Southwest Latex Corp.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsApr 15, 1969175 N.L.R.B. 358 (N.L.R.B. 1969) Copy Citation 358 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Southwest Latex Corporation and John T . Seaton. Case 23-CA-2971 April 15, 1969 DECISION AND ORDER By CHAIRMAN MCCULLOCH AND MEMBERS BROWN AND JENKINS On August 2, 1968, Trial Examiner Harry R. Hinkes issued his Decision in the above-entitled case, finding that the Respondent had not engaged in certain unfair labor practices as alleged in the complaint, and recommending that the complaint be dismissed in its entirety, as set forth in the attached Trial Examiner's Decision. Thereafter, the General Counsel filed exceptions to the Trial Examiner's Decision together with a supporting brief. The Respondent filed a brief in support of the Trial Examiner's Decision. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three-member panel. The 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 briefs, and the entire record in this case, and hereby adopts only those findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner which are consistent with the following. Respondent, a subsidiary of Southwest Chemical and Plastic Company, is engaged in the manufacture of specialty latex products. In October 1967, the company began operations in its new plant at Bayport, Texas. It is a small plant, with a work force consisting of about 20 employees. John T. Seaton was hired by the Respondent as an operator on October 27, 1967, at the Bayport plant, and was discharged on March 6, 1968. On February 22, 1968, Seaton had met with, several other employees for the purpose of organizing and drafting a letter to the Respondent concerning seniority, pay scale, and other working conditions. A draft of this letter, prepared by Seaton, was shown to the other employees, and a number of additions and corrections were then made on the draft. The letter was never finally signed by the employees or presented to the Employer, although Seaton had, on March 4 and 5, made and then postponed appointments with Plant Manager N. O. Swennes to discuss the matter. The evidence nonetheless indicates that Respondent's management was aware of the preparation of the letter. According to the uncontradicted testimony of employee Osborn, he had a conversation with Foreman Herbeck on or about March 1, in which Herbeck said that employee Holder had told him about the letter and that "Seaton was possibly going to be in trouble because of the letter."' On March 2, Herbeck had a talk with Seaton. According to Herbeck, the discussion concerned Seaton's continual complaining and certain alleged derelictions of duty by Seaton on February 28 and 29. These latter failures, to be discussed infra, were said by Respondent at the hearing to be the final straws which caused Seaton's termination. However, a written reprimand, dated March 2, placed in Seaton's file by Herbeck, states only, "Spoke to J. T. Seaton about chronic griping and spending more time talking than working." On the afternoon of March 6, Foreman Herbeck told Seaton to report to Swennes. At the meeting, Herbeck told Seaton that he was not working as expected, took too many coffee breaks, had been warned many times in the past, and that it was therefore necessary to discharge him. As Seaton was leaving the plant, he walked with Herbeck, who said that he was sorry but "we were all trapped into it." On March 7, the day after the discharge, Respondent called a meeting of the plant employees. The meeting began with an explanation by Swennes that Seaton had been terminated "because of his work he had done." Swennes then launched into a discussion of the existing and anticipated benefits available to the employees. Among other things, the employees were shown their wage progression plan for the first time, were told of their right to receive lunches when working overtime, and were assured that they would be receiving the new lockers previously promised to them. At the hearing, Respondent asserted several reasons for discharging Seaton on March 6. One alleged basis was Seaton's history of complaining about pay and working conditions, as well as certain past failures in work performance, which had purportedly led Herbeck and Swennes to discuss the firing of Seaton about a month before his actual discharge. He had been reprieved, they testified, because he showed some promise. Although Seaton denied that he had complained to any extent, the Trial Examiner found Herbeck and Swennes more persuasive. However, he also found that complaining was common in the plant and "standing alone .. . may not have furnished a valid explanation for the discharge of March 6." But there was more in the case - a failure to properly perform a duty on February 28, and a failure to make a log entry, as required, on February 29 - which the Trial Examiner found to be the effective basis for the discharge. The duty not performed on February 28 involved the failure to empty a batch of latex from a reactor 'The Trial Examiner concluded that he was "inclined to credit Herbeck's version of this conversation rather than Osborn's " In Herbeck's testimony, however, while he denied having made certain other remarks attributed to him by Osborn, he left undemed Osborn 's twice-repeated testimony about Seaton being in trouble because of the letter 175 NLRB No. 58 SOUTHWEST LATEX CORPORATION into a blowdown tank. When Seaton, working alone, came on duty at 11 p.m. on February 28, the reactor contained latex in which a reaction had been initiated earlier in the day. According to the admission of Respondent's witness Herbeck, the reaction should have been fully completed prior to Seaton's shift. It would, therefore, have been the duty of the operator on the shift preceding Seaton's to begin to empty the reactor into the blowdown, or, at the very least, to have a laboratory technician make a test to ascertain whether the reaction had been completed. The operator on the earlier shift did neither, however.' Accordingly, when Seaton came on duty at 11 p.m., the latex was still in the reactor, and there were no longer any lab technicians on duty, the laboratory having closed at 11 P.M. The crux of the question as to whether Seaton was thereafter derelict depends upon what was expected of him in the situation he then confronted. Respondent asserts that Seaton should have looked at the daily log and calculated that the reactor was probably ready to be emptied, that upon realizing this likelihood, Seaton should then have called Herbeck at home, pursuant to standing instructions that operators should call Herbeck at any time if they have "questions"; that Herbeck could then have called a lab technician to go to the plant and sample the latex; that the reactor could then have been emptied during Seaton's shift instead of sometime later in the day of February 29; and that considerable processing time could have been saved. Seaton, on the other hand, admits that he was instructed to call Herbeck if "problems" ever arose on his shift, but contends that the situation on the evening of February 28 was no "problem." He testified that he knows of other occasions on which latex had been left in the reactor overnight, and Respondent's witness, Herbeck, appeared to concede this possibility. In his testimony, Herbeck said that when Seaton encountered the February 28 situation, it was up to him to call Herbeck and "let me decide whether to call somebody, or wait until morning to drop the batch, or whatever." Respondent asserts that at least 8 hours of processing time were lost as a result of Seaton's error. The evidence establishes that the reactor could not have been immediately discharged of the batch of latex, since the blowdown tank, into which the latex would have to be emptied, was itself filled with another batch. It was therefore necessary to empty the blowdown tank before the latex in the reactor could be transferred to the blowdown. According to Seaton, however, the screens through which the latex in the blowdown had to filter were covered with a substance which made the passage of the latex unusually slow. He spent much of his time on the shift removing this substance and then 359 emptying the blowdown. The screens on the blowdown being in the described condition, and considering the necessity for getting a technician to the lab and having him test the latex in the reactor, it appears to be unlikely that the reactor could have been emptied with any dispatch. And it is worth noting that even though Seaton took a sample of the latex to the lab when it opened at 6:45 a.m. on February 29, the evidence shows that the latex was not discharged from the reactor until about noon of that day. Since other evidence establishes that a reactor may be quickly discharged once the reaction is completed and the blowdown is empty, it would appear that the Respondent felt no particular urgency about the disposition of this batch. Seaton's shortcoming of February 29 also seems to be of relatively minor import. Starting at I1 p.m. that evening, he worked half of the shift with another operator and then the remainder of the shift by himself. While the other operator made notes in the daily log as to what was accomplished during their common time on the shift, Seaton apparently made no entry as to the work performed by him during the remaining four hours. There was a company requirement that operators describe in the log the work done by them. However, a perusal of sample log pages entered in evidence and testimony by Herbeck indicates that it was not unusual for the operators to fail to comply with the rule and to give information so sketchy as to appear to be valueless. Furthermore, the requirement was not integral to the functioning of the plant, but simply served as a source of information for Herbeck concerning the work performed, or problems which may have arisen, while he was away from the plant. There is no evidence that Seaton's failure to report had any eventual consequences. Against these two specific complaints against Seaton, which, Herbeck testified, "strongly" influenced his decision to recommend Seaton's discharge, we consider certain facts previously mentioned. The decision to discharge came against a background of the protected activity of Seaton's preparation of a letter complaining about working conditions, to be presented to management on behalf of his fellow employees. Employee Osborn gave uncontradicted testimony that Herbeck said that he knew about the letter and that Seaton was "possibly going to be in trouble" because of it. This testimony is a significant indication of both Respondent's knowledge of, and attitude toward, Seaton's protected conduct. Although Respondent now contends that Seaton's work performance on February 28 and 29 was a significant factor in the decision to release him, Herbeck's written reprimand of March 2 fails to mention these incidents, and thus belies the importance now attributed to them by Respondent. The discharge came after Seaton had made and then postponed 'There is no indication in the record that the operator on the preceding formal appointments with the plant superintendent. shift was disciplined for his failure to do so The evidence indicates that Swennes must have been 360 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD aware of the purpose of the meeting After Seaton was discharged on March 6, Herbeck, accompanying Seaton as he was leaving, said to him that "we were all trapped into it." This seems to be a meaningless remark if addressed to an employee being discharged for incompetence and inefficiency; more sensibly, it implies that Seaton had done the one thing - organizing his fellow employees - which made his discharge inescapable. And, finally, we note the remarkable conjunction of Seaton's discharge with the employee meeting called the following day. At this meeting, the Respondent referred to Seaton's discharge and then discussed the array of benefits accruing to, or soon to be made available to, the employees. It seems apparent that something more than pure coincidence was responsible for the discharge on one day of an employee who had been attempting to organize his fellow employees and the convocation, on the very next day, of an employee meeting at which both the references to benefits and the reference to Seaton's discharge were prominently employed. In the circumstances described, we have no doubt that the General Counsel has established, by a preponderance of the evidence, that Seaton was discharged for engaging in activity protected by Section 7 of the Act, in violation of Section 8(a)(1). We further find that Herbeck's statement to Osborn, about the "trouble" faced by Seaton because of his responsibility for the preparation of the letter, must be considered to have coercive implications tending to dissuade Osborn from engaging in collective activity, thus violating Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. We find, however, that other complaint allegations of Section 8(a)(1) are not substantiated, and we shall order them dismissed. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. The Respondent is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act, and it will effectuate the purposes of the Act to exercise jurisdiction herein. 2. By unlawfully discharging John T. Seaton on March 6, 1968, the Respondent engaged in an unfair labor practice within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. 3. By unlawfully threatening an employee, Respondent has engaged in an unfair labor practice 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. THE REMEDY Having found that the Respondent has engaged in certain unfair labor practices, we shall order Respondent to cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act. It having been found that the Respondent unlawfully discharged John T. Seaton on March 6, 1968, and thereby violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act, we shall order that Respondent remedy such unlawful conduct by offering John T. Seaton immediate and full reinstatement to his former or a substantially equivalent position, without prejudice to his seniority or other rights and privileges, and make him whole for any loss of earnings he may have suffered as a result of the discrimination against him, by payment to him of a sum of money equal to the amount he would have earned from the date of his discriminatory discharge to the date of an offer of reinstatement, less net earnings during said periods, to be computed on a quarterly basis in the manner established by the Board in F. W Woolworth Company, 90 NLRB 289, including interest at the rate of 6 percent per annum, to be computed in the manner set forth in Isis Plumbing & Heating Co., 138 NLRB 716. ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board orders that the Respondent, Southwest Latex Corporation, Houston, Texas, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall: 1. Cease and desist from: (a) Discharging any of its employees or discriminating in any other manner in respect to their hire or tenure of employment, or any term or condition of employment, for the purpose of interfering with, restraining, or coercing employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed them in Section 7 of the Act. (b) Unlawfully threatening employees for the purpose of interfering with protected, concerted activities. (c) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing its employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action which the Board finds will effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Offer John T. Seaton immediate and full reinstatement to his former substantially equivalent position, without prejudice to his seniority and other rights and privileges, and make him whole for any loss of pay, together with interest thereon at 6 percent per annum, in accordance with F. W. Woolworth Company, 90 NLRB 289, and Isis Plumbing & Heating Co., 138 NLRB 716; and notify him, if he is presently serving in the Armed Forces of the United States, of his right to full reinstatement, upon application, in accordance with the Selective Service Act and the Universal Military Training and Service Act, as amended, after discharge from the Armed Forces. (b) Preserve and, upon request, make available to the Board and its agents, for examination and copying, all payroll records, social security records, SOUTHWEST LATEX CORPORATION timecards, personnel records and reports, and all other records relevant and necessary to determination of backpay due and the reinstatement and related rights provided under the terms of this Order. (c) Post at its Bayport, Texas, establishment, copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix."' Copies of said notice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 23, shall, after being duly signed by Respondent's representative, be posted by it immediately upon receipt thereof, and be maintained by it for 60 consecutive days thereafter, in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by Respondent to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (d) Notify the Regional Director for Region 23, in writing, within 10 days from the date of this Order, what steps Respondent has taken to comply herewith. 3. All allegations in the complaint not specifically found herein are hereby dismissed. 'In the event that this Order is enforced by a decree of a United States Court of Appeals, there shall be substituted for the words "a Decision and Order" the words "a Decree of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order" APPENDIX NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYEES Pursuant to a Decision and Order of the National Labor Relations Board and in order to effectuate the policies of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, we hereby notify our employees that. WE WILL NOT discharge or discriminate against our employees for the purpose of interfering with their right to organize as a group to bargain with us WE WILL NOT threaten our employees for the purpose of preventing them from engaging in concerted activities. WE WILL offer John T Seaton reinstatement to his former position with all the rights and any backpay due him. WE WILL notify John T Seaton if he is presently serving in the Armed Forces of his right to such reinstatement under Federal law after discharge from the Armed Forces. SOUTHWEST LATEX CORPORATION (Employer) Dated By (Representative) (Title) This notice must remain posted for 60 consecutive days from the date of posting, and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. If employees have any question concerning this notice or compliance with its provisions, they may communicate directly with the Board's Regional Office, 6617 Federal Office Building, 515 Rusk Avenue, Houston, Texas 77002, Telephone 713-228-4296. TRIAL EXAMINER ' S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE 361 HARRY R HINKES, Trial Examiner The complaint herein was issued on April 24, 1968, pursuant to a charge filed on March 7, 1968, by John T. Seaton and served on Southwest Latex Corporation, herein called the Respondent or Company, on March 11, 1968. Respondent is alleged to have engaged in unfair labor practices affecting commerce by the discharge of John T Seaton and the commission of other acts interfering with, restraining, and coercing its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act in violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act By answer duly filed Respondent denied the commission of any unfair labor practices. A hearing was held before me at Houston, Texas, on May 6 and 7, 1968, at which all parties were represented and were afforded full opportunity to participate, examine witnesses and adduce relevant evidence. During the hearing, upon motion of counsel for the General Counsel, an amendment to the complaint was allowed modifying the date stated therein for an alleged unfair labor practice. At the conclusion of the hearing counsel for the parties waived oral argument. Briefs have been received from the General Counsel and from the Respondent and have been given careful consideration Upon the entire record in this proceeding I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT I JURISDICTION The Respondent is and has been at all times material herein a subsidiary of Southwest Chemical & Plastics Company of Seabrook, Texas and a corporation duly organized under the laws of the State of Texas with its principal office and place of business in the city of Houston, State of Texas, where it is engaged in the manufacture of specialty latex products. By agreement between counsel it has been stipulated that during the 12-month period preceding the issuance of the complaint in this matter Respondent, in the course and conduct of its business operations, manufactured and sold products valued in excess of $50,000 which products were sold and delivered to customers in states of the United States other than the State of Texas I find that the Respondent is now and has been at all times material herein an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 11 THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Seaton Southwest Latex Corporation was formed around the beginning of 1967. Plans were drawn up for the construction of the plant at Bayport, Texas on January 3, 1967, and the plans were approved for construction on April 13, 1967 The Company started moving the operators down to Bayport from its pilot plant operation in October. Seaton began working for the Respondent on October 27, 1967. About 4 1/2 months later, on March 6, 1968, he was discharged Several of the employees including Seaton met on February 22, 1968, and discussed presenting a complaint 362 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD to the management of the Company regarding their working conditions. It was decided to draft a letter to present to the Company and Seaton prepared a draft of such a letter. As employee Brown put it "I guess [Seaton] sort of appointed himself as the letter writer." He showed his draft to the other employees on and after February 28, and by March 4, received everyone's approval to that letter. He then turned the letter over to another employee to be typed up, following which it was the plan of the employees that each of the employees would sign the letter and then, as a group meet with management to discuss it in the meantime, on March 4, Seaton requested a meeting with N O. Swennes, plant manager, for March 5. On March 5, however, he requested a postponement of that meeting to March 6 On March 6, Seaton asked another employee, Brown, to get a further postponement of that meeting to March 8, which Brown did. It does not appear that anyone informed management of the purpose for this requested meeting. Nor does it appear that Seaton's draft of the letter was every typed up in final form or signed by the employees. In the afternoon of March 6, Herbeck, Respondent's foreman, told Seaton to report to Swennes. Seaton requested permission to have employee Brown as a witness and was granted that request. At this meeting, attended by employees Seaton and Brown as well as Plant Manager Swennes and Foreman Herbeck, Herbeck told Seaton he had not been doing his job as expected, had been taking too many coffee breaks and that for the best concern of the Company Seaton be dismissed at that time, referring to a number of occasions on which Seaton had received reprimands As Seaton left the plant, Herbeck told him that he was sorry but "we were all trapped into it." Counsel for the General Counsel argues that Seaton was discharged for engaging in the alleged concerted protected activity of the letter writing referred to earlier. He cites the testimony of employee Osborn who told of a conversation he had with Foreman Herbeck on or about March 1, in which Herbeck allegedly told him that Seaton "was possibly going to be in trouble because of the letter . .. and if we try to go to the Labor Board or to bring in a union and everything that the Company would probably run the plant." Osborn further testified, however, that several days after this conversation with Herbeck he once again spoke to him and received an explanation that "satisfied" him Among other things Herbeck told him that he did not mean Osborn would be fired if he joined the Union but, if there was a strike, Herbeck and Swennes would try to run the plant. Finally, Osborn was asked. Q Now, [h]as Mr. Swennes, or any other company official told you if you joined the Union, you would be fired9 A. No, sir To this testimony of Osborn, counsel for the General Counsel adds the testimony of Seaton about a conversation that Seaton had with Herbeck on March 2, wherein: [Herbeck] told me that Mr Swennes, N. O. Swennes, plant manager, had called him into his office that week and asked him if there was something going wrong in the plant He said there was something in the air, he didn't know what it was. He thought that I - he thought that John Seaton was behind it. And Bill Herbeck said he had the same feeling and he said he would try to find out what the condition was and Mr. Swennes said that if Seaton keeps this up, this griping and complaining, that we are just going to have to let him go. Counsel for the Respondent, on the other hand, contends that the activity in which Seaton engaged was not protected concerted activity within the meaning of the Act and that in any event Respondent was not aware of it Walls Manufacturing Company, Inc, 128 NLRB 487, modified in 137 NLRB 1317, 1318. See also Ryder Tank Lines, Inc , 135 NLRB 936, 938 1 find it unnecessary, however, to consider this aspect of Respondent's argument, as the Board, in Norge Division, Borg - Warner Corporation, 155 NLRB 1087, 1089, held The crucial question, as we see it, is not whether the employees engaged in what we might assess as `plain and flagrant misconduct' but what in truth impelled the discharges Were the employees terminated because they engaged in concerted activity? Or were they terminated for some other and legitimate reason that would have impelled the Respondent to take such action even independently of their concerted activity? [Emphasis supplied.] We turn, therefore, to a consideration of the reasons advanced by the Respondent for its discharge of Seaton. According to Plant Manager Swennes, Seaton was told about the Company benefits and the working conditions before starting work at the plant but he made no complaint about either the benefits or the working conditions at the time. Nevertheless, Seaton thereafter began complaining until, according to Swennes, "it became a problem not only in terms of job but also in terms of the other employees, the effect he was having on - we will call it the morale of the people of the plant." Foreman Herbeck also testified that Seaton's "griping all the time was just making me so nervous I couldn't hardly get anything done." Among Seaton's complaints were the Company's failure to pay for his trips to the doctor when he was injured on the job, the Company's failure to provide rubber boots for him to wear, and his inability to locate tools to do the job Swennes spoke to him about his complaints as well as his quantity of work and Seaton told him he would try to correct the complaining and failure to work. Herbeck identified three documents which were received in evidence specifying three different occasions on which Herbeck had spoken to Seaton about his griping, being lax on shift duties, spending too much time on coffee breaks, and his inefficiency in work. Herbeck further testified that only Seaton had as many as three reprimands in his file. Seaton, however, denied having ever been reprimanded for his inefficiency in work or for being lax on shift duties or spending too much time on coffee breaks. I found Herbeck's and Swennes' testimony much more persuasive considering the demeanor of all of the men as they testified as well as the inconsistencies in some of Seaton's testimony which will be discussed later Seaton's fellow workers who testified in this proceeding also noticed that Seaton griped and complained but, according to them, everybody did a lot of griping and complaining and the criticism by management on this score was not directed specifically to Seaton but to all employees Standing alone, therefore, Seaton's gasping and complaining may not have furnished a valid explanation for the discharge of March 6. It does not, however, stand alone. Herbeck testified that Seaton's discharge was based on his derelictions in job duties, citing, in particular, Seaton's activities of February 28 and 29 Employees were required to maintain a log of their activities on each shift. Log entries made by Seaton and received in evidence show a number of instances between November 10 and December 29 where explanation for work done during his shift was SOUTHWEST LATEX CORPORATION 363 either completely missing or inadequately covered. Herbeck spoke to Seaton about this failure and discussed the advisability of discharging Seaton with Swennes about a month before the actual discharge. At the time, however, they felt that Seaton would straighten out because he had the ability to do the work. Seaton reported to work for the third shift of February 28, which began at I1 p.m. of that date and ended 7 a.m. February 29. Earlier that day, at around 1 p.m., a reaction had been initiated in a batch of latex in reactor number 2 and the major portion of the reaction had been completed several hours before Seaton came to work. At 5 p.m. a sample had been taken of the batch which showed a total solids content of 46 3 percent and an unreacted styrene count of 1.810. According to credited testimony, Seaton would know that the batch was near completion when he came on duty at II p m. and that it was his responsibility to take a sample each hour, it being the practice of the plant to empty the reactor when the total solids content reached 46 percent and the styrene count fell below .6. Although the operators such as Seaton could make the test for the total solids content, it was the lab technician's responsibility to make the styrene test and it was the operator's responsibility to request lab assistance if needed. He had also been instructed to call his supervisor if any problem arose on his shift and pursuant to such instructions supervisors were called many times during the night. On the batch in question, however, Seaton apparently never attempted to get the styrene tested, the lab having closed at 11 p.m., nor did he attempt to call his supervisor for instructions in the circumstances. Instead, he permitted the batch to remain in the reactor all night long As a result, the Company lost several hours of processing time As noted earlier, Seaton's shift ended on February 29 at 7 a m. Herbeck got to work at 8 a.m. that morning, reviewed Seaton's log entries and found insufficient data therein to account for all 8 hours of Seaton's shift. That night Seaton reported for work at the usual time of 11 p m., and worked until 7 a.m. the following morning, March 1. For that shift Seaton made no entry in the log book whatever Seaton had gone by the time Herbeck came to work at 8 a.m. Friday, March 1, but Herbeck noted Seaton's failure to record any activity for the preceding shift. Knowing that he would be gone when Seaton reported for work that night, Herbeck left word for Seaton to stay over Saturday morning after 7 a m. so that Herbeck could talk to him. Accordingly, on Saturday, March 2, Herbeck spoke to Seaton about his derelictions on the night of February 28, as well as his failure to write anything in the log book for his shift on February 29 The following day, Sunday, the plant was closed. On Monday, March 4, the plant was busy with resumption of operations after the one day shutdown. Moreover, Herbeck left work a little earlier to attend school. Consequently, Herbeck did not speak to Swennes about this matter until Tuesday, March 5. As a result of this discussion, Herbeck then decided to discharge Seaton. Seaton, however, testified that in his conversation with Herbeck on March 2, they merely discussed the letter that Seaton had drafted, Herbeck telling him that he "wished that more people . . would speak out instead of going in little groups behind backs, and tell the Company what they thought was wrong out there like I was doing." According to Seaton, Herbeck also told him at this time that Swennes had asked him if there was something going wrong in the plant and thought that Seaton was behind it. At first Seaton testified that Herbeck told him Swennes had said that "if Seaton keeps this up, this griping and complaining, we are just going to have to let him go." In rebuttal, however, he denied Herbeck speaking to him about chronic griping on that day This, however, was not the only inconsistency in Seaton's testimony Thus, Seaton first testified that he was "elected" by the other employees to be their spokesman Then he said "There was no formal election. It was just everyone meeting on different shifts would - agreed that myself and Cecil Brown would be the spokesmen for the hourly paid employees to the employer." Also Seaton denied ever telling a governmental agent that he had been elected A claim for unemployment compensation signed by Seaton and read by him before signing, which claim was received in evidence, recites, however, "I and another employees were elected to represent the employees in negotiating a bargaining unit among these workers." Seaton insisted that the employees told him he was authorized to negotiate the bargaining unit on their behalf. But employees Brown and Osborn, who were called on behalf of the General Counsel, testified that they had never appointed Seaton to represent either of them nor had Seaton been elected. Seaton also, denied telling any Southwest Latex employee that his unlawful discharge claim had already been decided and that he was going to be reinstated and get backpay. His first answer was vacillating: A. I think I told - yes, I told one employee. I didn't say that this had already been decided. No, I didn't. I told - no, I didn't say that. Q What did you say? A. I told them that it looked like it was in my favor. Q. Did you ever tell anybody at Southwest Latex that you had been told that you were going to be reinstated9 A. I told several different people that I would be reinstated if this thing - this hearing was final. Q. But did you tell them that you had been told you would be reinstated? A. No, Sir. His own witness employee Brown, contradicted him: Q. Did Seaton tell you at any time that it had already been voted that he was going to be reinstated and get his backpay? A. Yes, Sir. Seaton's testimony also refers to a pay increase that he received after he had worked 3 months. This, according to Seaton, was a merit increase, suggesting that the Respondent was quite satisfied with his work Again, his own witnesses testified in contradiction, stating that the 3-month pay increase was automatic for all employees on the payroll that long. In short, I cannot credit Seaton's testimony, finding it too often contradicted by himself or by his own witnesses. Instead, I find Herbeck's and Swennes' testimony more persuasive Counsel for the General Counsel argues that Seaton was not derelict in his duties on the night of February 28 when he failed to unload the reactor, pointing to the fact that the reactor had to be unloaded to a blowdown tank which was already full. This, however, does not explain why Seaton failed to call his supervisors for instructions on handling the reactor that night With the batch finished in the reactor and the blowdown tank full, it presented a problem which Seaton did not undertake to solve. It was, however the type of problem for which supervisors could be and had been called in the past for solution. In failing 364 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD to call the supervisors Seaton was derelict in his duties and caused a waste of reactor time as a result. In sum, I find that the General Counsel has not met his burden of establishing that Seaton's discharge was motivated by any protected concerted activity on his part but was instead motivated, as claimed by the Respondent, by his failure to carry out his required duties and only incidentally by the Respondent's displeasure at the disruption and loss of morale caused by Seaton's continual griping and complaining. B. The Other 8(a)(I) Incidents Counsel for the General Counsel argues "two distinct" violations of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by the Respondent. First, he argues that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) by threats to the employees He cites the testimony of Seaton, mentioned earlier, to the effect that Foreman Herbeck told him on March 2 that Swennes had asked him if there was something going wrong at the plant, that he did not know what it was but that he thought Seaton was behind it. According to Seaton, Herbeck added that he [Herbeck] had the same feeling Seaton further claimed that Herbeck told him Swennes had said that "if Seaton keeps this up, this griping and complaining, we are just going to have to let him go." Herbeck's testimony, however, which I credit, was that on March 2 he discussed Seaton's work of February 28, as well as his failure to enter his activity for the following day, February 29, and mentioned Seaton's griping and complaining as well. At this time, according to Herbeck, Seaton told him that his gripes were his own, nothing being said suggesting that Seaton was speaking for the other employees. Even accepting Seaton's version of that conversation there is nothing to suggest that Swennes was contemplating firing Seaton for any protected concerted activity but only for Seaton's personal complaints. Invalex Sales Co , Inc , 152 NLRB 773, 778. Counsel for the General Counsel also cites the testimony of employee Osborn concerning his conversation with Foreman Herbeck on March 1, in which Herbeck allegedly told Osborn that Seaton "was possibly going to be in trouble because of the letter . . . and if we try to go to the Labor Board to bring the Union in and everything that the Company would probably let us all go and him and Mr. Swennes would probably run the plant " Herbeck, however, denied telling any employee that he would be discharged if the Union came into the plant or if any employee took complaints to the Board but admitted that he told Osborn that in the event of a strike the management people could run the plant if they had to. I am inclined to credit Herbeck's version of this conversation rather than Osborn's. Osborn himself apparently was not quite sure of what Herbeck told him at first, since he went back to ask him again what he meant and this time, admittedly, was "satisfied" by Herbeck's alleged explanation that Herbeck did not mean Osborn would be fired if he joined the Union. Indeed, Osborn concluded his testimony on this score, denying that Swennes or any other company official ever told him if he joined the Union he would be fired I find insufficient evidence of threats by the Respondent for an employee's union or concerted activity. Counsel also argues that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by promises of benefits. As the brief of counsel for the General Counsel puts it: On March 7, 1968, Respondent called a meeting of its employees during which the Company promised wage increases , free lunches for overtime work, locker room lockers, and better and safer working equipment. The record, however, does not support this sweeping characterization. Employee Osborn testified that at this meeting, Swennes: .. told us that John had been released because of his work he had done, and showed us - told us that the Company benefits we was going to be getting and a new pay rate wage scale had been worked up. And also that we would be drawing lunch, overtime for lunches. We would be getting new lockers and be a new deal for us to work on around the strainers out there. Osborn added, however, that they had had discussions previously about new lockers. As he put it "they was working on it, trying to get them in." Osborn further admitted that Swennes made no mention about the Union that day. Employee Brown testified. The meeting was called for the purpose to explain why John Seaton was terminated They told us that John hadn't been doing his work satisfactory and, in other words, they had to let him go because his work wasn't satisfactory up to that day . They would get us lockers and try to improve the working conditions. Brown further testified that at this March 7 meeting a wage classification schedule was passed out showing the wage rates that employees would be entitled to at various periods of seniority. Brown, however, admitted that his wages were not changed by that instrument but that the instrument only "follows the pattern that my wage was set on at the time" Brown, too, denied that any mention was made of the Union at this meeting. Thomas Hudson, president of the Respondent, testified credibly that he established the wage progression plan shown to the employees on March 7, as far back as mid-1967, and that the wage rates shown to the employees on March 7, were the same as those he had devised, with the exception of the starting pay for helpers, not involved in this proceeding. He further testified that the plans pursuant to which the Bayport plant was built provided a space for lockers but that the lockers were not installed any earlier because management was "busy with trying to start up the plant and we were looking for the best buy we could get on lockers." As respects the overtime lunches, Hudson testified that in the early part of March 1968, when employee Osborn was asked to work overtime, he [Hudson] learned that the Company was not giving overtime lunches although it was a policy of the parent plant, Southwest Chemical, to provide overtime lunches. Consequently, Hudson ordered overtime lunches to be given to the employees The most that'can be said about the March 7 meeting is that the employees learned for the first time that they would be getting wage increases if they stayed with the Company for certain extended periods in the future, that they would be getting overtime lunches and that they would be getting lockers. None of this was conditioned upon any union or concerted activity among the employees or abstention therefrom The wage progression schedule represented no change in the wage being paid and was in conformity with the wage increases previously granted. The locker installation had been previously discussed and was not unexpected by the employees. The provision for overtime lunches was merely a reflection of company policy which had inadvertently been overlooked in the past. Counsel for the General Counsel would connect management ' s mention of Seaton's discharge at this meeting with the promise of benefits arguing that SOUTHWEST LATEX CORPORATION such connection demonstrates the Respondent's discouragement of the employees' protected activities but such connection was never made expressly or impliedly Indeed, witnesses called on behalf of the General Counsel testified that they were told Seaton had been discharged for his poor work, and nothing was said of anyone's protected activities Counsel for the General Counsel also makes reference to another meeting which took place on March 14, at which time a set of "Employee Rules and Regulations" was given to the employees. Among other things, these rules provided for a 6-month period of probation for new employees during which time such employees could be terminated at the Company's discretion. President Hudson testified credibly that this probationary period was instituted in place of a 3-month probationary period because it was found that, unlike the parent company, Southwest Chemical, Southwest Latex operations required a higher degree of skill necessitating a longer period to check out an operator Counsel for the General Counsel argues, however, that the purpose of the rule was to restrain and coerce the employees from engaging in the activities for which Seaton was discharged. The same argument could be made of any probationary penod but in this instance there is no evidence that the rule was intended for that purpose or was used for that purpose, "An unlawful purpose is not lightly to be inferred." N L.R.B v Columbus Marble Works, 233 F.2d 406, 413 365 (C. A. 5) Nor are nondiscriminatory and business motivated changes in working conditions violations of the Act J S Dillon & Sons v. N L R B , 338 F.2d 395 (C.A. 10), Southeastern Motor Truck Lines 113 NLRB 1122 Counsel for the General Counsel has the burden to prove unlawful motivation and effect. Quality Castings Co. v. N L.R.B 325 F 2d 36 (C.A. 6), which he has failed to do I conclude that there is insufficient evidence to sustain the complaint's allegation of unlawful promises of benefits in order to induce employees from becoming members of a union or engaging in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW General Counsel has failed to establish by a preponderance of substantial credible evidence of probative value that the Respondent discharged employee John T Seaton, or interfered with, restrained, or coerced its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act, in violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act RECOMMENDED ORDER It is ordered that the complaint in Case 23-CA-2971 be, and the same hereby is, dismissed Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation