National Distillers Products Corp.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsJun 29, 195194 N.L.R.B. 1775 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION 1775 venors to be ratified by their memberships. When all concerned have reached agreement the representatives of all the parties meet and at the same time and place sign a written contract. Representatives of American, Valley, Parsons, and Franklin and the Intervenors attach their signatures to the same document. Although separate documents are signed by the representatives of Chemical and Crocker-McElwain, the general contract terms which uniformly result from the joint nego- tiations are identical in all three documents. Special riders, however, pertaining to employees employed by only one of the Employers, as in the case of truck drivers employed by Chemical only, are added to the general agreement. As indicated above, since 1937 all bargaining concerning the employees here involved has been on a joint basis. There have been no separate negotiations by any of the Employers. The record also discloses that job classifications are uniform through- out the plants of all the Employers and that similar working condi- tions prevail among the employees of the six Employers. In view of the substantial- bargaining history on a joint basis, as set forth above, we find that the units sought by the Petitioner are inappropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining.4 Inasmuch as the Petitioner has not evinced a desire to represent a multiple- employer unit embracing the employees of all of the Employers and has not made an adequate showing of interest among such employees,-5 we shall dismiss the petitions filed herein. Order IT Is HEREBY ORDERED that the petitions filed in this case be, and they hereby are, dismissed. 4 Arena -Norton, Inc., et at ., 93 NLRB 375 ; Johnson Optical Company, at at., 85 NLRB 895 ; Associated Shoe Industries of Southeastern Massachusetts, Inc., at al., 81 NLRB 224 . The Petitioner asserts that the Employers involved and the Intervenors have previously consented to the appropriateness of the units it seeks to establish because they agreed to separate union -security authorization elections in 1948. However , neither the parties ' previous agreement nor the Board ' s consent election procedures necessarily control the appropriateness of such units where the issue is controverted in the repre- sentation proceedings and is before the Board for determination . United States Lime Products Corporation, 91 NLRB 1415. 5 The Madison Company, 91 NLRB 135; American District Telegraph Company, 89 NLRB 1228. NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION and LODGE No. 1646, INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MACHINISTS , PETITIONER . Case No. 9-RC-1.117. June 29, 1951 Decision and Order Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before Seymour Goldstein, hearing 94 NLRB No. 249. 1776 DECISIONS OP NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD officer. The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3 (b) of the Act, the Board has delegated its powers in connection with this .case to a three- member panel [Chairman Herzog and Members Murdock and Styles]. Upon the entire record in this case, the Board finds : 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. 2. The labor organizations involved claim to represent employees of the Employer. 3. No question affecting commerce exists concerning the representa- tion of employees of the Employer within the meaning of Section 9 (c) (1) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act, for the following reasons:' The Petitioner seeks a unit composed of all employees in the Em- ployer's mechanical., maintenance, and repair departments who are engaged in operating machine tools or -repairing and maintaining machinery and equipment throughout the Employer's Old Grand Dad, Old Crow, and Old Taylor plants in Frankfort, Kentucky, and all employees in the Employer's bottling departments who repair and maintain the bottling machinery at these three plants, excluding all other employees, professional employees, guards, and supervisors as, defined in the Act. Alternatively, the Petitioner seeks to represent either (1) a unit of employees limited to those engaged generally in making, install- ing, and maintaining machinery and equipment, substantially the same unit requested above, or (2) a unit consisting of all utility men and utility helpers in the maintenance and bottling departments at the Employer's three Frankfort plants. The Employer and Local Union No. 24, Distillery, Rectifying & Wine Worker's International Union of America, AFL, the Inter- venor herein, contend that none of the units sought by the Petitioner is appropriate, on the ground that the employees requested do not constitute a true craft, departmental, or otherwise homogeneous unit such as would warrant their severance from the existing production and maintenance unit which the Intervenor has represented for more than 10 years. The three plants here involved constitute the Employer's Frank- fort division which is directed by a resident manager and a general superintendent. The Old Grand Dad plant is supervised by a plant superintendent and an assistant superintendent. One superintendent 1In view of our findings which follow, it is unnecessary for us to decide whether or not existing contracts constitute a bar-to this proceeding. NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION 1777 supervises both the Old Crow and Old Taylor plants with the assist- ance of an assistant superintendent in each of the latter two plants. Each of the three plants operates as a unit and each has its own maintenance and bottling departments. There are approximately 60 maintenance employees employed in the maintenance and bottling departments of the three plants who are classified by the Employer as "utility men" and "utility helpers." The utility men possess a general knowledge of maintenance work, but each spends a majority of his time performing some particular maintenance task such as carpentry, painting, electrical work, operating machine tools, or repairing and maintaining machinery and equipment. As indicated above, the Petitioner's primary and first alternative unit requests would include only those utility men who operate machine tools and who repair and -maintain machinery and equipment. The Petitioner's second alternative unit would encompass all of the utility men. The record reveals that each of the plants has a shop where the utility men report and store their tools and equipment.. Generally, the utility men employed at one plant remain at that plant, although some individuals move from plant to plant as they are needed., In the event of a major breakdown or overhaul at one plant employees of the other plants are utilized. The utility men perform other maintenance work in addition to that in the particular field in which they are em- ployed. Approximately 25 percent of their time is spent in such other maintenance work. All of the utility men in the maintenance departments work under the supervision of the maintenance foremen at the several plants, with the exception of the utility men doing carpentry work at Old Crow, who have their own shop and are supervised by a carpentry foreman. They all receive the same rate of pay which is the highest rate paid by the Employer. They share the same working conditions, hours, pen- sion, holiday, and vacation benefits with all the other employees of the Employer. Approximately nine of the utility men are employed in the Em- ployer's bottling departments, to maintain, repair, adjust, and grease the bottling machinery and to do the necessary work to convert that machinery when bottling operations require a change from. one bottle size to another. These employees report to, and work under the direc- tion of, the bottling department foremen. They receive substantially the same pay and work the same hours as do the other utility men and they likewise share the same pension, vacation, holiday, and other benefits with the other employees. The utility men are not required to be journeyman craftsmen and the Employer does not conduct any apprenticeship programs. When 953841-52-vol. 94-113 1778 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD a utility man vacancy occurs in a plant, that vacancy is posted through- out the three plants and any employee may bid for the job. In filling the position of utility man operating machine tools or repairing and maintaining machinery and equipment, employees with mechanical aptitude and experience are desired, but employees are trained- to per- form the various jobs in the particular plants by a process of on-the- job training. The applicant's ability to do the job and his seniority, rather than his previous classification or experience, are the determi- native factors for filling such a position. Thus, on frequent occasions, a utility helper performing carpentry or painting duties may bid for and be assigned to the position of utility man doing maintenance and repair work on machinery and equipment. In the maintenance de- partments from two to four utility men are engaged in operating such machine tools as lathes, milling machines, and drill presses. Some of these employees have had prior machinist experience while others have attained their-ability by the on-the-job training process previously described. Approximately 18 utility men are engaged in repairing, maintaining, and adjusting machinery in production areas throughout the plant. For a period of more than 10 years the Intervenor has represented the employees here involved as part of a three-plant production and maintenance unit, including the usual categories of such employees, with the exception of boiler room employees-and pipe fitters, who are separately represented. Further, the record indicates that collective bargaining on an industrial unit basis is the prevailing practice in the distilling industry. From the foregoing it is clear that the utility men requested by the Petitioner, whether considered as a group constituting a particular segment or the whole of the maintenance and bottling departments, do not comprise a true craft or craft nucleus group of employees. They have no specific craft designations; there are no prerequisites of ap- prenticeship or journeyman status required of them; and their duties are not confined to those normally associated with a particular craft.2 Moreover, it does not appear from the record that these employees function as a distinct, departmental, or otherwise homogeneous group separate and apart from the employees in other departments so as to warrant their severance from the existing division-wide unit .3 The job of utility man is filled by selection from among the ranks of pro- duction and other employees. The utility men in the maintenance and bottling departments work throughout the plants under the same conditions of employment and sharing the same employee benefits 2 General Mills, Inc., Sperry Division, 91 NLRB 984; National Distillers Products Corporation, 84 NLRB 818. . ' The Nestle Company, Inc., 92 NLRB 1250; General Mills, Inc., Sperry Division, supra; Heyden Chemical Corporation, 85 NLRB 1181; Drewry's Limited U. S. A. Inc., 85 NLRB 1. ROCHESTER METAL PRODUCTS 1779 as the other employees in the existing production and maintenance unit. They perform the normal duties of maintenance employees. In view of these facts, including the long history of collective bar- gaining on an industrial unit basis, we find that none of the Peti- tioner's proposed units is appropriate for the purpose of collective bargaining. Therefore, we shall dismiss the petition. Order IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the petition filed in this case be, and it hereby is, dismissed. ROCHESTER METAL PRODUCTS, A SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP OPERATED BY ROBERT S. MERSEY 1 and INTERNATIONAL UNION, UNITED AUTOMO- BILE, AIRCRAFT & AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT WORKERS OF AMERICA, UAW-CIO, PETITIONER. Case No. 13-RC-1304. June 29, 1951 Decision and Direction of Election Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, hearings were held before Ivan C. McLeod, hearing ofl'icer.2 The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearings are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. The Employer urges in his brief that certain defects in the petition and alleged irregularities before and at the hearing prevent the Board from asserting jurisdiction in the instant case. The original petition named the Employer as "Rochester Metal Products Company." It appears that the correct name of the Em- ployer is "Rochester Metal Products." Copies of the petition and notice of hearing were served upon the Employer at his address in Rochester, Indiana. Subsequent to this, the superintendent of the Employer's Rochester, Indiana, plant, and a secretary attended the informal conferences held by the Board's Regional Office prior to the formal hearing and cooperated with the Board by furnishing informa- tion in regard to the operations of the Employer. Immediately be- fore the formal hearing, however, the Employer advised the Board's Regional Office that the company named in the petition and notice of hearing was nonexistent, and that because the Employer had no con- nection with the named company, it would not attend the formal hearing. I The name of the Employer appears as amended at the reopened hearing. 2 A hearing was held before Hearing Officer McLeod on March 20, 1951. Subsequently the Board on its own motion reopened the hearing. The reopened hearing was held before the same hearing officer on April 27, 1951. 94 NLRB No. 62. 953841-52-vol. 94-114 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation