Screw Machine Products CompanyDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsJun 27, 195194 N.L.R.B. 1609 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF BOILERMAKERS, ETC. 1609 - Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact and upon the entire record in the case, the undersigned makes the following : CoNcLusIoNs of LAW. 1. The operations of Consolidated Western Steel Corporation constitute trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States within the meaning of Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. 2. International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders, Welders and Helpers of America, Local #6, AFL, is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2 (5) of the Act. 3. By discriminating in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of Ross E. Dulinsky, thereby encouraging membership in a labor organization, the Respondent Company has engaged and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. 4. By causing the Respondent Company to discriminate in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of Ross E. Dulinsky in violation of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act, the Respondent Union and Respondent Rainbow have engaged and are engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (b) (2) of the Act. 5. By interfering with, restraining, and coercing employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act, the Respondent Company has engaged in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act. 6. By restraining and coercing employees of the Respondent Company in the exercise of their right to refrain from any and all of the concerted activities guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act, the Respondent Union and Respondent Rainbow have engaged and are engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (b) (1) (A) of the Act. 7. The aforesaid unfair labor practices are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. [Recommended Order omitted from publication in this volume.] "labor organization" and its "agents " by Section 8 (b), and of the definition of labor organization" provided by Section 2 (5) of the Act , it may not be assumed that Congress intended the term "labor organization ," as used in Section 10 (c), to include its "agents." The coupling of the words "labor organization " and "agents" in Section 8 (b) by specific use of the terms and the omission of "agents " from the relevant provision of Section 10 (c) evidences a statutory design to limit the obligation for back pay to employers and unions . The undersigned will accordingly not recommend that Respondent Rainbow reimburse Dulinsky for wage losses resulting from the discrimination against him. C. A. BRAUKMAN and LUCILLE BRAUKMAN D/B/A SCREW MACHINE PRODUCTS COMPANY and INTERNATIONAL UNION OF OPERATING ENGI- NEERS, LOCAL 1. AFL. Case No. 30-CA -34. June 27, 1951 Decision and Order On December 29, 1950, Trial Examiner C. W. Whittemore issued his Intermediate Report in the above-entitled proceeding,' finding ' Trial'Examiner Josef L. Hektoen conducted the hearing in this proceeding but due to his death Trial Examiner Whittemore prepared the Intermediate Report. 94 NLRB No. 234. 1610 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD that the Respondent had engaged in and was engaging in certain un- fair labor practices and recommending that it cease and desist there- from and take certain affirmative action, as set forth in the copy of the Intermediate Report attached hereto. Thereafter the Respondent filed exceptions to -the Intermediate Report and a brief in support -thereof. The Respondent's request for oral argument is hereby de- nied, as the record and brief, in our opinion, adequately present the issues and the positions of the parties. The Board has reviewed the rulings of Trial Examiner Hektoen :and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Intermediate Report, -the exceptions and brief, and the entire record in the case, and finds inerit in certain of the Respondent's exceptions for the following reasons. On September 24, 1948, the Board dismissed the International Asso- ciation of Machinists' petition for certification as bargaining repre- sentative of the Respondent's employees, stating that "we do not be- lieve that it would effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdic- tion in this case, because we think that the effect of the Employer's business on interstate commerce is too remote." 2 Again, on July 11, 1949, the Board-for the same reason dismissed a similar petition filed by the International Union of Operating Engineers, AFL.3 In the meantime, on December 6, 1948, and on February 15, 1949, the charge and amended charge in this proceeding were filed. As -detailed in the Intermediate Report, all the Respondent's activities alleged as unfair labor practices occurred after the Board dismissed -the first representation case on September 24, 1948, and before the Board dismissed the second representation case on July 11, 1949. .Despite the Board's refusal to assert jurisdiction over the Respond- ent's operations at that time, the former General Counsel, who by statute had sole authority over the disposition of charges, did not dismiss the pending charges. The charges remained on file until August 29, 1950, when the General Counsel issued the complaint in this matter. When the complaint issued, the Board was reexamining its policy concerning the exercise of jurisdiction; 4 thereafter, during October 1950, we announced certain specific criteria for the assertion of juris- 2 Screw Machine Products Company, 79 NLRB 980. 8 Screw Machine Products Company, 85 NLRB 129. ( Chairman Herzog and Member Reynolds dissenting.) 4 See Beaver Machined Tool Co ., Inc., 90 NLRB 529. SCREW MACHINE PRODUCTS COMPANY 1611 diction s It appears , as found by the Trial Examiner, that the Re- :spondent's volume of interstate commerce at about the time the alleged unfair labor practices were committed satisfied the Board's current jurisdictional criteria. The question thus posed is whether or not the Board should apply retroactively its present jurisdictional standards, and assert jurisdiction in the instant complaint case, although the Board had before and after the commission of the alleged unfair labor practices, refused to assert jurisdiction over the Respondent's opera- tions on the basis of then existing standards. The Board believes that the question should be answered in the negative. This result is dictated not only by the Board's obligation to respect its own* prior decisions,' but also by a desire for fair play. It would be inequitable now to hold the Respondent liable for the activi- ties in question, as the Board, almost 3 years ago, in effect advised the Respondent that such activities occurred at a time when "it would [not] effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction" over the Respondent's operations. This ruling imposes no hardship upon the Respondent's employees which they might not reasonably have anticipated, as they engaged in the concerted activities in question after the Board had refused to assert jurisdiction over the Respond- ent's operations. Moreover, in Yellow Cab Company of California 7 the Board re- cently held that "sound policy precludes reconsideration of complaint cases which were disposed of before the adoption of the present juris- dictional standards." True, the Board has not heretofore considered the instant complaint case. However, because the Board does not, with respect to the question of jurisdiction, differentiate between representation and complaint cases, we believe that dismissal of the second representation case on jurisdictional grounds on July 11, 1949, was in effect, notice to all parties concerned that any complaint case based on alleged unfair labor practices occurring before that date would similarly be dismissed. The policy considerations which war- ranted dismissal of the complaint in the Yellow Cab case are analogous to those presented here. On the basis of the foregoing, we shall therefore dismiss the com- plaint in its entirety. This ruling, however, is not to be taken as 5 For these criteria see : WBSR, Inc., 91 NLRB 630 ; W. C. King , d/b/a Local Transit Lines, 91 NLRB 623; The Borden Company, Southern Division , 91 NLRB 628 ; Stanislaus Implement and Hardware Company, Limited , 91 NLRB 618 ; Hollow Tree Lumber Com- pany, 91 NLRB 635; Federal Dairy Co. , Inc., 91 NLRB 638; Dorn's House of Miracles, Inc., 91 NLRB 632; The Rutledge Paper Products, Inc., 91 NLRB 625; Westport Moving and Storage Company, 91 NLRB 902. 6 Cf. Compressed Air, Foundation , Caisson, Tunnel, Subway , Sewer, Cofferdam Con- struction , Local Union 147, New York, New Jersey , States and Vicinities , 93 NLRB 1646. 7 93 NLRB 766. 1612 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD meaning that the Board would not assert jurisdiction in proper new complaint or representation proceedings involving this Respondent or other employers involved in previously decided cases, whose opera- tions meet present jurisdictional criteria. Nor do we here decide that we would dismiss a complaint solely because the alleged unfair labor practices occurred at a time when the Board would not have as- serted jurisdiction over the particular employer involved. That ques- tion is not before us. What is controlling in the instant case is the fact that the Board issued a decision declining to assert jursdiction after the commission of the alleged unfair labor practices . Order IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the complaint herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed. MEMBER HOUSTON, dissenting : Unlike my colleagues of the majority, I find that the decisions in two prior representation cases, refusing to assert jurisdiction over the Respondent, do not require dismissal of this subsequently issued complaint. Our jurisdictional criteria, upon being enunciated,. became applicable, without reservation, to all pending and undecided complaint cases. The instant.complaint case falls into that category.. Accordingly, as the Respondent's operations satisfy the Board's jurisdictional criteria, and as the complaint is properly before the Board, I would assert jurisdiction and proceed to a determination of the case on the merits. Intermediate Report Mrs. Margaret L. Fassig, for the General Counsel. Messrs. Jean S. Breitenstein, and James D. Geissinger, of Denver, Colo., for the Respondent. Mr. Henry H. Herbolsheimer, of Denver, Colo., for the Engineers. STATEMENT OF THE CASE Upon charges duly filed by International Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 1, AFL, herein called Engineers, the General 'Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board, herein respectively called General Counsel and the Board, on, behalf of the Board by the Regional Director for the Seventeenth Region (Kansas City, Missouri), issued a complaint dated August 29, 1950, against. C. A. Braukman, and Lucille A. Braukman, d/b/a Screw Machine Products Com- pany, Denver, Colorado, herein called upon the Respondent, alleging that the Re- spondent had engaged in was engaging in unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (1) and (3) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended (Public Law 101, 80th. Congress, herein called the Act. Copies of the charges, the complaint, ands notice of hearing were duly served upon the Respondent and Engineers. SCREW MACHINE PRODUCTS COMPANY 1613 With respect to unfair labor practices, the complaint alleges in substance that the Respondent: (1) has interrogated its employees concerning their union affiliations, conducted polls among them as to their union choice, and warned them against becoming members of any labor organization; (2) discriminatorily terminated the employment of four employees in 1948 to discourage membership in Engineers,' and (3) by these acts interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act. In its answer , duly filed, the Respondent denied the commission of the alleged unfair labor practices and set out certain affirmative defenses. The Respond- ent denied that the Board has jurisdiction. Pursuant to notice, a hearing was held on October 10 and 11, 1950, before Josef L. Hektoen, a Trial Examiner duly designated by the Chief Trial Exami- ner. The Respondent and General Counsel were represented by counsel, the Engineers by an official. All parties participated in the hearing, and were af- forded full opportunity to be heard, to examine and cross-examine witnesses, and to introduce evidence bearing upon the issues. All parties waived the opportunity to argue orally before Trial Examiner Hektoen ; the Respondent and General Counsel availed themselves of the opportunity to file briefs. On December 4, 1950, by order of the Chief Trial Examiner, the undersigned 'rial Examiner was designated to prepare an Intermediate Report in this case, due to the death of Trial Examiner Hektoen. Upon the entire record in the case, the undersigned Trial Examiner makes the following : FINDINGS OF FACT I. THE BUSINESS OF THE RESPONDENT A. Stipulation of Facts At the hearing the Respondent and General Counsel entered into the following stipulation of facts : 1. Prior to December, 1949 C. A. Braukman and Lucille A. Braukman were a partnership doing business as the Screw Machine Products Company and operated a machine shop in Denver, Colorado. This machine shop was engaged in the business of making, on order, small machine parts which it sold to others who used such parts in the assembly of articles manufactured by them. Examples of items produced by Respondent are : parts for gun sights ; parts for fishing reels and rods ; parts for camera photo flood synchronizing device; pipe and hose joints and fittings; bits for horse harnesses ; screws ; knobs ; and cams. In December, 1949 a corporation known as Screw Machine Products Company was incorporated under the laws of the State of Colorado and took over the assets, liabilities, em- ployees and business of the partnership which did business previously under the name of the Screw Machine Products Company, and the cor- poration has since that time operated the business at the same location and in the same manner as did the partnership. Some of the Respond- ent's current production is used in the assembly of products which are sold by customers of the Respondent to the United States Government. 2. All of the Respondent's machinery and equipment, which is valued at in excess of $35,000, although purchased by the Respondent within the 1 Elizabeth Merriman, Charles F . Mensing, Marie Saltzgaber , and Hilda Body. It developed at the hearing that the last mentioned had married since the alleged discrimina- tion. Hereafter in this report she will be referred to as Hilda Body Ralston , or as Ralston. 1614 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, State of Colorado , was manufactured outside of Colorado - During 1948; Respondent's purchases of tools and supplies amounted to approximately $5,400, of which approximately $1,600 represented shipments to, Respond- ent from points outside of Colorado. During 1949 and the first eight (8) months of 1950 Respondent purchased tools and shop supplies valued respectively at approximately $2,373 and $4,180, of which more than ten percent was shipped to Respondent from outside of Colorado. 3. The principal raw materials used by Respondent are steel , brass and aluminum. During 1947, 1948, 1949, and the first eight (8) months of 1950 Respondent purchased raw materials valued respectively at approximately $29,692, $22,512, $5,970 and $13,866; of these, materials valued respectively at approximately $19,644, $9,870, $992 and $2,800 were shipped to Respondent directly from points outside of Colorado. While most of Respondent's total purchases of raw materials were made from wholesale distributors located within Colorado and delivered to Respondent from the sellers' warehouses within the State of Colorado, all such raw materials were originally brought into Colorado from another State. Frequently the raw materials used by Respondent bear the names of nationally known producers engaged in interstate commerce within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act. 4. During 1948 , Respondent sold finished products valued at approximately $91,834 ; of these, products valued at approximately $2,295 were shipped to points outside Colorado . During 1949 Respondent 's total sales amounted to $53,600.66, of which approximately $3,790 represented shipments to points outside Colorado. During the first eight (8) months of 1950 Respondent's total sales amounted to approximately $62,769, of which approximately $5,795 were shipped to points outside Colorado . During 1947 and 1948• Respondent sold finished products valued at more than $100,000 to Colorado customers , and during 1949 and the first eight (8) months of 1950 Re- spondent sold machined products to its Colorado customers valued at more than $125,000. The Respondent 's Colorado customers in turn incorporated the items produced by this Respondent in their own production , and Re- spondent believes that more than fifty ( 50) percent of such production by the Respondent 's customers was shipped to points outside Colorado. More than fifty percent of Respondent 's sales to its Colorado customers , in dollar volume, represent sales to firms who are engaged in interstate commerce within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act, and over many of whom the National Labor Relations Board has asserted its jurisdiction. Included among the Respondent 's customers for whom it manufactures parts are firms listed on Appendix A attached hereto.' Respondent does not, by this stipulation , admit or concede that its opera- tions are in or affect commerce within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act. B. Conclusions In view of inconsistencies in the above-quoted stipulation, the undersigned Trial Examiner is not at all certain that an accurate analysis of the Respondent's business , based upon the figures appearing therein is possible . For example, there appears to be lack of consistency in the following statements made in para- graph 4 of the stipulation : 2 "Appendix A" is attached to the written stipulation in evidence . The undersigned Trial Examiner has not considered it in reaching his conclusions. The concerns listed, if any, over which the Board has exercised jurisdiction are not identified. SCREW MACHINE PRODUCTS COMPANY 1615 ( 1) During 1949 ... total sales amounted to $53,600.66. (2) During the first eight ($) months of 1950 . . . total sales amounted to . . . $62,769. (3) During 1949 ' and the first eight months of 1950 Respondent sold: machined products to its Colorado customers valued at more than $125,000. (Emphasis supplied.) Addition of (1) and (2), according to the undersigned Trial Examiner 's calcu- lation, brings the sum of $116,369.66 . Yet item ( 3), limited apparently to, Colorado sales, stipulated an amount for the 20 months considerably larger than the total sales for the same period.' For the purposes of this report, the undersigned Trial Examiner will assume to be accurate and use, as did counsel for the Respondent in a detailed analysis. set forth in his brief , the lesser of the two amounts-the "total sales" for speci- fied periods . And also for the purpose of this Report it will be assumed and found as stipulated , that "more than fifty percent of Respondent 's sales to its Colorado, customers , in dollar volume, represent sales to firms who are engaged in inter- state commerce within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act." The undersigned Trial Examiner is inclined to agree with counsel for the Respondent , as he ably argues in his brief , that only one of the sundry standards enunciated by the Board in determining commerce jurisdiction can here be reasonably applied with a result which may bring the Respondent within such jurisdiction . The standard set out in The Rutledge Paper Products , Inc.,4 will be applied. In short, that standard establishes that where an employer 's direct inflow and outflow of materials through interstate channels is less than the minimum requirements ($500,000 and $25,000 respectively ) established by the Board as standards whether jurisdiction should be asserted on either basis, the Board will nevertheless exercise jurisdiction , where the employer 's inflow and, outflow of materials "when considered in ratio to the respective inflow and out- flow requirements , are together equivalent to the minimum requirements in either category." Also for the purposes of this Report, the undersigned Trial Examiner considers material, for analysis , only the years 1948, during which the unfair labor prac- tices are alleged to have occurred , and the year 1950, in which the hearing was held. The following compilation is drawn from figures appearing in the above- quoted stipulation and, except for one minor correction ( indirect inflow for 1950 ) are as set forth in the Respondent 's brief. Percentages are approximate. Tools, supplies, and materials Direct inflow: 1948, $11,470, which equals 2.3% of $500,000. 1950 (8 mos.), $3,218, which equals 1 % of $333,333.5 Indirect inflow: 1948, $16,442, which equals 1.6% of $1,000,000. 1950 (8 mos.), $14,828, which equals 2.2% of $666,667. 3 Nor does the same paragraph reveal what the "belief" of General Counsel is, if any, in regard to the statement emphasized in the following quotation : "The Respondent's Colorado customers in turn incorporated the items produced by this Respondent in their own production , and Respondent believes that more than fifty ( 50) percent of such production by the Respondent's customers was shipped to points outside Colorado." 4 91 NLRB 625. E Since the 1950 figures in the stipulation cover only 8 months, it is obviously appropriate that the minimum standard set up by the Board should also be reduced to two-thirds of the annual amount, thus equalizing the periods covered. 1616 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Products sold Direct outflow: 1948, $2,295, which equals 9% of $25,000. 1950 (8 mos. ), $5,795, *which equals 34.8% of $16,667. Indirect outflow: 1948, $44,769, which equals 89% of $50,000. 1950 (8 mos.), $28,487, which equals 85% of $33,333. Summarizing the above compilation: 1948 Direct----------------- Indirect --------------- outflow Inflow 9% Direct-------------- 2.3% 89% Indirect ------------- 1.6% Combina- tion ------- ------ 98% 3.9% 1950 Outflow Inflow 101.9% Combina- tion Direct----------------- 34. 8% Direct-------------- 1% ------- Indirect --------------- 85% Indirect -------- ------ 2.2% ------- 119.8% 3.2% 123% Unless the undersigned Trial Examiner , who is not an accountant , has in- advertently erred in calculation , it appears that when tested by the Board standard cited above-a combination of inflow and outflow, the Respondent's business during both 1948 and 1950 exceeded the 100 percent requirement. It is so found. Contrary to the contention of the Respondent, it is concluded and found that the Respondent is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act, and that exercise of the Board 's jurisdiction will effectuate the policies of the Act.' II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED The International Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 1, AFL, and International Association of Machinists , herein called Machinists , are labor organizations admitting to membership employees of the Respondent. III. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Setting and major issues Early in 1948 employees C. F. Mensing and another ' approached C. A. Brauk- man and requested a wage increase for all 9 or 10 shop employees . then on the payroll. Braukman turned down the request . The 2 employees then prepared, circulated , and submitted a petition for a general increase . Upon receiving it Braukman assembled the workers , explained that the concern had lost money in 1947, and said that no increase could be given . The employees, dissatisfied, decided to seek affiliation with some union. Employee Hilda Body Ralston ° The -undersigned Trial Examiner finds no merit in the Respondent 's claim to the effect that having twice declined the Board may not now assert jurisdiction. 7 Robert Matthesen , who since then has been promoted to foreman and is not involved in these proceedings. SCREW MACHINE PRODUCTS COMPANY 1617 was selected to approach the Machinists . A representative of that organization came to the shop, and sometime in April a meeting was held. On April 26 the Machinists filed a petition for certification as the representative of the Re- spondent 's employees e Braukman was notified of the filing and a few days thereafter voluntarily gave the employees a wage increase. According to Brauk- man's testimony : "There was still unrest in the shop . I put it in nevertheless and I said to them at the time we announced it, `This is a cost of living in- crease. It isn't put in to encourage or discourage your union activities: " Union activities continued . Mensing was elected shop steward , and repre- sented the Machinists at a Board representation hearing held in the summer of 1948. Braukman received a copy of the Board's decision , dated September 24, 1948, in which it declined to assert jurisdiction . Upon receiving it, according to his own testimony , Braukman called all employees together and asked them to vote "Yes" or "No" on the question , prepared by himself , as to whether or not they wanted an "outside labor union " to represent them. The polling of em. ployees on this occasion is at issue , and will be discussed more fully below. The employees decided to seek affiliation with the Engineers , and most of them signed applications on or about September 30. The next day Mensing left on a month 's vacation . Not long after his return he was laid off: During his absence employees Ralston and Elizabeth Merriman were also laid off. Also' during October office employee Marie Saltzgaber , daughter of Henry Herbol- sheimer , organizer for the Engineers , was asked by Braukman to resign. She declined . Engineers filed a petition for certification as the representative of the Respondent 's employees on November 12.° Braukman refused to consent to an election , despite the fact that a few weeks before he had undertaken to conduct his own balloting . Upon her return from a vacation , early in December, Saltz gaber was transferred from her regular job in the Respondent 's office. The lay- offs.of Ralston, Merriman , and Mensing, and the transfer of Saltzgaber are in issue. B. The poll of employees There is no dispute as to the fact that Braukman , during the last week in September and immediately after the Board issued its decision in Case No. 30-RC-82, called all employees together during the working day and, after having Mensing read to them the Board decision , distributed among them ballots on which appeared this test : Check yes or no if you want an outside labor union to represent you as a bargaining agent. Yes No It is also established by credible evidence that before distributing the ballots Braukman told the employees , in effect : "This thing has gone far enough, I would like to get it settled ." When Ralston protested that they had not been responsible for "stalling ," Braukman said he did not like the idea of not being informed "of what was going on." Having distributed the ballots , Braukman left. The employees , however , decided not to use his ballots and returned them, unused , to Superintendent Dale Young who was present. They then conducted a vote among themselves , using paper towels for ballots, and . decided seven to one to continue organizing efforts. As a witness Braukman said that his attempt to ascertain the desires of his employees for union representation was, prompted only by the "considerable e Case No. 30-RC-82. Case No . 30-RC-127. 953841-52-vol. 94--103 1618 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD amount of unrest" occasioned by the Board's "not choosing to take jurisdiction."" His testimony leaves unrevealed , however : ( 1) what unrest, if any, he ob- served , since he did not have the Board decision read to them until just before passing out ballots already prepared by him ; and (2 ) why he asked for a vote on an "outside" union . His protest of neutrality is also discredited by his admitted refusal to consent to a Board election shortly after this event. The undersigned Trial Examiner concludes and finds that Braukman 's conduct in initiating the poll above described constituted interference , restraint, and coercion of employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed by the Act10 C. Discrimination to discourage union activities 1. Marie Saltzgaber Saltzgaber is the daughter of Herbolsheimer , business representative of the Engineers . For about 2 years before December 1948, she had performed general office work for the Respondent . On September 30, after the employees had signed application cards for the Engineers , Herbolsheimer asked Braukman for a bargaining conference . The same afternoon he was called to the office of the local "Employers Council," where Braukman told him that because of the "peculiar situation"-the father -daughter relationship-he could not permit Saltzgaber to work for him. The.next day Braukman requested her to resign . She asked why. Braukman told her that it would be better for her to leave because the "folks out in the, shop were organizing" and her father was business representative of the union, She countered that her work in the office made her ineligible for the Engineers, or the bargaining unit, and declined to resign. Finally, after discussion , Brauk- man told her he would "let it ride" for a time, and said she could keep her job if the employees decided not to have her "father's union represent them." At the September 30 meeting with Herbolsheimer Braukman refused to con- sent to a Board election . On November 12 the Engineers filed its petition with the Board . A few days later Saltzgaber went on her vacation , returning December 6. Upon reporting for work she was asked by Braukman , and con- sented, to "help out" Mrs. Braukman at the latter 's real estate office in North Denver . Although Braukman clearly implied that she was needed by Mrs. B,raukman only "for a while," and until she had gotten "things straightened out," she was not recalled to her regular job with the Respondent , and about` 6 months later her employment was fully terminated by Mrs. Braukman. The record reveals no major dispute in the evidence from which the foregoing findings are drawn . Braukman , as a witness , admitted asking Saltzgaber to resign and transferring her to his wife's office. General Counsel contends that Braukman ' s treatment of Saltzgaber was dis- criminatory and designed to discourage organization of the employees in Engi- neers. Braukman claims that his action was taken , in effect, for self-protection, and because Saltzgaber had been serving as his confidential secretary. The circumstances of the transfer fully support General Counsel's position. Although Braukman answered in the affirmative when asked by his counsel. if she had acted as his "private secretary ," his factual description of her duties reveals nothing of a "confidential" nature. "She did typing , minor bookkeeping, posting, cost records," he said. Moreover , having transferred her to his-wife's office, for a long period thereafter Braukman continued to take similar work to Saltzgaber , and she performed it as before but at another location . Finally, the 'ON. L. R. B. v. Stocker Manufacturing Company, 185 F. 2d 451 ( C. A.3), enforcing 86 NLRB 666. SCREW MACHINE PRODUCTS COMPANY 1619 timing of Braukman's request that she resign shows that his purpose was other than he claimed. His demand was made the day after her father had asked to bargain and he had refused even to consent to a Board election. No negotia, tions were in progress, and Braukman had clearly implied that none would be engaged in, since the Board had once declined jurisdiction. Furthermore, when Saltzgaber declined to resign, Braukman made it plain that her continued employment depended upon further action on the part of the shop employees: On November 12 the Engineers' petition was filed, demonstrating to Braukman that organizational efforts had not ceased. Immediately upon her return from vacation Saltzgaber was transferred. Braukman's previous threat was, in effect, carried out. She was promptly removed from the Respondent's office and payroll. The undersigned Trial Examiner finds no merit in the Respondent's position as to Saltzgaber;' but concludes and finds that her employment at the Respond- ent's plant was discriminatorily terminated on December 6, 1948, for the purpose of discouraging membership in Engineers. 2. Hilda Body Ralston, Elizabeth Merriman, and Charles F. Mensing Although all were not laid off the same day, these three employees were active union leaders, known as such to Braukman, and it is the Respondent's conten- tion that all were removed from the payroll for economic reasons, in accordance with a necessary reduction in force. Their terminations, therefore, reasonably may be considered not in isolation but as a group. Ralston, previously identified as the employee who was selected by other employees to seek aid in their efforts at self-organization and who, when Brauk- man sought to poll their union wishes, openly protested against his statements, was laid off on October 1, the same day Saltzgaber was asked to resign. Mer- riman, a machine operator with greater seniority than any other employee in the shop, was laid off on October 25. Her testimony isundisputed that she had previously discussed with Braukman the fact that she had been an active organizer of unions in other plants. Mensing, the shop steward, well known to Braukman as the most active union leader in the shop, was laid off on November 19, shortly after he returned from his vacation. In her brief, counsel for General Counsel concedes that the layoffs of Ralston on October 1 and of Merriman on October 25 were nondiscriminatory, and that they were actually occasioned by lack of work. In view of her concession and the state of the complaint and the record, the undersigned Trial Examiner accepts the premise of nondiscriminatory initial layoffs as to these two em- ployees. The Trial Examiner cannot ignore, however, despite the Respondent's claim that the layoffs were necessary: (1) Braukmau's testimony that "business stayed good" the rest of 1948, after voluntarily granting a general wage increase in May, and (2) the fact revealed by the Respondent's records and the super- intendent's testimony that Alvis Rice was hired as a new employee in the same. department, the week after Ralston was laid off and the week before Merriman was likewise terminated. If work was, in point of fact, as slow as the super- intendent claimed, his contention that Rice was hired to replace an employee who had previously quit is plainly inconsistent. Extreme doubt upon the reliability of management testimony on this point is cast, also, by the contradic- tion in the testimony of Young and Braukman as to Rice. Young stated that "Validity of the Respondent's position as to this employee is further discredited by the claim in its answer that her transfer was "solely the result of the decline in the business of the partnership." 1620 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Rice was hired to replace Phillips, a foreman, who had quit. Braukman, how- ever, testified that Foreman Phillips did not quit until June 1949, some 8 months after Rice was hired. Nor can the undersigned Trial Examiner ignore the credible evidence that both Ralston and Merriman were satisfactory employees, and that until October 1948, it had been the Respondent's practice to observe senority in laying off employees. As to Ralston, it is General Counsel's claim that she was discriminated against, as alleged in the complaint, in November, after she had been recalled from her October layoff. In substance, the circumstances bearing upon this point are as follows. On November 3 she was recalled by Young, who gave her at least implied assurance that work would be steady. This assurance she solicited; because just before the recall she had accepted another position. She worked steadily until November 19 when, although "right in the middle of a job" accord- ing her credible and undisputed testimony, she was approached by Young who told her she was to be laid off again. "I got mad," Ralston testified, and "told Mr. Young that if Mr. Braukman wanted to get rid of me I wished he would fire me and get it over with so I could go out get another job and know that I wasn't going to get called back right away as soon as I got situated someplace and get called back and fired out again." After consulting Braukman, Young told her, "If that is the way it is, you are fired." Young then added, "As long as I am in charge here there will never be any more women in the shop." Al- though differing in emphasis and some details, the testimony of Braukman and- Young as to this event agrees substantially with that of Ralston. The Respondent claims that Ralston quit. The established circumstances fail to support this claim. It was, in effect, a constructive discharge. In view of the fact that a new employee had been hired in her department after she had been laid off, and her assurance from Young when recalled that she would have steady work, her demand that' management make its position plain was reason- able. Merriman was told by Young on October 25 that she was being laid off because of lack of work. Her testimony is uncontradicted that in January 1949 she called Braukman and was specifically told her layoff was temporary and that she would be called back as soon as work "came in." She has never been re- called, although the Respondent's production force was again increased in May 1949, and at the time of the hearing had almost tripled in number since the 1949 layoffs. At the hearing Braukman testified that "to this date she is merely laid off." Young, however, as a witness stated that he had no intention of rehiring her or of hiring any woman. Asked to explain this position, Young declared that he preferred "men that are willing to learn set-up and take care of themselves on the machine." Whatever may be Young's general opinion and preference as to the hiring of male labor, his own testimony establishes that he had never had any complaint about the work of either Merriman or Ralston. Nor is any claim made that they were selected for lay-off because they were women. No credible evidence was offered to support the Respondent's present position, which in his brief counsel for the Respondent admitted "may be discrimination against women." Had this position been more than a pretext, it is reasonable to be- lieve that Braukman, in January 1949, would have told Merriman he intended to hire no more women. Finally, there is marked dissonance in management reasons given at the hearing and the affirmative allegations in the sworn answer. It is contended in that document that both Ralston and Merriman, "and each of them, were offered opportunities to return to work for the partnership and declined to do so." Facts established by the Respondent's own witnesses show that Merriman has never been offered an opportunity to return to work. So far as the record SCREW MACHINE PRODUCTS COMPANY 1621 shows, it appears that the Respondent hastily shifted its defense, in an effort to give it some degree of plausibility, after Ralston volunteered the statement that Young, having discharged her, told her he would hire no more women employees. (The answer alleges, furthermore, that Ralston was laid off, on November 19, not that she quit, as claimed in the Respondent's brief.) The undersigned Trial Examiner is convinced by the preponderance of credible evidence, and finds, that discrimination as to the rehiring of Merriman occurred- not because she was a woman, but because she was an active union adherent. Specifically, as to the two women, it is concluded and found that Ralston was discriminatorily discharged on November 19, 1948, and that Merriman was dis- criminatorily denied recall to her job in May 1949, when the Respondent's production force was increased, to discourage membership in Engineers. Mensing, like Ralston, was laid off on November 19, a few days after Brauk- man had been notified that Engineers had filed its petition with the Board. It is the Respondent's claim that he was laid off because of lack of work. As found above, he was the shop steward and well known to Braukman as the most active union leader in the shop. His services were terminated upon Braukman's orders and over the superintendent's protests. Mensing's ability is not questioned by the Respondent. When laid off he was given a letter of recommendation by the superintendent. It said, in part : He has always shown an above the average ability and attitude of coopera- tion on the job. According to Braukman's own testimony Mensing had more seniority and more ability in the same department, when laid off, than employee Robert Melson, who was retained. Braukman further testified that Young protested, when .told to lay Mensing off, that : Practically every job that we have needs one person or another to do that thing. We just haven't any extra people to lay off. Young's protest to Braukman finds support in Mensing's testimony that when laid off, "I was busy at the time, in fact, I had always been busy." In face of the facts that a new employee had just been hired, that Mensing had both more seniority and ability than another employee who was retained, and that he was busy when laid off, Braukman's claim that he was laid off for lack of work fails to have merit or validity. Mensing's following testimony is without credible or substantial refutation in the record.12 When informing him that he was to be laid off on November 19: Mr. Young came up to me . . . and he said, "What did you do to make Braukman mad at you . .. That is the first time he told me who to lay off." Not in lack of work but in Young's remark, the undersigned Trial Examiner is persuaded, is revealed the real motive for the layoff of Mensing. Braukman re- sented the persistence of his employees in seeking representation by the Engi- neers, and resented Mensing's continued leadership in those efforts. It is con- cluded and found that Mensing was, in effect, discriminatorily discharged on November 19, 1948. Engineers filed its original charge December 6, 1948, naming Mensing as dis- criminatorily discharged. On January 28, Young wrote to the employee, who already had obtained regular employment elsewhere, offering him work on one specific order, and voicing hope that "other orders" would be forthcoming. Mensing declined what plainly was uncertain and conditional reinstatement. 21 Young said only that he did not recall making this remark. 1622 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD The undersigned Trial Examiner finds that he has not been offered full rein- statement. In summary, the undersigned Trial Examiner concludes and finds that by the discriminatory discharges of Mensing and Ralston, and by the discriminatory failure to reemploy Merriman, to discourage membership in the Engineers, the Respondent has interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act." IV. THE EFFECT OF THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES UPON COMMERCE The activities of the Respondent, set forth in Section III, above, occurring in connection with its operations described in Section I, above, have a close, inti- mate, and substantial relation to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States, and tend to lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free flow of commerce. V. THE REMEDY Having found that the Respondent has engaged in unfair labor practices, the undersigned Trial Examiner will recommend that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action which will effectuate the policies of the Act. It has been found that the Respondent discriminated in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of Marie Saltzgaber, Hilda Body Ralston, Elizabeth Merriman, and C. F._ Mensing. It will be recommended that the Respondent offer to them immediate and full reinstatement to their former or substantially equivalent positions 14, and make them whole for any loss of pay they may have suffered as a result of the discrimination against them by payment to each of a sum of money equal to that which he or she would have earned as wages from the date of the discrimination, as found, to the date of the offer of reinstatement. Loss of pay shall be computed on the basis of each separate calendar quarter or portion thereof during the period from the Respondent's discriminatory action to the date of a proper offer of reinstatement. The quarterly periods, herein called quarters, shall begin with the first day of January, April, July, and October. Loss of pay, shall be determined by deducting from a sum equal to that which each would normally have earned for each such quarter or portion thereof, his net earnings,13 if any, in other employment during that period. Earnings in one particular quarter shall have no effect upon the back-pay liability for any other quarter. " In accordance with the Woolworth decision, it will. be recom- mended that the Respondent, upon reasonable request, make available to the Board and its agents all records pertinent to an analysis of the amount due as back pay. - The unfair labor practices found reveal on the part of the Respondent such a fundamental antipathy to the objectives of the Act as to justify an inference that the commission of other unfair labor practices may be anticipated. The preventive purposes of the Act may be frustrated unless the Respondent is re- quired to take some affirmative action to dispel the threat. It will be recom- 11 The record reveals but one act of interference which might, inferentially, be construed as directed against the Machinists : that of Braukman's polling of the employees in September. The undersigned is convinced that, since the Machinists' petition had been dismissed by the Board, Braukman's act was designed to discourage membership in any outside labor organization, and not specifically in the Machinists. It will be recom- mended, therefore, that the allegations of the complaint as to the Machinists be dismissed. 14 The Chase National Bank of the City of New York, San Juan,-Puerto Rico, Branch, 65 NLRB 827. 16 Crossett Lumber Company, 8 NLRB 440, 497-8. 'O F. W. Woolworth Company, 90 NLRB 289. STONE PAPER TUBE COMPANY 1623 mended , therefore , that the Respondent cease and desist from in any manner interfering with, restraining , and coercing its employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed by the Act. Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact and upon the entire record in the case , the undersigned Trial Examiner makes the following : CONCLUSIONS OF LAw 1. International Union of Operating Engineers , Local No. 1, AFL , and Inter- national Association of Machinists, are labor organizations within the meaning of Section 2 (5) of the Act. 2. By discriminating in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of Marie Saltzgaber , Hilda Body Ralston, Elizabeth Merriman , and C. F. Mensing, the Respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. 3. By such discrimination and by interfering with, restraining , and coercing employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act, the Respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act. 4. The aforesaid unfair labor practices are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. [Recommended Order omitted from publication in this volume.] STONE PAPER TUBE COMPANY and DISTRICT LODGE #67, INTERNA- TIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MACHINISTS , PETITIONER . Case No. 5-RC- 738. June 277 1951 Decision and Order Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before John J. A. Reynolds, Jr., hearing 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 power 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 organization involved claims 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: United Mine Workers, UMW, District #50, hereinafter called the Intervenor, and the Employer have bargained with regard to 94 NLRB No. 238. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation