Traveleze Trailer Co., Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 10, 1967163 N.L.R.B. 348 (N.L.R.B. 1967) Copy Citation 348 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Ludwig, Norman GC-161 McElrath, Estel GC-165 McElrath, Heman GC-89 McMillian, Dempsey GC-121 McMunn, Larry GC-174 McMunn, Leslie GC-190 Moore, Johnny GC-164 Moore, Kenneth GC-189 Nettleton, Clarence GC-90 Pearson, Richard GC-101 Pearson, Tommy GC-103 Perkins, Harold GC-58 Powell, Earl GC-148 Rice , Frankie GC-175 Riley, Michael GC-43 Rose, George GC-65 Rose, John GC-160 Schrader, Buford GC-118 Sims, James GC-162 Smithson, Andy GC-81 Stone, Bob GC-177 Strong, Homer GC-46 Thomas, Charles (Michael) GC-178 Van Gennip, Charley T. GC-126 Vincent, Carl GC-45 Wages, William GC-68 Walker, Bill GC-152 Walker, Billy GC-88 Walker, Charles GC-151 Walker, Charley GC-150 Waynick, George GC-30 Williams, Elmer GC-179 Wood, Earl GC-158 Cowell, Jimmy GC-124 Brandt, Jimmy GC-61 DePew, Richard GC-94 Crosby, John GC-38 Battles, John P. GC-23 Batchelor, Bob GC-49 Rose, Jimmy GC-63 Walton, Larry GC-104 Green, Acy Lee GC-105 Elsworth, Glendle GC-106 Proffer, Rodney GC-123 Traveleze Trailer Company , Inc. and International Union , United Automobile, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America , UAW-AFL-CIO. Cases 31-CA-145-1, 145-2, 145-3, 145-4, 167-2, 174-2, and 174-3. March 10, 1967 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MCCULLOCH AND MEMBERS FANNING AND BROWN On October 26, 1966, Trial Examiner James R. Hemingway issued his Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that the Respondent had en- gaged in and was engaging in certain unfair labor practices and recommending that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action, as set forth in the attached Trial Examiner's De- cision. He further found that the Respondent had not engaged in certain other unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint. and recommended dis- missal as to them. Thereafter, the General Counsel and Charging Party filed exceptions to the Decision and supporting briefs, and the Respondent filed a brief. 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 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 the case, and hereby adopts the findings, con- clusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner. ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board adopts as its Order the Recom- mended Order of the Trial Examiner and hereby orders that the Respondent, Traveleze Trailer Company, Inc., Sun Valley, California, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall take the action set forth in the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE JAMES R. HEMINGWAY, Trial Examiner : Upon a series of charges filed by International Union , United Automobile, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW-AFL-CIO, herein called the Union,' a complaint was issued on December 30, 1965, alleging that Traveleze Trailer Company, Inc., herein called the Respondent , had engaged in unfair labor nractices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act (29 U.S.C. Sec. 151 , et seq .). The complaint alleged that the Respondent discharged seven named employees on various dates between June and August 1965, because said employees had formed , joined, or assisted the Union and sought to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing and engaged in union or other concerted activities for the purposes of collective bargaining or mutual aid or protection , and that on several dates in July and August 1965 , the Respondent withdrew desirable work tasks from , and assigned more onerous work tasks to, its employees . The complaint also alleges ' The four charges numbered 31-CA- 145-1, 2, 3, and 4, were filed on August 13, 1965; the charge in Case 31-CA-167-2 was filed on August 31, 1965; and the two charges numbered 31-CA- 174-2 and 174-3 were filed on September 10,1965. 163 NLRB No. 43 TRAVELEZE TRAILER COMPANY, INC. 349 that the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act by various acts and statements listed in the complaint. With the exception of two corrections in dates of discharge, the Respondent's answer, filed on January 11, 1966, admitted the alleged discharges but denied that they were for the cause alleged. The Respondent's answer also denies the allegations of unfair labor practice under Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. Pursuant to notice, a hearing was held before me at Los Angeles, California, on various dates between April 19 and 27,1966.2 From my observation of the witnesses and upon the entire record in the case, I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. THE BUSINESS OF THE RESPONDENT The complaint alleges and the answer admits that Respondent is, and has been at all times material herein, a California corporation with an office and places of business located in Sun Valley, California,3 where it is engaged in the manufacture of house trailers. During the year preceding the issuance of the complaint, Respondent, in the course and conduct of its business operations, shipped from its plants located within the State of California directly to points located outside the State of California products valued in excess of $50,000. No issue is raised with respect to the Board's jurisdiction, and I find that the Board has jurisdiction and that it will effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction in this case. II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED The Union is a labor organization admitting to membership, among others, employees of Respondent. III. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Plant Management and Facts Bearing on Credibility of Witnesses 1. Supervisors Management of the Respondent at the Penrose plant in April 1965 was headed by Kenneth Dixon, vice president;' Dave Stahl, vice president and general manager; John Bowater, secretary-treasurer; Buster Stewart, production manager; Martis Bone, foreman of the fiberglass department (the only foreman); and a number of leadmen for other departments.5 The General Counsel contends that leadmen are supervisors, while the Respondent contends that they are not supervisors within the meaning of the Act. The evidence, which is conflicting, bears only on the issue of surveillance. It is conceded that leadmen could not hire or discharge employees, but it was their duty to assign work and see that it was properly done. They could recommend discharge to Manager Stewart, but the latter did not always discharge on the leadman's recommendation. Stewart testified that he would make an independent investigation before he decided to discharge a man on a leadman's recommendation. Sometimes, inst'ad of discharging the man whom the leadman recommended be discharged, Stewart would transfer that man to another department. The evidence is conflicting as to when, if ever, Stewart would discharge a man without an "independent" investigation. Larry Hearne, who had been a leadman with the Respondent until September 1965, testified that he had discharged one man and recommended discharge for five or six. He testified that he discharged one man for using foul language. He was unable to remember the name of this man but gave a bare description of him. There was no corroborative evidence of this discharge. Hearne recommended to Stewart that he discharge a man by the name of Clagg for violating the rule against smoking in the plant, after repeated warnings. Stewart, according to Hearne, told him to send the man up to him. Hearne did so and the man was terminated on February 12, 1965. Stewart testified that after Hearne had told him this man was smoking, he, himself, went and saw Clagg smoking before he discharged him. Clagg did not testify. Leadmen occasionally recommend a man for a raise, and Stewart testified that at times he might ask a leadman how one of his men was doing, whether he got on well with other men. Hearne testified that he spent 85 percent of his time supervising and 15 percent working with his hands. A witness for the Respondent reversed those percentages as to Hearne. Hearne testified that he had authority to permit a man to leave early. This was not refuted, but it is not clear when this authority might be exercised. The only evidence available indicates that this practice of excusing men early was limited to the end of the day when there might not be anything more for a man to do during the last few minutes of the workday and even then, I deduce, the leadman was supposed to notify Stewart. There is some evidence that the authority of leadmen might not have been uniform and that some of the leadmen might have been given more authority than others. In discussing with the Union (in September 1965, after the Union had been certified) whether or not the leadmen should or should not be in the unit, the Respondent agreed with the Union that two of the leadmen-Hearne and Leon Posnoski-should be excluded, while the others should be included.6 Although this took place some months after the alleged interference, restraint, and coercion, it may indicate that Hearne had somewhat more authority than other leadmen. However, Hearne might have expected more backing from Stewart respecting his authority than other leadmen were given because he was on friendly personal relations with Stewart, having been fishing with Stewart and having taken a trip to Las Vegas with him, and thus Hearne might have gone further in his exercise of authority than was justified. In any event, Hearne's recommendations of discharge were not, in a majority of instances, accepted by Stewart, who sometimes t Minor errors in the transcript have been corrected by the Trial Examiner 1 There are two plants in Sun Valley, one called the Penrose plant and the other the Tuxford plant A third plant is located in Burbank , California 4 Dixon's father was president , but his "office" was at Palm Springs, California Kenneth Dixon was in active charge at the plant. s There was a top of about 140 or 150 employees at the Penrose plant at the height of the seasonal business, with a low of about 80 The leadmen were not all identified by department and there is no evidence to show the number of men supervised by each of the leadmen ' The unit agreed on before the election included leadmen 350 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD transferred a man from Hearne's department to another rather than discharge him as Hearne had recommended. The evidence as a whole fails to convince me that leadmen at Respondent's plants are supervisors within the meaning of the Act 2. Credibility This case turns largely on a resolution of credibility. In resolving credibility, I have taken into account not only my observation of the witnesses but also the following facts: The key witness for the General Counsel was Leadman Hearne. The key witness for the Respondent was Production Manager Stewart. These titles were applicable to them at the time of the events herein related Hearne, however, left the employ of the Respondent in September 1965 and was elsewhere employed at the date of the heating. Stewart left the Respondent's employ, for a time, in early November 1965 Efforts of a Board investigator who was investigating the charges herein to get Hearne to respond to telephone calls with a view toward getting a statement proved ineffectual until November 2, 1965, at a time when Hearne learned that Stewait was no longer employed by the Respondent Then Hearne gave a statement to the Board's agent7 and immediately thereafter telephoned Stewart, told Stewart that he had heard he was no longer with the Respondent, and then told Stewart that he had just given a statement to a Board agent The following day, November 3, 1965, Stewait also gave a statement to a Board agent Early the following month (December 1965), Stewart was rehired by the Respondent to do carpentry work. On about January 25, 1966, Stewart was made plant manager and production manager of the Respondent's Burbank plant, the smallest of its three plants . Two weeks before the date of the hearing herein, when the Union began picketing the Respondent, Stewart closed the Burbank plant , brought his crew to the Penrose plant (where he had been production manager through October 1965), and was made assistant production and plant manager of that plant Stewart testified on direct examination for the Respondent that, when Hearne telephoned him on November 2, 1965, to say that he had heard that Stewart had left the Respondent, Hearne had said, "Well, I just wanted to let you know that 1 got them for both of us." When Stewart, according to his own testimony, asked Hearne what Hearne meant by that remark, Hearne replied that "the man from the Labor Board had been trying to get ahold of him for quite a while to take a statement from him," and that when Hearne had learned that Stewart had left the Respondent, he (Hearne) "decided to get John Bowater [Respondent's secretary- treasurer] for pulling out his rose bush." Stewart also testified that Hearne had told him "he agreed with everything the man [Board agent ] asked him." According to Stewart, Hearne had rented an apartment (at one place lie referred to it as a house) from Bowater, and Hearne had done work for Bowater on that property and other property which Bowater owned in the neighborhood, but Bowater stopped using Hearne's services and had come over and painted white a redwood fence (which Hearne had put up to keep his child in the yard) and had pulled up a rosebush which Hearne had put in near the front door, and Stewart testified that this had upset Hearne. Hearne was not recalled to refute any of this testimony, but while he was on the stand as a witness for the General Counsel, Respondent's counsel, on cross-examination, had asked Hearne if he remembered having a discussion about Bowater in which he said that he was "going to make Bowater and the company ... pay for" what Bowater had done to Hearne's rosebushes. Hearne denied that he had had any rosebushes, denied that he said he "got that s-o-b-Bowater" or was was going to get him for "pulling up his rosebushes," and denied that Bowater had ever pulled up any flowers, trees, or shrubs around his house. Since Stewart did not testify to having witnessed any damage to Hearne's rosebushes (if any), his testimony appears to have been based on hearsay. Bowater did not testify I do not find that Hearne made the statement attributed to him by Stewart 8 Nevertheless, there was in Hearne's demeanor and in the circumstances under which he gave a statement to a Board agent that which leads me to believe that Hearne had no affection for the Respondent and that his testimony might have been affected by bias. In his current employment, Hearne was a member of a union (whether voluntary or not does not appear) On the other hand, Stewart's return to Respondent's employ aligned him with the interests of the Respondent. Since he had already given an affidavit to a Board agent before he returned to Respondent's employ, it is not likely that he would have perjured himself by testifying contrary to his affidavit. Of course, I have no way of knowing what part of his testimony might have related to matters which had not been mentioned in his affidavit at all since his affidavit was not introduced in evidence. Stewart's demeanor on the stand, however, did not give the impression of fabrication or deliberate falsehood, although there were indications that, on matters which put him in a bad light, his memory was often sketchy, and I received the impression that lie did not disclose all that he knew. I have, therefore, scrutinized Stewart's testimony and contrary testimony carefully before crediting Stewart's testimony. B. Interference, Restraint, and Coercion The Union began to organize with the distribution of union literature in front of Respondent's Penrose plant on the afternoon of April 20, 1965, by Joseph Marinello, an International representative of the Union. On that afternoon, Production Manager Stewart came to Marinello and asked for one of the leaflets. After reading the leaflet, Stewart commented to Marinello that the Union did not offer any more than the employees already had without a union. Marinello made a second distribution on the morning of April 29, 1965, before the beginning of the workday. Between the Respondent's building and the curb at the street, there was a blacktopped paved area about 29 feet wide. Marinello stood about midway between the building and street and distributed leaflets to employees who arrived early and were waiting to enter the plant when it opened at 7:30. Stewart arrived about 8 or 10 minutes ' Hearne testified that he gave the statement on the day ' I consider it not unlikely that Hearne used a metaphorical Stewart left the Respondent As heretofore stated, Hearne had expression concerning the circumstances of his leaving the been a friend of Stewart Respondent and that Stewart misunderstood TRAVELEZE TRAILER COMPANY, INC. 351 before opening time, and, on seeing Marinello, hd approached and told Marinello that he was on company property and to get out into the street. Marinello replied that he did not believe that he was on company property and that he had a right to be where he was to distribute literature, but that before he came the next time he would ascertain where the property line was. Stewart began using language not approved in polite society and gave Marinello the impression that he was going to strike at him. Marinello commented that he regretted he had not brought a witness with him to hear Stewart's language but that, if Stewart struck him, there would be plenty of witnesses, indicating the employees standing about. When Marinello remarked that he would bring an assistant with him the next time, Stewart said that he was sure Marinello could get plenty of help down on skid row where the winos were. When Marinello did not move, Stewart as he quoted himself, said that he was going to "throw his ... out into the street." At this point, Marinello testified, Stewart swung his fist at him, and he stepped back a couple of feet to avoid it. Stewart denied closing his fist, but he admitted that, with his hand open, he attempted to push Marinello back. Stewart failed to make contact, but Stewart's belligerency and forward thrust of his arm were witnessed by a sizable number of employees who were lined up to get into the plant or who were getting coffee from a canteen truck which regularly came to the plant every morning before work and also at coffeebreaks each morning and each afternoon. Marinello said that if Stewart wanted to get rid of him, he would do better to call the police. Martis (Mike) Bone, a foreman, suggested to Stewart that he go in and telephone the police. Whereupon- the two of them went into the building. Whether or not Stewart closed his fist, he certainly made a belligerent gesture at Marinello that had the appearance of an assault. Since his act was witnessed by employees, I find that, by Stewart's threatening words and action, the Respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of the rights guranteed in Section 7 of the Act.9 Before going to the Respondent's plant again, Marinello went to the city planning department and procured a map which showed the property line as only a foot from the Respondent's building, although Marinello learned at that time that the Respondent was attempting to get the city to return about half the remaining distance between the building and the curb to the Respondent. A week or two after the aforesaid encounter with Stewart, Marinello returned with another International representative of the Union. Stewart approached and told Marinello that he had already told Marinello to get into the street. Marinello told Stewart that he had learned where the property line was and offered Stewart a photostatic copy of the plat. Stewart refused to look at it and said that he would call the police. He did so, but the police arrived after Marinello and his assistant had departed.11 Apparently the telephone call to the police delayed the opening of the plant gates that morning and Marinello was passing out leaflets to the men in the line when Stewart approached and asked, "Do you realize that you can get these people in trouble accepting a leaflet after the whistle has blown?" Stewart told the employees in the line that all the Union wanted was their money, their dues, that "they can't do anything for you." Thereafter Marinello made about nine distributions of literature, and usually Stewart was there to observe the distribution. On either Marinello's fourth or fifth distribution, Stewart told Marinello, "You wino bastard, all you want is their dues." There is no evidence that employees were present at this time. The first union meeting for Respondent's employees was scheduled late in April 1965.11 Marinello testified that this meeting was not announced in writing but was spread by word of mouth through some of his contacts. He named as contacts employees Joseph Darling, Wilber Owens, Gil Sigworth, and Gilbert Garcia.12 Marinello testified that actually two meetings were held that day-one right after work (4 p.m.) and the other at 7 p.m. at a different location.13 Darling, who was a friend of Leadman Daniel Wheeler, testified that he had a conversation with Wheeler sometime before noon that day in which he told Wheeler that he was going to attend the meeting that evening, that Wheeler had advised him not to do so because Hearne would be at the meeting to let the Respondent know who attended the meeting and how many attended, and that Darling would be risking discharge if he went. Wheeler's testimony of the time and content of this conversation was somewhat at variance with that of Darling. Wheeler testified that it was about 3:30 p.m. when he told Darling not to go to the meeting, and he testified that he had told Darling not that Hearne was going to report who was at the meeting but that he, himself, intended to do so, and that he had so told Darling because Darling was a friend of his and he did not want Darling to lose his job. Wheeler testified that he did not know how he learned of the meeting but that, before he had even spoken to Darling, he had, at or about 2:30 p.m., spoken to Hearne, asking the latter if he intended to go to the meeting that evening, and that when Hearne said he intended to, Wheeler told Hearne he would ride there with him. Hearne, whose memory as to details was often not sharp, testified that, in the afternoon, probably as he was leaving for the day, Stewart told him that there was going to be a union meeting that night and asked why he did not go down and see how many would be there, that he agreed to do so, and that Wheeler, who was standing nearby at the time, asked if he could ride with Hearne because he, too, wanted to see what was going on. Hearne could not recall how or when he first learned of the meeting or how he knew where it was, merely supposing that someone had told him. Stewart denied that he had suggested to Hearne that he go to the meeting. He testified that at sometime during the day of the meeting, Hearne had come to him and told him there was going to be a union meeting and asked if it was all right for him to go, that he had replied that certainly it was all right, that he did not care. Stewart also testified that no one else was present at that conversation. Stewart N L R B v Gibbs Corporation, 297 F 2d 649 (C A 5), Altamont Shirt Corporation, 131 NLRB 112 "' Since the Respondent could not require the police to deprive the Union of its right to distribute literature , I find no violation in merely telephoning the police Poray, Inc , 160 NLRB 697 11 The date of this meeting was not fixed to my satisfaction Joseph Darling testified it was on April 23 (a Friday) Later evidence tended to set it as on April 29, a Thursday Marinello testified that when a meeting was announced in one of the union circulars, the distribution was usually made in the evening it Darling and Sigworth are named in the complaint as discriminatees II There is reason to deduce that the 4 p in meeting was arranged by word of mouth on short notice in order to divert Hearne from attending the meeting scheduled for 7 p in 352 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD denied that he had asked Hearne to report to him about the meeting, and testified that he did not know that Wheeler and Hearne were going to return to the plant that night, but that he "figured they would." Stewart's testimony that he said it was certainly all right to go to the union meeting appears out of character with what he admittedly said to others about their union preferences. But, on the other hand, he apparently believed that Hearne and Wheeler were not in sympathy with the Union and that there was no reason for them to go to a meeting except to get information about any employees who might attend. Whether or not Stewart requested Hearne to attend the meeting, I find that he expressed approval of their going in expectation that they would return and report concerning the attendance at the meeting. Other than Hearne and Wheeler only two employees, Joe Darling and Wilbur Owens, went to the Union's hall right after work on that occasion. Darling and Owens drove together in Owens' truck. Hearne drove his car with Wheeler as a passenger and arrived soon after Owens and Darling did. The four of them were taken to a corner office, where Marinello discussed the Union and the problem of organization. They signed cards to be used to support a petition for an election, and Hearne and Wheeler took some union literature. Darling testified that while he was in that corner room of the union hall, he saw Stewart drive past the front of the building, slow down, and then go on. Although he testified that he commented on the fact that Stewart had driven by, no one else in the room apparently saw the car Darling saw, and only Marinello recalled Darling's commenting about it. Hearne, on cross-examination, at first testified that he remembered no one's saying anything about Stewart during the meeting, but when asked whether anyone had said anything about Stewart's driving past, Hearne, after a considerable pause, during which I observed no light of recollection in his eyes, answered, "Seems like I saw him drive past." However, he still recalled no comment about it. I do not give any weight to Hearne's testimony about seeing Stewart drive by. Darling was not questioned about the actions of the driver of the car he identified as Stewart's, whether or not the driver had turned his head to look at the union hall, or how clearly he could see the driver of the car. Stewart denied that he had driven past the union hall as Darling testified. The street on which the union hall was located was not one that Stewart would have had any legitimate occasion to be on at the time However, no evidence was adduced to prove that other cars of the same make as Stewart's were not commonly painted the same color. Futhermore, if Stewart was expecting Hearne and Wheeler to report back to him, there would have been no occasion for him to drive past the union hall. I consider it likely, therefore, that Darling jumped to an unwarranted conclusion. I find the evidence not sufficiently convincing to persuade me that Stewart in fact drove past the union hall at the time testified to by Darling, and I credit Stewart's denial. Following the meeting, Hearne and Wheeler returned and found Stewart at the drinking fountain below his office.14 Hearne told Stewart that they wanted to talk with him in his office. The three of them went up to Stewart's office and there Hearne told Stewart that there were-only four men from the plant at the meeting, naming Darling and Owens as the only other ones besides himself and Wheeler. Wheeler and Hearne gave Stewart the union literature which they had picked up. Stewart testified that Wheeler had told him it was for him to take home and that he "had probably" replied that he had enough toilet tissue at home. Hearne and Wheeler then told Stewart what Marinello had told them about how big the Union was and what benefits employees would have. They told him that Marinello explained that, if the Union had cards of 30 percent of the employees, a petition for an election could be filed and that Marinello had said that he had almost enough at that time. Hearne read some of the literature aloud and Stewart commented that the Union was not offering any benefits that the employees did not already have. Hearne read a passage from the union literature which said that spying on the Union or on union meetings was illegal, and someone jokingly remarked that Hearne would probably go to jail. I find that Stewart knew, when Hearne and Wheeler returned from the meeting, that they intended to make a report to him and that he encouraged them to do so by taking them to his office to make such report, and that, by this conduct, the Respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act.15 Thereafter, although not requested to do by Stewart, Hearne and Wheeler reported to Stewart regarding the number of employees attending other union meetings, Wheeler once telling Stewart that a majority of the employees appeared to be those who worked in the new building. Wheeler testified, however, that after the first meeting he never told Stewart the names of any employees who attended later meetings although he would have if Stewart had asked. Stewart had other informants among the employees, he conceded, who told him about the size of meetings, but he denied that he was told by any of them the identity of employees attending meetings. Stewart did, however, admit that he knew of one union proponent, for he received information from the lead welder that an employee named Alex Aganza had been to the welding shop to try to get employees there to sign cards for the Union.'s Stewart went to where Aganza was then working and told him not to engage in union activities on working time. Stewart then engaged Aganza in a discussion. testified that Stewart talked "roughly" to him and he asked Stewart to "talk like civilized people." Stewart asked Aganza, the only employee at that time to wear a union button, what good the Union would do for him. Aganza replied, "Well, what will I do without a union," and said that he had found a friend in the Union and attempted to explain why he was for it. Among other things, he said that he was being paid $1.75 an hour but the man he was teaching on the job (Sigworth) was being paid $1.95. Aganza quoted Stewart as saying that the Union was a bunch of winos after his money and as asking, "Well, if you don't like this place, why don't you leave?" Aganza spoke of the Union as a benefit for the employees the same as union was good for the United States and that that was why "all these Mexicans we decide to get united." Aganza testified and Stewart denied that Stewart said that if the " Stewart testified that the plant hours were 7 30 a in to 4 p in , that the office was open until 5 p in , and that he was (of the managerial staff) usually the first one there and the first to leave, although he often stayed until 6 or even 10 p in ' 5 Atkins Saw Division of Borg-Warner, 160 NLRB 790 ' The date of this incident was not fixed I judge that it occurred early in May 1965 , soon after the first meeting TRAVELEZE TRAILER COMPANY, INC. Union won the election "all these Mexicans will be 100 miles ... south of the border." This quoted statement does not, literally, make much sense. Perhaps Aganza was attempting to quote what was intended as a veiled threat of discharge, but I am not satisfied that his memory was accurate or complete on this. I believe that Aganza, in recollection, may have confused this with something else that was said or remembered only partly. Accordingly, I find that those words were not spoken in that way by Stewart. Stewart's version was that Aganza had said that, if the Union came in, he (Aganza) would get $3 or $4 an hour and that he (Stewart) had told Aganza that the Union could not get him any more than he was already getting; that he had asked Aganza if he thought the Company would pay $3 or $4 for men like Ayala and Vincent Gonzales who could not even speak English. Stewart quoted Aganza as saying that those people were scum, who swept out his house in Mexico. Stewart quoted himself as telling Aganza that "I would be ashamed of that" and that he would also be ashamed of wearing "that badge" that Aganza had on, referring to Aganza's union button. Stewart also testified that he had asked Aganza, "Why did you leave Mexico?" I believe that both witnesses were relating what they remembered and that (except as found above) the conversation was substantially as each testified. By thus questioning Aganza in a forceful manner about his union views the Respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. Gilbert Sigworth, an alleged discriminatee, who came up to hear part of the conversation between Stewart and Aganza, above related, testified, "I started talking about how good the Union was and the benefits of the Union ..." and "Mr. Stewart then said, `Well, if you like the Union so well, why don't you stay back where you came from?"' It is apparent to me that this was not an accurate quotation. It sounds like a garbled version of what Stewart said to Aganza. After his recollection was "refreshed" by a suggestion, Sigworth also testified that during that conversation Stewart had said, "If this Union goes through, I will blackball you," speaking to Aganza and himself. Stewart denied that he had used the word "blackball" on that or any other occasion. Aganza, whom I found to be an honest witness and one who appeared to testify to the best of his recollection, although not always connectedly, gave no indication that Stewart had said anything to Sigworth, who, Aganza testified, "listened to our conversation." Aganza did not indicate that Sigworth had said a word. I am sure that if Stewart had spoken of blackballing anyone for being for a union, Aganza would have remembered it and given testimony about it. I suspect that Sigworth shaped his testimony to strengthen his claim of discriminatory discharge, and I do not credit his testimony that Stewart spoke to him or that he spoke to Stewart in that conversation. Sigworth also testified that at a time in May or June17 when he was helping Aganza to hang doors, Stewart came up and told Sigworth, "Don't talk to that man," pointing to Aganza, and that Stewart had once told Sigworth not to talk to an employee named Gaylord Sebbo, an alleged discriminatee (as were Sigworth and Aganza). Stewart denied that he had told Sigworth not 17 Sigworth was terminated on June 2, 1965 1 Brennan 's , Inc., 147 NLRB 1545, 1554, Great Dane Trailers, Inc, 159 NLRB 537. 353 to talk to Aganza or Sebbo but admitted that he had told Sebbo not to talk with certain people and that he might have named Sigworth as one. However, he testified that he had told Sebbo this because Sebbo was always talking about his personal problems. Stewart admitted that he suspected that Sigworth was in favor of the Union. If Stewart were going to caution Sebbo not to talk to people about his personal problems, I consider it unlikely that he would have singled out specific persons not to talk to. I deduce that Stewart was more concerned with keeping prounion men from talking to nonunion men than he was with prounion men talking with each other, unless it delayed their work. Sigworth testified that he had told Stewart that he belonged to the Union, and Stewart admitted that he suspected that Sigworth did. In fact, at one point, Steward testified that he thought Sigworth wore a union button. However, I deduce that, at that time, Stewart then believed that Sebbo was not for the Union. I credit Stewart's denial that he told Sigworth not to speak to certain people. However, Aganza testified that Stewart told him many times not to talk union to anyone and "for anyone not to talk to me." Stewart could have had in mind union talk that interrupted work, but there is no evidence of this. Furthermore, there is no evidence that, before the union campaign, any restrictions had been imposed on talk among employees even during work. I find, therefore, that Stewart sought to curtail communication between employees concerning the Union. By this conduct, the Respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act.18 Employee Gaylord Sebbo testified on direct examination that in late July 1965, shortly before the union election, he had attended a union meeting and, at work the following day, had worn a union button, that Stewart, during the "lunch break," came to him and told him that he should be ashamed to wear the button because of what the Company had done for him and that he should give it back where he got it. Sebbo testified that he took the button off and did not wear it after that. On cross-examination, however, Sebbo testified that the incident had taken place during the afternoon coffeebreak, that Aganza was present, and that Stewart looked at Sebbo and asked, "What are you doing with it on?" Sebbo testified that he then returned to work, apparently without having removed the button, that Stewart came to where he was working and said, "If I was you, I would take that pin off and give it back where you got it, because you should be ashamed of yourself by wearing it. Give it back to your friend Alex [Aganza]." The third time that Sebbo repeated the story, he omitted reference to Aganza and testified that he did not remove the button until after Stewart had left. Stewart testified that he never saw Sebbo wear a union button and that, before the election on July 30, 1965, he had seen no one wear a union button except Aganza.1s Aganza gave no testimony about such an incident as that testified by Sebbo. Stewart testified that during an afternoon coffeebreak, in July or August 1965, he had heard Sebbo laughing and saying that "UAW" meant "unauthorized wetback." Stewart was not asked if he could see Sebbo when he heard him make this remark. " Stewart apparently forgot at this point that he had testified that he thought Sigworth had worn such a button, and Sigworth was terminated almost 2 months before the election 354 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Although Sebbo did not testify that Hearne was present during the alleged coffeebreak incident, and although Stewart believed that Hearne was not present, Hearne alluded to the incident on direct examination for the General Counsel but brought it in in a sketchy, backdoor manner which did not assure me that he had actually witnessed such an incident during the coffeebreak. If Hearne had witnessed any such incident, he could have been asked to relate the incident from the beginning, but his testimony was left with only a casual reference to it. Sebbo's testimony did not convince me of its accuracy, and I do not believe that Hearne's testimony was of any value as corroboration. Hearne's reference to seeing a button on Sebbo and that Stewart "mentioned something about he better take it off," does not confirm that Stewart mentioned that "something" to Sebbo, himself. From Hearne's testimony it could as readily be found that Stewart had remarked to Hearne alone that Sebbo had better take the button off as that Stewart had made the statement to Sebbo. Also, when Hearne testified that he did not see Sebbo take the button off, this does not mean that Hearne was looking at Sebbo to see if he did remove the button. The picture I draw from the preelection incident involving Sebbo is that he might, perhaps, have been displaying a union button during a coffeebreak while joking that the letters "UAW" stood for "unauthorized wetback," that Stewart heard the joke but did not see any button. Hearne could, of course, have seen and heard Sebbo's action, but he could as believably have learned of it by hearsay. I am not convinced that Hearne was with Stewart when Sebbo made his jest, and if he was not with Stewart, he could not have heard Stewart make the alleged remark about removing the button. In view of the vagueness of Hearne's testimony, and the weakness of all the evidence thereof, I am unconvinced that Stewart "on or about July 23, 1965, ordered employees to remove their union buttons" as is alleged in the complaint. Hearne testified that he had several conversations with Stewart about union meetings and that Stewart, in such a conversation, had said that "if he caught anybody that was attending union meetings, he was going to fire them," and that Stewart had also said he was going to "fire all the damn Mexicans, because they were the cause of the Union." Stewart denied making such statements. Although I would not think it unlikely for Stewart to make some such remark as that he would like to discharge all the Mexican employees for being strong for the Union (a statement he was not alleged to have made), I consider it most unlikely that Stewart would have said that he was going to discharge all the Mexicans, for, as pointed out by Stewart, 85 percent of the employees were of Mexican ancestry. I also doubt that Stewart would have said that he would fire anyone caught attending a union meeting. He never discharged Owens, who attended the first union meeting, and Darling was not discharged until a month after the first union meeting and then for another reason, as will be hereinafter related. When the union meetings reached an attendance of 60 employees, Stewart certainly would not have considered a mass discharge. On all the evidence and from my observation of the witnesses, I credit Stewart's denial of the statements attributed to him by Hearne. This does not mean that I believe Hearne did not have some basis for his testimony, but as to this testimony, I believe that his memory was inaccurate C. Discrimination in Regard to Hire and Tenure of Employment 1. Discharge of Darling Joseph Darling was employed by the Respondent as an assembler in February 1964, and he worked in Hearne's department, but because (at some time not fixed, but before the union campaign) he had a "run in" with Hearne, Stewart had transferred Darling to the cabinet-setting department. In March 1965, Darling's wages were attached by garnishment, and Manager Stewart informed Darling of this and warned him to get his financial affairs straightened out because the Respondent did not like garnishments. Stewart testified that he also told Darling that the Respondent did not allow a second garnishment. Emile Florin, the leadman, who was present at this conversation, testified that Stewart also told Darling that, if he got a second garnishment, that would be the end of his employment. Following that time, Stewart gave Darling overtime work to assist him financially. On April 27, 1965, Darling punched out a few minutes early. When an employee punches his card out he takes the card from the "in" rack and after punching it puts it in the "out" rack. Stewart, who customarily was near the rack at closing time, saw Darling's card in the out rack, and subsequently spoke to Darling about his leaving early. There is a conflict of testimony as to when Stewart spoke to Darling about this. According to Darling, Stewart did not speak to him about it until after the union meeting which he attended on April 29. Stewart testified that he spoke to Darling about it on either April 28 or April 29, which would have placed his speaking to Darling about the early punching out as either on the day before or the day of the meeting, but before the time of the meeting Darling testified that he had punched out early on other occasions, but that Stewart had not spoken to him about that. The record does not disclose how long in advance of closing time Darling had punched out on previous occasions, if at all Except for the 2 weeks ending April 27, 1965, none of Darling's timecards was introduced in evidence. When Stewart talked to Darling about his punching out early, Darling said that he had told Florin, his leadman. Stewart replied that Florin had not notified him and asked why Darling had left early. Stewart testified that Darling answered that he had to go somewhere. According to Stewart, he told Darling that if he had notified him or the leadman, it would be all right for him to leave early. According to Darling, the last thing that was said about this was that Stewart said he would check with Florin. Darling testified that before the union meeting of April 29, Stewart never bothered to come to the cabinet- setting department, but after the meeting he was there constantly. To quote Darling, "Everytime I turned around, he was behind me. He was criticizing all little errors that he never criticized before. He also warned me about-he says, `if you want to ruin your life, that is your business. If I catch you in any union activities, you have had it."' Darling testified that he had engaged in union activity in front of the plant during the coffeebreaks and at lunchtime, passing out union application cards for signature and sending in signed cards to the Union. Stewart usually was in front of the plant somewhere at coffeebreak time and during lunch. He usually ate lunch sitting in his car. It is the General Counsel's contention TRAVELEZE TRAILER COMPANY, INC. Union won the election "all these Mexicans will be 100 miles . . south of the border." This quoted statement does not, literally, make much sense. Perhaps Aganza was attempting to quote what was intended as a veiled threat of discharge, but I am not satisfied that his memory was accurate or complete on this. I believe that Aganza, in recollection, may have confused this with something else that was said or remembered only partly. Accordingly, I find that those words were not spoken in that way by Stewart. Stewart's version was that Aganza had said that, if the Union came in, he (Aganza) would get $3 or $4 an hour and that he (Stewart) had told Aganza that the Union could not get him any more than he was already getting; that he had asked Aganza if he thought the Company would pay $3 or $4 for men like Ayala and Vincent Gonzales who could not even speak English. Stewart quoted Aganza as saying that those people were scum, who swept out his house in Mexico. Stewart quoted himself as telling Aganza that "I would be ashamed of that" and that he would also be ashamed of wearing "that badge" that Aganza had on, referring to Aganza's union button. Stewart also testified that he had asked Aganza, "Why did you leave Mexico?" I believe that both witnesses were relating what they remembered and that (except as found above) the conversation was substantially as each testified. By thus questioning Aganza in a forceful manner about his union views the Respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. Gilbert Sigworth, an alleged discriminatee, who came up to hear part of the conversation between Stewart and Aganza, above related, testified, "I started talking about how good the Union was and the benefits of the Union ..." and "Mr. Stewart then said, `Well, if you like the Union so well, why don't you stay back where you came from?"' It is apparent to me that this was not an accurate quotation. It sounds like a garbled version of what Stewart said to Aganza. After his recollection was "refreshed" by a suggestion, Sigworth also testified that during that conversation Stewart had said, "If this Union goes through, I will blackball you," speaking to Aganza and himself. Stewart denied that he had used the word "blackball" on that or any other occasion. Aganza, whom I found to be an honest witness and one who appeared to testify to the best of his recollection, although not always connectedly, gave no indication that Stewart had said anything to Sigworth, who, Aganza testified, "listened to our conversation." Aganza did not indicate that Sigworth had said a word. I am sure that if Stewart had spoken of blackballing anyone for being for a union, Aganza would have remembered it and given testimony about it. I suspect that Sigworth shaped his testimony to strengthen his claim of discriminatory discharge , and I do not credit his testimony that Stewart spoke to him or that he spoke to Stewart in that conversation . Sigworth also testified that at a time in May or June" when he was helping Aganza to hang doors, Stewart came up and told Sigworth, "Don't talk to that man," pointing to Aganza , and that Stewart had once told Sigworth not to talk to an employee named Gaylord Sebbo, an alleged discriminatee (as were Sigworth and Aganza). Stewart denied that he had told Sigworth not i' Sigworth was terminated on June 2, 1965 " Brennan 's , Inc , 147 NLRB 1545, 1554, Great Dane Trailers, Inc, 159 NLRB 537 353 to talk to Aganza or Sebbo but admitted that he had told Sebbo not to talk with certain people and that he might have named Sigworth as one. However, he testified that he had told Sebbo this because Sebbo was always talking about his personal problems. Stewart admitted that he suspected that Sigworth was in favor of the Union. If Stewart were going to caution Sebbo not to talk to people about his personal problems, I consider it unlikely that he would have singled out specific persons not to talk to. I deduce that Stewart was more concerned with keeping prounion men from talking to nonunion men than he was with prounion men talking with each other, unless it delayed their work. Sigworth testified that he had told Stewart that he belonged to the Union, and Stewart admitted that he suspected that Sigworth did. In fact, at one point, Steward testified that he thought Sigworth wore a union button. However, I deduce that, at that time, Stewart then believed that Sebbo was not for the Union. I credit Stewart's denial that he told Sigworth not to speak to certain people. However, Aganza testified that Stewart told him many times not to talk union to anyone and "for anyone not to talk to me." Stewart could have had in mind union talk that interrupted work, but there is no evidence of this. Furthermore, there is no evidence that, before the union campaign , any restrictions had been imposed on talk among employees even during work. I find, therefore, that Stewart sought to curtail communication between employees concerning the Union. By this conduct, the Respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act.18 Employee Gaylord Sebbo testified on direct examination that in late July 1965, shortly before the union election, he had attended a union meeting and, at work the following day, had worn a union button, that Stewart, during the "lunch break," came to him and told him that he should be ashamed to wear the button because of what the Company had done for him and that he should give it back where he got it. Sebbo testified that he took the button off and did not wear it after that. On cross-examination, however, Sebbo testified that the incident had taken place during the afternoon coffeebreak, that Aganza was present, and that Stewart looked at Sebbo and asked, "What are you doing with it on?" Sebbo testified that he then returned to work, apparently without having removed the button, that Stewart came to where he was working and said, "If I was you, I would take that pin off and give it back where you got it, because you should be ashamed of yourself by wearing it. Give it back to your friend Alex [Aganza]." The third time that Sebbo repeated the story, he omitted reference to Aganza and testified that he did not remove the button until after Stewart had left. Stewart testified that he never saw Sebbo wear a union button and that, before the election on July 30, 1965, he had seen no one wear a union button except Aganza.19 Aganza gave no testimony about such an incident as that testified by Sebbo. Stewart testified that during an afternoon coffeebreak, in July or August 1965, he had heard Sebbo laughing and saying that "UAW" meant "unauthorized wetback." Stewart was not asked if he could see Sebbo when he heard him make this remark. "' Stewart apparently forgot at this point that he had testified that he thought Sigworth had worn such a button, and Sigworth was terminated almost 2 months before the election 356 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD denied telling Hearne that he had spoken with the lawyer, and testified that he had not in fact spoken with the Respondent's lawyer, at all. He also denied telling Hearne that he would probably have to fire Elgin as Hearne had testified. Elgin was, in fact, not discharged. Although Stewart confirmed that he had spoken on occasions with Hearne about Darling, Stewart's testimony, which appeared to me to be spontaneous, suggested that Hearne had distorted or enlarged upon what Stewart had told Hearne. According to Stewart, he told Hearne that Darling had come back with a release, but that he did not tell Hearne anything about taking him back. He also testified that, although he had not spoken with the Respondent's attorney about Darling, he had spoken with Bowater about the release which Darling had brought in to see if that would change the situation. It is possible that Bowater, after being told by Stewart about the release, had telephoned the lawyer and then had given his reply to Stewart and that Stewart had related something like that to Hearne. It appeared to me that some of Hearne's testimony was based upon impression rather than upon clear recollection. I credit Stewart's denials. Even if Stewart had had an inclination to discharge Darling for union activities, I could not consider that as affecting the discharge of Darling, in the first instance, because there is no question that the Respondent's rule that it would not retain an employee after a second garnishment existed and had been uniformly enforced.22 At best, therefore, Darling's case turns upon whether or not, when he brought the release to Stewart and asked for his job back, the Respondent refused to reinstate him because of prejudice against him because of his union activities. In order to find that the Respondent was so influenced, I should be obliged to find that the Respondent would not, under similar circumstances, have refused reinstatement to an employee who had not engaged in union activities. There is, however, no evidence from which I could make this determination. The Respondent had discharged several other employees for second garnishments and had never taken them back. The leadman of the janitors had requested an exception in one instance because one of his good workers was to be discharged for a second garnishment, but the Respondent refused to make any exceptions. Although Darling brought in a release and told Stewart about having gone to his creditor to learn why his bankruptcy had not forestalled the garnishment, and although he told Stewart that the garnishment was a mistake, presumably on the part of the creditor, the Respondent was not obliged to believe that Darling was free from fault in the matter. In fact, it was Darling's financial difficulties which, mistakenly or not, resulted in the second garnishment. Although I, personally, might have felt that the nullification of the second garnishment by the bankruptcy proceedings acted to nullify the garnishment notice ex post facto, and that this would put Darling in the position of a debtor who had paid his debt in full before garnishment, I note that the bookkeeping problem had already been encountered by the Respondent. Furthermore, I do not consider it unreasonable for Dixon to feel that bankruptcy was not the equivalent of meeting one's obligation on time, as he testified in substance. On all the evidence, therefore, I conclude and find that the Respondent did not discriminate against Darling because of his union sympathies or activities.23 2. Discharge of Sigworth Gilbert Sigworth was hired on April 6, 1965, and sometime thereafter he was assigned to the doorhanging department. Sigworth testified that during coffeebreaks and at lunch period he passed out union cards and talked about the Union with employees. Sigworth was present when Stewart spoke with Aganza about the Union as heretofore related. On June 1, 1965, before work, Sigworth went to Stewart and asked to have the day off to take his wife to the doctor. He quoted Stewart as saying , "Okay, I don't need you anyhow." Stewart testified that Sigworth had asked for the day off to take his wife to the hospital, that he had asked what hospital, and that Sigworth had said, "On Sherman Way and Hollywood Way," and that he had told Sigworth to go ahead. Stewart testified that, during the day, it had occurred to him that if the hospital was at Sherman Way and Hollywood Way, it must have been in the "middle of Lockheed."24 Stewart testified that on June 2, when Sigworth returned to work, he asked Sigworth the name of his doctor. Sigworth gave Stewart a name of a doctor. Stewart testified that Sigworth had given him the name of a doctor in North Hollywood. He could not remember at the hearing the name given him. Sigworth testified that he had given the name of his family doctor, Dr. Marcus, on Glenoaks Boulevard in Glendale.25 Stewart went to the office to attempt to call the doctor whose name Sigworth had given him. He found no such name listed in the "Valley" telephone book. He tried unsuccessfully to locate the doctor's number through the information service. Then he returned to Sigworth and told Sigworth he could not find any doctor of the name which Sigworth had given. According to Stewart, Sigworth said: "I am not going to talk to you any more. I am not going to say any more to you. You gave me the day off, and the hell with it." Stewart told Sigworth that he did not like liars working for the Respondent and that he was going to discharge Sigworth, and he promptly did so. Sigworth admitted that he did not take his wife to see the doctor . He testified that he was not feeling well, himself, and that he had given the excuse he did "because Mr. Stewart knew I was union - minded . I was afraid if I told him the truth, well, I would get canned for it . . . " It does not make sense that Sigworth would expect to be 22 Darling testified that his father had worked for the Respondent and, while there, had not been discharged after three garnishments . There is no showing that the senior Darling had been employed by the Respondent during the past 5 years that the rule had been in effect. 23 Federal Tool Corporation, 130 NLRB 210, Capital Distributing Co, 147 NLRB 1138, Pacific Electncord Company, 153 NLRB 521, Lutst Truck Lines, 160 NLRB 530 24 Sherman Way, an east and west street, ends where it runs into the west side of the Lockheed grounds Hollywood Way, a north and south street, runs along the east side of the Lockheed grounds There is, therefore, no actual junction of those two streets. 25 Sigworth first gave the name of the city as Glenoaks When interrogating counsel commented that he knew of no city of that name , Sigworth said Glendale Boulevard, another mistake Glenoaks Boulevard is in Glendale TRAVELEZE TRAILER COMPANY, INC. discharged for asking for the day off if he was, in fact, ill, and I do not credit this testimony. I likewise do not credit Sigworth's testimony that he gave Stewart the name of his family doctor. He had good reason to believe, when he gave Stewart a name of a supposed doctor, that Stewart was going to call the doctor to see if Sigworth had an appointment for his wife on June 1. Knowing that Dr. Marcus would have had to answer negatively, Sigworth apparently made up a name to give Stewart. Stewart testified that he did not always check up on excuses given by employees, but that he had done so, apparently, when he felt there was something peculiar about the employee's explanation. _ The General Counsel's case rests on the theory that Stewart knew Sigworth was union-minded and that, in the absence of a discriminatory motive, a production manager would "not be concerned with an employee's absence." The evidence discloses, on the contrary, that Stewart was the one whose consent had to be obtained by an employee for a day off, and it was Stewart who was supposed to check on unexcused absences. The best argument that the General Counsel could make would be that, if Stewart gave Sigworth the day off because his services were not needed, Stewart should not care why Sigworth was off and that he only checked Sigworth' s excuse as a means of getting a pretended cause for his discharge, the real reason being Sigworth's union advocacy. There is no evidence, however, that Stewart would consent to an absence unless there were some urgent reason. True, Stewart admitted that he suspected that Sigworth was prounion. But even with this admission, I am not persuaded that Sigworth's discharge was discriminatory. Sigworth testified that the Respondent had been laying off, but that, instead of his being laid off, he had been transferred from the doorhanging department to the plastic department that very morning-June 2, 1965. Had the Respondent wished merely to rid itself of a union advocate, it could more readily merely have laid Sigworth off on June 1 instead of discharging him on June 2. Since Sigworth had had less than 2 months' employment at the time of his discharge, he had not accumulated much seniority, and a layoff presumably would have raised no question. On all the evidence, I find that the Respondent did not discriminate in regard to Sigworth's tenure of employment because of his union membership or activities. 3. Discharge of Kelley John Kelley was hired by Respondent in early April 1965 and was assigned to the finishing line, but he was later made a janitor. Kelley testified that during lunch periods outside the front gate he passed out and collected union cards. Although this is not disputed, I would not credit this testimony without corroboration. Kelley testified that, about a week before his discharge, Stewart "pulled me over to the side after punching in after lunch and told me if I was caught in any union activities at all, that he would lay me off, and I better watch my step." Kelley further testified that the next morning, when he was in the office cleaning, Stewart had told him that he could not, believe that Kelley would have anything to do with the Union and 26 Since the Union would be more likely to pass out than collect pamphlets , this testimony is odd , unless he mistakenly used the word "for" instead of "from " Perhaps Hearne had in mind union authorization cards . That is apparently the way Respondent's 357 he "said something about that with the money they would collect that he could send a few guys around the world free and give everybody paid holidays and all the benefits." Ex-leadman Hearne, after having Kelley identified for him by the General Counsel, who asked Kelley to stand, testified that Kelley was "trashman." Asked if he had ever had any conversations with Stewart concerning Kelley. Hearne testified: "If I remember correctly, I think I told him that Kelley was the one that was picking up pamphlets26 for the Union. He [Stewart] said if he ever caught him goofing off, that he was going to fire him." Stewart testified that he had not said three words to Kelley all the time he was at the Respondent's plant; he denied having any conversation with Kelley about the Union or of having any conversation with Hearne or anyone else concerning Kelley and the Union; he denied that Hearne had told him that "Kelley was the guy that was picking up union cards"; and he denied that he had any knowledge or suspicion that Kelley might be involved in the Union or might have something to do with the Union. He specifically denied that he told Kelley that he did not think he would have anything to do with the Union or that he had told Kelley (although he admitted that he had told Marinello) "that for $5.50 a month or $5 a month I could collect from these guys, I could send at least three of them around the world once a year." He testified that he had made that statement outside the plant and that employees could have heard him. His testimony appears to be confirmed in this respect by other employees. On demeanor, alone, I would credit Stewart as against Hearne and Kelley on the above testimony, but there are other reasons apparent from a reading of the record which suggests that Hearne was attempting, in a vague way, to assist Kelley's case and that Kelley was fabricating. Accordingly, I credit Stewart's denials as above related. The Respondent has had for years a plant rule prohibiting smoking anywhere in the plant except in the offices. This is based on the danger of fire throughout a major part of the plant, but the rule has been applied even to the welding shop, where there is little danger, in order to deter contentions about special privileges. On June 4, 1965, late in the day (approaching 4 p.m.) Kelley was seen smoking in an area about 10 feet from the "dike," a low raised portion of pavement paralleling the boundary fence, which cuts a diagonal line at the rear, and behind which dike Respondent keeps drums of various kinds of volatile fluids and explosive chemicals.27 Although Kelley was standing behind a trash trailer while smoking, he was visible from the fiberglass building. The man who saw Kelley smoking was Mike Bone, the supervisor or foreman of the fiberglass department, an area of the greatest fire hazard. The fiberglass building was about 30 or 35 feet from the dike at its closest point. Bone immediately told Orville Mitchell, leadman of the janitors, who was passing at that moment, that one of his men was back there smoking, and suggested that Mitchell stop him. Mitchell said he would take care of it at once. Bone then walked up to the front of the plant grounds and told Stewart what he had seen. Stewart berated Bone for not bringing the violator to him at once instead of referring the matter to Mitchell. Bone apparently felt that because Kelley was not counsel interpreted Hearne's testimony , because he so framed his question when he asked Stewart about the matter n The raised portion of the pavement was apparently designed to keep leakage from spreading out onto the rest of the pavement 358 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD his man he should not intervene while Mitchell was present. Mitchell testified that he went back and "bawled out" Kelley and told him that the foreman of the fiberglass department had seen him. By quitting time, when Kelley came to punch out, Stewart had pulled Kelley's timecard and, when Kelley found his card missing, Stewart asked him if he had been smoking "out back."28 Kelley admitted that he had. Stewart told Kelley he was discharging him. Kelley waited until his check was prepared. Then Stewart discharged Kelley. Stewart testified that he told each employee when he hired him that there was no smoking in the plant. No- smoking signs were posted in many locations about the buildings and grounds, although there probably was none then at the point where Kelley was smoking that day. I observe, however, that Kelley never protested that he did not know of the no-smoking rule or that he did not know that it applied to the spot where he was smoking, so I am satisfied that he was aware of the rule and knew that he was violating it. His attitude was rather that other employees smoked in violation of the rule, too, so there was no reason why he should not smoke, too. The General Counsel does not dispute the existence of the no-smoking rule but contends that violation of the rule by employees was not uncommon and that Kelley was the first employee who had been discharged for smoking without prior warning; i.e., the first time he was caught. Leadman Hearne and Wheeler both testified that they did not know of anyone who had been discharged for smoking without being warned. They were not counting as warnings either the notice given to an employee when he was hired or the no-smoking signs. The evidence does indicate that a leadman might not report one of his employees for smoking but would, instead, tell anyone who tried to smoke to put it out, and he might warn him about smoking more than once before reporting him to Stewart Stewart, however, testified that he had never failed to discharge a man he had seen smoking, but that if one employee reported to him that another employee had smoked and, if he did not, himself, see it happen, he would ask the employee about it. If the employee denied it, Stewart testified, he would warn him. He did not testify, specifically, as to what he would do if the employee admitted it. In one instance, to be hereinafter related, Stewart was aware of the fact that A man was smoking in the toilet, that he waited outside and, when the man came out, asked him if he had been smoking. When the man (Sebbo) admitted that he had, Stewart reproved him but did not discharge him on the spot. The evidence justified the conclusion that employees "sneaked" smokes when they thought they could get away with it, with the men's toilet being one of the most common places for sneaking smokes, although this area, too, was a prohibited one. However, I am sure that the Respondent's supervisors must have suspected that smoking went on at times in prohibited areas, a conclusion I reach because stamped- out cigarette butts could be found on the pavement in most places in the plant, according to my observation on viewing the premises, subsequently followed by Z" Stewart was not certain if he had asked Kelley about the location where he was smoking, but Bone had told him it was near the dike, and Kelley testified that Stewart asked him if he had been smoking "out back " t" The leadman of the welding shop apparently had smoked openly near the welding shop until Vice President Dixon spoke to him about it After that the lead welder satisfied his tobacco concurrence of counsel in my observations and because Dixon testified that every night an inspection was made to be sure no burning cigarettes were left lying around. Employees did not generally smoke openly in the plant in the presence of supervisors. Kelley was the only one to testify to the contrary. He testified, without going into detail, that he had seen other employees smoking when supervisors or foremen were around. And he testified that Vice President Stahl had seen him smoking a couple of times in back of the factory building and a couple of times in the washroom without saying anything. Since Kelley did not testify that the supervisors or foremen were looking in the direction of the other employees who were violating the no-smoking rule, his testimony regarding seeing employees generally smoking in the presence of supervisors was, alone, of little weight. His testimony that Stahl had seen him and fellow workers smoking would, if believed, indicate a tolerance of this violation.29 Stahl did not testify. I am skeptical of Kelley's testimony that Stahl had actually seen him smoking under the circumstances he described and said nothing, especially since I have discredited Kelley's testimony of conversations with Stewart. In any event, Stahl was not the man who discharged Kelley. It is Stewart's motivation that must be determined, and Stewart's reputation was not one of leniency. Leadman Mitchell testified that between 10 and 10:30 a.m. on June 4 (the day of Kelley's discharge) he had warned Kelley about smoking There is no evidence, however, that Stewart knew of this warning. Stewart testified that, in deciding to discharge a man for smoking, he took into account the location where the man had been smoking Theie was no evidence that Stewart knew of smoking by any other employee near the dike. The General Counsel relies on disparity of treatment by pointing to the case of the employee whom Stewart thought was smoking in the toilet and who admitted it when asked by Stewart but who was not discharged on the spot. I am not persuaded, however, in view of the difference in danger of smoking between the toilet room and the dike area that the lenience shown in the case of the toilet-room smoker can be used as a basis for establishing a disparity such as to show a discriminatory motive in Kelley's case.so Kelley had been employed for only 2 months. The employees to whom lenience might have been shown were men of considerably more seniority and skill than was Kelley. In June, Respondent's production begins to reduce, although the reduction is not so sharp until July or August. The record is bare of any evidence to show that a replacement was hired for Kelley. It does not appear odd for the Respondent to dispense with the services of a janitor at that time. I conclude that the sum of the credible evidence is insufficient to make out a case of discrimination. I have credited Stewart's testimony that he had no knowledge of any union activity or preference by Kelley. Accepting Stewart's denial, I conclude that scienter was lacking. But even if it were not, I am unable to find that Kelley's craving by chewing it Dixon testified that he did not discharge the lead welder because he was too valuable a man and because there was little fire danger from smoking in the area of the weld shop "' Poray, Inc , 143 NLRB 617, enfd sub nom Metal Processors' Union Local No 16, AFL-CIO v NLRB, 337 F 2d 114 (CADC) TRAVELEZE TRAILER COMPANY, INC. smoking near the dike was so analagous to violations of the no-smoking rule by other employees in other places as to create an inference of animosity by the Respondent against Kelley because of presumed union activities by him. Indeed, I find that Stewart might well have been greatly perturbed by word that a man was smoking in an area where volatile liquids or explosive chemicals were kept. In fact, he indicated that he was perturbed when he berated Bone for not bringing the man to him at once when Bone saw the man smoking. I conclude, therefore, that the Respondent did not discriminate against John Kelley because of his union membership, activities, or preference. 4. Discharge of Aganza Alexander Aganza was hired by the Respondent in February 1965 as a door assembler. I have hereinbefore related Stewart's exchange of words about the Union with Aganza in which he told Aganza, among other things, not to engage in union activities in the plant during working time.31 Thereafter Aganza engaged in union activities outside the front gate. He was the only employee to wear a union button from the beginning of the Union's campaign. The Respondent admits that it knew Aganza as a leading exponent of the Union. In fact, on July 29, 1965, the day before the union election at the plant, in a speech by Vice President Dixon to the employees, Dixon said that the rumor that employees were being discharged because of union activities was untrue, that "not even Alex [Aganza] will be fired because of union activities." At the union election on Friday, July 30, 1965, Aganza was a union observer. The next working day after the election was Monday, August 2. According to Aganza, Stewart came to him to tell him he wanted Aganza to "sweep that trailer good." About mid-July Stewart had assigned Aganza to sweep trailers (I assume when the trailer reached his position in the production line) in addition to his assembly work. Aganza testified that his assignment of sweeping trailers was punishment. The evidence indicates that, during the busy season, some of the employees had helpers, and these helpers would do the sweeping, but as production fell off and work flowed down, the helpers would be assigned to other work, and the sweeping would then be done by men on the production line. Aganza's department, the window and door department, followed the metal and molding department, where bits of metal would be left on the floor. To avoid damage to the linoleum or floor tile, it was important to sweep out the trailer before work was commenced in each succeeding department. Since Aganza had been employed during the busy season, he was not familiar with the changes of routine normally made during slack times, and his reaction to additional duties he was assigned was exemplified by his tes- timony, "I knew that he [Stewart] was up to, what was going to happen, because they [the Union?] told me he was going to press on me. . . ." Later in the morning, an employee named ay Aganza as Jesus Sanchez 32 came to Aganza and asked Aganza to install windows. Aganza's 31 The first time Aganza related this conversation, he testified that Stewart had told him not to engage in union activities in the plant . Stewart testified that he told Aganza that he did not want Aganza fooling with the Union on company time Actually, at that time, the employees were on the plant premises only dunng working time They took their lunch and coffeebreaks in front of the plant, outside the gate. Thus, whether or not Stewart used the words "on company time" or merely "in the plant," it would have meant the same thing to Aganza , as he disclosed when questioned 359 testimony concerning what followed was disconnected and he tended to commingle statements with thoughts. However, as near as I can decipher his testimony, he just kept on sweeping or getting ready to work, thinking that Sanchez had no authority and thinking also that, for what he was being paid, he should not have to do so many different jobs. He testified that he told Sanchez that his job was getting behind with so much work to do. Actually, the production line was slow that morning and Aganza did not have anything to do but get ready for the work on his next trailer. Aganza told Sanchez that he did not care if the trailers (i.e., production line) got behind. When Aganza would not install windows as requested, Sanchez went to Stahl and reported that Aganza did not want to put win- dows in. Stahl told Aganza to do whatever Sanchez told him to do, that Sanchez was in charge of the department. Apparently, Sanchez had just been made leadman, and Aganza had not been so informed before and said so. Stahl told him he knew it now. Because Stahl spoke "mean," Aganza still would not do what Sanchez requested, because he wanted to "have everything ready" for the door work that would later be arriving. Sanchez reported to Stahl that Aganza still refused to do the work that Sanchez called on him to do. Stahl sent for Aganza to come to the office where Stahl, Stewart, and Sanchez were. Stahl asked Aganza to repeat for Stewart what Aganza had said. Aganza quoted himself as saying that "that wasn't a very nice way of telling me." Then Aganza repeated what he had told Sanchez. Stewart asked Aganza how he hoped to get ahead if he did not do the work he was told to do. Aganza said that he was making only $1.75 an hour and Sigworth, his helper, was getting $1.95, and he was not going to put windows in when he was making only $1.75 and he was worth more. Stewart said if he was worth so much, why did he tear the grinder apart when all it needed was a set of brushes-that Aganza had ruined it and that it had cost the Respondent $60. This aroused Aganza, who said, according to a composite of Stewart's and Aganza's testimony, "What do you want me to do? Buy you new furniture, a new thunderbird? You want my wife, too?" Then he told Stewart, according to Aganza: "Well, it is up to you. Decide ... I won't talk to you anymore, because I don't like you. I want to see my adviser, the union adviser, so I can keep talking to you." He testified that he crossed his arms and said, "Well, if you are not satisfied, let me go with something. Do something. Whatever you want to do, it is all right. Go ahead, and do it." He quoted Stewart as saying: "All right, I am going to give you this [i.e., a] check. Wait until the bookkeeper gets here." Aganza said he would wait outside. There he told Stahl he wanted to do something and not just stand around. Stahl, according to Aganza, said, "O.K., do something in there. I don't know." Aganza went to Sanchez and asked, "What do you want me to do?" Sanchez replied that he, himself, would do it. About that time the lunch signal was given and the men broke off for lunch. Stewart decided that, because Aganza was such a prominent union man, he should have Dixon and Bowater decide whether or not to discharge Aganza. He waited for about a conversation with Stahl who asked Aganza not to engage in union activities dunng working time 31 The first name may not be right It was not mentioned by Stewart Dixon testified that Sanchez was captain of the Union's picket line which was picketing the plant at the time of the hearing. There were two brothers of the same surname-Sanchez -who were identified by Stewart as men who, he had been told attended union meetings , but they had different initials than Jesus Sanchez Sanchez did not testify 360 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD them to return and told them he thought Aganza should be discharged. They told Stewart to call Aganza. When Aganza arrived, Dixon asked him to repeat what he had already told Stewart. Aganza told Dixon that Sanchez had asked him to put in windows and that he had replied, "Who is Sanchez?" Aganza said he told Sanchez "that I don't care-it is all right if the lines gets behind." Dixon asked Aganza why he had refused to install windows. Aganza said that he had not refused. Sanchez was sent for. When he arrived he was asked if Aganza had refused to help him put in windows, and he replied affirmatively. Aganza was quoted by Dixon as saying that he was paid only $1.75 an hour and that he was going to do $1.75-an- hour work. Stewart quoted Aganza as saying: "You guys can't run this business yourself. You have to go out and-get guys like me to do it." Stewart further quoted Aganza as saying that for 12 years he had been looking for a job with- out a dictator, that he had gone to Cuba but left because of the dictatorship there, that if he had a gun he would kill all dictators. Then he looked at Stewart, according to the latter, and said: "You are a dictator. If I had a gun, I would kill you, too." Aganza conceded that he had called Stewart a Hitler and that maybe he had said he would shoot him if he had a gun, but he testified that this was only talk.33 Dixon asked Aganza if he would go out and do the work he was asked to do. Aganza folded his arms and said that he was not going to say or do anything more until he had seen his counsel, referring his union ad- viser. Dixon said that if Aganza would not go back and do his work, he was afraid he was going to have to let Aganza go Since Aganza was adamant, the Respondent discharged him. The General Counsel does not argue that Aganza's insistance on seeing his union adviser insulated Aganza from discharge. The Union had only just been chosen by the employees and had not yet even been certified so far as the evidence shows. Aganza's case does not, therefore, come within the line of cases holding that an employee may not lawfully be discharged for asserting rights under a union contract. The General Counsel merely argues that "Respondent's avowed reasons for discharging Aganza was a pretext to cover its real purpose to rid the plant of an open supporter and activist for the UA . ." He suggests that "it appears suspect that a fellow employee [Sanchez] would inform - management of an employee's remarks, unless he was solicited to do so." I do not find any cause for suspicion in Sanchez' conduct. Since he had been placed in charge of the work on doors and windows, Sanchez had the responsibility of assigning work. If a man refused an assignment, the leadman could not, himself, punish the recalcitrant employee. He would have to report the matter to Stahl or Stewart. Thus, Sanchez acted as would be expected of him in the normal course of events The General Counsel also finds the "entire incident suspect in light of the fact that Stewart ordinarily terminates employees and that Dixon did not get involved in terminating employees, except in Aganza's case." Again, I find nothing suspicious about this. Aganza was known to be a prominent and active protagonist of the Union. It would be' only natural for the Respondent to expect that a charge of unfair labor practice might ensue as a consequence of Aganza's discharge, and it is not unnatural that Stewart would assume that the Respondent would like to take precautions to avoid even the ap- pearance of unfair conduct and so would give Dixon an opportunity to make the final decision. Granted that the Respondent was openly opposed to the Union and that it would have liked to avoid unionization, such disposition, alone, does not suffice to establish a specific motivation in Aganza's case. Regardless of Respondent's antiunion sentiments, it had a business to carry on. If, absent union activity, the Respondent would have grounds which would justify discharging an employee, it would still be entitled to act on those grounds in the face of union activity. 34 In the light of all the evidence here, I find that the evidence does not present more than suspicion, which is not enough upon which to base an inference of discriminatory motive, especially when the reason given for discharge is supported by the evider' p 35 Accordingly, I find that the General Counsel has not proved that the Respondent discriminated in regard to Aganza's hire and tenure of employment. 5. Discharge of Sandifer Danny Sandifer was hired by the Respondent in January 1963. He started cutting pipe at a rate of $1.85 an hour. Toward the end of his employment, he was putting roofs on trailers, and his rate was $2.40 an hour. He testified that in April, May, and June, 1965, he distributed union cards for signature, picked them up, and talked about the Union before and after work and during lunch and coffeebreaks. He testified on direct examination that he did all this "in the presence" of Production Manager Stewart and Foreman Bone. But on cross-examination he testified that, although supervisors could have seen him passing out cards, he did not know if they had. Stewart testified that no one had told him and that he did not have any reason to believe or suspect that Sandifer was engaged in any union activities and he denied that he had ever seen Sandifer passing out union literature or cards. On the morning of August 2, 1965, Sandifer failed to show up for work. He testified that he had had to take his son to the doctor and that he had tried to call the plant at 7:20, 7:30, and 7:45 a.m. that day and got no answer. He testified that he later learned that the last digit of the number he had called was wrong. The last call, he testified was made from a telephone near the doctor's office while his wife and son were in the doctor's office. On cross- examination, he gave the name and address of the doctor he had taken his son to. The Respondent subpenaed the records of that doctor, and the doctor's secretary testified that (1) the doctor never had office hours in the morning and (2) the records showed no visits by any member of the Sandifer family since April 1964, although if someone had come in when the doctor was out, a record would have been made of the call. Sandifer came to work at noon on August 2, 1965, and found his timecard missing from the rack. He went to see Stewart, and Stewart told Sandifer that lie had written him off as quit. He told Sandifer to come back at 2 p.m. for his check. According to Sandifer, when he picked up his check, Stewart told him never to set foot in the plant again. Stewart denied saying this but testified that he did not permit discharged employees to go back in the shop. Sandifer could have misunderstood what Stewart said. Stewart conceded that he had watched Sandifer until he left the building, as he was accustomed to doing with " Aganza also admitted using foul language in speaking of 877-878 (C A 8). N L R B v Isis Plumbing & Heating Co, 322 Stewart It is unnecessary to recount this F 2d 913 (C A 9), Baldwin Supply Company, 159 NLRB 745 "Fort Smith Broadcasting Co v NLRB, 341 F 2d 874, " N L B B v Comfort, Inc, 365 F 2d 867 (C A 8). Baldwin Supply Co , supra TRAVELEZE TRAILER COMPANY, INC. discharged employees, because some people had missed tools after employees had been discharged. Sandifer testified that about 8 or 10 months earlier he had been absent without calling in and that Stewart had warned him to call in or he would write Sandifer off as quit and that thereafter he had called in until the morning of August 2, 1965. Stewart testified that he had several times talked with Sandifer about calling in in the morning when he did not come to work but that Sandifer never did call. He testified that he had warned Sandifer repeatedly and that in June 1965 he had told Sandifer that, if he missed work one more time without calling in , he would be terminated. Stewart testified that although Sandifer was late a couple of times after that-he did not say how late-he had not failed to appear until the day of his discharge and that he had then told Sandifer that he had gone as far as he could with him, that "I was fed up to my neck with him." Stewart testified that he had checked with the girl in the office and had checked his box for messages before he had pulled Sandifer's card. The burden of proving that the Respondent knew of the dischargee's union activity is on the General Counsel. Here he failed adequately to prove scienter. 36 But in any event, I credit Stewart's testimony wherever it conflicted with Sandifer's, and I find that Sandifer was discharged for cause. If the Respondent had had an unlawful motive, Stewart would be much more likely to have discharged Sandifer in June, during the union campaign and before the union election, but instead, at that time, Stewart warned Sandifer and gave him one more chance. I conclude on all the evidence that the Respondent did not discriminate in regard to Sandifer's hire or tenure of employment. 6. Discharge of Sebbo Gaylord Sebbo was hired by the Respondent as a finish molder on a piecework rate in 1958. In the winter of 1961-62, Stewart was transferred from the Burbank plant, where he had been manager, to the Penrose plant, the main plant, as production manager. Stewart did not like the piecework rate because if he lightened Sebbo's work by requiring installation of less molding, Sebbo wanted the same piecerate pay, but if Stewart added more molding to the job, Sebbo wanted extra pay. One day in 1963, Stewart told Sebbo if the latter did not like the way Stewart was doing things, Sebbo could always quit. Sebbo did. When Sebbo returned for his check about a week later, he learned that Stewart had eliminated all piecework, and he asked for his job back. Stewart rehired him at $2.60 an hour, a rate he received until the time of his termination. When Sebbo would complete a molding job, he would be put to use elsewhere. Stewart testified that Sebbo had worked on about everything in the shop. In 1965, for the first time, Sebbo was given an assistant, Raoul Garcia, who would countersink nails and fill the holes with putty. When the production line slowed down, Garcia was given work elsewhere. Sebbo testified that his helper was taken from him on August 2, the first workday after the election. In July, General Manager Stahl told 1n See Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc ,128 NLRB 574, 580 17 The paper was originally cut and laid on the tile floor as soon as the floor was laid to protect it against metal and other objects that might gouge the floor tile Stewart testified that sometimes this paper got torn while going through the production line This is what Sebbo might have had to cut at the edge if it got in his way New paper would be put down on the finish line only after all other work was done Sebbo had never worked on the finish line 361 Stewart that Sebbo was not finishing his work (by countersinking nails and puttying the holes). Stewart spoke to Sebbo about this several times. Sometime, thereafter, Sebbo would finish the work, but often left it to be done by men on the finish line. The last time that Stewart spoke to Sebbo about finishing his work was on the morning of August 9, 1965. Sebbo then complained of extra work and said he needed a helper. Stewart testified that, at that time, the Respondent was getting only two trailers a day, whereas, when Sebbo had had a helper, five or six trailers a day were being produced. When Stewart spoke to Sebbo on August 9, Sebbo told Stewart that cleaning up was not his job and he said that he was going to see Vice President Ken Dixon about all the extra work that he was being given. According to Sebbo's account, on direct testimony, after the election he had been assigned additional work such as cleaning up the trailers, cutting the paper, and cleaning the metal out. Stewart testified that the only cleaning that Sebbo had to do was to sweep away the trash on the floor before he put in his base shoe molding around the cabinets and that the only paper Sebbo would have had to cut would be torn paper on the floor that interfered with installation of the base shoe molding.37 I deduce that Sebbo exaggerated the amount of extra work he had been given. When Sebbo said that he was going to see Dixon, Stewart told him to go ahead, but meanwhile he was going to put Sebbo on the line so he could keep an eye on him. He transferred Sebbo to building rear curves in the bathroom department, in which Hearne was leadman.38 Sebbo testified that Garcia, his former helper, was then given the job of installing base shoe molding, Sebbo's original job. On August 10, 1965, Sebbo worked in the bathroom department on rear curves. Part of the work involved the use of contact cement to affix a piece of protective tile on each frame after it was built. Contact cement has an odor. Sebbo testified: "It is sticky and gooey and gets all over you. Nobody likes the job because it dries out so quick before you get your panel on." At 3:35 p.m. on August 10, Stewart came to the bathroom department. Sebbo was missing. He asked Hearne where Sebbo was and Hearne said he was probably in the bathroom. Stewart went there and was able to detect that someone in a stall was smoking. He waited outside until Sebbo came out. Then he asked Sebbo if he had been smoking. Sebbo said that he had had a few drags. Stewart told Sebbo that he knew no smoking was allowed there and that Sebbo belonged out on the line working on those bathroom curves where Stewart had put him. Sebbo testified that everybody heard this. Sebbo said, "O.K." and walked out.39 The following day, August 11, 1965, Sebbo did not show up for work, and Stewart testified that there was no telephone call from him. Sebbo testified, "I didn't feel good the next morning after getting the bawling out the night before." But he testified, "My boy called the plant at about twelve o'clock in the afternoon and told them I was sick." On cross-examination, Sebbo testified that the pay telephone his son used for the call was about 40 feet from " Sebbo testified that Hearne was not near him as he worked and that Hearne had "Richard over here to supervise me and guard me so I wouldn't leave my place He says, `If Sebbo leaves, let me know ... " Sebbo testified that there was a "no-smoking" sign over the restroom door but that he and others smoked there Sebbo testified that President Dixon who visited every Tuesday and Thursday came through the plant smoking a cigarette "No one says nothing to him He ain't no better than I am " 362 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD where he lived, that he had given his son the telephone number to call, and that he had gone out and stood there while his son called, that he was not so ill that he could not do this, that his stomach was upset from contact cement and the bawling out Stewart had given him. It is not difficult to conclude that Sebbo was nursing injured feelings and that if he was well enough to get up to watch his son call the plant, he was well enough to call for himself. I credit Stewart's testimony that Sebbo did not notify the Respondent of his ailment on August 11, 1965. Sebbo was late for work on August 12, 1965. When he arrived, he asked Stewart, "Am I still working or am I fired?" Stewart who had already written up Sebbo's termination slip on August 11,40 told him he was fired. The General Counsel relies on Sebbo's testimony related in section III, A, above, that he had first attended a union meeting on July 23, that he had worn a union button the next day, and that Stewart had told him to take it off, as establishing knowledge of Sebbo's union affiliation, as well as on the evidence of supposed added duties, transfer to less desirable work, and changed attitude on Stewart's part immediately after the union election. I have already passed on Sebbo's credibility and credited Stewart's denial of knowledge of Sebbo's union attitude. I have not completely ruled out the possiblity that Stewart, who testified that he had tried to give Sebbo breaks because of personal problems, the nature of which was not revealed, although having no "knowledge," might have become suspicious that Sebbo had espoused the union cause and, being prejudiced against him for this, had lost sympathy with Sebbo. The timing of the discharge of an employee (whose work had not been criticized and who had been employed for 7 years) so soon after the union election, along with the evidence of Stewart's open hostility toward the Union, furnishes a basis for suspecting that Stewart, who undoubtedly had some cause to discharge Sebbo, would not have discharged Sebbo when he did except for such a suspicion on Stewart's part that Sebbo had become a union adherent. From the point of view of an outsider, Sebbo's discharge appeared to be rather abrupt and callous considering his ability and length of service. However, Stewart testified that he had become fed up with Sebbo, indicating, in effect, that Sebbo's failure to show up on August 11 was the last straw that broke the camel's back. I have, therefore, examined the record carefully to discover whether or not there was a basis for Stewart to become "fed up" aside from Sebbo's union membership. Sebbo testified that he had previously complained about having too much work to do, as when someone had made a mistake and cut too large a hole for an air-conditioner 41 or refrigerator and he had had to put molding over the hole to cover it, or when they added base shoes on the bathroom floor to his job, lightening the job of the other molding man in April or May 1965, and when they asked him to set staples along sidewalls on August 2, 1965, when his helper was taken away. His complaints appear to have covered a number of years and appeared mainly to be that he did not wish to do anything except molding regardless of the number of trailers he had to work on in a day because his "job was molding." Sebbo testified that he had once, about 8 or 10 months before August 11, 1965, been absent without calling in, that Stewart had told him then to call in or he would write Sebbo off as quit, but that after that he had called in until August 2 (11?), 1965. Sebbo's testimony as to absences was less than satisfactory. He testified that when he was sick he would always say, "You go call." The inference was that he was speaking to his son. On cross-examination Sebbo conceded that he had been absent for sickness from time to time although on direct examination he had testified that the first time he had missed work because of illness was on August 11, 1965. When the contradiction was called to his attention, he testified that he had not missed a day since he had his appendix out, presumably in 1964. His record showed that in 1965, before his discharge, Sebbo had missed no less than 1 day in each of 11 weeks. In 3 of these weeks, in June and July, he had missed 1-1/2,, 3, and 4 days, respectively. Stewart testified that Sebbo did not always call in when he was absent, that he missed more often than he would call, that when he did send word, it would be by his wife or someone else, that when Sebbo did not send word, he would ask Sebbo why he had not called, that Sebbo would tell of his personal problems, and that he would tell Sebbo that his job was more important than anything else. It would appear, therefore, that Sebbo had been not too reliable an employee and that there was cause for Stewart's impatience, especially since Sebbo had missed so much time in July-7 days.42 On all the evidence and my evaluation of it, as well as from my observation of the witnesses, I conclude and find that the Respondent did not, by discharging Sebbo on August 11, 1965, discriminate in regard to his hire or tenure of employment. 7. The layoff of Cuevas Jose Cuevas worked for the Respondent in 1964 but quit and worked elsewhere before returning to work for the Respondent in February 1965, at which time Cuevas was given a 30-cent-an-hour increase over his former pay. His work was electrical. Cuevas attended union meetings and signed an application card, but he did not otherwise engage in union activities except to talk about the Union with other employees at lunch time occasionally. The evidence is vague as to where Cuevas was working at specific dates in July and August 1965. According to Stewart, Cuevas was transferred from the Penrose plant to the Tuxford plant after the period when the plants were closed for vacation in early July.43 Following that time, Stewart testified, orders picked up at Tuxford while they were falling off at Penrose and, instead of laying employees off, Stewart, following a conversation with Ronald Dixon, manager of the Tuxford plant,44 transferred eight or nine45 employees, including Cuevas, to the Tuxford plant. R. Dixon, however, testified that Cuevas was not at the Tuxford plant on the date of the union election-July 30, 1965-so his transfer must have been in August. The Penrose plant laid off a group of employees on August 13, 1965, while the Tuxford plant laid off a group on August 17. It is possible, therefore, that Cuevas 4" The termination slip stated three reasons for termination "(1) Failure to call in or notify co on missing work (2) Not doing jobs assigned to him (3) Smoking in a no-smoking area Air-conditioning was added in 1964 This does not count the time everyone was off because the plant closed for the July 4 week " Tuxford had been closed for 2 weeks and Penrose for only I week then " R Dixon had the title of vice president in charge of labor and production, but his duties were then confined to the Tuxford plant '' R Dixon testified that six to eight employees were transferred Dixon put the time of his conversation with Stewart as before the vacation TRAVELEZE TRAILER COMPANY, INC. 363 was at the Tuxford plant only for the few intervening days. Payroll records of Cuevas were not called for by the General Counsel to fix the date. On August 17, 1965, the Respondent laid off from 6 to 10 employees at the Tuxford plant. R. Dixon testified that he selected the employees to be laid off on the basis of plant seniority. At quitting time that day, R. Dixon stationed himself at the timeclock with paychecks ready to deliver them as the men came up to punch out. Dixon's memory was vague as to who was laid off besides Cuevas. He could remember only one other name-Herrera.46 Dixon testified that he had told the men laid off that the layoff was for lack of work and that if things picked up he would bring them back, but he could not remember whether he told this to the laid-off men as a group or individually. He remembered that some asked why they were laid off, and he testified to what he answered, without remembering who asked. His memory of his answer appeared to be based on what he would have answered to anyone who asked. He had, apparently, no specific memory. He did not remember that Cuevas had asked why he was laid off, but testified that, if Cuevas had asked, his answer would have been the same as given the others. Cuevas' testimony was that as he came to the timeclock to punch out, Dixon said, "Don't look for your card, because I make it up today." On cross-examination he quoted the last phrase as "I make layoff today." Cuevas testified that he asked, "Why?" and that Dixon replied, "Because you work for the Union." Then Cuevas testified: "I say, `Are you sure?' He say, `Yes, I am sure.' I say, `Okay."' After this testimony was read back by the reporter at the request of Respondent's counsel, the General Counsel again asked Cuevas what Dixon had said "when you asked him why you were being laid off." This time Cuevas quoted Dixon as saying , "Because you vote for the union , the election." I am of the opinion that the reporter had misunderstood Cuevas the first time when he recorded the word as "work" instead of "vote." Cuevas' command of English was less than perfect, although he appeared to understand English reasonably well. Dixon denied making the quoted statement. On direct examination, Dixon defined seniority as plant seniority relative to the position the employee was in; i.e., in this case, electrician. On cross-examination by the General Counsel he confirmed this definition but, when asked whether the plant seniority was applied when a man was transferred from another plant, he replied, "It is handled individually at the time of the situation involved." On cross-examination by the Union's counsel, Dixon testified that if anyone from the Tuxford plant was, at a given time, on layoff, the man laid off from the Tuxford plant would have seniority over anyone from the Penrose plant, but he could not remember if there were men on layoff status when Cuevas was transferred. However, on redirect examination , in response to leading questions by Respondent's counsel, Dixon testified that the Respondent does not give a new date of hire to a employee such as Cuevas who is transferred from the Penrose plant to the Tuxford plant and that the date of hire is the date he goes by when he is looking down his list to determine what employees to lay off. Such testimony appears to contain contradictions. It leaves open a suspicion that Cuevas might have been transferred from the Penrose plant to the Tuxford plant in order to keep employees with less seniority at the Penrose plant with the object of making him compete with electricians at the Tuxford plant who had been at that plant or with the Respondent longer than Cuevas had. However, no evidence was adduced to show the hiring dates of all electricians at both the Tuxford and Penrose plants who were in Respondent 's employ in July and August 1965; so it is impossible to ascertain whether or not the Respondent had an ulterior purpose in transferring certain employees, including Cuevas. In any event, the General Counsel's contention as to discrimination against Cuevas is based on Cuevas' testimony of what Dixon told Cuevas when he laid him off. It is not contended that a layoff was not necessary on August 17, 1965. About 2 weeks after his layoff, Cuevas testified, he returned to the plant to see some of his friends. He quoted Stewart as then saying: "Hey, you. What is the matter with you? Are you working now?" When Cuevas answered, "No," Stewart said, according to Cuevas, "What happened with the union promise?" Stewart was not asked about this, and it was not further explained. Later Dave Stahl telephoned Cuevas to come in. Cuevas went to the Penrose plant on the evening of September 15, 1965, and saw Stewart and Stahl, who were together. One of the two asked Cuevas if he wanted to work. I infer from Cuevas' testimony that Stahl asked the question because Cuevas then quoted Stewart as saying, "He don't need to work because you [he] got the nice clothes and the union pay you?"47 Then Stewart or Stahl said , "Come to work tomorrow, 7:30." Cuevas returned to work on September 16, 1965, and was still employed at the time of the hearing. Cuevas appeared to me to be an earnest young man of high caliber. I have no doubt of his good faith. He appeared to understand English fairly well and appeared to be capable of answering questions in slightly broken English. I believe it possible that he might have some difficulty understanding idiomatic English. Dixon denied knowledge of Cuevas' union activities or sentiments. I am persuaded that, when Cuevas was laid off, Dixon did make a statement which Cuevas understood to be what he testified to. As quoted by Cuevas, however, the statement suggests that Dixon had invaded the privacy of the ballot. Cuevas may have so taken it, because he said, "Are you sure?" It is incredible that Dixon would have known how Cuevas voted. If Dixon did make a remark similar to the one quoted by Cuevas, he would more probably have been using the word "you" in the second person plural than in the second person singular. But even if Dixon had sought to make Cuevas believe that the layoff was brought about because the employees had voted the union in , I do not believe that Cuevas was laid off for that reason. The Respondent's slack season had started. Total hours worked were less during that week. Although Cuevas testified that there was still plenty of work, I do not believe he was in the best position to know how long the work would last or how many employees would be needed to keep up with orders, and I find his testimony insufficient to overcome the evidence that the layoff was economically motivated. Even if Dixon had made the remark attributed to him (and I believe it was misunderstood), I should find that, although the remark might have been a violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act, it did not convert a layoff economically necessitated into a violation of Section 8(a)(3) of the Act.48 Accordingly, I find that the Respondent did not discriminate in regard to " Herrera was one of the employees who had been transferred to the Tuxfurd plant at the same time as Cuevas 17 Stewart admitted making a remark about Cuevas' dress clothes He said nothing about the rest of this quotation 41 See Standard Trucking Company, 134 NLRB 371,385 364 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Cuevas' hire and tenure of employment by laying him off on August 17, 1965. 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 the Respondent's operations described in section I, above, have a close, intimate, and substantial relationship 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. Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact and upon the entire record in the case, I make the following: CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. The Respondent is engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 2. The Union as a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. 3. By interfering with, restraining, and coercing employees in the exercise of 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 Respondent has not discouraged membership in a labor organization by discriminating in regard to hire and tenure of its employees in violation of Section 8(a)(3) of the Act. 5. The unfair labor practices herein found are unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. RECOMMENDED ORDER Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law and upon the entire record in this case, I recommend that the Respondent, Traveleze Trailer Company, Inc., its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall: 1. Cease and desist from interfering with, restraining, or coercing employees in the exercise of the right of self- organization , to form labor organizations, to join or assist International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW-AFL-CIO, or any other labor organization, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection, or to refrain from any or all such activities, except to the extent that such rights may be affected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organization as a condition of employment as authorized in Section 8(a)(3) of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action which I find will effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Post at its plant at Sun Valley, California, copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix."49 Copies of said notice, to be furnished by the Regional Director for Region '" In the event that this Recommended Order is adopted by the Board, the words "a Decision and Order" shall be substituted for the words "the Recommended Order of a Trial Examiner" in the notice In the further event that the Board's Order is enforced by a decree of a United States Court of Appeals, the words "a Decree 31, after being duly signed by the authorized representative, shall be posted by the Respondent, immediately upon receipt thereof, and be maintained by it for 60 consecutive days thereafter, in conspicuous places, including places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by the Respondent to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (b) Notify the Regional Director for Region 31, in writing, within 20 days from the date of this Decision, what steps have been taken to comply herewith.so IT IS FURTHER RECOMMENDED that the complaint be dismissed except to the extent of the unfair labor practices herein found. APPENDIX NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYEES Pursuant to the Recommended Order of a Trial Examiner 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 interfere with, restrain , or coerce our employees in the exercise of their right to self- organization , to form labor organizations, to join or assist International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW-AFL-CIO, or any other labor organization , to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in any other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection, or to refrain from any or all such activities, except to the extent that such right may be affected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organization as a condition of employment as authorized in Section 8(a)(3) of the Act. All our employees are free to become or remain, or to refrain from becoming or remaining, members of International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW-AFL-CIO, or any labor organization. , TRAVELEZE TRAILER COMPANY, INC. (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 provisions, they may communicate directly with_ the Board's Regional Office, 10th Floor, Bartlett Building, 215 West Seventh Street, Los Angeles, California 90014, Telephone 688-5840. of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order" shall be substituted for the words "a Decision and Order " "' In the event that this Recommended Order is adopted by the Board, this provision shall be modified to read "Notify said Regional Director, in writing, within 10 days from the date of this Order, what steps Respondent has taken to comply herewith " Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation