Dyson-Kissner Corp.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 16, 1970181 N.L.R.B. 962 (N.L.R.B. 1970) Copy Citation 962 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Dyson-Kissner Corporation , K-P Manufacturing Division and Over-The-Road , Transfer, Cold Storage , Grocery & Market Drivers, Helpers & Inside Employees Union , Local 544, affiliated with International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America and United Electrical , Radio & Machine Workers of America , UE. Cases 18-CA-2742, I8-CA-2770 March 16, 1970 DECISION AND ORDER BY MEMBERS FANNING , BROWN, AND JENKINS On December 3, 1969, Trial Examiner Thomas A Ricci issued his Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that the Respondent had engaged in and was engaging in certain unfair labor practices within the meaning of the Act, and recommending that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action, as set forth in the Trial Examiner's Decision attached hereto. Thereafter, the General Counsel filed exceptions to the Trial Examiner's Decision and a brief in support of its exceptions. Respondent filed cross-exceptions to the Trial Examiner's Decision and briefs in support of its cross-exceptions and in answer to the General Counsel's exceptions and supporting 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 Trial Examiner's Decision, the exceptions, briefs, and the entire record in this case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner. ORDER designated Trial Examiner at Minneapolis, Minnesota, on August 26 and 27, 1969, on complaint of the General Counsel against Dyson-Kissner Corporation, K-P Manufacturing Division,' herein called the Respondent or the Company A single complaint was issued on July 18, 1969, based upon two separate charges In Case 18-CA-2742 the charge was filed on March 5, 1969, by Over-The-Road, Transfer, Cold Storage, Grocery & Market Drivers, Helpers & Inside Employees Union, Local 544, affiliated with International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, herein called the Teamsters. In Case 18-CA-2770 the charge was filed on April 17, 1969, by United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers of America, UE, herein called the UE The issues are whether the Respondent violated Section 8(a)(3) of the Act in the discharge of three employees, and Section 8(a)(I) by certain conduct of management representatives Briefs were filed after the close of the hearing by the General Counsel, the Respondent, and the UE Upon the entire record, and from my observation of the witnesses, I make the following FINDINGS OF FACT 1. THE BUSINESS OF THE COMPANY The Respondent, a Delaware corporation, operates a plant in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where it is engaged in the manufacture, sale and distribution of automatic screw machine parts, grease guns, and hydraulic pressure equipment During the past 12 months, a representative period, it manufactured and shipped from this location products valued in excess of $50,000 to out-of-state points, and during the same period it purchased and received at this plant products valued in excess of $50,000 which were received from locations outside the State. I find that the Respondent is engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act 11. THE LABOR ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED I find that Over -The-Road, Transfer, Cold Storage, Grocery & Market Drivers, Helpers & Inside Employees Union, Local 544 , affiliated with International Brotherhood of Teamsters , Chauffeurs , Warehousemen and Helpers of America, and United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers of America, UE, are labor organizations within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the Board hereby adopts as its Order the Recommended Order of the Trial Examiner, and orders that the Respondent, Dyson-Kissner Corporation, K-P Manufacturing Division, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall take the action set forth in the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE THOMAS A. Ricci, Trial Examiner A hearing in the above-entitled proceeding was held before the duly 111. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES This case touches upon union activities on behalf of two unions, the Teamsters and the UE. In about February of 1969 truckdrivers employed by the K-P Company Jointed the Teamsters Later, in March and early April, employees of Northwest Automatic Products Division of the Dyson-Kissner Corporation, herein called N-W, as well as K-P, Joined the UE The two companies operate in physically separate, but nearby buildings, are both owned by Dyson-Kissner Company, and are both immediately and personally controlled and run by Frank Griswold, who once owned them as an individual and in 1968 sold both to the Dyson-Kissner Company Bruce Smith, a K-P 'The name of the Respondent Company appears as corrected by agreement of the parties at the hearing 181 NLRB No. 107 DYSON-KISSNER CORP. 963 truckdriver, signed a Teamster membership card on February 11, 1969, told his supervisor, the traffic manager, early on the morning of March 3, and was discharged a few minutes later The complaint alleges his dismissal was retaliatory action and therefore a violation of Section 8(a)(3) of the Act Eino Haataja was a part-time driver for K-P, he spent most of his time as a stock clerk, filling orders for shipment On March 4 the Teamster Union established a picket line at the K-P premises to protest Smith's discharge. Haataja was asked to make a truck delivery through the picket line; he did not do it He never worked for the Company again and it is alleged the reason for his discharge was because he refused to cross the picket line, also an unfair labor practice On April 3 a 17-year-old girl, Joy Marth, who had been hired by K-P less than 3 weeks before, signed a UE membership card and was discharged at the end of the workday Her dismissal is also said to have been because of her union activities and a violation of the statute. There are also complaint allegations of unlawful surveillance and interrogation. The Respondent denies the commission of any unfair labor practices The Discharge of Bruce Smith Smith was for 12 years a driver for K-P, always in personal contact with Mr. Griswold, in fact enjoying a quite intimate and friendly relationship with him There was never any question about his competence or sense of responsibility towards the job He joined the Teamsters on February 11, and then talked about it with other employees He interested one of the N-W drivers, Kodytek, into signing up He talked to several others, including Streif and Haataja, of the K-P shipping department, Earl Rautio, a truck mechanic, and Tom Bistadu, a painter, both of K-P, and Hugo Lusar, who works for a certain coffee company in the same area, a company also owned and operated by Griswold. He did this during working hours, at the loading platform, in the general garage and shop area, as well as at lunch and during coffeebreaks On occasion, when the N-W driver group was overloaded with work, he used to make a special trip for N-W, and this took him into the N-W area, where he also talked to employees there about the Union It appears he was careful to warn Kodytek, of N-W, to keep all of this from Griswold's ears Early in the morning of March 3, after he made his first delivery, his supervisor, Traffic Manager Waryan, told him to wash the truck, and that he, Waryan, had heard Griswold was thinking of giving part of the truck delivery work to an independent trucking company called Widholm. Smith commented maybe this was because Griswold heard he had joined the Teamsters Waryan asked had Smith really signed, and then said it was the first he knew about it Within half an hour Smith was called into the office of Plant Superintendent Jernander, where Griswold had also called Jernander and Waryan to be witnesses to a conversation. There is a conflict in testimony as to part of what Griswold then said, or did not say. According to Smith, Griswold opened with. "What's this I hear about you joining the Teamsters Union, did you'"" Smith admitted he had, and Griswold continued: "Wally came and told me this morning that you had joined the Teamsters Union." Smith then called Waryan a "fink," and Griswold came back with "That's what I pay the man for. I pay him to keep me informed to what is going on in my plant . How could you join the union after I have been so good to you"" To the foreman Griswold then said "I can't see how this man could join a union after I have been so good to him " Griswold then told Smith he was discharging him, and the employee asked "What for, for joining the union"" The answer was "No, I am not firing you for joining the union, I am going to fire you because you are unhappy with your work." There followed some talk with Smith protesting he was satisfied and would not have been kept for 12 years were his work less than satisfactory and Griswold suggesting he was not worth his "salt " When Griswold asked why Smith had joined the Union, he answered because Griswold had sold the business and the future must be protected As they talked, Griswold called his secretary on the phone to inquire how much Smith had earned in 1968, it was $8,000 With this Griswold turned to his assistants- "Look at the pay I have paid that man Isn't this a good salary to pay a truckdriver?" Again Griswold called his secretary to inquire how much Smith had earned, in 1967, and again confronted Smith with what the employer thought a good pay Griswold then went on to remind Smith of past favors. "Look at how I helped this man, I helped him with his house and plumbing and his house and contracts I haven't asked him for money and he turns around and does this to me How could you do this?" Griswold then reminded Smith that he had damaged two trucks and never been criticized for it Finally he had the secretary prepare checks for the driver and paid him for the entire week -- this was Monday, the first day of the workweek -- and an additional 2 weeks' vacation pay. At the hearing Griswold said he discharged the driver for soliciting on behalf of the Union during working hours. Indirectly, but no less clearly, he also implied there was another reason that he had decided to contract away the K-P trucking deliveries and therefore no longer needed the man Be that as it may, his testimonial version of the discharge conversation, where he admitted inviting the two supervisors as witnesses, is as follows "I told him I knew he wasn't happy, I didn't want anyone working at my company that wasn't happy. He was not loyal, [ told him I told him that he would be much better working for someone else. I was paying all of the employees' vacation check, in the past we had only paid them 2 weeks, but anyone there for 10 years was entitled for 3 weeks vacation I handed him his check for a full week that way plus two more vacation checks. I said, `You won't be entitled to these checks until July 1st, you have three or four months to go,' I said, `You have worked here a long time and I want to give you the checks ' I said any time I could help him, I would be happy to " This is the sum total of Griswold's testimony as to the discharge conversation. He made no mention of company rules against solicitation, nor said anything to Smith about such activities by the employees Smith's testimony that the matter was not mentioned stands uncontradicted The statement in the Respondent's brief that Griswold then and there told Smith he was being released for infraction of a no-solicitation rule misreads the record transcript 2 'Later in the day, after Smith had left the premises, Griswold did tell other employees Smith had been released for soliciting, and in a written statement distributed to all employees on March 13 he publicized the same 964 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Smith said the conversation in the office lasted 30 to 45 minutes; Griswold said it was only 5 or 10 minutes. Waryan, the traffic manager, put it at 10 or 15 minutes His direct testimony as a witness for the Respondent is: "Mr Griswold and Bruce discussed about Bruce not being happy working for K-P and there were other parts of the conversation that I don't recall exactly, Mr Griswold did mention how he had loaned him quite a sum of money over the years, and that is all I can say, that I can remember" A final question to him before he left the stand was "Do you recall anything about Griswold getting somebody to bring information or to ask via telephone how much the man had earned in a year or two" The witness. I recall that now, sir." Plant Manager Jernander was also called by the Respondent All he said about this meeting was that it lasted about 10 minutes Although Griswold personally runs both the K-P and the N-W companies, and once himself owned them, it is clear on this record that each is a separate and distinct business operation, with separate payrolls and separate physical premises In the spring of 1968 the UE carried on an organizational campaign among the N-W employees and Griswold posted a no-solicitation rule notice on the premises of N-W. It was received in evidence and a total reading of the document single spaced and two pages long shows unmistakably the purpose for announcing the rule then was to dissuade the N-W employees from all union activities The statement is replete with arguments against any self organizational activitites Clearly the notice is as much, if not more,,an antiunion message than an innocuous method for maintaining order and production It was not posted on any of the premises of K-P, and apart from Griswold's uncorroborated statement at the hearing that such a rule exists, and his further statement that he more than once told Smith to stop soliciting others during working hours, there is no substantial objective evidence that any proper no-solicitation rule was ever publicized among the K-P personnel. One of the seemingly most credible witnesses at the hearing was Eino Haataja, the part-time driver who worked for K-P for 16 years, he said quite convincingly he had never heard of such a rule. The truth of the matter is there was no rule against solicitation among the K-P employees and that while Smith may have wanted to conceal his prounion activities for other reasons, he was not in violation of any established work orders. A further persuasive fact supporting this conclusion is Griswold's failure to refer to such a rule at all when discharging the driver Had he really turned against this man for this reason surely he would at least have mentioned it that day He spoke of disloyalty instead I find that Smith was discharged because he joined the Teamsters Union, and do not credit Griswold's later idea throughout the shop But this came after the discharge , and after the Teamsters had filed a charge on March 5 on Smith's behalf Q [By Mr Field ] Also we had testimony yesterday about a meeting in the shipping office in the afternoon as I recall of March 3 , 1969, after Bruce Smith was discharged where there was some discussion on your part as to why Smith was discharged , and as I recall or at least according to my notes , one of the witnesses , and I have forgotten which one, stated in a part of his testimony that you said that Mr Smith was fired for joining the Teamsters Union, is that what you said" A No, I told him that he was fired because he solicited employees on company time Q That is all I have A I think that was Dick Streit Griswold was testifying here that he told Streif , in the afternoon, why Smith had been released, not Smith himself at the moment of discharge statement that the reason was violation of a no-solicitation rule. Left-handedly at the hearing Griswold injected a second reason for the discharge, and this was that he was going to and in fact did contract away the K-P trucking work and therefore had no need for him anymore. His testimony on this point, taken in totality, only served to impair his credibility generally. Picketing started on Tuesday, March 4, the morning after Smith was released It seems no deliveries were made at all the rest of the week On Friday afternoon Griswold made a contract with Widholm Transfer and Storage Company to have all the K-P deliveries made by that company, and no K-P driver has performed any such work since That day Smith, as well as Kodytek, the N-W driver, went on the Widholm payroll. With this all picketing ceased. Widholm's employees are represented by this same Teamster Local under contract. Widholm had never before made any such deliveries of products for K-P, all it had done in the past was move heavy machinery belonging to the Company from one location to another. Early in his testimony Griswold gave the impression he had decided to use Widholm before releasing Smith, indeed that Widholm was already doing such work while Smith was still on his payroll Q. (By Mr Field) Now, what finally precipitated your discharging him, how did you go about it) A. I had been working with Widholm . . We had a big trucking expense and Bruce burned up two trucks I talked to Widholm and I knew a lot of companies that have their trucking taken over by another contracting trucker Russ [R H. Glosser, vice president of Widholm] came in and showed me how much we would save by picking up once a day and take them in their truck over to their garage and warehouse where they would distribute them into bins where they had 15 trucks going out everyday to different trts of the country We figured we could save ,,000 a year by having them handle our trucking. I f ed this would be a good way to make the best show. , for the company I was working for now Q What did you decide to do about Bruce when you decided to switch your trucking to Widholm'> A. There wasn't anything to do I kept him on when we didn't need him, but there was really no use for him. Before the Respondent was through with its defense, it developed clearly and beyond question, that aside from any sales efforts Widholm may have made earlier to get this business,' the decision to make the change, and the reason why the change was made that week, was because unfair labor practice charges had been filed to protest Smith's discharge and the Teamster picket line had interrupted all deliveries. A conference took place on the afternoon of March 7 in the office of Mr. Field, the Respondent's lawyer. From Griswold's later testimony "He [Fred Snyder, secretary-treasurer of Teamster Local 544] said if we would give our trucking for K-P to Widholm that would dissolve or terminate the picketing and so forth and so on I believe you [Mr Field] wrote him a letter after we talked it over. He said we would also have to have Jim Kodytek because he had joined the union also I said that was o k and whatever he wanted to do was o k with me " And to prove the point the Respondent offered its lawyer's letter handed to Snyder 'Glosser, of Widholm , testified that before these events, "I have talked to Griswold a year before this came up now and then, always plugging for business " DYSON-KISSNER CORP 965 that day' With these the facts, Griswold's attempt to justify the discharge on the ground that Smith's services were not needed on Monday of that week taints his entire testimony' I find equally unconvincing his further suggestion that he released; the man because of damage to trucks. Smith recalled that "a couple of years ago," engine, clutch, and transmission on a pickup truck had to be replaced because of overloading, and that "a year and a half before" his discharge a cylinder rod had to be replaced on another truck he drove. He testified, without contradiction, that no criticism had ever been made to him because of these things Smith may have embellished the discharge conversation somewhat, but I do credit his statement that Griswold confronted him with having joined the Teamsters The traffic manager had just learned of it 30 minutes earlier, and the discharge was indeed precipitate. No reasonable explanation was offered as to why it had to be just at that moment that the man must be discharged. Griswold is opposed to any union activities among his employees.' He is above all a very intelligent man, and from him a charge of "disloyalty" directed to Smith at that moment must be taken as a euphemism He spoke the same way when demoting a supervisor, who had also engaged in union activity, to a rank-and-file position in the N-W Company the year before. See the Board decision cited above And of course reminding Smith of past favors, substantial loans for house building and what Griswold believed quite adequate earnings in prior years, was the employer's way of telling the man that direct, personal dealing with the employer are to be preferred over collective bargaining through a labor organization. I can only conclude the discharge of Smith was a deliberate unfair labor practice. The Release of Eino Haataja With respect to Haataja, stockroom employee and part-time driver, the charge of wrongdoing, as stated in both the complaint and the General Counsel's brief, is pinpointed and very narrow. It is said he was released because "he failed to drive a Respondent's truck through the Teamster picket line " The word "fail" is used as a deliberate avoidance of the word "refuse," because the fact is he was not told to cross the picket line and it would be wrong to say he refused to do so. Despite this shading of words, the implication is the same -- retaliation for respecting a picket line. 'The letter reads as follows Confirming the discussion this morning between yourself, Mr Madden, Mr Griswold and me, this letter is to advise you that Northwest and K-P both intend to turn their truck hauling over to Widholm Trucking Company Since this arrangement will eliminate the controversy which gave rise to the unfair labor practice charge filed last week by your union, I understand that you will contact the NLRB and withdraw the pending charge '1 also credit the testimony of Haataja, against Griswold 's partial denial, that in a special meeting he called after Smith had left the premises on March 3 - with Jernander , Waryan, Streif, and Haataja present - Griswold said " that he fired Bruce Smith and he mentioned how much benefits he gave him He said he gave him a plumbing job, and loaned him roofing on occasions and he was awful nice to him Then he went and joined the union " 'Griswold made it a point to stress that in both the K-P and the N-W companies he and he alone hires and fires employees In F W G Corporation , 178 NLRB No 99 (this is the N-W Company discussed above ), the Board found unlawful discrimination in employment with respect to N-W employees and ordered their reinstatement with backpay The issue of motivation in this man's discharge presents about as close a question as can be On his own testimony, Griswold told him- "Wally [the traffic manager] has a few deliveries out of the picket lines .. . You don't have to do it." With this I must also believe Griswold's version that he asked did Haataja "have any objection" to making the delivery, that when the man said "he would be glad to do it," he, Griswold, said "Don't argue with them . . Go slow and if anyone says a word to you, back up." The picket did have something to say, Haataja did back up, and that was an end to the matter On the face of the thing it would be virtually impossible to find he disobeyed an order, or offended Griswold by his attitude Haataja was told to go home that day and has not worked since He was not a Teamster man; without explanation as to when, he said he signed and mailed away a UE card There is no evidence the Respondent believed, or had reason to believe he was prounion If anything, his conduct could lead Griswold to believe Haataja was willing to set himself against Smith's picket line, for he said he would be "glad" to cross the line. When he "failed" to go through, he was as much carrying out Griswold's orders to avoid confrontation as evidencing a respect for the concerted activities of other employees He had worked for this company 16 years, a reason for his dismissal there has to be What makes this man's case a difficult one is that the reason assigned by the Company to explain his discharge is totally incredible, and I do not believe it In November 1967 Haatafa suffered a heart attack, he returned to work in January 1968, and on medical advice was given light assembly work instead of driving, first half day and then full time. By the summertime he was doing regular work in the stockroom, filling orders for shipment and lifting product cartons as necessary. He also drive the truck, 2 weeks during one man's vacation, many weeks when another had an accident, a'nd on and off part-time whenever necessary. He continued on this regular basis for many months until the day of picketing on March 4, 1969 Griswold simply told him to go home that morning and to await further orders When they did not come Haataja called a number of times, always asking for work, but Griswold advised him to start living on social security as a disabled workman Haataja insisted he felt fine and wanted his job back, but to no avail He checked with his doctor, who examined him, advised him to work and said he was too healthy to justify disability retirement. Haataja is only 52 years old and now working as a carpenter The physician, Dr Avant, even telephoned Griswold to tell him Haataja was perfectly able to resume his old duty, and not entitled to social security benefits Griswold admitted the doctor urged him to take the man back To justify the discharge on this basis Griswold testified that after backing up from the picket line, Haataja was "shaking," "pale, really nervous and shook " He recalled how Mrs Haataja had once telephoned the Company to say she would hold it responsible if anything happened to her husband while driving a truck It then developed this phone call came early the year before, and I credit Mrs. Haataja's testimony that she telephoned on May 23, 1968. Griswold admitted he made no change in Haataja's assignment through the 10 months intervening between May and the following March. Whatever Griswold's reason for releasing Haataja, the man's physical condition was not it 966 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD All this really reduces the complaint to an argument that absent any convincing reason proved by the Respondent for releasing an employee with 16 years seniority, and given the Company's otherwise established antiunion animus, it must be inferred that the incident on the picket line, the only thing that happened during the last day of the man's employment, was in fact the provoking cause. And this may very well be true Yet the affirmative indication that Griswold did not really care whether Haataja did or did not make the delivery that day still remains It is also true that with elimination of all trucking work, part, at least, of Haataja's regular assignment ceased to exist. And finally, he was not a union man, and this fact cannot be ignored On total balance, and disturbing suspicion aside, I conclude that the General Counsel has not satisfied the affirmative burden resting upon the complaint to show by a preponderance of the substantial evidence on the record as a whole that Haataja was unlawfully dismissed. I shall therefore recommend dismissal of the complaint as to him Discharge of Joy Marth The discharge of this 17-year old girl presents a purely factual question Was she discharged because she signed a UE membership card" As in all such cases, there are certain facts which indicate illegal motivation and others which point to economic reasons. The question is not quite why she was fired, but rather do all the relevant facts warrant an affirmative finding that she in fact was released to curb union activity'? The test is a positive one, requiring substantial evidence and places the burden upon the-General Counsel. An even balancing of the pros and the cons requires dismissal of the complaint as to her' Joy Marth started work on March 24, 1969, and was discharged on the 14th next consecutive workday, April 10 She did mechanical, repetitive and totally unskilled work in the hydraulic hose room, where Joseph Rivers was in charge During lunch hour on April 10 she joined a group of employees on the parking lot while UE organizers held a meeting with them. Two supervisors were sitting in their car nearby at the time On returning to the shop Janice Waite, who worked in the same room, gave her a UE card and told Rivers, the supervisor, she had given it to Marth and that Marth was going to sign it. Shortly before 5 p m. that day Plant Manager Jernander paid her off. These, plus the fact of Griswold's union animus evident in the discharge of Smith the month before, are the basic elements advanced in support of the complaint as to Marth. If other relevant considerations are ignored, it would seem proper to infer an illegal motive. The Respondent that very day learned of her pro-UE attitude, the discharge followed rather precipitously in midworkweek, and the girl had no advance notice. Other contentions are also made, but these are essentially aimed at weakening the persuasive force of other facts urged by the Respondent in defense. In this case the Company is properly charged with knowledge of Marth's conduct in signing for membership in the UE. Contrary to the Respondent's assertion, I find that Rivers is a supervisor within the meaning of the Act He testified he is in charge of the department, where three girls worked under him at the time of the events. It is he who is "told to put them to work," who "show[s] them 'Glen Raven Silk Mills, 101 NLRB 239 what to do," and who must "know what they are doing," and see that "they seem to be going alright." He "several times" complained to the plant manager that Marth was too slow The plant manager corroborated this by simply saying he "turned her over to Rivers" when she was hired No other management representative works in this department And Griswold, who said he made the final decision to discharge her, said the action followed Rivers' first bringing his complaint about her to him - "Mr Rivers talked to me that he couldn't have her in his department," and then conceded both the manager and Rivers "recommended her discharge " About whether he did learn that day of Marth's signing the card, Rivers, a rather simple person, first sought to evade, but in the end virtually admitted the fact He first denied knowing she was interested in the Union before the discharge, or that he gave Janice Waite permission to take the UE card from his cupboard, while also saying he did have such a card among his personal effects in the shop: "I don't know where the card went " Without explanation he then dust continued along to say he did tell Waite he had a card in his cupboard, "I didn't tell her when she could pick it up " "I told Janice Waite the card was there, if she wanted it she could have it, I did not-need it," "she told me she picked it up." Against such testimony I credit Joy Marth's statement at the hearing that she heard Waite tell Rivers that day at noon that Marth did intend to sign up for the UE Griswold said his ultimate decision rested upon the fact Marth had been absent too much and her production record was too low The following facts lend support to this affirmative defense. (I) During the 14 days Marth was on the payroll she was absent 3, 2 of them during the last week she worked. (2). Rivers found fault with her work, first saying she worked too fast and a week later that she was too slow Marth admitted this The General Counsel's insistence that the phrase "too fast" was a compliment by the supervisor is wrong, for it is clear this meant too rapid handling of the machine endangered the hands and reflected poor adaption to the process. The "too slow" meant too little production, and Marth's records, placed in evidence, do show her hourly output did decline the second week in some respects at least (3) Rivers had to redo a full order of Marth's work (4) Comparison of Marth's production record with the comparable ones of Janice Waite and Nancy Wilson, the other two girls in the same room, leaves no doubt she was substantially the poorest of the three. As to her the records show the picture of 80 percent out of the 98 hours she was paid for The charts show work and time for the same parts and the same mechanical operation with respect to all three girls. They show, in terms of units produced per hour, the following. Marth 285, Waite 384, Wilson 344, Marth 590, Waite 621, Wilson 783; Marth 546, Waite 721, Wilson 879 In his brief the General Counsel ignores these comparisons, and stresses instead the fact that Marth's record, considered alone, does not prove any substantial deterioration in her work, or poorer performance in the end than seems to have been the case more markedly during her second week of employment The argument does not effectively rebut the fact her performance was low, if comparative performance figures are to have any meaning at all And the fact of Marth's production indeed having been lowest during her second week makes more credible Jernander's testimony that he did speak to her about it, than her denial. 8 DYSON-KISSNER CORP. 967 The weight to be accorded the foregoing factors in this case is not lessened by certain other contentions advanced Marth was hired without experience -- as indeed, at age 17, it could hardly be otherwise -- others are hired without experience, and yet Jernander told her when she left that she "had no experience on machines and they were going to hire someone else " The implication here is that Jernande`r would normally have ignored her relative incompetence because he is always willing to hire inexperienced girls There is another face to this coin The work requires no skill whatever, it was shown one can learn to do it in 5 minutes But if on such work an employee after 3 weeks is still low in production, it follows she is not likely to improve and will long remain low In the circumstances, it would not be unreasonable to try someone else, even another inexperienced person There is much stress on the fact she stood around with others on the parking lot while the UE organizers talked it up. Someone said it was mostly a K-P employee meeting, with a majority of the approximately 35 persons gathered there from K-P and the rest from the N-W Company Jernander was looking from his car, and may have noticed she was listening At best he could have concluded she favored the idea But all this adds nothing to the case in support of the complaint, for knowledge of her prounion sympathy stands firmly enough in Rivers' knowledge that she was going to sign the regular union card And there is a certain relevance in the fact Janice Waite, who appeared as the solicitor of Marth's signature to a UE card, was not discharged; could it be because her work was satisfactory? Griswold said he decided to do this on Thursday, without waiting for Friday, because the girl might not have come to work the last day of the week She had been out 2 days that very week Was her final separation check already prepared before Rivers learned she would sign for the UE, or was it hastily calculated that afternoon9 The office girl, Cole, said it "probably" went over in the morning, as is the usual practice. Jernander, who handed it to her, said it was in the same envelope with all others, on Thursday morning, he "thought " There was no way of contradicting these things In the end, it is a question of substantial evidence, convincing proof that the complaint is correct Another mind, another thought I do not think the proof sufficiently supports the charge, and shall recommend dismissal of the complaint as to Marth. Surveillance He said they often sit there about 10 minutes. He was then asked had this habit begun "about the time UE rented the bullhorn and started their meetings in the parking lot"", and answered "It may be then, but I don't know " I think it clear this was a form of surveillance, both in Jernander watching the leaflet distribution and in the supervisors sitting in plain view of employees gathered to hear the union organizers. The managers may not have been in position to single out the particular individuals who succumbed to the solicitation, but that this conduct of necessity gave the impression to the employees that they were being watched is a necessary inference that must be drawn. By such conduct Jernander and Waryan violated Section 8(a)(I) of the Statute, and I so find IV THE REMEDY The Respondent must be ordered to cease and desist from the unlawful conduct here found to have occurred In view of the nature of the unfair labor practices found, it must also be ordered to cease and desist from further violations of the statute of any kind Smith, who was illegally discharged, has been regularly employed since his departure from the Respondent, and the General Counsel stated on the record that there is no occasion for ordering reinstatement now or payment of any loss of earnings The transfer of the Respondent's trucking work to the Widholm company was not called improper In the event, however, that the Respondent should discontinue the arrangement in the future and itself resume making its own truck deliveries, Smith must be offered the first position available as a truckdriver employed directly by the Respondent. V. 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 operations of the Respondent described in section 1, above, have a close, intimate, and substantial relation to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States and tend to lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free now thereof Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of fact, and upon the entire record, I make the following. Time and again, while UE organizers distributed union organizational leaflets immediately outside the employee entrance to the K-P plant, Plant Manager Jernander came out of the building, asked for a copy, and then stationed himself just inside the door, in plain view of employees being solicited by the union agents At the hearing he said he does this two or three times a week, and has done so "off and on for years just to greet the people as they leave at night " Jernander also sat in his car on the parking lot during the lunch hour; Waryan, the traffic manager, does the same thing, often sitting together with the plant manager There have been a number of organizational meetings held by UE organizers on the parking lot in midday, where they solicit membership The two supervisors sat there on April 10, the day Marth was released. Waryan explained this practice as "just relaxing and getting ready to go to lunch," that he normally goes to lunch with Jernander, and that they just "visit" there. Conclusions of Law I The Respondent is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act 2 The Unions are labor organizations within the meaning of the Act 3 By discharging Bruce Smith the Respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(3) of the Act. 4. By the foregoing conduct and by surveilling the self-organizational activities of the employees, the Respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1) of the Act 5 The aforesaid unfair labor practices are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 968 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act it is hereby ordered that Dyson-Kissner Corporation, K-P Manufacturing Division, Minneapolis, Minnesota, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall I Cease and desist from (a) Discharging employees or discriminating in regard to their hire, tenure of employment, or other terms or conditions of employment, because they have engaged in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection (b) Surveilling the self-organizational activities of its employees, or in any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing employees in the exercise of their right to engage, or to refrain from engaging in, any or all the activities specified in Section 7 of the Act 2 Take the following affirmative action, which I find will effectuate the policies of the Act (a) In the event the Respondent resumes trucking operations for the delivery of its products by use of its own equipment and employees, offer the first position available to Bruce Smith without prejudice to any rights and privileges previously enjoyed (b) Post at its place of business in Minneapolis, Minnesota, copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix "8 Copies of said notice, to be furnished by the Regional Director for Region 18•, shall, after being signed by the Respondent's representatives, be posted by Respondent immediately upon receipt thereof and maintained by it for 60 consecutive days thereafter in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted Reasonable steps shall be taken to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material (c) Notify the Regional Director for Region 18, in writing, within 20 days from the date of this Order, what steps Respondent has taken to comply herewith ' 'In the event no exceptions are filed as provided by sec 102 46 of the Rules and Regulations of the National Labor Relations Board, the findings, conclusions , recommendations , and Recommended Order herein shall, as provided in sec 102 48 of the Rules and Regulations , be adopted by the Board and become its findings, conclusions, and order , and all objections thereto shall be deemed waived for all purposes In the event that the Board 's Order is enforced by a judgment of a United States Court of Appeals , the words in the notice reading "Posted by Order of the National Labor Relations Board" shall be changed to read "Posted pursuant to a Judgment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board " '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 Respondent has taken to comply herewith " IT IS HEREBY RECOMMENDED that the complaint be dismissed insofar as it alleges the unlawful discharge of Eino Haataja and Joy Marth APPENDIX NOTICE TO EMPLOYEES Posted by Order of the National Labor Relations Board an agency of the United States Government WE WILL NOT discharge any of our employees or discriminate in regard to their hire, tenure of employment, or any term or condition of employment, because they have engaged in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection WE WILL NOT surveill the self-organizational activities of our employees WE WILL NOT in any other way interfere with, restrain, or coerce our employees in the exercise of their right to engage in, or to refrain from engaging in, any and all of the activities specified in Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act. In the event at a future date we resume truck operations for the delivery of our products by use of our own equipment and employees, we will offer the first position available to Bruce Smith You are all free to join, or to refrain from joining, Over-The-Road, Transfer, Cold Storage, Grocery & Market Drivers, Helpers & Inside Employees Union, Local 544, affiliated with International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, and United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America, UE DYSON-KISSNER CORPORATION, K-P MANUFACTURING DIVISION (Employer) Dated By (Representative ) (Title) This is an official notice and must not be defaced by anyone 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 or compliance with its provisions, may be directed to the Board's Office, 316 Federal Building, 110 South Fourth, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55401, Telephone 612-725-261I Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation