The M. B. Farrin Lumber Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 12, 1957117 N.L.R.B. 575 (N.L.R.B. 1957) Copy Citation THE M. B . FARRIN LUMBER CO. 575 The M. B. Farrin Lumber Co. and Local Union No. 156, Uphol- sterers' International Union of North America , AFL-CIO, Peti- tioner. Case No. 9-RC-2913. March,1 2, 1957 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 Thomas M. Sheeran, hearing officer. The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. 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 organizations involved claim to represent certain em- ployees of the Employer.' 3. The Employer and Intervenor Mine Workers request dismissal of the petition on the ground of contract bar. On October 15, 1955, the Employer, as named in this proceeding, and the Mine Workers entered into a collective-bargaining agreement which, by its terms, was to remain in effect until October 15, 1956. In support of the contract- bar contention, the record contains evidence showing that about No- vember 18, 1955, the D. B. Frampton Company acquired all of the Em- ployer's outstanding corporate stock and that on January 20, 1956, the Employer and the Mine Workers executed a new collective-bar- gaining contract with a termination date of October 15, 1957. The assertion is made that either the identity of the Employer was changed because of the stock purchase and therefore the 1955 contract is irrele- vant to this proceeding or that the Board's premature extension doc- trine does not apply in this case because the petition was not timely filed with respect to a purported automatic renewal date in the 1955 contract. The change in stock ownership resulted in new management for the Employer; 2 however, there has been little if any change among the rank-and-file employees, and the Employer has continued the same type of lumber business operations. We do not agree that such change 1 Intervenor Local Union 287, United Construction Workers, Division of District 50, affiliated with the United Mine Workers of America, has questioned the sufficiency of the Petitioner's showing of interest Showing of interest Is a matter for administrative determination , and we are administratively satisfied that the _ Petitioner has sufficient showing among the Employer 's emnlovees The Mine Workers moved to intervene on the basis of it contractual interest in the em- ployees sought by the Petitioner . The Petitioner and Intervenor United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners of America , AFL-CIO, contend the Mine Workers ' contract is invalid and cannot serve as a basis for intervention in this proceeding and also claim that the Mine Workers' noncompliance with the filing requirements of Section 9 (f), (g), and (h) of the Act is ground for denying intervention We find the Aline Workers ' contract Is sufficient basis for its intervention in this proceeding , but In view of the Aline Workers' noncompliance status we shall not place it on the ballot in the election directed herein. Congoleunt - Nairn , Inc, 115 NLRB 1202 'We note that one of Employer 's two signatories to the October 1955 contract , executed before the stock transfer , was "Robert Henderson" and 1 of the Employer 's 2 signers of the January 1956 agreement , signed after the stock sale, was "R W Henderson " The 117 NLRB No. 91. 576 DECISIONS 'OT NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD in the internal structure of the managerial hierarchy brought into ,existence a new and separate company. The stock sale had no mani- fest effect upon the legal identity or responsibility of the corporate em- ployer. The stock transfer merely had the same effect as any change in corporate control resulting from a stranger's or minority stock- holder's acquisition of the majority of a corporation's stock. It is also significant that there was no change in the composition of the con- tract unit of employees or in the operations of the Company. We ac- cordingly find that, for the purposes of this proceeding, the Employer in January 1956 was identical to the one that signed the October 1955 contract.3 It thus becomes necessary to consider the alternative issue raised by the Employer and the Mine Workers-the timeliness of the petition in relation to the 1955 contract. As indicated above, the Employer and the Mine Workers, in their alternative contention, claim that the 1955 agreement was, by its terms, automatically renewed for a further fixed period because neither of the parties gave notice at least 60 days before October 15, 1956, to change or amend the agreement. They argue that the petition in this case was not timely filed because it was filed on September 26, 1956, less than 60 days before October 15. However, we do not read the 1955 contract as providing for automatic fixed period renewal. The 1955 contract contains the following clause: ARTICLE XI This AGREEMENT shall be and remain in effect from the 1&/i day of October, 1955, to and including the 15th day of Octo- ber, 1956. In the event that either party desires to change or amend this agreement at the time of its termination, written notice shall be given to the other party sixty (60) days before the date of expira- tion, and negotiations shall be started within ten (10) days of'the date or (sic) receipt of said notice. The only express termination or expiration date appearing on the face of the contract is October 15, 1956. However, we recognize a certain ambiguity in the second paragraph of article XI. Reading the 2 sections together, we hold that at most the intention of the parties to the contract may have been that either party, by giving 60 claws' notice of desire "to change or amend" could continue the terms of the contract in effect until an indefinite date in the future. In the record does not disclose whether the "Henderson " on the respective documents was the same individual , but some doubt is cast upon the completeness of the change , in the Em- plover's management 3 Inapposite therefore are those Board decisions holding that a collective -bargaining contract between a union and a fownter owner of a business does not bind a 'purchaser when the latter did not participate in the execution of the agreement See, Poi example, Jolty Giant Lumber Co, 114 NLRB 413 Compaie also L B Spear and Company, 106 NLRB 057, wherein the contract of one company was held not to be a bar after the sale of its stock and corporate entity because there followed a complete merger and integra- tion of the personnel and operations of two separate corporations , resulting in a new, appropiiate grouping of employees THE M.' B. FARRIN LUMBER CO. 577 absence of any further fixed period established in the contract itself or of any subsequent fixed expiration date, we can only conclude that at best the agreement as a whole provided for its continuance for an indefinite period after October 15, 1956 4 As such, following a con- tract for a fixed term, it could not constitute a bar.' Furthermore, as the January 1956 agreement extended the expiration date of the existing 1955 contract it constituted a premature extension agree- ment and could not operate as a bar to the petition timely filed with respect to the expiration date of the 1955 contracts -We find therefore that a question affecting conunerce exists con- cerning the representation of employees of the Employer within the meaning of Section 9 (c) (1) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. 4. All parties agree that a production and maintenance unit of the .Employer's employees is appropriate. They disagree, however, on the unit placement of salaried inspectors. The Carpenters, contrary to the other parties, would include the salaried inspectors in the unit. The salaried inspectors inspect and grade lumber. They are hired especially for their jobs from outside the plant and do not interchange ,with other employees. A minimum of 5 months education in a special ,school for lumber inspecting is desirable but is not required by the Employer, and the inspectors possess a skill different from those of the other employees. They are, as their job title denotes, salaried anll ,have a vacation plan different from that of the hourly paid-production employees. On the other hand the salaried inspectors do physical work; they use a measuring tool and mark and physically handle lumber. They exercise no supervisory functions. It appears that the salaried inspectors possess a distinctive skill and have some job characteristics different from those of the Employer's general produc- tion and maintenance employees. However, such minor distinctive- ness does not suffice to set the inspectors apart from the production and maintenance employees. As the salaried inspectors perform ' an ,integrated function in the Employer's production process, as they are not supervisors, and as there is no persuasive reason for excluding them, we shall include them in the production and maintenance unit.' We find,that all production ,and' maintenance-,.employees-,ofthe Employer at its Cincinnati, Ohio, plant, including salaried inspectors, but excluding all office and plant clerical employees, professional employees, guards, and supervisors as defined in the Act, constitute a 'The hearing officer rejected the Employei's offer to prove by oral testimony that in earlier years the Employer and the Aline Workers, had construed . conttacts containing clauses ', similar to article XI of the 1955 contract as providing , for automatic renewal In view of our consideration of the clause as one providing for indefinite extension of the 1955 agreement-the most favorable interpretation for the Employer that can be ascribed to that agreement-we find that the heal mg officer 's ruling was not prejudicial New Jer.scij Porcelain Company, 110 NLRB 790 e Congoleu in-Nau-n. Inc , supra 71, eneen Pioduct4, Inc .81 NLRP. 492 4 2 5 7 54-5 7-vnl 11 i 28 578 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 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.] MEMBER BEAN took no part in the consideration of the above Deci- sion and Direction of Election. Paul M. O'Neill International Detective Agency, Inc. and New Jersey Guards Union , Petitioner. Case No. 2-RC-8588. March 19, 1957 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 Leonard J. Lurie, 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 National Labor Relations Act, the Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three-member panel [Chairman Leedom and Members Murdock and Bean]. Upon the entire record in this case, the Board finds : 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act. 2. The labor organizations named below claim to represent certain employees of the Employer.' 3. A question affecting commerce exists concerning the representa- tion of certain employees of the Employer, within the meaning of Section 9 (c) '(1) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act 2 1 The Independent Guards Union was permitted to intervene on the basis of a current contractual interest in the employees Petitioner seeks to represent . Contrary to Peti- 'tioner's contentions , Intervenor is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2 (5) of the Act as it was formed for the purpose of representing employees and negoti- ating .with the Employer regarding wages and working conditions . Burroughs Corpora- tion , 116 NLRB 1118. 2 Petitioner contends that the contract which is currently in effect between the Em- ployer and Intervenor and which contains a union -security provision does not bar this proceeding because Intervenor first achieved compliance with the filing requirements of the Act on December 26, 1956 , after both the execution of the contract and the filing of the petition . The Employer offered to prove that on November 21, 1956, 2 days before the execution of the contract, Intervenor 's officers executed the required forms for com- pliance, that Intervenor 's secretary failed to file these documents with the Board and Department of Labor through an excusable ignorance of the technical requirements of the filing provisions of the Act , and that Intervenor believed itself in compliance with the Act when the contract was executed and on November 27, 1956, the day the petition was filed. The Employer argues that Intervenor having thus indicated its intention to comply with the Act, the contract should be held a bar under the rule announced in Dichello, Incorpo- rated, 107 NLRB 1642 . In that case , although the intervenor actually achieved compli- ance only after the contract was executed and the petition filed, the intervenor be- fore executing the contract filed with the Board the required non-Communist affidavits and a certificate of intent to remain in compliance with Section 9 (f) and (g) of the 117 NLRB No. 97. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation