Thalhimer Brothers, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 7, 195193 N.L.R.B. 726 (N.L.R.B. 1951) Copy Citation 726 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD THALHIMER BROTHERS, INCORPORATED and HOTEL & RESTAURANT EM- PLOYEES AND BARTENDERS INTERNATIONAL UNION, AMERICAN FEDERA- TION OF LABOR, PETITIONER. Case No. 5-RC-716. March 7, 1951 Decision and Direction of Election 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. At the hearing, the Employer moved to dismiss the petition upon various grounds stated below. The hearing officer reserved ruling on the motion for the Board. For reasons stated hereinafter, the motion is denied.' 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 powers 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, a Virginia corporation, operates a retail depart- ment store in Richmond, Virginia. During the fiscal year ending January 31, 1950, the Employer purchased approximately $14,933,000 worth of goods, of which 90 percent was obtained from sources outside the State. During the same period, the Employer's sales amounted to $24,315,000, of which approximately 10 percent represented sales to customers outside the State. On these facts, we find, contrary to the Employer's contention, that it is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act, and that it will effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction in this case.2 2. The labor organization named below claims to represent certain employees of the Employer. ' One of the reasons advanced by the Employer in support of its motion to dismiss is based on the following facts : In May 1950 , several months before the instant petition was filed, the Petitioner filed a petition for certification of representatives in a unit similar to that here requested . The Regional Director dismissed the petition and no appeal was taken from this action . The' instant petition was filed on August 25 , 1950 It is the Employer 's contention that as the instant petition is the second one to have been filed by the Petitioner within a short period , it "overburdens the Company and makes mockery of the procedural rules of the Board " In our opinion, the Petitioner is not overburdening the Employer by its action in filing the present petition . Furthermore , neither the Act nor the Board 's rules place any limit on the number of petitions that may be filed con- terning the representation of a unit of employees , although the Act limits the number of elections which may be held within the same bargaining unit or subdivision thereof within a period of 12 months Accordingly, we find no merit to the contention of the Employer 2 Federal Dairy Co., Inc, 91 NLRB 638 At the hearing and in its brief, the Employer contested the Board 's jurisdiction on the ground that the employees in the unit here requested work in departments which are not engaged in commerce . We find no merit to this contention as the departments in question are an integral part of the Employer's operations . Thalhimer Brothers, Incorporated , 83 NLRB 664 and 81 NLRB 1175. 93 NLRB No. 106. THALHIMER BROTHERS , INCORPORATED 727 3. A 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. The Petitioner seeks a unit composed of all the restaurant employees employed at the Employer 's retail store, including waitresses , chefs, dishwashers , salad mixers , kitchen helpers, and soda fountain workers. The Employer opposes the establishment of a separate unit for its restaurant employees and contends that only a store-wide unit is appropriate. The Employer maintains five different eating places in its store for the convenience of customers and *employees . These are the soda fountain in the basement ; the soda fountain on the first floor; the soup bar on the mezzanine ; the tearoom , also known as the T-Cart on the third floor; and the employees ' cafeteria on the sixth floor. Each of these eating places has its own kitchen , makes its own purchases, and prepares and cooks all the food it serves. The employees assigned to these restaurant units, of whom there are between 60 and 70, are classified as chefs, waitresses , dishwashers , salad mixers , kitchen helpers, and soda fountain workers. These are the employees whom the Petitioner is here seeking. In a representation proceeding decided in March 1949, a request was made by another labor organization for a separate unit of the Employer 's restaurant employees .3 In that case , the Board held that it was inappropriate to segregate the restaurant employees apart from the other store employees for purposes of collective bargaining and ordered that the petition be dismissed. The Employer contends that the Board 's earlier decision is res judicate upon the question of whether the Employer's restaurant employees constitute an appro- priate unit and therefore the Board may not now reexamine the mat- ter. We find no merit to this contention. The judicial doctrine of res judicata has no applicability here .4 The Board, moreover, has repeatedly held that a prior determination as to the appropriate bar- gaining unit does not preclude a redetermination of the unit appro- priate for the employees when a later petition may be filed.' The Employer also contends that the restaurant employees do not constitute a sufficiently distinct and homogeneous group to be set apart for collective bargaining purposes . The record shows that there is a separate manager in charge of each of the Employer's restaurant 3 81 NLRB 1175. 4 Ahlberg Bearing Company, 56 NLRB 1794 ; Pacific - Greyhound Lines , 9 NLRB 557. 6Inter- City Advertising Company of Greensboro , N C, :Inc ., 89 NLRB 1103 ; Owens- Corning Fiberglas Corporation , 81 NLRB 441 ; Thompson Products , Inc, 73 NLRB 548; Endicott Johnson Corporation , 67 NLRB 1342 ; General Motors Corporation, 64 NLRB 688. We also note in this connection , that the Board 's earlier decision was subsequently overruled in the Allied Stores cjse, discussed supra. 728 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD units to whom the employees are directly responsible. These man- agers are accountable to the divisional merchandise manager who in addition has authority over the supervisors in the following six sales departments : Candy, bakery, delicatessen, frozen foods, optical, and camera and photo reflex. Although dealing with foodstuffs, the candy, bakery, delicatessen, and frozen foods departments appear to be operated like the Employer's other sales departments with the bulk of the personnel consisting of salesclerks. They neither make their foodstuffs except for the salads sold in the delicatessen depart- ment nor prepare them for consumption on the Employer's premises. It further appears that all the Employer's store employees, both selling and nonselling, are hired under the same processing procedure, are carried on a single payroll, and receive the same vacation, pension, insurance, and discount benefits. Unlike the other employees, however, the restaurant employees receive their noonday meals as part of their compensation, and two 30-minute relief periods during the day, instead of a full hour lunch period. Their working schedules, moreover, are dependent upon the hours which the various restaurant units are open rather than upon the opening and closing of the store as is the case of the sales and office employees.6 Recently in Allied Stores of Ohio,' the Board had occasion to con- sider the appropriateness of a separate unit for restaurant employees in a retail department store and concluded that such employees were entitled to separate representation. In that case, the Board observed that restaurant workers had among themselves a mutuality of em- ployment interests not shared by other retail stores, selling or nonsell- ing employees, and that this mutuality existed by reason of their singularly different work and training skills. In accordance with its findings, the Board in that case overruled its earlier decision involving the Employer's restaurant workers. As we do not believe that the record here warrants a departure from the Board's decision in the Allied Stores case, we shall establish a separate unit for the Employer's restaurant employees." We find that all the restaurant employees employed at the Em- ployer's store in Richmond, Virginia, including waitresses, chefs, dishwashers, salad mixers, kitchen helpers, and soda fountain workers, but excluding guards, professional employees, and supervisors as 6 Although the store opens at 9 a in except on Mondays, the basement soda fountain opens at 8 a in while the soup bar, the tearoom, and the employee cafeteria do not open until 11 a. in. 4 Allied Stores of Ohio, d/b/ry A. Polsky Company, 90 NLRB 1868 8 Board Member Murdock, who did not participate in the Allied Stores decision although agreeing in principle with the unit determination made therein, is of the opinion that the petition in that case sh^uld have been dismissed for reasons not material to the issues involved in this case Therefore, his concurrence in the upit finding made herein does not imply that he agrees that the Allied Stores case was properly decided. BELK'S DEPARTMENT STORE OF SAVANNAH, GA., INC. 729 defined in the Act, constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication in this volume.] BELK'S DEPARTMENT STORE OF SAVANNAH, GA., INC. and RETAIL CLERKS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION, LOCAL UNION 1604, AFL , PETITIONER. Case No. 10-RC-1079. March 7,1951 Decision and Direction of Election Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before Clarence D. Musser, 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 powers in connection with this case to a three-member panel [Chairman Herzog and Members Houston and Reynolds]. Upon the entire record in this case, the Board finds : 1. The Employer is a Georgia corporation which operates a depart- ment store in Savannah, Georgia. During the year 1950, the Em- ployer purchased approximately $400,000 worth of goods for resale, more than 50 percent of which was shipped to it from outside the State of Georgia. All sales were local. More than 50 percent of the capital stock of the Employer is owned by the Employer's president, W. H. Belk, and his children, who also hold substantial, and in some cases, controlling amounts of stock in more than 250 separately incorporated retail stores located throughout the southern States? W. H. Belk and two members of his family also are the officers and part owners of two North Carolina corporations, Belk's Stores Buy- ing Service, Inc., and Belk Brothers' Company of Charlotte, North Carolina. These corporations operate buying services, the former in Charlotte, North Carolina, the latter in New York City, for the use of the many retail stores in which the Belk family has an interest. Each of the service corporations has offices and display rooms where samples of manufacturers' merchandise are on display. Goods are bought only by store managers or buyers in the name of the individ- 1 At the hearing the Employer moved to dismiss the petition on the ground that it is not engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. For the reasons given in paragraph 1, bel°w, the motion is denied 2 There are 64 stores in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Virginia alone, in which the Belk family owns a controlling interest 93 NLRB No. 110. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation