Packard Motor Car Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsFeb 24, 194560 N.L.R.B. 871 (N.L.R.B. 1945) Copy Citation In the Matter of PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY ( TOLEDO DIVISION) and MECHANICS EDUCATIONAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, LOCAL #4 (CUA) Case No. 8L-R-1664.-Decided February 24, 1945 Messrs. Carl Binns, D. C. Livesay, F. W. Fennell, and R. D. Camp- bell, of Toledo, Ohio, for the Company. Messrs. Earl Streeter and George Pilkiewicz, of Toledo, Ohio, for MESA. Messrs. David Gubernian, Howard Rediger, and Fred Gelow, of Toledo, Ohio, for the C. I. O. Mr. Robert O'Brein, of Toledo, Ohio, for the Pattern Makers. Mr. Donald H. Frank, of counsel to the Board. DECISION IAND DIRECTION OF ELECTION STATEMENT OF THE CASE Upon .a petition duly filed by Mechanics Educational Society of America, Local #4 (CUA), herein called MESA, alleging that a question affecting commerce had arisen concerning the representation of employees of Packard Motor Car Company (Toledo Division), herein called the Company, the National Labor Relations Board pro- vided for an appropriate hearing upon due notice before Arthur Stark, Trial Examiner. Said hearing was held at Toledo, Ohio, on January 11, 1945. The Company, MESA, the International Unjgn, United Automobile, Aircraft & Agricultural Implement Workers of America, Local No. 12, C. 1. 0., herein called the C. 1. 0., and the Pattern Makers Association of Toledo, Lima and Vicinity, A. F. L., herein called the Pattern Makers, appeared and participated. All parties were afforded- full opportunity to be heard, to examine and cross-examine witnesses, and to introduce evidence bearing on the issues. During the hearing, the C. 1. 0. moved that the petition of MESA be dismissed. The Trial Examiner referred the C. I. O.'s motion to the Board. For reasons set forth in Section V, the motion is hereby denied. The Trial Examiner's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are 60 N. L. R. B., No. 148. 871 872 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD hereby affirmed. All parties were afforded an opportunity to file briefs with the Board. - Upon the entire record in the case, the Board makes the following : FINDINGS OF FACT I. THE BUSINESS OF THE COMPANY Packard Motor Car Company is a_Michigan corporation with its principal office in Detroit, Michigan. The Company owns and operates several plants in and ' about the Detroit area, in addition to which it operates a plant owned by the Defense Plant Corporation and located at Toledo, Ohio, herein called the Toledo Plant. We are concerned herein solely with the Company's operations at the Toledo Plant. The Company is engaged at the Toledo Plant in the manufacture of aircraft engine parts for the Government of the United States and other members of the United Nations. The primary raw materials used at the Toledo Plant are steel and aluminum, 80 percent of which is obtained from points outside the State of Ohio. During the 12 months preceding the date of hearing, the Company used a quantity of these raw materials valued in excess of $300,000, and in the same period manufactured finished products valued in excess of $1,000,000, all of which was shipped to points outside the State of Ohio. The Company admits that it is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act, and we have so found.' II. 'THE ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED Mechanics Educational Society of America, Local, #4 (CUA), is a labor organization admitting to membership employees of the Com- pany. International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft,& Agricultural Implement Workers of America, Local No. 12, affiliated with the Congress of Industrial Organizations, is a labor organization admit- ting to membership employees of the Company. Pattern Makers Association of Toledo, Lima and Vicinity, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, is a labor organization admitting to membership employees of the Company. III. THE QUESTION CONCERNING REPRESENTATION The Company has refused to grant recognition to MESA as the exclusive bargaining representative of certain of its employees until MESA has been certified by the Board in an appropriate unit. 1 Matter of Packard Motor Car Company , 59 N L R B 966 , Matter of Packard Motor Car Company, 54 N. L . R B. 1029. PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY 873 A statement of a Board-agent, introduced into evidence at the hear- ing, indicates that MESA represents a substantial number of employees in the unit hereinafter found appropriate.2 We find that a question affecting commerce has arisen concerning the representation of employees of the Company, within the meaning of'Section 9 (c) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. IV. TIIE APPROPRIATE UNIT The Company, MESA, the C. I. 0., and the Pattern Makers stipulate and agree that the appropriate unit consists of all hourly rated em- ployees in the TX department of the Company's Toledo Plant,' excluding pattern makers and pattern makers' apprentices, supervisory employees, employees at the Willow Run, Michigan, plant,' and all salaried employees. The TX department is engaged solely in experimental work on Rolls-Royce engines. It is the only department in the United States doing this type of work, and the project is highly restricted and covered by a secrecy agreement between the Company and the United States Army. We are of the opinion that these facts reveal a func- tional dissimilarity which sets this department apart from all other departments of the Company's Toledo Plant and demonstrates its appropriateness as a separate unit. We find that all hourly rated employees in the TX department of the Company's Toledo plant, but excluding pattern makers and pattern makers' apprentices; employees at the Willow Run, Michigan, plant; all salaried employees; and all supervisory employees with authority to hire, promote, discharge, discipline, or otherwise effect changes in the status of employees, or effectively recommend such action, con- stitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act. V. THE DETERMINATION OF REPRESENTATIVES The TX department is an expanding unit. The department began its operations in August 1944. On September 1, there were 30 hourly rated employees; on October 1, there were 38; on November 1, there were 55; on December 1, there were 72; and on January 7, 1945, there 2 The Field Examiner reported that MESA submitted 45 authorization cards, 38 of which bore apparently genuine original signatures of persons whose names appear on the Com- pany's pay roll of October 4 , 1944,'ehich contained the names of 93 employees in the ap- hropirate unit , and that the cards were dated • 3 in July, 5 in August , 6 in September, and 24 in October 1944 The C. I. O. submitted 27 authorization cards, all of which bore apparently genuine original signatures . The names of 21 persons appearing on the cards were contained in the pay roll of January 7, 1945. 3 when the Toledo TX department completes experimental engines they will be flight- tested at willow Run by certain TX employees working at that plant. 874 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD were 98. The Company anticipates that when the department is fully manned there will be approximately 300 hourly rated employees in the unit herein found appropriate, and it expects that this number will be reached by May 15,1945. Moreover, the Company expected to have in its employ 50 percent of the anticipated full complement by Febru- ary 15, 1945. The Company has already installed almost all of the required machinery and intends to hire new employees as rapidly as they may be obtained. The Board holds that where a substantial num- ber of the anticipated full complement of employees in the appropri- ate unit has been employed, and those employees represent a fair cross section of the employees to be encompassed by the unit, it will entertain a petition for an election to determine representatives.4 Where the substantial number already employed has reached 50 percent of the anticipated complement to be engaged within a year, the Board places no time qualification on its certification of the chosen representative.' Moreover, upon a finding that a company anticipates employment of 50 percent of the employees in the unit within a short interval we have ordered an election to be conducted at a future date, leaving unqualified the usual certification period .6 The C. 1. 0. contends, how- ever, that an election should not be presently ordered because the em- ployees already at work within the unit are not representative of the categories of employees to be included in the unit since no "laborers" have yet been hired. We find no basis for this contention. The future employment of such workers is a matter of conjecture. The testi- mony reveals, furthermore, that there are some presently employed workers in various "unskilled" categories. The fact that the majority of employees who to date have been transferred from other plants and from other departments to the TX department are skilled or semi- skilled workers is not persuasive, when the nature of the activity of the TX department is considered. That the majority of the employees thus transferred may have been members of MESA elsewhere is not pertinent to the issue; the material question before us is whether or not the present employees are a fair cross section of the unit deemed appropriate. We cannot concern ourselves with the question of past union membership, elsewhere, of the present employees. We are sat- isfied that there are a substantial number of employees presently on 4 Dfatter of Northern Aircraft Products Division , The Aviation Corporation, 53 N. L. R. B. 188: Matter of Aluminum Company of America, 52 N. L. R. B. 1040 ; Matter of Pre- cision Manufacturing Corporation , 49 N. L . R. B. 438; Matter of Aircraft Parts Manu- facturing Division, Kroehler Manufacturing Company, 49 N. L. R. B 1151 ; Matter of Atlas Powder Company, 41 N. L. R. B . 127; Matter of Buick Motor Division, General Motors Corporation, 40 N. L. R. B. 825 ; Matter of Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Com- pany, 38 N L R. B 404. 5 Matter of Fairchild Aircraft Division of Fairchild Engine & Airplane Corporation, 50 N. L R. B. 113; Matter of Hughes Tool Company, 45 N. L. R. B. 821. 5 Matter of Avion, Inc., 51 N. L. R. B . 174; Matter of Remington Rand, Inc., 50 N. L. R. B 819; Matter of Irwin-Pedersen Arms Company, 45 N. L . R. B. 920. . PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY 875 the pay roll comprising representative categories of employees in the appropriate unit. Inasmuch as it appears that approximately 50 percent of the anticipated complement is already employed, we shall direct that the question con6erning representation which has arisen be resolved by an election by secret ballot among the employees in the appropriate unit who were employed during the pay-roll period im- mediately preceding the date of the Direction herein, subject to the limitations and additions set forth in the Direction. DIRECTION OF ELECTION By virtue of and pursuant to the power vested in the National Labor Relations Board by Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Rela- tions Act, and pursuant to Article III, Section 9, of National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regulations-Series 3, as amended, it is hereby DIRECTED that, as part of the investigation to ascertain representa- tives for the purposes of collective bargaining with Packard Motor Car Company (Toledo Division), Toledo, Ohio, an election by secret ballot shall be conducted as early as possible, but not later than thirty (30) days from the date of this Direction, under the direction and supervision of the Regional Director for the Eighth Region, acting in this matter as agent for the National Labor Relations Board, and sub- ject to Article III, Sections 10 and 11, of said Rules and Regulations, among the employees in the unit found appropriate in Section IV, above, who were employed during the pay-roll period immediately preceding the date of this Direction, including employees who did not work during the said pay-roll period because they were ill or on vacation or temporarily laid off, and including employees in the armed forces of the United States who present themselves in person at the polls, but excluding any who have since quit or been discharged for cause and have not been rehired or reinstated prior to the date of the election, to determine whether they desire to be represented by Mechanics Educational Society of America, Local #4 (CUA) or by International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft & Agricultural Implement Workers of America, Local No. 12, affiliated with the Congress of Industrial Organizations, for the purposes of collective bargaining, or by neither. 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