Cox Market, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsOct 1, 1965155 N.L.R.B. 1 (N.L.R.B. 1965) Copy Citation Cox Market , Inc. and Local 725, Retail Clerks International Asso- ciation , AFL-CIO. Case No. 95-CA-2119. October 1, 1965 DECISION AND ORDER On June 25, 1965, Trial Examiner William F. Scharnikow issued his Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that the Re- spondent had engaged in and was engaging in certain unfair labor practices within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, and recommending that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action, as set forth in the attached Trial Ex- aminer's Decision. He also found that the Respondent had not en- gaged in certain other unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint and recommended that such allegations be dismissed. Thereafter, the General Counsel and Charging Party filed exceptions to the Trial Examiner's Decision and supporting briefs. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the Act, the National Labor Relations Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three-member panel [Members Fanning, Brown, and Zagoria]. 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 Trial Ex- aminer's Decision, the exceptions and briefs, and the entire record in the case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommenda- tions of the Trial Examiner, with the following additions. The Trial Examiner concluded that the Respondent had violated Section 8(a) (1) of the Act by certain conduct of Supervisors Brown and Dockrey but that no unlawful interference with employee rights occurred by reason of statements by Assistant Manager Roberts to employee Sims or by comments by Roberts in the presence of em- ployee Thomas. The General Counsel and the Union have excepted to the findings concerning Roberts' activities. We find merit in those exceptions. As found by the Trial Examiner, Roberts told Sims that he thought "there would be a store and no Union or a Union and no store" and that President Cox would not permit picketing but "would sign with the Union and if he couldn't meet [the Union's] demands, he would just have to close the doors." Also, Roberts told Alvin Laughlin, in the presence of employee Don Thomas, that he thought President 155 NLRB No. 1. 1 `Z DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Cox would rather close than give in to the Union or the "union shop" and that, in view of Cox's "moral beliefs," Cox would "close shop rather than receive the Union." There can be no doubt that in both instances the assistant manager clearly threatened that the store would close if the Union persisted in its efforts to represent the employees. We therefore do not agree with the Trial Examiner that Roberts' re- marks to Sims were noncoercive. And, since the conversation with Laughlin occurred at a time when Thomas and Roberts were working together, the latter obviously knew Thomas was present and could hear what was said. Under these circumstances, Roberts' remarks may be presumed to have been intended for Thomas' ears, and they constituted unlawful interference with employee activities, in viola- tion of Section 8(a) (1) of the Act.' ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board hereby adopts as its Order the Recommended Order of the Trial Examiner, as modified herein, and orders that the Respondent, Cox Market, Inc., Conners- ville, Indiana, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall take the action set forth in the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order, as so modified : I. Add the following as the first paragraph in paragraph 1. 1. "Cease and desist from : "(a) Threatening employees with closing of the store or other eco- nomic reprisals because Local 725, Retail Clerks International Asso- ciation, AFL-CIO, was selected as the bargaining representative of its employees." II. Change the number of present paragraph 1 of the Recommended Order to (b) and delete therefrom the opening words "Cease and desist from" and capitalize the letter "i" in the word "interfering." III. Add as the first indented paragraph in the Appendix the following : WE WILL NOT threaten our employees with closing of the store or any other economic reprisals because Local 725, Retail Clerks International Association, AFL-CIO, is selected as the bargain- ing representative of our employees. IT IS HEREBY FURTHER ORDERED that the complaint be, and it hereby is, dismissed insofar as it alleges unfair labor practices not found herein. i The Trial Examiner concluded that because the statements under consideration were made to Laughlin, whom he found to be a supervisor, they could not be intimidatory. However, in view of the basis of our Decision herein, we find it unnecessary to pass on the supervisory status of Laughlin. COX MARKET, INC. 3 TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE The complaint in the present case was issued by the Board's Regional Director on a charge filed by Local 725, Retail Clerks International Association, AFL-CIO, herein called the Union, and alleges that the Respondent, Cox Market, Inc., has committed unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Sec- tions 8(a)(1) and (5) and 2(6) and (7) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, 61 Stat. 136, 73 Stat. 519, herein referred to as the Act.' With respect to the unfair labor practices, the complaint alleges, in substance, that: (1) As certified by the Board's Regional Director on November 23, 1964, in accordance with the majority vote of employees in an election by secret ballot con- ducted under his supervision on November 13, 1964, the Union has been since November 13, 1964, and continues to be, the exclusive bargaining representative of an appropriate unit of the Respondent's employees at its Connersville, Indiana, store, within the meaning of Section 9(a) and (b) of the Act.2 (2) On various dates since approximately December 28, 1964, the Respondent, through the acts of its supervisors and agents including John Dockrey and Donald E. Brown, has interfered with, restrained, and coerced its Connersville employees in their joining, assisting, remaining members of, and being represented by the Union, and has thereby committed unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. (3) Among the acts of Dockrey and/or Brown attributable to the Respondent as unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act were Dockrey's and Brown's formation of the "Cox Market Employees' Association," which purported to represent the employees in the appropriate bargaining unit; their solicitation of the signatures of employees to petitions opposed to the positions taken by the Union in current bargaining negotiations with the Respondent; their urging the employees to demand a vote on the Respondent's proposed contract terms; and their solicitation of employee opposition to union policies and procedures relating to picketing, consumer boycotts, and employees' voting on contracts. (4) On and since November 13, 1964,3 the Respondent has refused to bargain collectively in good faith with the Union as the exclusive bargaining representative of the employees in the appropriate bargaining unit and has thereby committed un- fair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act (a) by negotiating with the Union with no intention of entering any final or binding agree- ment and (b) during the course of purporting to negotiate, by resorting to, or avail- ing itself of the benefit of, the alleged acts of Dockrey and Brown as just described, thereby weakening and undermining the employees' support of, and adherence to, the Union as their bargaining agent, causing the employees to oppose the Union's bargaining objectives and tactics on their behalf, and placing the Respondent in the position of bargaining directly with the employees rather than with the Union as their exclusive bargaining representative as required by the Act. In the answer which it filed to the complaint, the Respondent denies its commission of the alleged unfair labor practices and also the commission by its alleged super- visors or agents of any of the acts charged. It also denies that either Dockrey or Brown was its agent or that either of these men was a supervisor since, as it alleges in substance, the Union, in spite of the Respondent's disagreement, had insisted in the preelection conference and during bargaining negotiations between the Union and the Respondent that neither man was a supervisor and that both were therefore to be included as employees in the appropriate bargaining unit. The Respondent further alleges, in this connection, that, with the assent of the Board's agent in charge of the election, both Dockrey and Brown were included in the list of employees eligible to vote and did, in fact, vote in the election of November 13, 1964. Pursuant to notice, a hearing was held at Connersville, Indiana, on May 3 and 4, 1965, before Trial Examiner William F. Scharnikow. The General Counsel, the Respondent, and the Union appeared by counsel and were afforded full opportunity i The Union 's charge was filed on January 15 , 1965, and served on the Respondent on January 18, 1965. The complaint was issued and served on the parties on March 19, 1965. 2 Case No. 25-RC-2716. 2 The complaint apparently inadvertently refers to October 13, 1964, instead of Novem- ber 13, 1964, the date the employees chose the Union as their exclusive bargaining repre- sentative in the election conducted by the Regional Director. 212-809-66-vol. 155-2 4 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD to be heard, to examine and cross-examine witnesses, and to introduce evidence bear- ing upon the issues. Since the hearing I have received and considered briefs sub- mitted by counsel for each of the parties. Upon the entire record in the case, and from my observation of the witnesses, I make the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. THE BUSINESS OF THE RESPONDENT The Respondent, an Indiana corporation with its principal office at Alexandria, Indiana, maintains a store in Connersville, Indiana, where it is engaged in the retail sale of groceries and related items. During the 12 months preceding the issuance of the complaint, a representative period, the Respondent in the course and conduct of its business operations at its Connersville, Indiana, store sold and distributed products, the gross value of which exceeded $500,000. During the same year, the Respondent purchased, caused to be shipped, and received goods and materials at its Connersville store of a value in excess of $50,000 directly from points located outside the State of Indiana. I find and conclude that the Respondent is now, and has been at all material times, an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act, and that it will effectuate the policies of the Act to entertain jurisdiction of the case. II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED Local 725, Retail Clerks International Association, AFL-CIO, herein called the Union, is a labor organization within the meaning of the Act. III. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Preliminary basic findings and the issues Pursuant to a consent-election agreement executed by the Respondent and the Union on November 2, 1964, in Case No 25-RC-2716 and in accordance with the vote of the Respondent's employees by secret ballot in the election conducted under the supervision of the Board's Regional Director on November 13, 1964,4 the Re- gional Director certified on November 23, 1964, that the Union had been designated and selected as collective-bargaining representative by a majority of the Respondent's employees, and was therefore the exclusive representative of all the Respondent's employees in the following unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargain- ing within the meaning of Section 9(a) and (b) of the Act: All employees of the Respondent employed at its Connersville store, exclusive of meat department em- ployees, guards, professional employees, the store manager, the assistant store man- ager, and all supervisors as defined in the Act. Thereafter, the Union's and the Respondent's representatives met at the YMCA in Connersville in an attempt to negotiate a contract on December 7, 16, 28, and 29, 1964, and on January 5 and 14, 1965. No agreement was reached, however. The bargaining issues still open and undecided were raised by the Union's requests for a 2-year instead of a 1-year contract, a 10-cent-an-hour raise for each of the 2 years in addition to the bonus the Respondent was then paying its employees, and premium pay for holidays (all of which the Respondent said it could not afford), and also by the Union's request for an agency-shop provision (to which Respondent President David Cox voiced his "moral opposition"). With bargaining in this posture, no further negotiations have taken place, and on January 15, 1965, the Union began picketing the Respondent's store. The picketing was still continuing at the time of the hearing in the present case on May 3 and 4, 1965. The foundation of the General Counsel's contention that the Respondent com- mitted unfair labor practices in this case, is the conduct of its supervisors. As will be later summarized and considered in detail, there is disputed evidence as to several alleged incidents involving Store Manager Leon Barber and Assistant Store Manager Clyde Roberts, both of whom admittedly were and are supervisors within the mean- ing of the Act. But the bulk of the evidence introduced by the General Counsel relates to the conduct of Department Heads John Dockrey and Donald Brown, their status in the store, and the significance of their conduct from the latter part of December 1964 until the present time From this evidence, it appears that during the critical events in the case, the supervisory or nonsupervisory status of Dockrey 4 The tally of ballots showed that only 1 ballot having been challenged and none declared void, 21 valid votes were cast for, and 18 valid votes were cast against , repre- sentation by the Union. COS MARKET, INC. 5 and Brown, and therefore the Respondent's responsibility for their conduct as the basis for both Section 8(a)(1) and (5) findings, was clouded by the opposing posi- tions taken by the Union and the Respondent concerning their inclusion in, or ex- clusion from, the bargaining unit. Furthermore, as he stated during the hearing, the General Counsel has based his theory of the Respondent's refusal to bargain with the Union in good faith in violation of Section 8(a)(5) of the Act solely on the conduct of Dockrey and Brown as undercutting and defeating the Union's rep- resentative status, its bargaining position, and its tactics during the negotiating meetings 5 There is no dispute as to Dockrey's and Brown's conduct the details of which will be considered at a later point in this Decision. Moreover, it is clear from un- contradicted evidence, and I therefore find and conclude, that both Dockrey and Brown have possessed and exercised such substantial elements of the supervisory authority described in Section 2(11) of the Act that they were and are supervisors within the statutory definition of that term. For Dockrey and Brown are the salaried department heads, respectively, of the store's produce department and its nonfood or "Benjamin Franklin" department; they serve directly under, and are accountable to, the Respondent's president, the store manager, and the assistant manager; with reasonable discretion in the light of the requirements of their work, they schedule the extent and the times of their own working hours, being free to leave the store upon punching the timeclock whenever they complete their work or their duties outside the store require it; their salaries are guaranteed weekly minima, with additional compensation for all hours they may work in excess of 52 hours in a particular week; and each purchases the merchandise for his own department, determines its price, supervises or arranges his department's displays, schedules the hours of his work force, has power to lay off his employees or to send them home when work is slack, and occasionally makes recommendations as to hire or discharge which have been followed. In any event, the principal point of dispute in this case is the significance, not merely of the actual supervisory or nonsupervisory status of Dockrey and Brown, but of the differing positions taken by the Union and the Respondent with respect to the two men's status from the time of the preelection conference in the representa- tion case on November 2, 1964, through the period embraced by the contract nego- tiations in December 1964 and January 1965. For it appears from the evidence that it was the Union which maintained that the two men were not supervisors but were merely "chief clerks" and therefore employees included in the bargaining unit,6 with the result that the names of both men were included on the voting eligibility list and both of them actually voted in the election without challenge. On the other hand, the Respondent's counsel, Clyde Hoffman, argued with the Union's representatives at length, but unsuccessfully at the negotiations of December 16, 1964, and thus about 2 weeks before either Dockrey or Brown engaged in any of the activity with which the present case is concerned, that Dockrey and Brown were both supervisors and should not be included as employees in the bargaining unit. It was only at the negotiating meeting on January 14, 1965, after Dockrey had engaged in his question- able activity with the employees, that the Union informed the Respondent that it finally conceded Dockrey was a supervisor and not an employee in the unit. Even 5 See the section entitled "Statement of the Case," above, for a summary of the pertinent allegations of the General Counsel in his complaint concerning Dockrey's and Brown's participation with, and leadership of, employees in generally supporting the Respondent's bargaining position , opposing the Union ' s position , and requesting the right to vote upon the Respondent 's contract proposal. 9 From the testimony of Clyde Hoffman , the Respondent ' s attorney , it appears, and I find, that this was the position taken by the Union at the preelection conference on Novem- ber 2, 1964 , and that neither he nor President Cox voiced any objection Hoffman ex- plained that at the time he was not familiar with the duties or authority of Dockrey or Brown but , that, upon later learning what they actually were , he made an unsuccessful attempt to convince the Union during negotiations on December 16, that the two men were supervisors and not employees in the appropriate unit. This is also the substance of the testimony of Union Representative Milli ; i e ., that on November 2 the Respondent "did not object" to the inclusion of Dockrey and Brown in the appropriate unit. Fur- thermore , in their briefs, both the Union and the Respondent recognize the situation to have been as I have just set it forth . The General Counsel, however points to elements in President Cox's testimony from which it might appear that it was Cow who originally suggested at the preelection conference on November 2 that department heads such as Dockrey and Brown were employees in the unit . However , Cox was obviously confused and I rely upon the testimony of Attorney Hoffman and Union Representative Milli. 6 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD then, the Union still insisted that Brown, who had not yet become involved in any of the employee activity, was not a supervisor but was merely an employee within the bargaining unit. Under these circumstances, the Respondent contends that, since the evidence does not show instigation or encouragement on its part, Dockrey's and Brown's activities must be regarded as those of employees in the unit insisted upon by the Union and that the Respondent should not be held accountable for them as unfair labor practices. The defense thus interposed by the Respondent against responsibility for Dockrey's and Brown's activities would, if fully accepted, not only preclude a finding that these activities were imputable to the Respondent as general interference with, restraint, and coercion of the employees' exercise of their rights under Section 7 of the Act and therefore an unfair labor practice on the part of the Respondent within the mean- ing of Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act. In view of the General Counsel's limited theory as expressed by him during the hearing, it would also constitute a defense to the allegation of the complaint that the Respondent refused to bargain with the Union in good faith and thereby committed an unfair labor practice within the meaning of Section 8(a)(5) of the Act. With this general background we may now turn to a consideration of the evidence first as to the broad activity of Department Heads Dockrey and Brown, and then as to the acts of Store Manager Barber and Assistant Store Manager Roberts. B. The activities of Dockiey and Brown From what has already been said, it is clear that the Union's representatives re- garded both Dockrey and Brown as employees within the bargaining unit and openly took this position in dealing with the Respondent until at least January 14, 1965, when the Union finally agreed with the Respondent that Dockrey was a supervisor. Even then, the Union still insisted that Brown was not a supervisor but merely an employee within the bargaining unit. Consistent with the position thus taken by the Union, both men were placed on the eligibility list for the election at which at least Brown did in fact cast an unchallenged vote; the Union gave Dockrey the same certificate waiving initiation fees that it gave generally to all the Respondent's em- ployees in the unit; and both Dockrey and Brown were not only permitted, but were invited by the Union, to attend the Union's meetings. Dockrey received the Union's letter sent generally to employees and inviting them to attend these meetings, and in fact attended the union meetings held on November 18, 1964, and January 13, 1965, and thus up until January 14, 1965, when the Union finally agreed that he was a supervisor. Although Brown did not receive these employee notices and invitations, he attended three of the union meetings on the invitation of employees Barbara King and Pauline Nestor. Furthermore, Dockrey and Brown also attended some of the negotiating meetings between the Union's representatives (Milli and Sandford) and the Respondent's representatives (President Cox and Attorney Hoffman). Thus, Dockrey attended the negotiating meetings on December 16, 28, and 29, 1964, and both he and Brown attended the meetings of January 5 and 14, 1965. From Dockrey's credible testi- mony, it appears that the two men attended these meetings in accordance with the announcement made at the Union's meetings that all employees who could do so were welcome to attend the bargaining sessions. From Brown's credible testimony, it further appears that although neither Cox nor Hoffman gave them permission, they made no objection to their attendance. While the employees who served on the Union's committee 7 were not paid for their attendance at these sessions, Dockrey and Brown received their weekly salaries without being docked for any loss of work- ing time. But it does not appear from the record either that a request was made to the Respondent that the Union's committee members be compensated for the time spent by them at the bargaining meetings nor that Dockrey or Brown participated in the bargaining discussions or was consulted by Cox or Hoffman on the bargaining issues. In view of this and Dockrey's and Brown's normal freedom in fixing the extent and times of their own working hours without reduction of their compensation so long as they performed their work satisfactorily, it does not appear to me to be significant, as the General Counsel urges in substance at one point in his complaint, that the union committee was not compensated for negotiating time although the department heads, who turned out to be unfriendly to, and critical of, the Union's course in the negotiations, were free to attend the negotiating sessions without loss of compensation. Without further discussion of the matter, I reject the General 4 Gene Harvey , Lana Wilma, Joan Willis , and Donald Thomas. COS MARKET, INC. 7 'Counsel's contention that in this respect there was any disparity of treatment-much less any significant disparity of treatment-of the prounion employees who attended the negotiating meetings as members of the Union's committee and the two depart- ment heads. In any event, from their attendance of the union meetings and the negotiating meetings, both Dockrey and Brown were obviously familiar with the developments in the bargaining negotiations between the Union and Respondent and the respective positions taken by each of them. But other employees, who were also not favorably disposed toward the Union's position in the bargaining negotiations, were also inter- ested in what was happening. Among them were Barbara King and Pauline Nestor, who worked as checkout cashiers in the store. As will be seen, these two women employees both played a prominent role first with Dockrey in the preparation and circulation of a petition for the submission of contract issues to the employees be- ginning on or about December 28, 1964, and then with Brown (and also to a lesser -degree with Dockrey) in the formation of the "Cox Employees' Association" on or about January 16, 1965, the day following the Union's establishment of the picket line at the Respondent's store. 1. The petition of December 28, 1964 On the morning of December 28, 1964, King asked Dockrey whether anything could be done "to move the [contract] negotiations along." Dockrey replied that he had heard from his uncle who worked for an industrial employer that employees had the right to vote on contract proposals. In their conversation, Dockrey and King agreed that they should tell the Union how the employees felt about the wage proposals under discussion and ask that the contract proposals be submitted to a vote of the employees. King thereupon said she would go to a lawyer about this possibility. Sometime later in the day, Dockrey met Clyde Hoffman, the Respond- ent's attorney, and remarked that he understood employees had the right to vote on their contract. But Hoffman told Dockrey he would have to see another lawyer. On the same afternoon, Dockrey accompanied King to the office of Attorney Himelick in Connersville. Upon being told of the purpose of their visit, Himelick suggested that he draw a petition by the employees to the Union asking for the right to vote. Upon Dockrey's and King's request, Himelick drafted such a petition and Dockrey took it back to the store where he gave it to employee Weston to obtain the signatures of employees. Neither King nor Dockrey paid Attorney Himelick for his service nor has the attorney billed them for it. Employee Weston and Dockrey began circulating the petition and asking em- ployees to sign it that afternoon at the store. But Respondent President David Cox told Dockrey he could not circulate the petition in the store. Accordingly, King, Dockrey, and Weston visited employees' homes that night and, by their efforts, succeeded in getting 32 signatures, including those of Dockrey and Brown. The petition simply asked the Union for the right to vote on the Respondent's counterproposal to the Union concerning wages. Accompanying the petition at least at some stage of the solicitation of employees' signatures was a statement which King had drafted and which described the Respondent's counteroffer on wages as providing one 10-cent-an-hour increase immediately for full-time employees and an immediate 5-cent raise followed by another 5-cent raise in September for part-time employees, but eliminating the bonus then currently being paid by the Respondent. According to Dockrey's testimony, this was essentially the Respondent's counteroffer and one which the group circulating the petition believed to be fair. In addition to soliciting signatures to the petition in the store, Dockrey accom- panied King and Weston in their visits to employees' homes. From the record, it appears merely that Dockrey explained the Respondent's wage offer and asked the employees to sign the petition. In several cases, however, Weston told the em- ployees in Dockrey's presence that it did not look as if the Respondent could meet the Union's demands and that if the Union pressed the issue, the Respondent could be forced out of business. On December 29, 1964, the Respondent's and the Union's representatives held one of their bargaining sessions at the YMCA. During a recess, Dockrey presented the petition to Union Representatives Sandford and Milli. Upon reading the petition, Milli said it was "the biggest piece of junk" he had ever seen. And Sandford tore the petition in half, and told Dockrey to leave the room. Although the Union's representatives thus became aware of Dockrey's involve- ment in the activities of the Respondents' employees, it does not appear that the Union brought the matter to the Respondent' s attention , much less that it made any 8 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD protest to the Respondent For Union Representative Milli testified that, although he was aware of antiunion activities on the part of both Dockrey and Brown and the nature of these activities, the Union never asked the Respondent to stop them On the other hand, as I have noted, President Cox of the Respondent knew that Dockrey was circulating the December 28 petition in the store that day, having been so informed by Store Manager Barber, and merely forbade the circulation of the petition in the store. According to Cox's testimony, he had immediately consulted Hoffman, the Respondent's attorney, about Dockrey's activity and Hoffman had said that Cox was to "stop it." 2. The "Cox Market Employees' Association" When the Union began picketing the Respondent's store on January 15, 1965, some of the women employees became disturbed because they were not in favor of the picketing and were being asked by customers what the reason for the picketing was. Here again, as in December, employee Barbara King took the initiative. Both she and employee Pauline Nestor told Don Brown that they believed something should be done to express the employees' point of view and suggested that perhaps an advertisement might be run in the local newspaper. Brown agreed. Either King or Brown (it is not clear which of them it was) thereupon prepared a statement which the employees were to sign and which was to provide the wording of the newspaper ad. In substance, the statement (to which the witnesses all referred as a "petition") asserted that the picketing of the Respondent's store was "not en- dorsed by the majority of the employees"; that, having been told "we would have the right to draw up our own contract" and vote on the Respondent's proposal, the employees had presented a petition to the Union "for the right to vote on the Company's counterproposal", but that "no steps [had been] taken [by the Union] to recognize it [the employees' petition]" and that the "bargaining agents [had] made it plain they do not intend to give us any participating rights." On January 16, Brown and King got the signatures of about 24 employees on this statement or "petition," by asking the employees to sign it at the store before 10 o'clock and by visiting 12 or 15 other employees at their homes. Although there was no objection made by the Respondent, it does not appear that President Cox or the store's manager or assistant manager knew of their activity. In his testimony, President Cox specifically denied any knowledge. After getting the employees' signatures on the statement or "petition," Brown sub- mitted it to the local newspaper. But the newspaper later telephoned Brown and informed him that it could not run the ad because of its policy "not to become a party to a debate " Brown asked why the paper had printed the Union's ad and re- fused to print the employees' statement, and the reply was that the employee group was not "a recognized body and .. . would have to organize." Brown and King then consulted John Kerrigan, another attorney in Connersville, about organizing an employees' association to sponsor the advertisement. On Janu- ary 26 or 27, acting upon Kerrigan's advice, King and Nestor drafted a brief set of bylaws for a "Cox Market Employees' Association" which were to be signed by the Respondent's employees who desired to become members. The bylaws as thus drafted set forth the name of the Association, provided for the conduct of its activities by a president, vice president, secretary, and treasurer, and the subscription of the signatures of the employee members. The only other provisions in the bylaws were the following: ARTICLE II The purpose of this Association is: 1. The welfare of the employees of Cox Market of Connersville. 2. To insure the rights of members of this group with regards to intimidation of outsiders through advertising or other media. ARTICLE IV The support of this organization will be contributed by members of this association through dues. Between January 26 or 27 and February 1, 1965, Brown and Dockrey solicited the signatures of employees at the bottom of the bylaws, both at the store and at the employees' homes, and, in all, procured 39 signatures. Here again , although the Respondent did not stop them, it does not appear that the Respondent knew of their activity. Moreover, Brown testified that no notice was then given to the Respondent that an association was being formed and President Cox denied any knowledge until after it was formed and its advertisement appeared in the local newspaper. COX MARKET, INC. 9 On February 1, 1965, the Association held its first meeting at the YMCA and the members elected officers by writing their choices on slips of paper which were collected and counted by an election board including Dockrey who was not a candidate. Although three other employees were nominated for the office, Brown was elected president. Barbara King was elected secretary. Dues were fixed at $3 a month for full-time employees and $1 a month for part-time employees, and were then and thereafter paid by the members for each of the few months the Association had been in existence before the hearing in the present case. Rent for the use of the YMCA meeting place and other expenses, including the $35 cost of two advertisements which the Association then placed in the local newspaper, have been paid out of the Association's treasury. No bill, however, has been submitted by Attorney Kerrigan for his advice and services. Following the first meeting of the Association and the election of its officers, Attorney Kerrigan prepared the following advertisement which was thereupon pub- lished in the local newspaper apparently on Thursday and Friday, February 4 and 5: -NOTICE- TO THE CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS OF COX SUPER MARKET ... . We, an Association of the majority of employees of Cox Super Market have requested an opportunity to VOTE on the Company's contract proposal. We HAVE NOT been permitted to do so! No employee of this company is picketing our store. We solicit your patronage and support. COX MARKET EMPLOYEES' ASSOCIATION OF CONNERSVILLE DON BROWN, PRESIDENT On February 22, Brown, as the Association's president, mailed letters to the Union and to the Respondent, advising them of the formation of the Association. By mistake, he reversed the enclosures and the Union actually received the Respondent's letter while the Respondent received the Union's letter. Both letters refer to the employees' desire for a vote on the contract. In the letter addressed to the Union, but which was sent by mistake to and received by the Respondent, Brown said that the employees who were members of the Association "feel their bargaining agent should be responsive to its members' desires . As I have noted, President Cox testified that he knew nothing of the formation of the Association until its advertisement appeared in the newspaper. Moreover, so far as the record shows, there has been no communication between the Association and either the Union or the Respondent other than in the Association's letters of February 22. While there was some evidence that the Association's advertisement was posted in the store, President Cox, Store Manager Barber, and Assistant Store Manager Roberts denied having seen, or having been responsible for, any such post- ing or its continuance. Crediting their testimony, I make no finding, as the General Counsel and the Union apparently urge, that the Respondent was responsible for any posting of the Association's advertisement nor, in this manner or in any other man- ner, for indicating the Respondent's sympathy with the Association or its instigation or acceptance of the Association's assistance in limiting the contract terms to those which might be approved by the Association. C. Incidents involving Manager Barber and Assistant Manager Roberts In addition to the evidence relating to Dockrey's and Brown's activities, the General Counsel produced the testimony of two employees concerning remarks and statements which were allegedly made to them or in their presence by Assistant Store Manager Roberts on four different occasions, with Store Manager Barber participating on one of these occasions. In each of these instances, according to the General Counsel and the Union, the remarks made were antiunion and constituted interference, restraint, and coercion attributable to the Respondent and violative of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. On one of these occasions, according to the uncontradicted testimony of cashier Betty Sims which I credit, she was waiting one evening for her husband to call for her at the store and Assistant Manager Roberts was standing with her. As they stood there, they talked about the Union. Although it does not appear who intro- duced the subject, nor what else was said either by Roberts or Sims, she testified that Roberts remarked to her that he thought "there would be a store and no Union or 10 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD a Union and no store"; that President Cox would not permit picketing but "that he would sign with the Union first"; i.e. that he "would sign with the Union and if he couldn't meet [the Union's] demands, he would just have to close the doors." [Emphasis supplied.] Upon consideration of this testimony, I see no logical or permissible construction of Roberts' remarks other than that he told Sims in effect that the Respondent would "sign" a contract with the Union unless impossible de- mands by the Union made it necessary to close the store. There was thus no threat to close the store to avoid bargaining in good faith with the Union, as the General Counsel apparently believes, nor any such interference with, restraint, or coercion of the employees in their right to be represented by the Union which would be an unfair labor practice within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. I so find. The testimony as to the remaining three incidents involving Assistant Store Man- ager Roberts, and in one instance also Manager Barber, was given by Don Thomas who at the time was employed by the Respondent as a grocery clerk and who, as I have noted, was one of the employees on the bargaining committee with the Union's representatives at the negotiating meetings with the Respondent in Decem- ber 1964 and January 1965. In the first of these incidents, which occurred just after the November 1964 rep- resentation election, Thomas (as well as Manager Barber and Assistant Manager Roberts) testified that Barber and Roberts called Thomas to the office and repri- manded him for his failure to drain the well of the store's "air door" over the week- end. Thomas testified that the manager and the assistant manager also told him that Thomas' persuasion of the part-time boys to vote for the Union was "one of the main reasons that the Union had got in"; and that when Thomas denied having exerted any such influence on the part-time boys, Barber said that he had heard Thomas talking to the boys on the floor of the store, that Thomas knew this was "illegal," that the Respondent's "hands had been tied before the election," but that "now things were going to change." Both Barber and Roberts denied that the Union had even been mentioned in this conversation and testified that they had merely reprimanded Thomas not only about the "wind door" but also about his failure to maintain his area of the store properly. On consideration of this conflicting testi- mony I credit that of Barber and Roberts and find that, in this incident, they did not attempt to repress Thomas' union activities nor interfere with any of his em- ployee rights in violation of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. As to the second incident involving Assistant Store Manager Roberts to which Thomas testified, Thomas' testimony was uncontradicted and I therefore credit it. This incident occurred in the end of December 1964 or the beginning of January 1965 just after Thomas had been asked by Dockrey to sign, and some of the other em- ployees did sign, the petition to the Union for the right to vote on the contract proposal made by the Respondent. At that time, Thomas overheard Assistant Produce Manager Alvin Laughlin tell Roberts he thought President Cox would close rather than give in to the Union or the "union shop," and also ask Roberts for a leave of absence so he (Laughlin) could go to Texas. Roberts agreed that, in view of President Cox's "moral beliefs," Cox would "close shop rather than receive the Union," but that it would be better if Laughlin quit instead of taking a leave of absence. From Thomas' testimony to this effect it does not appear that Roberts' remarks were either directed to Thomas or that it was intended or realized by Roberts that Thomas would overhear them. Furthermore, the only reference in the record to Laughlin described him as "assistant produce manager" and thus apparently as a supervisor. It cannot be said upon this state of the record that Roberts' remarks were made to, or intended to be heard by, an employee, nor therefore that the remarks can reason- ably be construed as a threat made by the Respondent to an employee that the Respondent would close the store to prevent consideration and the possible con- cession of one or more of the Union's bargaining requests I therefore do not find, as the General Counsel and the Union urge, that Assistant Store Manager Roberts' remarks constituted interference with, restraint, or coercion of employees within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act Moreover, since neither Roberts nor Laughlin played any role in determining the Respondent's position or the course it or President Cox would follow, Roberts' remarks must be regarded simply as an opinion expressed by one supervisor to another concerning their employer's attitude and not necessarily as a reflection of such an actual intransigence on the part of the employer with respect to bargaining issues as would amount to a refusal to bargain in good faith within the meaning of Section 8(a)(5) of the Act. COX MARKET, INC. 11 As to the third incident involving Assistant Manager Roberts which occurred at the end of January or the beginning of February 1965, Thomas and Roberts agreed in their testimony that Roberts complained to Thomas that Thomas was slow in his work and shifted Thomas' schedule of working hours to coincide with Roberts'. Thomas testified that Roberts said since the Union had been in the store, Thomas had become slower and slower in his work; that if Roberts were Thomas he would go to another store because Thomas had shown disloyalty to Cox through his sup- port of the Union and through his wife's buying at another store; and, finally, that Cox had been more tolerant of Thomas' loyalty to the Union than other employers would have been and that if Roberts were Cox, Thomas "would have left [the Respondent's employ] long ago." But Roberts testified that in this conversation he had not mentioned the Union in reprimanding Thomas for his slowness; that he told Thomas he was going to schedule the same hours for Thomas as for himself so that he could be sure Thomas would get his work done; that Thomas then said that the Respondent was "just trying to get something on him" because of his union activities; and that Roberts replied that he was not trying to "get" Thomas and that President Cox said there would be no reprisals. Upon consideration of this conflict in the testimony, I credit Roberts' testimony and, finding that Roberts' testimony has set forth the substance of the conversation, I also specifically find that Roberts did not refer to Thomas' union activities in reprimanding Thomas, nor charge Thomas with disloyalty or in effect threaten him with discharge because of his union activities. D. Conclusions Upon the considerations just set forth, I have concluded contrary to the allega- tions of the complaint, that there is no credible evidence that Store Manager Leon Barber or Assistant Store Manager Clyde Roberts by any statements made by them to employees or by any other action interfered with, restrained, or coerced em- ployees in the exercise of the employees' rights under Section 7 of the Act Accord- ingly, I will recommend dismissal of those allegations of the complaint which assert that the Respondent through the statements or actions of Barber or Roberts com- mitted unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act. There remains the broad question of whether, under the peculiar circumstances of this case, the Respondent was and is responsible for the acts of Department Heads John Dockrey and Donald Brown and, through their acts (as the complaint alleges), committed unfair labor practices within the meaning of either or both subsection 8 (a) (1) and (5) of the Act. In accordance with the Regional Director's certification in Case No. 25-RC-2716 and upon the basis of the proceedings had therein, I conclude that on and since November 13, 1964, the Union has been and is the exclusive representative of all the Respondent's employees in the employee unit described in the Regional Director's certification as being appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9(a) and (b) of the Act. Furthermore, as I have already found upon the evidence in the present case and despite the murkiness of the positions of the parties before the hearing, Department Heads John Dockrey and Donald Brown have at all times been supervisors within the meaning of Section 2(11) of the Act, and not employees within the appropriate bargaining unit. Although the Union has thus been their exclusive bargaining representative under the Act, the Respondent's employees were entitled to representation in accordance with their desires and, to the extent that they or any group of them attempted to influence, govern, or control the objectives and the tactics of the Union to that end, they were engaged in such "concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargain- ing" as have been guaranteed to them by Section 7 of the Act and protected against interference both by the Union representing them and their Employer 8 The em- ployees themselves therefore might properly have attempted to persuade the Union to accord them the right to vote on contract terms and even, as some of them apparently intended, to accept the terms offered by the Respondent. So far as they 8N.L.R.B. v. Nu-Car Carriers, Inc., 189 F. 2d 756, 760 (C.A. 3), cert. denied 342 D.S. 919, enfg. 88 NLRB 75, 76 , 88-89; Roadway Express , Inc., 108 NLRB 874, 875, enfd. sub nom. N.L.R.B. v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters , Chauffeurs , Warehouse- men and Helpers of America, Local 823, 227 F. 2d 439 (C A. 10) ; Roadway Express, Inc., 119 NLRB 104 , 107-108, enfd . 257 F. 2d 948 ( C.A 4) ; Cooper Alloy Corporation (Air- craft Division ), 120 NLRB 586 ; Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Ltd ., 123 NLRB 395 , 407-408, remanded on other grounds 274 F. 2d 567 (C.A.D.C.). 12 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD themselves were concerned, it was their protected right to pursue such a course by bringing their concerted pressure to bear upon the Union through the December 28, 1964, petition and the newspaper advertisements in the beginning of February 1965. Furthermore, the formation of the Cox Market Employees' Association, as part of their scheme of pressure upon the Union, was also a protected activity so far as the employees were concerned. For, although the employees in the Association were apparently favorable to an acceptance of the Respondent's contract terms, they made no attempt to deal with the Respondent nor therefore to substitute the Association for the Union as their representative. Instead, as the Association stated on Febru- ary 22, 1965, in the letter which it directed to the Union but which by mistake was mailed to and received by the Respondent, its purpose was merely to convince the Union that, as "their bargaining agent [it] should be responsive to its members' desires," an objective which the Board and the courts have repeatedly approved as being protected by Section 7 of the Act .9 Dockrey's and Brown's participation in and leadership of these proper activities of the employees, however, constituted an interference which the Act was designed to eliminate. For regardless of how the Union and the Respondent treated them, these two men were actually supervisors under the tests laid down by the Act, and their supervisory authority not only gave them the power to affect the status of employees but was likely to create the impression that they were exercising their influence upon the employees with the approval of the Respondent. Since the General Counsel has made this supervisory interference with employee rights the sole basis for his contention that the Respondent committed unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act, what effect, in its determination of the ultimate unfair labor practice issues and the terms of an appropriate remedial order, should the Board give to the fact that the Union, in dealing with the Respondent, insisted that Dockrey and Brown were not super- visors? For the reasons which follow I conclude that the facts as shown by the evidence in the present case justify and require findings that the Respondent engaged in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1), but not Section 8(a)(5) of the Act, with a correspondingly limited remedial order. From the evidence, it appears, and I find, that the Respondent (personified in this small-business operation by President Cox) knew nothing of its employees' activity critical of their Union's course in bargaining nor of Dockrey's or Brown's roles therein before they developed and had any effect and certainly that the Respondent did not instigate or encourage Dockrey's or Brown's participation Furthermore, before any of the employees' or Dockrey's or Brown's activity began the Respondent had already formulated and presented its contract terms to the Union and then con- tinued to negotiate with the Union in an apparent attempt to reach an agreement acceptable to both sides without reference to or any attempt to take advantage of the employees' activities. Throughout all this, by insisting that Dockrey and Brown were employees in the bargaining unit it represented despite the Respondent's pro- testation of December 16 that they were actually supervisors, the Union was as much to blame as the Respondent for permitting Dockrey's and Brown's participation as putative employees in the general employee activity critical of the Union. For although it possessed as much information about Dockrey's and Brown's activities as did the Respondent, never once did it make any protest to the Respondent or ask that this activity be stopped or repudiated by the Respondent. But, despite all this (i.e., the absence of any authority, instigation, encouragement, or approval by the Respondent, and the Union's initial and continuing responsibility for the situa- tion which permitted Dockrey and Brown to act though they were merely em- ployees), Dockrey's and Brown's activities were actually those of the Respondent's supervisors; they did interfere with the employees' freedom to engage in, or to re- frain from engaging in, concerted activities protected by the Act; and under the principles underlying the Act and recognized by the Board and the courts, the Re- spondent as the Employer was responsible for Dockrey's and Brown's activities even though unauthorized and also for the interference which these activities brought to hear upon the employees Accordingly, I find and conclude that the Respondent through the activities of Dockrey and Brown did interfere with, restrain, and coerce its employees in the exercise of their right tinder Section 7 of the Act and thereby committed unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) as the complaint alleges. 0 Ibid. See particularly Nu-Car Carriers, Inc , 88 NLRB 75, 88-89. COX MARKET, INC. 13 Certainly, the general effect of this interference was to give the Respondent an appreciable advantage in dealing with the Union at the bargaining table. The pressure exerted upon the Union by the activities of the employees and Dockrey and Brown as putative employees, favored acceptance of the Respondent's contract terms, withdrew the employees' support of the Union's bargaining objectives, and, in that sense, "undercut" the Union as the General Counsel and the Union both point out. Furthermore, if fair and free bargaining is yet to proceed under the Respond- ent's continuing, general statutory obligation to bargain with the Union as certified exclusive bargaining representative, the Respondent's bargaining advantage traceable to Dockrey's and Brown's activity should be wiped out, as far as possible, through an appropriate remedy of the supervisory interference which I have found to be an unfair labor practice on the part of the Respondent within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. But, at the same time, the employees' future exercise of their free and independent right to engage in concerted activities, vis-a-vis the Union, should not be limited nor disturbed. On the other hand, under the peculiar circumstances of its case, the mere fact that in its negotiations with the Union the Respondent may have derived a bargain- ing advantage from its supervisors' improper activities does not, in my opinion, pro- vide a sufficient basis for a finding that it failed or refused to bargain with the Union in the good faith required by the Act, nor therefore that it had violated not only Section 8(a)(1) but also Section 8(a)(5). On the contrary, upon the facts shown by the present record it appears that the Respondent did bargain in good faith in an attempt to reach an agreement; that it established its position with respect to the various issues even before any of the objectionable supervisory activities began and then merely adhered to this position as did the Union to its counterposition; that the Respondent did not know of, much less authorize or give its approval to, its supervisors' activities; that it did not plan nor exploit the bargaining advantage which it received from these activities; and that the Respondent's very bargaining advantage of which the General Counsel and the Union now complain was primarily the result of the position taken by the Union that Dockrey and Brown were em- ployees and not supervisors. It would therefore be impossible to find upon any of the facts in this case that this Respondent failed or refused to bargain in good faith. Nor would the finding of a violation of Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act, which I have made upon the supervisors' activities, warrant an order to bargain. For such an order would contain implications of a violation of the Act by Respondent beyond the Section 8(a)(1) interference found, and would serve to place the Respondent in an undeservedly disadvantageous position upon a resumption of negotiations with the Union. In any event, as I have already stated, the Respondent is still under the general statutory obligation to bargain with the Union as the exclusive bargaining representative of all the employees in the appropriate bargaining unit, and the most that can fairly be required of the Respondent is that it take such steps as are possible for the dissipation of the effects of the Section 8(a)(1) violation found. Whether the recommendations I hereinafter make will be sufficient, is conjectural, but, as I have pointed out, it was not the Respondent, but the Union which created the situa- tion permitting Dockrey and Brown to act as they did. For the foregoing reasons, I shall recommend dismissal of those allegations of the complaint which assert violation by the Respondent of Section 8(a)(5) of the Act, and the issuance of an order against the Respondent confined to my Section 8(a)(1) findings based upon the improper supervisory activities of Dockrey and Brown. 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 business operations of the Respondent as described in section I, above, have a close, intimate, and substantial relation to trade, traffic, and com- merce among the several States, and tend to lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free flow of commerce. V. THE REMEDY Having found that the Respondent through its supervisors, John Dockrey and Donald Brown , has engaged in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Sec- tion 8(a)(1) of the Act, I shall recommend that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act. 14 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD The essence of the unfair labor practices which have been found is that Super- visors Dockrey and Brown, although without the Respondent's authority, participated and were among the leaders in concerted activities of the Respondent's employees which undercut the Union's bargaining position and tactics and favored acceptance of the Respondent's contract proposals. To dissipate the effect of these activities of the supervisors so far as it is possible, and to prevent their continuance or resumption, I shall recommend that the Respondent: (1) Issue written instructions to John Dockrey and Donald Brown that, upon penalty of discharge so long as they occupy their present or other supervisory posi- tions with the Respondent, they are to cease, and in the future refrain from, par- ticipating with, counseling, or advising any of the Respondent's employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act, and that they are also to withdraw from, and hereafter refrain from, holding membership or any position or office in the Cox Market Employees' Association or any similar future group of the Respondent's employees which may be formed. (2) Require Dockrey and Brown to comply with these instructions. (3) Notify it employees as provided in my Recommended Order that: (a) It has issued the foregoing written instructions to Dockrey and Brown and intends to en- force them; (b) it disavows and repudiates the action of Dockrey and Brown in their participation with, counseling, and advising its employees in the employees' concerted activities under Section 7 of the Act; and (c) it recognizes, and will not in the future interfere with, its employees' independent exercise of the right to engage in, or to refrain from engaging in, the concerted activities guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act. 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 , Cox Market, Inc., is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. 2. Local 725, Retail Clerks International Association , AFL-CIO, is a labor organi- zation within the meaning of the Act. 3. All employees of the Respondent employed at its Connersville store, exclusive of meat department employees , guards, professional employees , store manager , assist- ant store manager, and all supervisors as defined in the Act, constitute , and at all material times have constituted , a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9(b) of the Act. 4. On and at all times since November 13, 1964, the Union has been, and now is, the exclusive representative of all employees in the aforesaid bargaining unit for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9(a) of the Act. 5. At all times material herein, John Dockrey and Donald Brown have been supervisors and not employees within the meaning of the Act. 6. By the acts of its supervisors , John Dockrey and Donald Brown , in participat- ing with , counseling , and advising the Respondent 's employees in the aforesaid bar- gaining unit in the employees ' exercise of the rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act, the Respondent has interfered with , restrained , and coerced employees in the exercise of said rights and has thereby committed unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act. 7. The aforesaid unfair labor practices are unfair labor practices affecting com- merce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 8. The Respondent has not refused to bargain collectively with the Union in good faith and therefore has not committed unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 ( a)(5) as alleged in the complaint. RECOMMENDED ORDER Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law and upon the entire record in the case, and pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, it is recommended that the Respondent, Cox Market, Inc., an Indiana corporation, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall: 1. Cease and desist from interfering with, restraining, and coercing its employees, through the acts of its supervisors, in the employees' exercise of their right to engage in, or refrain from engaging in, the concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining which are guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act. COX MARKET, INC. 15 2. Take the following affirmative action which it is found will effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Immediately issue written instructions to John Dockrey and Donald Brown that, upon penalty of discharge so long as they occupy their present or other super- visory positions with the Respondent, they are to cease, and in the future refrain from, participating with, counseling, or advising any of the Respondent's employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act, and that they are to withdraw from, and hereafter refrain from holding, membership or any position or office in the Cox Market Employees' Association or any similar future group of the Respondent's employees which may be formed. (b) Require Dockrey and Brown to comply with the foregoing instructions. (c) Post at its store in Connersville, Indiana, copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix." 10 Copies of said notice, to be furnished by the Regional Director for Region 25, shall, after being signed by a representative of Respondent, be posted by it immediately upon receipt thereof, and be maintained for a period of 60 consecutive days thereafter, in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by Respondent to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (d) Notify the Regional Director for Region 25, in writing, within 20 days from the receipt of this Decision, what steps the Respondent has taken to comply herewith." 10 In the event that this Recommended Order be 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 be enforced by a decree of a United States Court of Appeals, the words "a Decree 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 be 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." 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 Rela- tions Act, as amended, we hereby notify our employees that: WE WILL NOT interfere with, restrain, or coerce our employees, through the acts of our supervisors, in the employees' exercise of their right to engage in, or refrain from engaging in, the concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining which are guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act. WE HAVE issued, and will enforce, written instructions to Department Heads John Dockrey and Donald Brown, that, so long as they occupy their present or other supervisory positions with us and upon penalty of discharge, they are to cease, and in the future refrain from, participating with, counseling, or advis- ing any of our employees in the exercise of the employees' rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act, and that they are to withdraw from, and hereafter refrain from holding, membership or any position or office in the Cox Market Employees' Association, or any similar future group of our employees which may be formed. WE DISAVOW AND REPUDIATE the action of Department Heads John Dockrey and Donald Brown in their participation with, counseling, and advising our employees in the employees' concerted activities under Section 7 of the Act. WE RECOGNIZE, and WILL NOT in the future interfere with, our employees' independent exercise of their right to engage in, or to refrain from engaging in, any of the concerted activities guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act. COX MARKET, 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. 16 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD If employees have any question concerning this notice or compliance with its pro- visions, they may communicate directly with the Board 's Regional Office , 614 ISTA Center, 150 West Market Street , Indianapolis , Indiana, Telephone No. Melrose 3-8921. Local 157, United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry of the United States and Canada, AFL-CIO and Midwest Homes, Inc. Case No. 25- CC-133. October 1, 1965 DECISION AND ORDER On July 22, 1965, Trial Examiner Sidney Sherman issued his Deci- sion 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. Thereafter, Re- spondent filed exceptions to the Trial Examiner's Decision. Pursuant to 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 [Chair- man McCulloch and Members Jenkins and Zagoria]. 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 Trial Examiner's Decision, the exceptions, and the entire record in the case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, 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 hereby adopts as its Order the Recommended Order of the Trial Examiner, and orders that Respondent, Local 157, United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry of the United States and Canada, AFL-CIO, its officers, agents, and representatives, shall take the action set forth in the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION The charge herein was served on Respondent on March 10 , 1965,1 the complaint issued on April 9, and the case was heard on June 2 before Trial Examiner Sidney Sherman . The issues litigated related to alleged violations of Section 8(b)(4)(i) and (ii)(B ). After the hearing briefs were filed by the General Counsel and Respondent. i All events herein occurred in 1965, unless otherwise stated. 155 NLRB No. 5. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation