Roegelein Provision Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 6, 1970181 N.L.R.B. 578 (N.L.R.B. 1970) Copy Citation 578 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Roegelein Provision Company and Antonio Deleon, and Domingo C. Servantez , and Rosalio C. Garcia, and Vicente P. Morales , and Richard Noriega, and Johnny Martinez . Cases 23-CA-3240-5, 23-CA-3240-8, 23-CA-3240-9, 23-CA-3240-14, 23-CA-3240-15, and 23-CA-3240-16 March 6, 1970 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MCCULLOCH AND MEMBERS FANNING AND JENKINS On June 30, 1969, Trial Examiner Melvin Pollack issued his Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that the Respondent had engaged in and was engaging in certain unfair labor practices, and recommending that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action, as set forth in the attached Trial Examiner's Decision. Thereafter, the Respondent filed exceptions and a supporting brief. The National Labor Relations Board has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner made at the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Trial Examiner's Decision, the exceptions and brief, and the entire record in this case, and, for the reasons set forth herein, dismisses the complaint in its entirety. The Trial Examiner found that the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, by refusing to count strike time towards vacation eligibility under a newly negotiated collective-bargaining agreement, thereby denying reinstated strikers the vacation benefits they would have earned if they had worked during the strike. In the particular circumstances of this case we disagree. The facts are not in dispute. The Respondent operates a meatpacking business in San Antonio, Texas. From April 1, 1965, to April 1, 1968, the Respondent recognized Local 171, Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of North America, AFL-CIO, as the exclusive representative of its employees. In April 1968,' the Board certified the National Brotherhood of Packinghouse and Dairy Workers, herein called the Union, as the new collective-bargaining representative of the Respondent's employees. On April 25, the Respondent and the Union commenced negotiations for a new contract. On September 24 or 25, the unit employees struck in support of their economic demands. The strike ended November 9, the date the parties executed a contract. The newly negotiated agreement contained the following vacation article, application of which by the Respondent is here in issue: All dates refer to 1968 unless otherwise indicated ARTICLE XI Vacations Section 1. All employees who have completed one (1) year of continuous service for the Company shall receive one (1) week's vacation without interruption with pay, such pay to be forty (40) times the employee's regular straight time hourly rate. Employees who have completed four (4) years continuous service for the company shall receive two (2) weeks' vacation with pay, such pay to be eighty (80) times the employee's regular straight time hourly rate. It is understood that `service' as used herein means time actually spent performing productive work for the Company and does not include time away from work for any cause or reason whatever. Such vacation shall be taken at a time designated by the Company. The temporary layoff by the Company for not more than sixty (60) days of any employee who has as much as ten (10) months continuous service with the Company shall not constitute a break in such employee's continuous service as that term is used in this section. After an employee has become eligible for a vacation, he shall be entitled to have it within six (6) months after such eligibility has been established. Section 3. An employee who has been absent from work for any reason for as many as two hundred (200) hours during which the employee was supposed to work, during the twelve (12) months immediately preceding the taking of his vacation, shall not be entitled to a vacation. Provided, however, that absence because of military reserve duty and jury duty shall not be counted as time absent for the purpose of the above disqualification. The agreement also contained a no-strike clause; a miscellaneous provision (article XVII, section 4) permitting, with certain qualifications, employee "leaves of absence for Union business"; and an arbitration clause specifically permitting arbitration of unresolved grievances concerning "[e]mployee eligibility for vacation pay and the amount of such vacation pay due in accordance with the terms of this contract." Following the strike, and on November 11, the Respondent began recalling striking employees. Shortly thereafter, it denied vacation benefits to all employees, including both the charging parties and other employees who worked throughout the strike, whose absences during the preceding 12 months met or exceeded 200 hours. Basing this decision on article XI, section 3, of the contract, the Respondent counted strike time as a disqualifying absence for this purpose. The record shows that the 181 NLRB No. 72 ROEGELEIN PROVISION CO. 579 six charging parties, had they worked during the strike, would have qualified for vacations under the contract. During the contract negotiations, the subject of vacations was discussed at eight bargaining conferences. In these negotiating sessions, the scope and meaning of Section 3 was discussed throughout. The Company originally proposed a vacation provision substantially identical to that finally agreed on, except in two respects: its original proposal disqualified employees after 180 hours (instead of 200); and, as the Company did not want any exception to the "for any reason" proviso, its original proposal would have disqualified employees from participating in vacation benefits if absences for any reason exceeded the 180 hour figure. The Union in response demanded (1) that the amount of vacation be based on a percentage of earnings, rather than on' the 1 week after 1 year, etc., type of formula; (2) that the disqualifying hours-absent total be raised from 180 hours to 200 hours; and,(3) that the contract include five enumerated exceptions to the absent "for any reason" provision, viz: An employee absent from work for any reason for as many as 200 hours during which the employee was supposed to work during the 12 months immediately preceding the taking of his vacation shall not be entitled to a vacation, except that leaves of absence on Union business, sickness, both family and employee, accidents where substantiated by acceptable medical evidence, military reserve duty and jury duty shall not be counted as time absent for the purpose of the above disqualification. The Respondent and the Union finally agreed to retain the Company's formula for amount of benefit (1 week for 1 year, etc.); to raise the disqualifying total to 200 hours; and to include only two of the five requested exceptions - military reserve duty and jury duty. In addition, although the Respondent agreed (at the October 18 session) to permit absences for "Union business" (under the miscellaneous provision mentioned above), it made clear that it would nevertheless count such absences toward the 200 hours for purposes of disqualifying employees for vacation benefits. This "Union business" provision apparently was intended to denote absences for such matters as filing or processing grievances.' At the seventh bargaining session, held September 10, attorney West joined the negotiations for the 'At the last bargaining session in which vacations were discussed, held during the strike and just prior to the parties' agreement on this subject, the Respondent 's negotiator (attorney Weiss ) stated that , so far as the Respondent was concerned , "the leave of absence [for Union business] has nothing to do with the vacation provision They are in no way related" Then , when the Union 's negotiator (Mr Morris ) asked hypothetically" [ l]f a person took off for t hour today to handle someone 's grievance on [sic] the plant It took him approximately an hour or half an hour or so, is this time counted against him [toward the 200 hours]" Weiss responded, "Any reason , it means any reason . I don't see how you can state it any more clearly than that " first time, and participated as chief Union negotiator. On that occasion, he introduced for discussion proposals based on, but modifying, the then-expired contract with the Amalgamated Meat Cutters Union, which had been in effect from April 1, 1965, to April 1, 1968. That contract contained a vacation clause which, so far as is here relevant, had required as a precondition for vacation eligibility that the employee have completed 1 year of "continuous service," and also said: "It is understood that `service' as used herein means time actually spent performing productive work for the company and does not include time away from work on strike, in the armed service, or for any other cause or reason." [Emphasis supplied.] However, after West sought discussion of this document and his proposed modifications, Company negotiator Weiss suggested it be withdrawn, because "the Union in previous meetings [having already] agreed to a number of these clauses in the Company's proposals . . . , we think it is really a step backwards to try to go back to the old contract when we have made such substantial progress in reaching agreement on the provisions of the contract proposals submitted by the Company." Accordingly, West's proposal was withdrawn; and no discussion of its vacation provisions took place The Trial Examiner found that the Charging Parties and other strikers were denied vacation benefits because the Respondent counted strike time in computing hours of absence for purposes of article XI, section 3,' and concluded that this disqualification constitutes unlawful discrimination under recent Board Decisions involving what he found to be comparable circumstances. The Trial Examiner further concluded that the Board is not deprived of jurisdiction merely because the Respondent's defense rests on contract interpretation; that in any event the Respondent's interpretation was unsound, because there was no agreement by the Union, "expressed or implied," to so disqualify the strikers; and that the Board and court decisions relied on by the Respondent, including General Electric Co., 80 NLRB 510, are inapplicable. To remedy the violation, he recommended that the strikers be made whole for any loss of vacation pay they incurred due to the Respondent's discrimination, which amount "may be reduced pro rata for their absence from the job while on strike." The Respondent contends , inter alia , that when executing the contract, the parties were "fully aware of the intended scope" of the vacation provisions; that the Respondent's motivation was not unlawful; and that relevant Board and court decisions require dismissal of the complaint because there was no discrimination in any event, inasmuch as none of the strikers denied a vacation had already qualified for 'The Trial Examiner's reference to "strike benefits" should obviously read "vacation benefits " 580 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD it at the time of their application, while nonstrikers absent over 200 hours were also denied vacations. In the particular circumstances, we find merit in the Respondent's position. We are persuaded by the affirmative evidence appearing in this record that the denial of vacation benefits has been satisfactorily demonstrated to be a lawful implementation of a right understood to have been acquired through the collective-bargaining process, from which conduct no inference of improper motive should be drawn. It is undisputed that the Respondent, in denying vacation benefits, relied solely on section 3 of the vacation article, which disqualified employees from participating in benefits, if absent for more than 200 hours, for any reason, during the previous 12 months. That this provision would adversely affect those striking in support of the Union's position was inescapably in issue during the bargaining which led to its incorporation in the final contract. The negotiating history shows that the meaning and scope of that provision were the subject of repeated discussions. The Union, during the negotiations, was reminded that under the predecessor contract between Respondent and the Meat Cutters Union, strike time was specifically excluded from "continuous service" for vacation purposes. At the same time, Respondent in describing the proposed 180-hour exclusion, which upon the Union's request was later raised to 200 hours, repeatedly informed the Union of its applicability to all forms of absences. With this in mind, the Union also sought exceptions covering five types of absences. Negotiations resulted in agreement on two, but the Union receded from its demand that absences for "union business", sickness, and accidents not be counted toward the 200-hour exclusion. The resulting contract language was plain and unambiguous, and since the Union acceded to it while the strike was in progress, there could be no confusion as to its intended impact upon reinstated strikers. Indeed, when one of the Charging Parties protested his loss of vacation to a Union steward, he was referred to section 3 of the vacation provision. Under all the circumstances, we are persuaded that Respondent has affirmatively established that the losses incurred by the strikers stemmed from good faith collective bargaining between Respondent and the statutory representative of the alleged discriminatees. Accordingly, as Respondent's action could hardly be viewed as conduct discouraging union activity in any proscribed sense , we disagree with the Trial Examiner, and shall dismiss the complaint in its entirety. ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board orders that the complaint herein be, and is hereby, dismissed in its entirety. MEMBER BROWN, dissenting: For the reasons stated by the Trial Examiner, I would adopt his Decision and Recommended Order. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE MELVIN POLLACK, Trial Examiner: These cases were heard at San Antonio, Texas, on April 29, 1969, pursuant to charges filed on January 16 and 24, 1969, and a consolidated complaint issued on February 28, 1969. The complaint alleges that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act by denying vacation benefits to employees who engaged in a strike to further their bargaining demands. The General Counsel, Respondent, and the Union filed briefs after the hearing. Upon the entire record, and my observation of the witnesses, I make the following. FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS 1. THE BUSINESS OF RESPONDENT Respondent is engaged in the meat packing business in San Antonio, Texas, and during the 12 months preceding the complaint had retail sales in excess of $500,000 and purchased over $50,000 worth of goods from out of state firms. I find that Respondent is engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED National Brotherhood of Packinghouse and Dairy Workers, herein called the Union, is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. III. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES Pursuant to a Board election conducted on April 12, 1968, the Union was certified as the collective-bargaining representative of Respondent's production and maintenance employees, including plant clericals. Collective bargaining began on April 25 and, on September 24, employees in the bargaining unit struck in support of their bargaining demands. The strike ended on November 9, 1968, when Respondent and the Union executed a collective-bargaining agreement.' The agreement contained the following article on vacations: ARTICLE XI. Vacations Section 1. All employees who have completed one (1) year of continuous service for the Company shall receive one (1) week's vacation without interruption with pay, such pay to be forty (40) times the employee's regular straight time hourly rate. Employees who have completed four (4) years continuous service for the Company shall receive two (2) weeks' vacation with pay, such pay to be eighty (80) times the employee's 'Respondent and the Union simultaneously executed a strike settlement agreement which provided, inter aim , that "the rights and obligations of the parties shall be those, and only those, evidenced by the Collective Bargaining Agreement executed by the parties of even date herewith " ROEGELEIN PROVISION CO. 581 regular straight time hourly rate. It is understood that "service" as used herein means time actually spent performing productive work for the Company and does not include time away from work for any cause or reason whatever . Such vacation shall be taken at a time designated by the Company. The temporary layoff by the Company for not more than sixty (60) days of any employee who has as much as ten ( 10) months continuous service with the Company shall not constitute a break in such employee's continuous service as that term is used in this section After an employee has become eligible for a vacation , he shall be entitled to have it within six (6 ) months after such eligibility has been established. Section 2. No employee shall work for pay for any other employer during his vacation , and any employee who violates this provision shall be subject to discharge Section 3 . An employee who has been absent from work for any reason for as many as two hundred (200) hours during which the employee was supposed to work , during the twelve ( 12) months immediately preceding the taking of his vacation , shall not be entitled to a vacation . Provided, however , that absence because of military reserve duty and jury duty shall not be counted as time absent for the purpose of the above disqualification. Respondent thereafter counted time on strike as absence from work within the meaning of article XI, section 3, and denied vacation benefits to all employees, including the six charging parties, whose absences from work , including time on strike , met or exceeded 200 hours. For example , Antonio De Leon requested a vacation in November 1968, at which time in the 12-month period preceding his request he had missed 334 hours of work , of which 272 hours were missed during the strike and 62 hours were missed prior to the strike. De Leon was denied a vacation on the ground of disqualification under article XI, section 3 The Board holds that an employer may not equate strike time with other forms of absence because the Act protects employees who are on strike , and hence , even if his action is free of antiunion motivation ,2 that an employer discriminates against strikers by depriving them of vacation benefits for which they otherwise qualify because of strike "absence ." Flambeau Plastics Corporation , 167 NLRB No. 102; Frick Company, 161 NLRB 1080, 1108 ; Star Expansion Industries Corporation , 164 NLRB No. 95; Tex-Tan Welhausen Company, 172 NLRB No. 93 . See also Quality Castings Company, 139 NLRB 928, reversed 325 F 2d 36 (C A 6), National Seal , Division of Federal- Mogul-Bower Bearings , Inc , 141 NLRB 661, reversed 336 F.2d 781 (C.A. 9).3 Respondent does not dispute that the charging parties and other strikers were denied strike benefits because it counted strike time in computing hours of absence for purposes of Article XI, Section 3. It contends, however, that such computation accords with the language of its contract with the Union, especially when Article XI, Section 3 is interpreted in light of the bargaining negotiations on vacations.' 'The General Counsel did not contend in his complaint or at the hearing that Respondent 's withholding of vacation benefits from the strikers was motivated by antiunion considerations 'I follow the Board decisions in the Quality Castings and National Seal cases as the Board has not accepted the adverse court rulings 'The issue presented in this case is not whether Respondent breached its contract with the Union by denying vacation benefits to the strikers, but Article XI, Section 3, as originally proposed by Respondent, provided: "An employee who has been absent from work for any reason for as many as 180 hours during which the employee was supposed to work, during the twelve (12) months immediately preceding the, taking of his vacation, shall not be entitled to a vacation." Respondent agreed during the negotiations to increase the disqualifying absence from work to 200 hours and, of several exceptions proposed by the Union - leave of absence on union business, sickness, accidents, military reserve duty, and jury duty - agreed to the latter two exceptions The strike was not mentioned in connection with the negotiations on vacations. In these circumstances, I see no agreement by the Union, expressed or implied, that the employees who had responded to its lawful strike call would be considered "absent" from work for purposes of determining vacation eligibility.' Respondent further contends that its denial of vacation benefits to the strikers is in accord with Board decisions holding that vacation pay, profit-sharing rights, health insurance premiums, and similar employee benefits are forms of wages and that an employer is therefore under no obligation to treat strike time as work time or pay employees such benefits while they are on strike See, for example, General Electric Company, 80 NLRB 510; Mooney Aircraft, Inc., 148 NLRB 1057; Kimberly-Clark Corporation, 171 NLRB No. 82. In General Electric, the employer denied strikers accrual of vacation and pension benefits during the period of the strike, but gave the strikers full credit for their work before and after the strike. In Mooney Aircraft, the employer's plan required 1 year of actual work as a prerequisite for vacation eligibility. The Board held that nine reinstated strikers who thereafter quit their jobs were not entitled to vacation pay because they did not meet this requirement of actual work. In Kimberly-Clark, the employer gave employees no service credit for time lost during a strike. The foregoing cases, and similar cases cited by Respondent, are thus examples of the familiar principle that an employer need not finance a strike against himself. They are not authority for Respondent's position that it was privileged to treat time on strike as an absence from work for purposes of determining vacation eligibility under its contract with the Union. I find that Respondent, in contravention of the right of employees to engage in protected strike activity, equated time on strike as the equivalent of absence from work for the purpose of determining vacation eligibility under its contract with the Union and, accordingly, that it violated Section 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act by denying vacation benefits to employees whose absence from work, excluding time on strike, was less than 200 hours. whether Respondent by this conduct acted in derogation of the right of its employees to strike in support of their bargaining demands. The Board is not precluded from resolving this unfair labor practice issue because Respondent asserts that its denial of vacation benefits to the strikers followed the terms of the contract N L R B v. C & C Plywood Corp, 385 U S 421, Flambeau Plastics Corp, 167 NLRB No 102 'The contract vacation article was agreed upon on October 18, 1968 During this bargaining meeting, Respondent 's attorney , Weiss, emphasized that the 200-hour provision included absences "for any reason " other than military reserve duty or jury duty, and the Union 's attorney, West, remarked "Does everybody understand that? I think this is important Two hundred hours for any reason " As the Union had up to this meeting insisted on other exceptions in addition to military reserve duty or jury duty, I do not agree with Respondent that the negotiations at the October 18 meeting support its position that the Union negotiators understood and agreed that time on strike would be disqualifying absence. 582 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 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. By denying vacation pay to employees because they engaged in protected concerted and union activity, Respondent engaged in unfair labor practices proscribed by Section 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act. 4. The aforesaid labor practices affect commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. THE REMEDY Having found that Respondent has engaged in unfair labor practices in violation of Section 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act, I shall recommend that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act. As Respondent has unlawfully denied vacation benefits to employees who engaged in the September 24 strike, I shall recommend that Respondent make these employees whole by paying them the vacation pay to which they are entitled. Their vacation pay, however, may be reduced pro rata for their absence from the job while on- strike., The amounts due shall be determined in the compliance stage of this proceeding and shall include interest at 6 percent from the dates on which they normally would have been paid. [Recommended Order omitted from publication.] 'As vacation payments are a form of wages, Respondent cannot be required to make such payments to individuals for the period they were absent on strike General Electric Co , supra. 80 NLRB 510 at 511 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation