Stokely-Van Camp, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsFeb 11, 1954107 N.L.R.B. 1137 (N.L.R.B. 1954) Copy Citation STOKELY-VAN CAMP, INC. 1 137 professional employees , guards, and supervisors as defined in the Act. 5. The Employer contends that an election should not be directed at this time because it anticipates expanding its opera- tions . To improve production and eliminate certain seasonal aspects of its business , the Employer intends to alter its manufacturing process and to manufacture additional products. At the time of the hearing the Employer had purchased machin- ery for the new operations , but was unable to state the number or classification of employees it expected to employ in the expanded business . In view of these facts, we are of the opinion that the substantial number of employees now employed should not be deprived of an opportunity to express their desires as to a bargaining representative because of the contemplated changes in operations . We find that a determination of repre- sentatives at this time is not premature , and we shall direct an immediate election. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication. ] STOKELY-VAN CAMP, INC. and UNITED STEELWORKERS OF AMERICA , CIO, Petitioner. Case No . 35-RC-813 . Febru- ary 11, 1954 SUPPLEMENTAL DECISION, ORDER , AND CERTIFICATION OF REPRESENTATIVES On February 1, 1953, the Boardissuedits Decision and Direc- tion of Election herein1 finding appropriate a unit of production and maintenance employees, including viner station and seasonal employees 2 at the Employer' s Greenwood, Indiana, plant, and directing the election to be held at or about the time of the employment peak of the next canning season on a date to be determined by the Regional Director. Thereafter, the Employer filed motions : (1) On June 8, 1953, to require the Regional Director to comply with the Board' s Decision and hold the election in September or October rather than on June 16 as determined by the Regional Director; and (2 ) June 15, 1953, to correct the unit determination by excluding viner station employees and Mexican and British West Indies nationals from the unit . On June 16 , the Board denied the Employer's first motion and the election proceeded on that date as scheduled. Following the election , the parties were furnisheda tally of ballots. The tally showed that of approximately 115 eligible voters, 94 cast ballots, of which 55 were for, and 12 against, the Petitioner , 26 were challenged and 1 ballot was void. 1102 NLRB 1259. 2lncluded among the seasonal employees were Mexican and British West Indies nationals. 107 NLRB No. 239. 1138 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABLR RELATIONS BOARD On June 22, 1953, the Employer filed timely objections to conduct of the election and to conduct allegedly affecting the results of the election. In accordance with the Rules and Regulations of the Board, the Regional Director conducted an investigation of these objections, and on August 7, 1953, issued and duly served upon the parties his report on objections, recommending that the Board overrule the objections and issue the proper certification of representatives. The Employer thereafter filed timely exceptions to the report, with a sup- porting brief. Timing of the Election The Employer reiterates the position set forth in its motion of June 8, to the effect thatthe Regional Director, by scheduling and holding the election in June rather than in September or October when the employment peak was greater, acted contrary to the Board's Decision and Direction of Election. This motion was denied by the Board because nopersuasive reason to grant the immediate relief requested was advanced. We have recon- sidered the motion and again find it without merit. The Regional Director, in his report, stated that the eligibility and the election date in June occurred when there was apeak employment of 115, which was comparable to that of the earlier peak in 1951 and approximately 46 percent of the highest peak during the entire 1952 season; and that 94 of the 115 eligible voters participated. Thus, the employment peak at the time of the election was both substantial and representative. Moreover, the size of the employment peak is but one of many considerations governing the Board and the Regional Director in the determination of a valid election date.' Under these circumstances, we are of the opinion that, in setting the date of the election in June, the Regional Director has complied with the Board' s Decision. 4 Accordingly, we shall overrule the Employer's objections in this respect. Unit Correction The Employer also reiterates the position set forth in its motion of June 15 to correct the unit found appropriate in the Board's Decision by excluding (1) viner station employees; and (2) Mexican and British West Indies nationals . For the reasons hereinafter set forth, we shall grant the motion with respect to the exclusion of the Mexican and British West Indies nationals, but not with respect to the viner station employees. 3Libby, McNeil & Libby, 90 NLRB 279. 4 We find no merit in the Employer's objection based on the refusal and failure of the Regional Director to supply it with copies of correspondence between the Regional Director and the Board as they are confidential. intraoffice documents and as they, in any event, would not have affected our ultimate conclusion herein. STOKELY-VAN CAMP, INC. 1139 Viner Station Employees The Employer' s operations include 16 viner stations, each equipped with machines to separate the fruit from pods and to remove bits of stem and other foreign matter . Each spring the stations are set up by the Employer and operated through- out the season until fall when they are torn down and stored for the next season . Practically all the stations are located in central farming areas, 4 to 28 miles from the Employer's plant, near farms raising the crops for the Employer. The Employer contracts with individual farmers to deliver their crops to the viner stations . Thus, the farmers perform the actual harvesting operations of cutting , raking , and loading the crops on trucks and transporting them to the viner stations where the Employer first obtains control of them. The vining operations are performed by employees of the Employer and constitute , in effect , the first step in the Employer 's canning operations. In our original Decision , we considered this specific issue and found , contrary to the Employer, that the viner station employees were not agricultural employees within the meaning of the Act. We held that the viner station employees were a part of the canning operation , which is a separate commer- cial enterprise and not an incident to or in connection with farming operations , and that the viner station employees per- form no functions in connection with the planting , cultivating, or harvesting of crops . Accordingly, we included the viner station employees in the unit found appropriate . As we find no persuasive basis for changing our Decision in this respect, we reaffirm it and deny the Employer' s motion to exclude the viner station employees from the unit. Mexican and British West Indies Nationals The record discloses that Mexican and British West Indies nationals were recruited and imported into this country for agricultural work on a temporary basis in accordance with procedures established by the Governments of the United States, Mexico, and the British West Indies .5 These foreign nationals are required to execute individual standard work contracts with the Employer , covering in great detail the terms and conditions of their employment . The Mexican work contracts are executed under governmental supervision and may not be altered either by the employee or the Employer, individually or jointly, with- 5 Mexican workers are imported pursuant to Public Law 78 , 65 Stat . 119 (7 USCA 1461) and to the Migrant Labor Agreement of 1951 between the United States and Mexico. There is no specific statute applicable only to the importation of the British West Indies nationals but they are permitted temporary entry into this country under the McCarran- Walter Act, Public Law 414, 66 Stat. 163 (8 USCA 1184 ( c)) and are recruited and imported under an established procedure similar to that applicable to the Mexican. 1 140 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD out the consent of the United States and Mexican Governments. As to the work contracts of the British West Indies nationals, the Government of the particular British West Indies subdivi- sion from which the worker comes is a party to the agreement. Under these circumstances, we agree with the Employer that these individual standardized contracts effectively remove for all practical purposes, these foreign nationals from the sphere of compulsory bargaining through our certification. Accord- ingly, we believe that the Mexican and British West Indies nationals should be excluded from the unit and, we shall so amend the unit. Our determination herein cannot affect the results of the election because (1) the viner station employees voted subject to challenge and their ballots could not affect the results of the election; and (2) no Mexican or British West Indies national voted in the election. Accordingly, as it appears from the tally of ballots that the Petitioner has secured a majority of the valid votes cast in the election, we shall certify the Petitioner as the collective-bargaining representative of the employees in the appropriate unit as amended herein. ORDER IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the Employer's motion to cor- rect the unit, be, and it hereby is, denied insofar as it would exclude viner station employees from the unit and is granted insofar as it would exclude Mexican and British West Indies nationals, and that the unit found appropriate in the Decision and Direction of Election herein be and it hereby is amended to read as follows: All production, maintanance, and warehouse employees of the Employer at its Greenwood, Indiana, plant, including seasonal, viner station, and machine-shop employees, viner station supervisors, and field men, but excluding Mexican and British West Indies nationals, office clerical, professional, sales, laboratory, and agricultural employees, agronomist, over-the-road driver, guards, labeling machine operators, and all other supervisors as defined in the Act, constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act. [The Board certified United Steelworkers of America, CIO, as the designated collective-bargaining representative of the employees of the Employer in the amended unit.] Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation