Bierl Supply Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsNov 26, 1969179 N.L.R.B. 741 (N.L.R.B. 1969) Copy Citation BIERL SUPPLY COMPANY 741 Bierl Supply Company and United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners • of America , Local 1012, AFL-CIO. Case 18-CA-2732 November 26, 1969 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MCCULLOCH AND MEMBERS BROWN AND ZAGORIA On August 28, 1969, Trial Examiner Marion C. Ladwig issued his Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that Respondent had engaged 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 Decision. He also found that the Respondent had not. engaged in other unfair labor practices alleged in the amended complaint. The General Counsel filed timely exceptions to the Trial Examiner's Decision, with a brief in support thereof. Respondent filed timely exceptions and an answering 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 made at the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Decision, the exceptions and briefs, „and the entire record in this case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner, as modified herein. 1. We agree with the Trial Examiner, for the reasons stated in his Decision, that the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3)1 and (1) of the Act by discriminatorily discharging employee Schwarzenbach. We also concur in the Trial Examiner's conclusion that the General Counsel has failed to prove that the Respondent discriminated against employees-union officials Olberding and Fischer in violation of Section 8(a)(3) and (1). 2. The Trial Examiner found that the Respondent granted unilateral wage increases to nonjourneymen employees and made a unilateral change in vacation benefits during the negotiating period. We agree with this finding. The Trial Examiner concluded, however, that, this activity was not in violation of Section 8(a)(5), relying in part upon the failure of the Union to object to the changes and in part upon his findings that the Respondent did not intend to undercut the Union's prestige as the employees' representative and that the increases did not in fact interfere with the negotiations or indicate bad-faith bargaining. We do not agree v+ith this conclusion. It is clear that under established principles the Respondent' s unilateral changes in wages and vacation policies violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act. Thus, it is now well settled that a unilateral change in conditions of employment is a circumvention of the duty to negotiate which frustrates the objectives of Section 8(a)(5) much as does a flat refusal. The U. S. Supreme Court has held that such a change made while the parties are in the process of negotiating, i.e., at a time when no impasse has occurred, violates Section 8(a)(5) even though the employer has every desire to reach agreement upon a contract and in all good-faith bargains to that end.' There is no dispute that in this case the parties were continuing to meet, that the wage rates were under discussion and a change in vacation practices had been proposed, and that in fact the Respondent instituted a new vacation policy and continued to grant wage increases' without notice to the Union. In these circumstances, it is immaterial that the Respondent may have acted without any intention to undermine the Union's prestige. Nor do we consider it significant that the Union failed to object to the Respondent's institution of the changes, inasmuch as its silence does not constitute a clear and unequivocal manifestation of the Union's intention to waive its right to complain about such action.3 Finally, with respect to the change in the vacation benefits, the Respondent wrongly relies in its answering brief upon the fact that the Union had continuously proposed this very change. Since the bargaining process contemplated by the Act had not been completed, there was no impasse in bargaining, and the Respondent was not free to take unilateral action to put into effect proposals which had been made and were under consideration 4 Accordingly, we hold that the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(5) of the Act when it unilaterally increased certain wage rates and changed vacation benefits, and the employees have thereby been deprived of the benefits of collective bargaining. The record indicates that the first instance of unilateral wage increase occurred on June 13, 1968, almost immediately after the certification of the Union. We find, therefore, that the Respondent deprived its employees of the effective services of their selected bargaining agent on that date. To place the Respondent and the Union in as nearly the same situation as possible to that which existed prior to June 13, we shall construe the initial year of certification as beginning on the date Respondent commences to bargain in good faith with the recognized representative in the appropriate unit.' IN L R B v Benne Katz. d/b/a Williamsburg Steel Products Co. 369 U S 736, 743 'The Trial Examiner found that the Respondent did not have an established regular wage progression pattern and that the raises given were individual increases unilaterally granted 'J H Bonck Company, Inc, 170 NLRB No 164 (TXD) 'Comfort Springs Corporation, 143 NLRB 906, 9l3 'Barnett Pontiac . Inc , 174 NLRB No 57, Burnett Construction 179 NLRB No. 125 742 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board adopts as its Order the Recommended Order of the Trial Examiner and hereby orders that the Respondent, Bierl Supply Company, Carroll, Iowa, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall take the action set forth in the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order, with the following modifications: 1. Renumber the present paragraph 1(b) as 1(c), and insert prior thereto the following paragraph 1(b): "(b) Refusing to bargain collectively concerning wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment with the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local 1012, AFL-CIO, as the exclusive bargaining representative of its employees in the appropriate unit." 2. Add the following as paragraph 2(b) of the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order and reletter the subsequent paragraphs accordingly: "(b) Upon request, bargain with the above-named labor organization as the exclusive representative of all the employees in the appropriate unit with respect to rates of pay, wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment, and, if an understanding is reached, embody such understanding in a signed agreement. The appropriate bargaining unit is: All employees employed in construction and floor covering work of Bierl Supply Company; excluding office clerical employees, professional employees, sales employees, guards and supervisors as defined in the Act, as amended." 3. In the notice to the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order insert the following paragraph as the first indented paragraph: WE WILL, upon request, meet with and bargain collectively in good faith with the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local 1012, AFL-CIO as the exclusive collective-bargaining representative of all the employees in the appropriate unit and if an understanding is reached will embody such understanding in a signed agreement. The appropriate unit is: All employees employed in construction and floor covering work of Bierl Supply Company; excluding office clerical-employees, professional employees, sales , employees, guards and supervisors as defined in the Act, as amended. 4. In the notice insert the following paragraph after the present second indented paragraph: WE WILL NOT refuse to bargain collectively with United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local 1012, AFL-CIO, as the exclusive representative of the employees in the Company. 149 NLRB 1419, 1421. Mar lac Poultry Company. Inc. 136 NLRB 785, 786-787 appropriate unit. IT IS HEREBY FURTHER ORDERED that the complaint herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed insofar as it alleges violations of the Act not found herein MEMBER ZAGORIA, dissenting in part and concurring in part. I would adopt the Trial Examiner's findings, conclusions, and recommendations. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE MARION C. LADWIG, Trial Examiner : This case was tried at Carroll , Iowa, on June 10-11, 1969 ,' pursuant to a charge filed on February 11, and amended February 24, by United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local 1012, AFL-CIO, herein called the Union, and pursuant to a complaint issued on May 13. The primary issues are whether the Respondent , Bierl Supply Company, herein called the Company , (a) discriminatorily discharged one employee , (b) discriminatorily laid off two others, and (c) failed to bargain in good faith, in violation of Section 8(a)(I), (3), and ( 5) of the National Labor Relations Act , as amended. Upon the entire record, including my observation of the demeanor of the witnesses , and after due consideration of the briefs filed by the General Counsel and the Company, I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. THE BUSINESS OF THE COMPANY AND THE UNION INVOLVED The Company is a corporation doing business in Carroll, Iowa, where it is engaged in the construction and remodeling of homes and in the sale of floor covering and other building materials . Annually, its sales exceed $500,000 and its purchases of goods originating outside the State exceed $50,000. The Company admits, and I find , that it is engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act, and that the Union is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. II. THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Discharge and Layoffs I Background The Company's construction and floor covering employees work under separate supervision. President Harold J . Bierl , herein called Bierl, supervises the construction crew, which builds partially-prefabricated Kingsberry Homes, and remodels old homes Bierl's brother, Store Manager Dennis Bierl , supervises the Company's carpet layers, as well as manages the store where floor covering and other building materials are sold. In June 1968, the Union was certified as the bargaining representative of a unit of both construction and floor covering employees. At the time of the election in May, 'All dates, unless otherwise indicated , are in the period from July 1968 until June 1969 BIERL SUPPLY COMPANY 743 there were six construction employees (crew leader Leonard Fischer and five others), four carpet layers, and a salesman -drapery installer. In August, Bierl decided to expand the construction business if a sufficient number of employees could be hired at the nonunion rates the Company was paying. (At that time, Bierl had two journeymen carpenters, crew leader Fischer and finisher Erwin Grote, being paid $3.25 an hour ; a nonjourneyman carpenter , Leroy Bierl, being paid $2.50 an hour; a carpenter helper, Greg Stoelk, being paid $2 an hour; a carpenter-laborer, George Seidle, paid $1.65, and a licensed plumber and licensed electrician, Merle Olberding, paid $3 an hour.) The Company advertised in the newspaper for employees, but got little response On September 16, Bierl hired Wayne Nepple, who had neither a plumber's or electrician's license, to help Olberding with the plumbing, heating, and electrical work. He paid Nepple $2.75 an hour (25 cents less than Olberding). Then on - October 7, Bierl employed Nick Schwarzenbach, an unemployed, union, journeyman carpenter, who agreed to work for $3 an hour. .On October 9, Bierl summarily discharged Schwarzenbach. Thereafter on December 20, during contract negotiations with the -Union, Bierl laid off the two members of the construction crew who were on the Union ' s negotiating committee , Crew leader Fischer and plumber-electrician Olberding (both of whom were also officials of the Union). The complaint alleges that the discharge and layoffs were discriminatorily motivated. 2. Discharge of Schwarzenbach Journeyman carpenter Schwarzenbach, a resident of Carroll. was a member of Carpenters Local 1948 in Ames, about 67 miles away. When Schwarzenbach responded to one of Bierl's newspaper ads for employees, Bierl informed him that the Company could not afford the (union) wages he had been getting. Schwarzenbach, who was unable to find work in Ames, replied that he was looking for something more permanent , and that he was willing to take a lower wage in order to save the time and money spent in driving out of town to work. He agreed to accept $3 an hour. Schwarzenbach worked alone at the construction project on Monday, October 7, and until Tuesday noon, when he began working with crew leader Fischer and carpenter-helper Stoelk (Bierl's son-in-law ). The next morning, Wednesday, October 9, Fischer asked Schwarzenbach (outside, of Stoelk's presence) if, in Schwarzenbach's words, "I would go out on strike with them if they went , and I said yes, I would. And after Mr. Fischer left, the boy [Stoelk, Bierl's son-in-law] came back and I thought he was for the Union, and I asked him if he heard about them going on strike, and he said no." That afternoon, when Stoelk was still working with Schwarzenbach, Union Business Agent Clarion Sampson and Carpenters State Council Representative Fred M. Pedersen went to the job. Sampson talked with Schwarzenbach for about 5 or 10 minutes. In the conversation, they mentioned job opportunities for carpenters in Denver. As Schwarzenbach was leaving work, at the end of the day, he observed Bierl at the entrance to the project, talking to one of the workmen. That evening, he received a telephone call from Bierl. According to Schwarzenbach, Bierl first asked "if this-was Nick," and then said, "This is Harold Bierl. As far as your and my relationship is concerned, you are done as of now." Schwarzenbach asked why, and Bierl "said he thought he hired someone who had some interest in him and wanted to work but I was going to Denver, anyway, so just forget it." On cross-examination, Schwarzenbach testified that he did not advise Bierl of any intention of going to Denver Then the company counsel asked if Schwarzenbach had "any opinion or information as to where he [Bierl] would have drawn that conclusion." Schwarzenbach answered that he had a very positive idea, "It was his son-in-law that was on the job. . I am sure Mr. Fischer didn't tell Mr. Bierl , and I didn't, and he [son-in-law Stoelk] was the only other person ... that knew about the conversation" with Sampson. (Bierl denied having heard that day that the union representatives visited the job, and denied talking to Stoelk ) The following Saturday, October 12, Schwarzenbach went to the office to pick up his check According to Schwarzenbach, Bierl then "said he was going to shut it off before it got started," without explaining what he meant "He also continued to say they are going to strike, anyway, so I might lust shut it down completely. . He said he didn't need them two characters in there telling him how to run his business either." (Union Representatives Sampson and Pedersen had been negotiating with him ) Bierl further "said I was good enough that I could get a job anyplace, he knew that." (Schwarzenbach had already gone to work, the morning after his discharge, on an industrial job in Carroll at a higher rate of pay ) When the company counsel asked him on cross-examination what was his opinion of why he was discharged, Schwarzenbach testified that Bierl "knew I was union and I had heard about this strike and . . I told [Bierl's son-in-law] about it . . and Mr. Bierl knew about that, and I just figured he just tied the thing together and figured that it was best that I wasn't around there any more, because I made both statements in front of his son-in-law " Bierl gave much conflicting testimony about what transpired He testified that Schwarzenbach's "workmanship was fine, but ... he didn't seem to get too much work done." He stated that he went by the job three times on Wednesday, October 9. When asked by company counsel the direct question, "Did you say anything to Mr. Schwarzenbach about the performance that you were observing," he stated, unequivocally, "Not until that evening." Upon being asked when he reached the decision to discharge Schwarzenbach, he first answered, "That evening." Then he changed his answer, stating, "Well, no, when I left there I decided that he wasn't going to work out and he was on a trial basis." Bierl further testified that that evening, while still at the store, he telephoned Schwarzenbach at home and told him "He did a real good job, but except there wasn't enough accomplished," and that he was discharged, "that it wasn't working out." Thus, according to this testimony, Bierl had said nothing to Schwarzenbach about his performance on the job, but summarily discharged him by telephone. Later, however, Bierl testified that when he went to the job ;I1 mid-afternoon, he told Schwarzenbach "I was unhappy with what went on, how much work was progressed," whereupon Schwarzenbach said he "was working his hardest." (This not only conflicts with Bierl's earlier testimony, but it is contrary to Schwarzenbach's denial that there had been any complaints about his work .) Bierl also testified at one point (although giving further contradictory testimony elsewhere) that he talked with crew leader Fischer about Schwarzenbach about mid-afternoon, after visiting Schwarzenbach's job the 744 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD third time, and complained that there was a lot of visiting going on and not too much accomplished. He claimed that Fischer agreed with him, and said "he thought there was a problem," and "he was going to watch it, I guess " Later in his testimony, Bierl was asked if he talked to Fischer again before discharging Schwarzenbach over the telephone. He answered, "No, because I told him I thought I was going to relieve" Schwarzenbach. (This testimony is contrary to Fischer's testimony that Bierl did not say anything to him about not being pleased _ with Schwarzenbach's work, did not consult with him about Schwarzenbach's work performance, and did not advise him that Schwarzenbach might be discharged.) Both Schwarzenbach and Fisher impressed me as honest, trustworthy witnesses . I credit their testimony (and not Bierl 's) about what transpired , and discredit Bierl's claim that Schwarzenbach's work was unsatisfactory. , Having considered all the evidence and the circumstances , including Bierl ' s comments to Schwarzenbach on October 12 about a strike, about shutting "it down before it got started," and about "two characters" (meaning Sampson and Pedersen ) running his business, I find that Bierl was concerned with the influence Schwarzenbach, a member of another Carpenters local, might have on the other employees during the contract negotiations with the Union. (Contrary to Bierl's denials, I find that his son-in-law, Stoelk, had reported to him about Sampson's and Pedersen's visit to the job, and about Schwarzenbach's talk concerning a strike.) I find that Bierl, despite the shortage of journeyman carpenters who would work for $3 an hour, decided to discharge this competent, satisfactory journeyman in order to eliminate from his employment this person he then suspected of being a militant union supporter. (In view of the fact that Schwarzenbach was employed on a better-paying job the day after his discharge, I do not agree with the contention the Company makes in its brief that the Union's failure to file a charge at the time, or to protest the discharge in negotiations , "strongly militates against the force and credibility of the Union's delayed allegations and belated innuendoes.."). Accordingly, I find that the reason given for discharging Schwarzenbach was pretextual, and that the discharge was discriminatorily motivated - to discourage union membership and a strike - and violated Section 8(a)(3) and (I) of the Act. 3. Layoff of Olberding and Fischer By the last part of December, the Company's construction work had contracted instead of expanding, as earlier planned. The new houses were not selling ( because of the "tight money" situation); the bank would not grant another construction loan until a house was sold, and there was little construction work to be done on two unfinished houses. In the December 18 contract negotiations with the Union, Company Attorney Ronald H. Schechtman stated that there would possibly be a layoff, and that if things got worse, the Company probably would close down the construction work and keep only one man, journeyman carpenter Grote, to perform the Company's remodeling work. On December 20, Bierl laid off plumber-electrician Olberding and crew leader Fischer, and on December 27, he laid off carpenter-laborer Seidle. Olberding was recalled on December 31 to complete the plumbing work on one house, and laid off again on January 10, until January 28 when he was recalled to finish the plumbing on the other house, and to do remodeling work. On April 17, when the Company planned to resume its construction work, it recalled Fischer "to his previous position as journeyman carpenter," but he declined because of other work he was doing. (Contrary to the Company's belated contention that Fischer was a supervisor, I find that Bierl himself supervised the small crew of construction workers and did the hiring, firing, and granting of wage increases without consulting Fischer I further find that despite Bierl's plans in August to hire a second crew, to train Fischer to be a construction supervisor, and to place him on a commission , these plans did not materialize, and crew leader Fischer had no actual supervisory authority at the time of his layoff ) The General Counsel does not dispute the shortage of work, but contends that the Company was discriminatorily motivated when it laid off Union Financial Secretary Fischer and Treasurer Olberding (both members of the union negotiating committee), and "retained junior employees Nepple and Stoelk to perform work which both Fischer and Olberding had done in the past." Fischer (hired in April 1968) had been a carpenter for 16 years. Olberding (the Company's senior employee, hired in May 1955) was not only a plumber and electrician, but had worked a total of 8 years as a carpenter for the Company, and despite the customary winter slack seasons, had not been laid off since his first year of employment. Both were qualified to do finish carpentry work. However, as pointed out by the Company in its brief, "except for the inside finish work which [finisher] Grote completed, the remaining work did not require a journeyman carpenter." (The evidence is undisputed that Nepple and Stoelk engaged in a considerable amount of make-work: sweeping out the garage, shoveling snow, and working for one of Bierl's other businesses , hauling, unloading , and unpacking furniture, and hauling away cartons ) As special reasons for retaining the junior employees (both hired in 1968), Bierl testified that "Stoelk was my son-in-law . . I couldn't hardly lay him off," and Nepple's "wife is my secretary . . and they are lust newly weds and they are expecting, I wasn't in any position to lay him off" (Nepple, as well as two carpet layers and the salesman-drapery installer, quit in February.) The evidence does show that in prior years, the Company permitted Olberding during the slack winter seasons to work in the shop, making fittings and duct work for future use, or to work as a carpenter finisher. However, in view of the undisputed shortage of skilled work to be done, and the special reasons cited by Berl, I find that the General Counsel has failed to prove that the December 20 layoffs of these two key employees, Olberding and Fischer, while retaining the lower-paid junior employees, was motivated by a desire to undercut the Union in the negotiations, to discourage union membership, or to interfere with the employees' protected concerted activity I further find that even if it is assumed that Bierl was aware that both Stoelk and Nepple were nonmembers of the Union (as they were), the General Counsel has failed to prove that this was a contributing factor in deciding to retain them while laying off Union Officials Olberding and Fischer. The General Counsel also contends that the Company further discriminated against crew leader Fischer by hiring replacement carpet layers in February without offering Fischer the opportunity to perform this work However, the Company made a practice of hiring low-paid trainees BIERL SUPPLY COMPANY 745 to learn carpet laying, and gave each of them periodic wage increases while he was being trained by working with a leadman. Not only is there no showing that Fischer would have been interested in such a low-paying job, but the assignment of a journeyman carpenter to this different trade would have deprived the Company of a trainee who in time would be trained to assume the role of leadman of a two-man crew I therefore find, in these circumstances, that the Company was justified in not offering employment to Fischer as a carpet layer. Accordingly, I shall recommend dismissal of the allegations that the Company discriminated against Olberding and Fischer. B. Alleged Bargaining Violations 1. Negotiations The main issue in the negotiations was wages. A major problem in reaching agreement on wages was the fact that the Company was the top-paying residential contractor in Carroll, and the Union had been unable to organize any of the Company' s competitors. Following the June 3, 1968, certification, Union Representatives Sampson and Pedersen met informally with President Bierl on June 25. Bierl informed them that they could not expect a wage rate of $4 or more, and stated that many of his men were not qualified for high wages. Thereafter, the Union selected an employee negotiating committee , drafted a proposal, and submitted it to Bierl on July 26, requesting a journeyman rate of $3 30 an hour , to be raised on May I to $3.45. Bierl met with Union Representative Pedersen and the employee negotiating committee on August 12, when (as testified by Pedersen ) Bierl stated his wish that "we had other employers to sit on the same side of the table with him." The Union agreed that that would be helpful, and "the committee left that meeting with instructions to secure additional members from the employees of other employers." Following this meeting , Bierl turned the negotiations over to Attorney Schechtman , and the Union renewed its efforts to organize other contractors in Carroll . During the next 3 months, the Union contacted the Company once or twice a month , while the organizing efforts continued . Sampson lived in Ames , and Pedersen in Waterloo, about 160 miles from Carroll. Usually, when they were in town, they would drop by to see either Bierl or Schechtman , without appointments . (The General Counsel contends that the Company engaged in dilatory tactics, pointing out that the Company failed to propose any meetings , and that Attorney Schechtman was not prepared for negotiations , and said he would be busy for the next 2 weeks , when Sampson and Pedersen met with him on November 7. However , the union representatives did not have an appointment to visit Schechtman on that date , and had not had an appointment about a month earlier, on October 9, when they went by his office and found him to be out of town. In view of the Union's failure to request the attorney for a meeting during this time , or to give him notice , of their coming , I find no merit to the General Counsel 's contention.) Serious negotiations began on December 2. The Union had failed to organize any of the Company's competitors. It was still proposing the same wage scale . Attorney Schechtman advised the union representatives and the employee committee that the employees would have to be classified, because they were not all journeymen. The Union agreed, and on December 18 met again with the Company, proposed its classification of the employees, and reached an agreement with the Company on it (The classification placed the employees along an apprenticeship scale, crediting them with various years of experience in order that the percentages of the journeyman wage -- figured at $3.30 an hour would approximate their current wages.) At this meeting, and in the meeting on the next day, the Union was proposing an immediate $3.30 rate, and the Company was proposing a $3.10 rate. (Sampson and Pedersen, who kept no notes of the meetings, did not recall the Company proposing a rate of $3 10, but I credit Attorney Schechtman's testimony that the Company did propose that journeyman rate ) By this time, the parties had reached an agreement on most of the Union's contract proposal. On December 23, the Union mailed the Company a revised proposal, requesting a journeyman rate of $3.15, to be increased to $3.20 on February 1, $3.25 on April 1, and $3.30 on June 1. On January 3, Attorney Schechtman mailed the Union a reply. He wrote that he had made inquiries and had found that the top journeyman rates of the Company's competitors ranged from $2.20 to $3 an hour He offered a journeyman rate of $3.15 an hour. When the parties met on January 14, the work was slack, none of the houses had been sold, and three employees on the construction crew had been laid off The Union reduced its proposal further, by offering to postpone each of its proposed bimonthly wage increases for 3 months. (The $3.25 rate paid journeymen Grote, as well as Fischer before his layoff, would be red-circled, and would not be increased under the revised proposal until September 1, when the $3.30 journeyman rate would become effective. Plumber-electrician Olberding would, under both the Company's proposals, receive a 15-cent increase immediately, from $3 to the $3.15 journeyman rate.) The Company continued to propose a journeyman rate of $3.15 for the entire life of the agreement (without reducing any employee's wages). No further concessions were made; there was an impasse on wages; and the negotiations concluded. (No further meeting was held until June 4, the day after the end of the certification year. The Company then stated that the Union no longer represented a majority of the employees, and conditioned further bargaining on proof of majority. The Union contended that this was irrelevant presumably in view of the alleged unfair labor practices The General Counsel does not deny a loss of majority, but contends that an employer who has failed to bargain in good faith during the certification year "is in no position to challenge the union 's continued majority status.") Contrary to the General Counsel's contention that the Company was engaged in bad-faith bargaining, and that at the last negotiating meeting on January 14, "Schechtman really had nothing to offer and no real intention to negotiate ," I see nothing in the attorney's conduct at the negotiations to indicate a lack of good faith. The Company had already offered the Union a journeyman rate 15 cents higher than the next highest journeyman rate for residential work in the area. Unless the Company's conduct away from the bargaining table (discussed below) indicates otherwise, its refusal to make further concessions on the wage issue would not indicate a desire to produce a stalemate as a means of undermining the Union. 746 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 2. Other conduct In the Union's original written proposal, dated July 26, the Union sought a 1-week vacation "with pay based on a forty hour week." This was less than the Company had been providing. For years, the construction crew had been given a 1-week vacation with pay based on the number of hours the crew was, working. i.e., pay for 45 hours if the crew was working a 45-hour workweek. On September 6, the Company issued a notice, stating that in 1969, vacation pay would not be paid on overtime as before, but would be "adjusted to straight time of forty hours." Having proposed the same thing, the Union raised no objection -- , until filing its- first amended charge against the Company on February 24. Under these unusual circumstances, I find that the Company's actions in announcing the change in the vacation pay, effective the next year, did not interfere with the negotiations, nor indicate bad faith, on the Company's part. Also in the September 6 notice, in which the Company pointed out deficiencies in the making out of time tickets, the Company stated that "Time books will no longer be furnished. They can be picked up at Stones at very small cost." The cost was 35 cents, for a book which would last 6 months. The Union did not object. This matter is too trifling for further consideration. Although the September 6 vacation and time-book changes were mentioned in the Union's February 24 amended charge (but not in the Union's original charge filed on February 11), there was no mention in either the original or amended charge of the Company's continued practice of giving individual wage increases to nonjourneyman employees. The Company's practice was first challenged , on June I 1 at the trial, when the complaint was amended to allege that the Company "has unilaterally offered and has unilaterally granted wage increases to employees in the bargaining unit without bargaining with the union." In the floor covering department, Store Manager Dennis Bierl customarily hired low-paid trainees to learn the, trade of carpet laying, promising them periodic wage increases. After the June 3 certification of the Union, he continued to upgrade the carpet' layers as previously promised. ,, Following the certification, President Harold Bierl gave no wage increases to the journeyman carpenters, but continued his prior practice of granting individual wage increases to -nonjourneyman employees on the basis of experience, ability, and need. These wage increases were given to two union members, nonjourneyman carpenter Leroy Bierl and carpenter-laborer. Seidle, and to one nonmember, carpenter helper Stoelk. The Union at no time raised any objection, or sought to be consulted. In contract negotiations, the Union was concerned with raising the journeyman' rate. It apparently welcomed the individual increases to the nonlourneyman. The unilateral granting of individual wage increases, under ,other circumstances, may not only constitute evidence of overall .bad-faith bargaining, but also itself violate Section 8(a)(6), as in Insulating Fabricators, Inc , 144 NLRB 1325, 1332, cited by the General Counsel. I find. that -here, though, .th'e Company's actions were not intended to undercut the Union's prestige as the employees' representative, and there is no proof that they had that result, or that they interfered in any way with the negotiation, of higher journeyman rates. Accordingly, I find that the continued granting of individual increases to nonjourneyman employees, without objection from the Union, did not interfere with the negotiations or indicate bad-faith bargaining. Although having found heretofore that Bierl discharged journeyman carpenter Schwarzenbach when Bierl learned that he was talking about a strike, I do not believe that the discriminatory discharge, in October, demonstrated bad-faith bargaining, or a desire to produce a stalemate in December and January, when the impasse over wages occurred. The General Counsel also contends that Bierl's suggestion to Fischer, "an employee committeeman and Financial Secretary of Local 1012, that the employees abandon the Union and form their own independent union," demonstrates bad-faith bargaining This remark was made in August, when Bierl was talking to Fischer about being trained to be a construction supervisor I find that this isolated remark, over 3 months before serious bargaining began, was not sufficient in itself -- nor sufficient when considered in the totality of the Company's conduct - to prove that the Company was not seeking in good faith to resolve its differences with the Union. I shall therefore recommend dismissal of the Section 8(a)(5) allegations in the complaint. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. By discriminatorily discharging Nick Schwarzenbach on October 9, 1968, to discourage union membership and the employees' protected concerted activity, the Company engaged in unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 8(a)(3) and (1) and Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 2. The General Counsel has failed to prove that the Company discriminated against union officials Leonard Fischer and Merle Olberding in violation of Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act. 3. The General Counsel has failed to prove that the Company failed to bargain in good faith or otherwise violated Section 8(a)(5) of the Act. THE REMEDY I shall recommend that the Respondent be ordered to cease and desist from the unfair labor practices found and from like or related invasions of the employees' Section 7 rights; to offer reinstatement to Nick Schwarzenbach, with backpay computed in the manner set forth in F. W Wdolworth Company, 90 NLRB 289, plus interest at 6 percent per annum as prescribed in Isis Plumbing & Heating Co., 138 NLRB 716; and to post appropriate notices. Accordingly, on the basis of the foregoing findings and conclusions, and on the entire record, I recommend pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Act issuance of the following. ORDER Respondent , Bierl Supply Company, its officers , agents, successors, and assigns , shall: 1. Cease and desist from- (a) Discharging or otherwise discriminating against any employee because of his membership in or activities on behalf of United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America , AFL-CIO, or any other labor organization. (b) In any like or related manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing employees in the exercise of their BIERL SUPPLY COMPANY rights under Section 7 of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action necessary to effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Offer Nick Schwarzenbach full reinstatement to his former or substantially equivalent position, without prejudice to his seniority or other rights and privileges, and make him whole in the manner set forth in the section of the Trial Ekaminer's Decision entitled "The Remedy." (b) Notify the above-named employee if presently serving in the Armed Forces of the United States of his right to full reinstatement upon application in accordance with the Selective Service Act and Universal Military Training and Service Act, as amended, after discharge from the Armed Forces. (c) Preserve and make available to the Board, or its agents, upon request, for examination and copying, all payroll records, social security payment records, timecards, personnel records and reports, and all records necessary to analyze the amount of backpay due under the terms of this Order. (d) Post at its places of business in Carroll, Iowa, copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix."2 Copies of the notice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 18, after being duly signed by an authorized representative of the Respondent, shall be posted by the Respondent immediately upon receipt thereof, and be maintained for 60 consecutive days thereafter, in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by the Respondent to ensure that the notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (e) Notify the Regional Director for Region 18, in writing, within 20 days from the receipt of this Decision, what steps the Respondent has taken to comply herewith.' 'In the event that this Recommended Order is adopted by the Board, the words "This Notice is Posted by Order" shall be substituted for the words "Pursuant to 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 the United States Court of Appeals, there shall be added after the words "An Agency of the United States Government" the words "as Enforced by the United States Court of Appeals." 'In the event that this Recommended Order is adopted by the Board, this provision shall be modified to read : "Notify the Regional Director for Region 18, in writing , within 10 days from the date of this Order, what steps the Respondent has taken to comply herewith." 747 IT IS ALSO ORDERED that the complaint be dismissed insofar as it alleges violations of the Act not specifically found herein. APPENDIX NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYEES Pursuant to the Recommended Order of a Trial Examiner of the National Labor Relations Board an Agency of the United States Government WE WILL offer Nick Schwarzenbach full reinstatement, and pay him for the earnings lost as a result of his October 9, 1968, discharge, plus 6 percent interest. WE WILL NOT discharge or discriminate against any employee for supporting United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, AFL-CIO, or any other union. WE WILL NOT unlawfully interfere with our employees' union activities BIERL SUPPLY COMPANY (Employer) Dated By (Representative) (Title) Note: Notify the above-named employee if presently serving in the Armed Forces of the United States of his right to full reinstatement upon application in accordance with the Selective Service Act and the Universal Military Training and Service Act, as amended, after discharge from the Armed Forces. 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. Any questions concerning this notice may be directed to the Board's Regional Office, 316 Federal Building, 110 South Fourth, Minneapolis , Minnesota 55401, Telephone 612-725-2618 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation