Rhone-Poulenc, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsAug 15, 1984271 N.L.R.B. 1008 (N.L.R.B. 1984) Copy Citation DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. and Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers International Union, AFL-CIO, Local 8-948, Petitioner. Case 4-RC-15478 15 August 1984 DECISION AND CERTIFICATION OF REPRESENTATIVE BY CHAIRMAN DOTSON AND MEMBERS ZIMMERMAN AND HUNTER The National Labor Relations Board, by a three- member panel, has considered objections to an election held 21 December 1983 and the Regional Director's report recommending disposition of them. The election was conducted pursuant to a Stipulated Election Agreement. The tally of ballots shows 24 for and 20 against the Petitioner, with 1 challenged ballot, an insufficient number to affect the results. The Board has reviewed the record in light of the exceptions ' and briefs, has adopted the Re- gional Director's findings and recommendations, and finds that a certification of representative should be issued. In its evidence in support of objections, the Em- ployer raised allegations of misconduct unrelated to its timely filed objections. The Regional Director refused to investigate this unalleged misconduct be- cause the Employer failed to show that the evi- dence was not only newly discovered but also pre- viously unavailable. We find that the Regional Di- rector properly refused to expand the scope of his investigation to include consideration of the Em- ployer's allegations. Our dissenting colleague, how- ever, would remand this case for consideration of the unalleged misconduct because it was submitted within the time allowed for submission of support- ing evidence and because the Regional Director had not yet begun his investigation. The Board's Rules and Regulations provide five working days from the date of the election in which a party may file objections to the conduct of and conduct affecting the results of the election. Board Rules and Regulations, Section 102.69(a). The filing of objections and submission of support- ing evidence triggers an investigation by the Re- gional Director. The Board's time limitation on filing requires parties to act promptly in unearthing and reporting to the Region any potentially objec- tionable conduct. In establishing this 5-day rule, the Board sought to prevent the piecemeal submission of objections which necessarily delays the Regional 1 In the absence of exceptions thereto, we adopt, pro forma, the Re- gional Director's recommendation to overrule the Employer's Objection 2 alleging that the Petitioner misrepresented the amount of union dues members would be required to pay. 271 NLRB No. 149 Director's investigation. Although mindful of these concerns, the Board will consider evidence of mis- conduct unrelated to the timely filed objections, but only when the objecting party demonstrates by clear and convincing proof that the evidence is not only newly discovered but was also previously un- available. Our dissenting colleague concedes that, in the in- stant case, the Employer has failed to meet this burden. Nonetheless, our colleague argues that the Regional Director should have considered the mis- conduct as this case presents a "special circum- stance" in that the Employer proffered the allega- tions within the time permitted for submitting sup- porting evidence and before the Regional Director started his investigation. Contrary to the dissent, we are not persuaded by the facts of this case that any special circumstance exists that would justify permitting the Employer to file untimely objec- tions. CERTIFICATION OF REPRESENTATIVE IT IS CERTIFIED that a majority of the valid bal- lots have been cast for Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers International Union, AFL-CIO, Local 8- 948 and that it is the exclusive collective-bargain- ing representative of the employees in the follow- ing appropriate unit: INCLUDED: All production, maintenance, warehouse, shipping and receiving employees employed by Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. at its 1669 Corporate Road West and 1145 Towbin Avenue, Lakewood, New Jersey facility. EXCLUDED: All office clericals, laboratory technicians, managerial employees, guards and supervisors as defined in the Act. MEMBER HUNTER, dissenting in part. I would remand this proceeding to the Regional Director to consider the allegations of misconduct raised for the first time by the Employer in its 3 January 1984 letter to the Regional Director. I think the Regional Director's refusal to consider these further allegations in the particular circum- stances here was in error. The election here was held 21 December 1983. The Employer timely filed three separate objec- tions to the election. On 28 December 1983 the Acting Regional Director acknowledged receipt of these objections and gave the Employer until 5 January 1984 to submit the evidence available to it in support of these objections. The Employer claims it submitted certain evidence by letter dated 30 December 1983, and additional evidence on the I(X) RHONE-POULENC, INC. objections by letter dated 3 January 1984. In that later submission, the Employer also included an af- fidavit alleging that one employee had threatened other employees, and that another employee was offered a benefit if the Union won the election. These two allegations were not covered in the three previously submitted objections. The Regional Director did not consider these latter two allegations. He found the allegations un- related to any of the three objections previously filed, and thus found them untimely absent a show- ing, not made here, that they were newly discov- ered and previously unavailable. He cited for this conclusion Burns Security Services, 256 NLRB 959 (1981); Tuf-Flex Glass, 262 NLRB 445 (1982); and Parks Food Service, 235 NLRB 1410 (1978). I find all these cases distinguishable from the instant situ- ation, and I conclude that the Regional Director was in error in rejecting these further allegations on the basis he used. In Burns, the Board refused to consider certain further allegations of misconduct proferred on two occasions by the objecting party because those alle- gations were unrelated to the original timely sub- mitted objections and were not shown to be previ- ously unavailable and newly discovered. But, im- portantly, the first set of additional allegations was submitted some 40 days, and the second some 70 days, after the objections had been filed; the allega- tions appear to have been submitted after the time had expired for the submission of evidence support- ing the timely objections; and were apparently sub- mitted after the Region had begun its investigation of the timely submitted objections. In rejecting var- ious of these submissions, the Board relevantly noted that "the period during which the [Region's] investigation proceeds was never intended to pro- vide more time for the objecting party to extend its own investigation in the hope of finding a basis for objection that lies beyond the matters covered in the [Region's] investigation." 256 NLRB at 960. There are two critical differences between this case and Burns. First, here the Employer submitted its additional allegations and supporting evidence within the time allowed for submission of support- ing evidence on the original objections. Secondly, no Regional investigation appears to have yet begun when these additional allegations were sub- mitted. In this latter regard, the Region noted in its 28 December 1983 letter to the Employer that no such investigation would begin without the evi- dence supporting the original objections first being submitted to the Region. As noted, not all of that evidence had been submitted when the Employer raised its additional allegations and thus it appears, contrary to Burns, that the Region's investigation had not yet begun. Hence, the concerns raised by the Board in Burns are not present here. Likewise, Tuf-Flex Glass and Parks Food Service are distinguishable. In each, additional allegations of misconduct were raised for the first time in the objecting party's exceptions to the Board-in Tuf- Flex after an initial report by a hearing officer, and in Parks Food after a report by a regional director. That is hardly the situation here in which the addi- tional allegations were submitted before the time had expired for submitting evidence in support of the original objections. In sum, the Employer admittedly did not include these two other allegations in its original objec- tions, but nonetheless it submitted these allegations and the evidence it relied on to support these allega- tions before the time had expired to submit evi- dence on the original objections and prior to the Region's beginning its investigation on those objec- tions. The Region, under this special circumstance, was in error in failing to consider them. I would remand the case to the Regional Director for such consideration. 1009 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation