threat he made one week later to get rid of him, as soon as a plausible excuse presented itself. His testimony, as ap- pears herein, was always positive-but not always credible or consistent with other parts of his own testimony. His answers to questions were not always responsive but seemed always composed to justify his conduct or the decisions he had made, and his demeanor while testifying seemed also adjusted to- ward that goal. In short, I do not regard Gray as a credible witness. Turning, now, to the validity of Wagoner's expressed belief that he was entitled to a 20-minute supper break on August 7, it must first be noted that the contract provides for a supper break "when an employee works eleven or more hours in one day". This contract provision, however, even if it were crystal clear, does not dispose of the question in this case. The road technicians all testified that they were given no formal train- ing course when they became employed by the company and that they learned company procedures as well as their jobs by working with more experienced employees." All of them ex- cept Opitz professed ignorance of the terms of the contract24 and they all testified that they took breaks and made out their route sheets and timecards as they had been thus informally instructed by the more experienced employees who broke them in. Opitz and Wagoner both testified that they believed they were entitled to a second afternoon break whenever they worked "overtime" but that they actually took it on only about half of those occasions. They also testified that such breaks were usually brief and rarely recorded on their route sheets. Opitz also testified the he had been told by Piccolo that, if a man "got hung up late on a call"-late being some- time after 5 p.m., as he understood it-there was an allow- ance of 20 minutes for supper. He also testified that on several occasions when he had been out with Piccolo on refrigeration calls and completed them late, Piccolo told him not to forget his supper break when figuring up the timesheet. Piccolo did not dispute this testimony by Opitz, although he was the official who customarily approved the handwritten timecard entries for the road technicians who worked late and would, therefore, be fully acquainted with their practices.29 Opitz also testified that there were occasions when he worked late with Piccolo that they did not actually take the supper break to which he believed himself entitled but, instead, on his route sheet added the 20 minutes to the time he actually quit. " Only one of them, Morriseau, testified that, about 5 years earlier, he had been given some instructions on the method of filling out route sheets. 34 Opitz, who was the union steward prior to March, testified that he was "generally familiar" with the contract, but he also testified that he believed the men were entitled to a late break whenever they worked after 5. " Piccolo's testimony concerning when the road technicians were enti- tled to supper breaks, sometimes called "second p.m. breaks" was both vague and mechanical but, under questioning by company counsel, he tes- tified that, on the basis of his review of several months of Opitz' route sheets, there were times when Opitz took breaks after 7 p.m., but that he did so only after he had worked 8 hours. The sheets he examined are not, as such, in evidence but his caveat concerning 8 hours of work indicates that the breaks he was referring to were supper breaks. The major effect of this testimony -whatever company counsel may have intended it be-is that it shows that 11 hours of work, set forth in the contract as a prerequisite for a supper break, was not necessarily the method actually followed in daily operations. MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., INC. Gray 's description of company procedure under the con- tract provision was that , if an employee worked from 8 a.m. until 8 p .m., taking only his lunch period and the a.m. and p.m. breaks , he would nevertheless automatically have a full hour deducted from the 12 , half an hour for lunch and half an hour for a second p .m. break , even though the employee did not take the second p.m. break . The only way an em- ployee could be paid for the second p.m. break which he did not take , according to Gray , was to note on his timecard that he did not take the late break and to have that notation approved by a supervisor . As noted above , the only documen- tary evidence in this case supports Gray 's testimony to the extent that it shows that about an hour was deducted then Opitz worked after 9 p . m. but this evidence represents com- pany procedure at a time long after Wagoner 's discharge. Since Gray was in control of the timekeeping procedure, the evidence is self-serving and no reliance may be placed upon it. To contradict the testimony of the road technicians con- cerning their understanding of the breaks to which they thought they were entitled , the company introduced several route sheets of Opitz , Sullivan , and Wagoner but conceded that it had "selected" these sheets . 26 Since the technicians testified that they sometimes made entries showing the breaks they took and sometimes they did not , the company 's selec- tion of the sheets to put into evidence makes it impossible to regard them as effective contradiction. As heretofore noted , moreover , the route sheets require detailed information covering the road technician's move- ments, calling for both times of day and fractions of hours in more than one place on the sheet . The timekeeping and record notations are intricate but they also permit-perhaps even require-many "adjustments" to keep the various sets of entries consistent with each other and with company rules and customs . There is ample , uncontradicted evidence of this from all the road technicians who testified and no contrary evidence from the company . On Wagoner 's route sheet for August 7 , although there is no doubt that his "time out" entry of 7 p . m. was one such "adjustment" he believed he was entitled to make , it appears that he was also making an effort to set forth all the facts , rather than making any effort to cheat on his time record. To the extent that Wagoner's records and actions differed from the company 's policies in those areas , those differences resulted from the company's failures to communicate its policies to its employees. A significant contribution to the evidence on this point is Wagoner 's testimony , not contradicted by Gray , that when Wagoner asked why he was being discharged , Gray said it was because he had taken "two supper breaks", thereby im- plying that one was justified. Based upon all of the evidence, as detailed above, I find that, on August 7, Wagoner had reasonable cause to believe that his overtime work entitled him to a brief supper break; that he took no break after the completion of the Copake call but returned at once to the shop , reaching it about 6:35 and completing his day 's work with the securing of his truck about 6 :40 p.m .; and that he believed that , not having taken the break , company procedure permitted him to add it to his working time, so that his entry of 19 .00 as his quitting time was an acceptable method of recording his time. Since Wagoner 's timecard entry was not inconsistent with a reasonable impression of company practice , the remaining question for resolution is the company 's-that is, Gray's- true reason for discharging Wagoner on August 13, for as appears, the decision was almost entirely that of Gray. 16 Therc were some others produced and the General Counsel examined them during recess. 733 Following Gray 's March denunciation of the three "agita- tors"27 and his promise to fire them in June , July, and August, Wagoner 's performance ratings, which had been reasonably good during his 5 years of employment , became quite poor.28 As noted above , Wagoner's rating, based upon examination of his route sheets for March , was 4 plus which , Piccolo testified , put a man "on the borderline of going to the five rating", 5 being the maximum . Moreover Gray's grant of Wagoner 's request for a salary increase about the same time was based upon Wagoner 's claim of extraordinary perform- ance in output-the area shown weakest in the otherwise very good March rating . The performance review of Wagoner's work , however , prepared by Piccolo on May 8 and described in detail above , rated Wagoner as unsatisfactory in most respects and he was put on probation . There is no independ- ent or objective evidence of any change in Wagoner's per- formance justifying this change in evaluation of his perform- ance: only the testimony of Gray and Piccolo that they had been dissatisfied with him since the previous August, tes- timony completely refuted by the March report. The unsatisfactory rating of Wagoner on May 8, and his consequent probationary status, called for another perform- ance evaluation in 30 days but there is nothing in the record to show that one was made . The so-called performance rating of July 7 or 8 which resulted in Wagoner 's discharge and reinstatement, and which has been found to have been pre- pared solely to support that discharge, is the only item in Wagoner 's record between May 8 and his ultimate discharge on August 13. The incident leading to Wagoner 's discharge , as recounted by Gray, started with his noting Wagoner 's entry into the parking lot at, as he put it , 6:25, but there is no explanation for his elaborate by-play in calling the attention of the em- ployee with him to Wagoner 's presence and asking him to note the precise time . Wagoner testified , without contradic- tion by Gray , that he had received permission from Gray to go into overtime to make the call in Copake . In view of Gray's supervisory responsibility over the road technicians and his distaste for allowing overtime work , there is no special signifi- cance in his making a note of Wagoner 's time of arrival at the shop that evening but he seems to have gone beyond that. Again , there would ordinarily be no basis for drawing any inference from Gray 's checking of Wagoner 's timecard to see whether the checkout time written on it by Wagoner agreed with his observed time of Wagoner's arrival at the shop but, here again , Gray 's conduct appears to be an elaborate stage play. Although there is no express contradiction of Gray's testimony that it was on Monday afternoon that he wrote the words "check out" on Wagoner's timecard just below the handwritten entry " 19.00" and the initials "O.W." in the "out" column and that he then encircled these notations, it is strange that Wagoner , who used that card to check in and out on both Tuesday and Wednesday, made no reference to 2' Gray testified that the three he had in mind were Opitz, Wagoner, and Sullivan, but that he never named them until he was interviewed by Govern- ment investigators . Sullivan, however , testified that on the day of the meet- ing Piccolo named the three men to whom Gray referred and said Gray had given the names to him. Neither Gray nor Piccolo disputed this testimony. 38 Although Piccolo prepared the performance rating, it may be inferred that he did not do so with complete independence of Gray, his immediate supervisor . Sullivan, another of the "agitators", had received a performance rating signed by Piccolo on April 15 which marked him "satisfactory" in every respect. Piccolo nevertheless testified that he put Sullivan on proba- tion about the middle of May. Sullivan testified , without contradiction, that Piccolo, while giving him the performance review which put him on proba- tion, said that he had been instructed by Gray to "write him up" and give him unsatisfactory ratings and that he was doing so, although he did not necessarily agree with all of it. 734 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD these highly visible markings. Accordingly, and in view of my strong reservations concerning Gray's credibility, I do not accept Gray's account of his procedure. Moreover, there are other notations on this timecard which, while unexplained on this record, nevertheless raise several questions which are discussed below. Several details on Wagoner's route sheet for August 7, as well as on his timecard for the week ending Wednesday, August 12, raise questions concerning the company's "inves- tigation" into Wagoner's alleged misconduct. No agent of the internal security department of the company testified and, notwithstanding Gray's statement that Wagoner's discharge came after he had been interviewed, Wagoner testified that he had no indication of anything unusual until Piccolo sent him to Gray's office Thursday morning29 On the route sheet there are partially erased red crayon markings around the entries of 5.0 to 5.4 for supper and around those of 5.4 to 6.0 for return travel to the shop. From these there is a partially erased red line leading to the "timed out" entry of 7 p.m. These markings indicate that someone saw a need for investi- gation, but the obvious inconsistency in'these figures cannot justify a conclusion that the entries in themselves prove an attempt to defraud the company. The record does not disclose who made these crayon markings or why they were partly erased. The total absence of any evidence concerning the alleged "investigation", and the few minutes available, ac- cording to the company's own evidence, for any investigative functioning by the representative of the security department, is in marked contrast to Gray's repeated references to the company's "investigation". This marked contrast justifies all inference that there was, in fact, no independent investigation as the foundation for Wagoner's discharge but that, on the contrary, the sole function of the "internal security" man was to lend an appearance of justification to the discharge that Gray had threatened and for which he now believed he had a basis. Wagoner's timecard also raises some questions that should have, been, but were not, answered on this record. Next to Wagoner's "out" entry of "19.00" is the notation, in a hand- writing obviously not his but closely resembling the one used to enter totals in the "hours daily" column on all the cards in evidence, "Pd per 113" and, in the "hours daily" column, "10.5". The total time between Wagoner's timeclock "in" entry of 7.93 and his handwritten "out" entry of 19.00, is 11 hours; the deduction of the usual half hour for lunch reduces that total figure to 10.5 hours. Wagoner's route sheet, how- ever, which Gray claims he inspected, states that Wagoner took a supper break. Accordingly, regardless of when it was taken and on the basis of the company procedure Gray claimed was automatic, a half hour, or at least 20 minutes, would have been deducted for the supper break and Wagoner would have been paid only for time he actually worked.30 There is no evidence concerning the origin of the "Pd per 113" entry and no explanation for it. Judicial notice, how- ever, may be taken of the fact that, in many large organiza- tions, persons are sometimes designated by numbers and I draw the inference that someone bearing the identification number 113 authorized payment to Wagoner for working until his claimed checkout time of 7 p.m. Whether 113 is Gray's number or that of a subordinate is immaterial since Gray testified that he gave the matter his personal attention. Had the matter been treated routinely, Wagoner would have been paid only until 6:30 or 6:40, to which time he admittedly worked. The unexplained notation, indicating au- thorization for payment until 7 p.m., makes it impossible to avoid an inference that there was some special reason for paying Wagoner until 7 p.m., the final 20 or 30 minutes of which, the company contends, was improperly and dishon- estly" claimed. This inexplicable procedure also makes it impossible for me to avoid a step that is taken not lightly, but only after the most serious deliberation and consideration of 'the evidence and the witnesses in this case: I am compelled to draw the inference that the direction that Wagoner be paid until 7 p.m. was for the express purpose of having him paid for the final 20 or 30 minutes of the day on the basis of a claim that could later be branded unjustified and made the basis for his dismissal from employment. I am also compelled to draw the further inference that Gray, who was the head of the service unit, directed this action for that purpose. It also appears that Gray, by describing Wagoner's conduct as "stealing" in his initial report to Burgio, endeavored, success- fully, to influence Burgio to order the discharge of Wagoner instead of applying his rule that a "marginal" infraction by a basically honest employee (there is no evidence that Wag- oner had ever been accused of dishonesty) may be regarded as a "mistake" and the employee retained. The time lag between Gray's threat to discharge Wagoner and its accomplishment, which normally would raise a sen- ous doubt concerning any relationship between the two, does not raise any such doubt in this case, because in March, when Gray announced his intention to discharge the "agitators", he also announced that his timetable to accomplish this objective was "one in June, one in July, and one in August", and he warned his audience that when he made a statement he ad- hered to it. From his repeated use of military expressions and his manner of addressing his subordinates, it is apparent that Gray regarded this announced objective as a campaign hav- ing both tactical and strategic aspects. His careful notation of Wagoner's time of return to the shop on August 7, including the drafting of a witness, shows that he was alert to test every possible tactical opportunity which might serve his an- nounced strategic objective of firing Wagoner. Moreover, when it had been accomplished, he proclaimed to his subordi- nates that he had achieved his objective. Finally, it is important to note that there is not even a contention in this case that Wagoner had ever previously manipulated his time records and there is no credible evi- dence that he had ever been given even a reprimand for shortcomings in any aspect of his recordkeeping. Moreover, company animus is clearly shown in Gray's declared inten- tion to discharge the "agitators" and, admittedly, Gray con- sidered Wagoner one of them.32 Based upon all of the foregoing, I"find that Wagoner was discharged because of his concerted activities and that the reason assigned by the company for his discharge, was a pre- text to mask its true reason. 29 Company counsel put no questions to Wagoner concerning any such interview and I find that none occurred '° Gray's testimony that the men were paid solely on the basis of their timecard entries was obviously designed to neutralize the full disclosure on Wagoner's route sheet but Gray's further statement that on Monday, several days before the end of the payroll week on Wednesday, he looked at Wago- ner's route sheet for August 7, makes that testimony irrelevant. " Both Burgio and Gray accused Wagoner of "stealing" half an hour or $2, from the company " Compare Tierney Electrical Manufacturing Company, 192 NLRB No. 41, where the Board, citing previous plant rule violations by the employee and the lack of union animus against him, reversed the finding of the Trial Examiner that the rule violation was "so trivial as to imply a discriminatory motivation" MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., INC. 735 5. The effect of the unfair labor practice upon commerce ORDER The activites of respondent, set forth in finding of fact 4, above, occurring in connection with its operations described in finding of fact 1, above, have a close, intimate, and substan- tial relationship to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States and tend to lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free flow thereof. 6. The remedy Having found that respondent has engaged in an unfair labor practice, I shall recommend that it cease and desist therefrom and take affirmative action designed to effectuate the purposes of the Act. Having found that respondent, by discharging Olin Wag- oner for engaging in activities protected by the Act, commit- ted an unfair labor practice, I shall recommend that it offer him reinstatement to the position he held on August 13, 1970, or, if that position no longer exists, to a position substantially equivalent thereto, without loss of seniority or other rights and benefits, and that it make him whole for any loss of compensation he may have suffered, computed in the manner prescribed in F W. Woolworth Company, 90 NLRB 289, and with interest as prescribed in Isis Plumbing & Heating Co., 138 NLRB 716. In view of the nature of the unfair labor practice found herein to have been engaged in by respondent, which indi- cates its determination to interfere aggressively with its em- ployees' rights of self-organization, I shall recommend a broad cease-and-desist order herein.33 Upon the foregoing findings of fact and upon the entire record herein, I reach the following: CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. Respondent is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 2. The union is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. At the time of the activities set forth in the Decision, Sam S. Burgio, James Gray, Italo Piccolo, and Keith Acker were supervisors of respondent within the meaning of Section 2(11) of the Act and acted as its agents. 4. By discharging Olin Wagoner for engaging in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining and other mutual aid and protection, respondent interfered with, re- strained, and coerced employees in the exercise of rights guar- anteed in the Act and committed an unfair labor practice within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. 5. The foregoing unfair labor practice is an unfair labor practice affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. Upon the foregoing findings of fact, conclusions of law, and upon the entire record, and pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Act, I hereby issue the following recommended:34 N.L.R.B. v. Entwistle Mfg. Co., 120 F.2d 532, 536 (C.A. 4, 1951). In the event no exceptions are filed as provided by Section 102.46 of the Rules and Regulations of the National Labor Relations Board, the findings, conclusions , and recommended Order herein shall, as provided in Section 102 . 48 of the Rules and Regulations , be adopted by the Board and become its findings, conclusions , and order, and all objections thereto shall be deemed waived for all purposes. Respondent, Montgomery Ward & Co., Incorporated, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall: 1. Cease and desist from: (a) Discharging any employee because he or she engaged in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or mutual aid or protection. (b) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing employees in the exercise of their right to self-organ- ization, or to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining and other mutual aid or protection, or to refrain from any and all such activities. 2. Take the following affirmative action to effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Offer to Olin Wagoner immediate and full reinstate- ment to his former position or, if that position no longer exists, to a position substantially equivalent to that which he held immediately prior to August 13, 1970, without prejudice to his seniority or other privileges, and make thim whole for any loss of wages in the manner set forth in the section of the Decision entitled "The remedy". (b) Notify immediately the above-named individual, if presently serving in the Armed Forces of the United States, of the right to full reinstatement, upon application after dis- charge from the Armed Forces, in accordance with the Selec- tive Service Act and the Universal Military Training and Service Act. (c) Preserve and, upon request, make available to the Board or its agents, for examination and copying, all payroll records, social security payment records, timecards, person- nel records and reports, and all other records necessary to analyze the amount of backpay due under the terms of this recommended Order. (d) Post at its Service Unit at Menands, New York, copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix"." Copies of said notice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Re- gion 3, after being duly signed by its representative, shall be posted by it immediately upon receipt thereof, and be main- tained by it for 60 consecutive days thereafter, in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by it to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (e) Notify the Regional Director for Region 3, in writing, within 20 days from the date of the receipt of this Decision, what steps the Respondent has taken to comply herewith .31 APPENDIX NOTICE To EMPLOYEES POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD An Agency of the United States Government The trial held at Albany, New York, on June 9 and 10, 1971, in which we participated and had an opportunity to give evidence, resulted in a decision that we had committed an " In the event that the Board's Order is enforced by a Judgment of a United States Court of Appeals, the words in the notice reading "POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD" shall be changed to read "POSTED PURSUANT TO A JUDGMENT OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS ENFORCING AN OR- DER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD." 14 In the event that this recommended Order is adopted by the Board after exceptions have been filed, this provision shall be modified to read: "Notify the Regional Director for Region 3, in writing , within 20 days from the date of this Order , what steps the Respondent has taken to comply herewith." 736 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD unfair labor practice in violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended , and this notice is posted pursuant to that decision. The National Labor Relations Act, as amended, gives all employees the following rights: To organize themselves To form, join, or support unions To bargain as a group through a representative they choose To act together for collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection To refrain from any or all such activities In recognition of these rights , we hereby notify our em- ployees that: WE WILL NOT discharge any of our employees be- cause they engage in concerted activities for collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection. WE WILL offer Olin Wagoner immediate and full rein- statement to his former job or , if this job no longer exists, to a substantially equivalent position , without prejudice to his seniority or other rights and privileges , and make him whole for any loss of earnings he may have suffered by reason of his discharge. WE WILL NOT in any other manner interfere with, re- strain , or coerce employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization , to form labor organizations , to bar- gain collectively through representatives of their own choosing , to engage in concerted activities for the pur- pose of collective bargaining or other mutal aid or pro- tection, or to refrain from any and all such activities, except to the extent that such right may be affected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organiza- tion as a condition of employment as authorized by Sec- tion 8(a)(3) of the Act. MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., INCORPORATED (Employer) Dated By (Representative) (Title) WE WILL notify immediately the above-named individual, if presently serving in the Armed Forces of the United States, of the right to full reinstatement , upon application after dis- charge from the Armed Forces, in accordance with the Selec- tive Service Act and the Universal Military Training and Service Act. This is an official notice and must not be defaced by any- one. This notice must remain posted for 60 consecutive days from the date of posting and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. Any questions concerning this notice or compliance with its provisions may be directed to the Board's Office, Federal Building, 9th Floor, 111 West Huron Street, Buffalo, New York 14202, Telephone 716-842-3100. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation