Grain Elevator, Flour & Feed Mill Workers, Etc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsOct 29, 1965155 N.L.R.B. 402 (N.L.R.B. 1965) Copy Citation 402 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD All our employees are free to become or remain, or to refrain from becoming or remaining, members of the above named or any other labor organization. LEAS & MCVITTY, INCORPORATED, Employer. Dated------------------- By------------------------------------------- (Representative) (Title) NOTE.-We will notify the above-named employee if presently serving in the Armed Forces of the United States of his right to full reinstatement upon application in accordance with the Selective Service Act and the Universal Military Training and Service Act of 1948, as amended, after discharge from the Armed Forces. This notice must remain posted for 60 consecutive days from the date of posting, and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. If employees have any question concerning this notice or compliance with its provi- sions , they may communicate directly with the Board's Regional Office, Sixth Floor, 707 North Calvert Street, Baltimore, Maryland, Telephone No. 752-8460, Extension 2100. Grain Elevator, Flour and Feed Mill Workers, International Longshoremen Association , Local 418, AFL-CIO 1 and Conti- nental Grain Company 2 Seafarers' International Union of North America' and Continen- tal Grain Company. Cases Nos. 13-CC-350 and 13-CC-351. October 3939, 1965 DECISION AND ORDER On November 13, 1963, Trial Examiner David London issued his Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that Respondent ILA, Local 418, had engaged in and was engaging in certain unfair labor practices and recommending that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action, as set forth in the attached Trial Examiner's Decision. Additionally, the Trial Examiner found that Respondent SIUNA had not committed any unfair labor practices and recommended dismissal of the complaint insofar as it, alleged viola- tions by SIUNA. Thereafter, the General Counsel and both Respond- ents Local 418 and SIUNA filed execptions and supporting briefs.4 The Board has reviewed the rulings made by the Trial Examiner at the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Decision, the exceptions and briefs, and the entire record.in this ease, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner to the extent that they are consistent with this Decision .and Order. Hereinafter referred to as ILA, Local 418, or Local 418. ' Hereinafter referred to as Continental. 3 Hereinafter referred to as SIUNA. 'As the record , exceptions , and briefs adequately present the issues and the positions ,of the parties, Respondents' requests for oral argument are hereby denied. 155 NLRB No. 45. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 403 The complaint alleges that Respondent SIUNA was involved in a labor dispute 5 with Upper Lakes Shipping Ltd., a Canadian corpora- tion 6 hereinafter called Upper Lakes, and that in furtherance thereof, during the limited period from February 15 to June 20, 1963, Respond- ents SIUNA and Local 418 induced and encouraged employees of Con- tinental, members of Local 418 employed at grain elevators A and B at the port of Chicago, not to perform services or load Continental's grain on ships operated by Upper Lakes and threatened Continental with a strike with an object in each instance of forcing or requiring Continental, a neutral,7 to cease doing business with Upper Lakes in violation of Section 8(b) (4) (i) and (ii) (B). 1. The relationship between Continental and Upper Lakes The Respondents contend initially that Continental and Upper Lakes are operationally integrated, thereby constituting "allies," "sin- gle employers," or "joint venturers," as those words of art are custom- arily utilized in an 8(b) (4) context. If this contention is valid, it would then follow that Continental would lose its status as a neutral, disinterested party to that dispute. In such circumstances, Conti- nental would not be entitled to the protection which Congress bestowed upon neutral employers in enacting 8(b) (4) (B) and the direct eco- nomic pressure brought to bear on Continental herein would accord- ingly constitute lawful primary activity for purposes of that section of the Act. However, as elaborated below, we are not persuaded, on the entire record, that Respondents' contention is meritorious. Continental is engaged in the business of buying and selling grain in domestic and foreign markets. In connection with its multimillion- dollar-a-year operation, Continental owns and maintains a network of grain elevators at ports throughout the United States.8 Upper Lakes 5 The complaint contains no allegations as to the precise nature of the underlying dis- pute between the parties. U Respondent ILA contends that the Board cannot assert jurisdiction over the instant complaint in view of the Supreme Court 's "foreign flag" rulings (Frank W. McCulloch v. Sociedad Nacional de Marineros de Honduras ( United Fruit Co.), 372 U S. 10, and Incres Steamship Co., Ltd v. International Maritime Workers Union , et at. , 372 U S. 24). We find no merit in this contention . These cited cases are inapposite to the instant situation. For here an American corporation , Continental , filed unfair labor practice charges against two American labor organizations alleging that they violated the Act by engaging in certain specific conduct which occurred on American territory and did not directly involve the relationship of Upper Lakes , a foreign corporation , and its foreign employees. Local 1355, International Longshoremen 's Association ( Ocean Shipping Service , Ltd.), 146 NLRB 723 ; Great Lakes District , Seafai era' International Union of North America, AFL- CIO, etc., 139 NLRB 216; and William Benz, et at. v . Companies 1 av,era Hidalgo, 353 U.S. 138, 143, at footnote 5 therein . Also, cf. Trial Examiner ' s instant decision at foot- note 14 therein. 7 The complaint alleges that Continental is not involved in a labor dispute with Respond- ent SIUNA or Respondent Local 418, the latter being the collective-bargaining repiesenta- tive of Continental ' s employees at grain elevators A and B in Chicago for the past 25 years. 8 The particular conduct in question here occurred exclusively at Continental ' s Chicago elevators . All the episodes , except that of June 20, 1963, occurred at elevator B. 212-809-66-vol. 155-27 404 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD is a Canadian corporation comprised of three companies performing related services-Upper Lakes Shipping Ltd., (shipping bulk car- goes), Trans-Lake Chartering Ltd. (chartering), and Three Rivers Grain & Elevator Company Limited (elevator storage). According to the undisputed testimony of Upper Lakes' Executive Vice President Mayer, Upper Lakes does not either directly or indi- rectly own any part of Continental or its wholly owned Canadian subsidiary, Continental Grain Ltd., Winnipeg. Nor do Upper Lakes' officers and directors occupy similar positions with Continental. Con- versely, Continental does not own any part of Upper Lakes, nor do Continental's officers and directors occupy similar positions with Upper Lakes. It is thus apparent that the Continental and Upper Lakes enterprises are not commonly owned and are not commonly controlled, either by virtue of interlocking corporate directorates or otherwise. Nevertheless, these two corporate entities have been involved in numerous business dealings through the years. By far the most signi- ficant dealings for the purpose of this case have occurred since the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1959. Prior to 1959 Continen- tal shipped only small quantities of grain on the Great Lakes. When it desired to do so, Continental utilized the services of lake carriers owned by various companies, including Upper Lakes. These services were ordered on an individual basis under simple common carriage for hire arrangements. No long-term formal contractual agreements were involved. Continental and Upper Lakes transacted business essentially oil this basis for approximately 10 years (1949-59). The opening of the Seaway, however, revolutionized the entire grain exporting business. It enabled big lakers (400,000-730,000 bushel capacity) to travel from U.S. ports via the Great Lakes to such Cana- dian ports as Montreal, Quebec, Three Rivers, and Sorrell. This, in turn, made it possible to use the St. Lawrence River to transship grain to European and other foreign ports. It thus became essential from the standpoint of business competition for Continental to acquire a St. Lawrence Seaway port in Canada, where it could store grain and transship it on demand to Europe and the Far East via oceangoing liners.9 Continental had two available alternatives to meet its needs-either make a multimillion dollar investment and build its own grain elevator or arrange to use someone's existing facility. Continental chose the latter course; it entered into an arrangement with Upper Lakes in 1961. A similar arrangement was in effect through the end of the 1963 shipping season, whereby Continental obtained the right to use 2.8 million of the 6 million bushel capacity at Upper Lakes' Three Rivers D There are public grain elevators at the St. Lawrence Seaway ports, but Continental and other companies are only permitted to store grain there for short periods of time. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 405 grain elevators.10 In consideration therefor, Continental agreed to use Upper Lakes' shipping services for all of its grain destined for these storage elevators. When the grain arrives there, Continental also pays Upper Lake a regular Canadian-Government-imposed tariff on a daily basis. This is the uniform rate that any other company would pay at Three Rivers or any other St. Lawrence port. Also, under this ar- rangement, Trans-Lake Chartering, one of three aforementioned companies comprising Upper Lakes, is obliged to give Continental Canada Ltd., Winnipeg, "agency wheat" 11 to the extent of one-third the total volume of U.S. grans that Continental puts through the Three Rivers' elevator. Apparently, this entire agreement was subject to Canadian Government regulations concerning how early or late in the season American grain can be shipped through Canadian ports and how much of it can be stored in Three Rivers. While Continental today has arrangements with other companies to provide shipping services on the St. Lawrence under simple common carriage for hire agreements, only the aforementioned Upper Lakes' arrangement entitles Continental to utilize grain storage facilities and to obtain "agency wheat" as well. It is thus evident that the above arrangement is not similar either to Continental's earlier arrange- ments with Upper Lakes or to any of its current relationships with other carriers. Mindful of the presence of these special aspects in the Continental- Upper Lakes business relationship, we are nevertheless of the opinion that Respondents have failed to satisfy their burden 12 of establishing a basis for applying the "ally," "single employer," or "joint venture"- type concepts here. In arriving at this conclusion after scrutinizing the instant facts, we are persuaded particularly by the absence of any common ownership or common control and by the fact that these two companies are operated independently.13 Accordingly, we find, in 10 The 2.8 million bushels represents the total amount of American grain that can be stored by Three Rivers. The grain may remain in the Three Rivers elevators indefinitely, depending upon the demand for it by various foreign countries. In practically all cases, title to the grain remains vested in Continental while the grain is stored at Three Rivers; title passes to the purchaser by a negotiable bill of lading when the boats are loaded at Three Rivers. u The "agency wheat" concept is admittedly complicated. Essentially, it works as follows: The Canadian Wheat Board, a subdivision of the Canadian Government, owns wheat and pays various Canadian grain merchants a commission and interest for making the flnanciai, transportation, and storage arrangements with respect to these shipments. In these circumstances, the wheat is described as agency wheat. 13 Chauffeurs, Teamsters, Warehousemen and Helpers Local Union No. 135, affiliated with International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, A. F. of L. (Marsh Foodliners, Inc.), 114 NLRB 639, 642 33 Cf. N.L,R.B. v. Denver Building and Construction Trades Council, et al. (Gould & Preisner), 341 U.S. 675, National Union of Marine Cooks and Stewards and Pacific Coast Firemen, oilers, Watertenders & Wipers Association (Irwin-Lyons •Lnmber Company), 87 NLRB 54, Local 282, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America (Acme Concrete & Supply Corp.), 137 NLRB 1321, and Miami Newspaper Printing Pressmen Local No. 46, etc. (Knight Newspapers, Inc.), 138 NLR1 1346, 1347-1348, enfd. 322 F. 2d 405 (C.A.D.C.). 406 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD agreement with the Trial Examiner, that Continental is a neutral employer in the instant case for purposes of Section 8(b) (4) (B). 2. SIUNA's liability Respondent Searfarers' International is a parent organization com- prised of four affiliated district organizations, including SIU, Canada. As found by the Trial Examiner, these districts operate autonomously of the International. Mr. Hal Banks is president of SIU, Canada, and, in addition, an executive vice president of Seafarers' Interna- tional. His union, SIU, Canada, was engaged in a labor dispute with Upper Lakes. In furtherance of this dispute, Banks delivered a speech to a Great Lakes District meeting of the ILA in Detroit on March 1, 1963; Banks talked about his union and then asked the con- vention comprised of 200-250 delegates to support his union again in 1963 as it had in 1962, namely, by not loading Upper Lakes' vessels. Local 418's representatives, employees of Continental, were in attend- ance and participated in a voice vote to support Banks' plea. With respect to SIUNA's alleged commission of an unfair labor practice, the complaint rests exclusively on this above-described inci- dent and it is the basis upon which the General Counsel seeks to impose responsibility on the Seafarers' International.14 Thus, it is the Gen- eral Counsel's contention that Banks' speech induced Continental's employees in attendance at the meeting and likewise constituted a threat to Continental with an object of forcing Continental to cease doing business with Upper Lakes in violation of 8(b) (4) (i) and (ii) (B). We find, however, in agreement with the Trial Examiner's finding and his rationale, as well, that the mere fact that SIU, Canada, and SIUNA are affiliated is not itself sufficient to establish the respon- sibility of Respondent Seafarers' International for Banks' conduct. Accordingly, without reaching the question whether Banks' above speech constituted lawful primary strike action or an inducement to engage in unlawful secondary boycott activity, we find that the named Respondent, SIUNA, is not responsible for any of the acts in question alleged to have constituted unfair labor practices. We shall therefore dismiss the complaint with respect to SIUNA. 3. ILA, Local 418's liability The General Counsel alleges that Local 418, through the acts of President Connor, Trustee Garvey, Acting Steward Novosel, and Steward Simmons, violated Section 8(b) (4) (i) and (ii) (B) on numerous occasions during the period February 15 to June 20, 1963, "While the record also contains tangential reference to comments made by a \Ir Al Tanner which may arguably have constituted unlawful inducements of Continental's employees not to load Upper Lakes ' ships , the record does not establish that Tanner is either a SIUNA official or an agent of the named Respondent. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & NEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 407 by inducing its members, employees of Continental, not to load Upper Lakes' vessels and by threatening Continental's officials with an object in each instance of forcing Continental to cease doing business with Upper Lakes. Relying principally on the conduct of President Conner, the Trial Examiner found that Local 418 engaged in numerous specific acts con- stituting inducements and threats within the meaning of 8 (b) (4) (i) and (ii) (B). The Respondent takes issue with these findings on two general counts : (1) there was insufficient evidence to establish any inducements or threats; and (2) even assuming the sufficiency of such evidence, the inducements and threats did not constitute 8(b) (4) (i) and (ii) (B) violations as a matter of law. We shall address ourselves to these contentions seriatim. First, we are mindful of the fact that there is little direct evidence to establish that Conner, or indeed any other Local 418 official, induced or encouraged Continental's employees not to load Upper Lakes' ships. We are not persuaded, however, that the seeming lack of such evidence is necessarily fatal to the General Counsel's case. For the circumstan- tial evidence present ineluctably draws us to the opposite conclusion. Thus, it is clear from the undisputed testimony of Continental's execu- tive vice president, Julius Mayer,15 that he requested Conner's assist- ance in getting Upper Lakes' ships loaded but that Conner informed him time and time again during the critical period herein that : (1) Local 418 was supporting Banks' union, SIU, Canada, in its dispute with Upper Lakes; (2) Conner would not instruct his men to load Upper Lakes' vessels; and (3) Continental's grain would be loaded if Continental used vessels of another shipping company. Additionally, Mayer testified that Conner made several references to the fact that there was an "invisible picket line" around Upper Lakes' vessels rocked alongside Continental's Chicago grain elevators and that Con- tinental would have trouble at its Texas elevators and with its railroad boxcars at Chicago and elsewhere if it persisted in attempts to get Upper Lakes' ships loaded. Furthermore, the testimony of Trustee Garvey,16 a union officer under the express terms of Local 418's consti- tution and bylaws, discloses that he attended a union meeting in April 1963 together with Conner and other union officials, that the SIU- Upper Lakes situation was discussed, and that it was agreed that the situation would remain the same-Local 418 would continue to refuse to load Upper Lakes' ships.17 As evidenced by the mentioned pro- 15 The Respondent Local 418 's contention to the contrary nothwithstanding, we find no basis for reversing the Trial Examiner 's determination that Mayer was a credible witness. 16 The testimony of Continental Superintendent Goldschmidt and Assistant Superin- tendent Borchert corroborates Garvey's above version 17 One month earlier, in March 1963 , delegates of Local 4118 attended a meeting of Great Lakes District of ILA in which the latter body also voted to support Banks' union in its dispute with Upper Lakes. 408 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD nouncements of its high echelon officials, Local 418's established and unequivocal policy was thus to support SIU, Canada, in its dispute with Upper Lakes by refusing to load Continental's grain on Upper Lakes' ships at Continental's Chicago elevators. The remaining evidentiary question is whether the ensuing failure to load the SS Shaw on numerous occasions between April 21 and June 20, 1963, was attributable in each instance solely to the individual decisions of all of Continental's employees, as urged by Respondent 418, or rather to the fact that Local 418's above policy was disseminated to its membership and they acted in reliance thereon. The latter ex- planation, in our opinion, is by far the more plausible. Indeed, we note that Conner informally called a union meeting on May 29 to discuss the course of action to be taken after the U.S. marshall served each member of Local 418 with a certified copy of the Federal district court's 10(l) injunction order.18 Subsequently, Conner announced to management's representatives at the dock that the Shaw would not be loaded. And it was not loaded. This episode, in our view, simply illustrates that decisions whether or not to load Upper Lakes' vessels were, in fact, union decisions, not those of some 25 bargaining unit members who coincidentally, although acting as individuals, all hap- pened to be of one and the same mind. Accordingly, we find that Local 418 induced or encouraged its membership not to load Upper Lakes' vessels with an object of forcing Continental to cease doing busi- ness with Upper Lakes within the meaning of Section 8(b) (4) (i) (B).19 We likewise find that Conner's mentioned comments to Mayer constitute threats for a similar object within the meaning of Section 8(b) (4) (ii) (B). It is thus clear that Respondent Local 418 engaged in conduct which falls within the literal language of Section 8(b) (4) (B). Neverthe- less, Local 418 urges that its activity constitutes traditional primary strike action and therefore is not violative of the Act. We agree that primary strike action is lawful for purposes of Sec- tion 8(b) (4) (B) even though it may fall within the literal strictures of that section. Indeed, this very principle has found expression in Board decisions ever since the passage of the Taft-Hartley amend- ments. In rejecting a literal interpretation of Section 8(b) (4) (A), the predecessor of the present Section 8(b) (4) (B), the Board fre- quently pointed out that the legislative history of Taft-Hartley demon- strated persuasively that the Congress only sought to ban certain Is As pointed out in the Trial Examiner 's Decision, this injunction required that Local 418, its officers and agents, withdraw all requests and appeals to employees of Continental not to load grain on Upper Lakes' ships and further required Local 418 , its officers and agents, to advise the employees that they were free to perform any and all services tor Continental in loading Upper Lakes' ships 19lnternational Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 501, et al. ( Samuel Langer) v. N.L.R.B., 341 U.S. 694. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL `YORKERS, ETC. 409 secondary activity.20 The primary-secondary dichotomy was again endorsed by the Congress in the 1959 Landrum-Griffin amendments- the proviso to Section 8(b) (4) (B) expressly protects primary strikes and primary picketing. It is thus manifest that this section was in nowise intended to interfere with labor's right to engage in traditional primary strike action and it therefore cannot be read literally, lest all traditional activity be prohibited.21 We are asked to hold that Local 418's inducements of Continental employees to refuse to perform certain duties falling within the nor- mal scope of their employment do not fall within 8 (b) (4) (B)'s ban against secondary activity because SIU, Canada, lawfully could have made similar inducements to those employees, had it chose to do so 22 To support this premise, Local 418 relies on Moore Dry Dock 23 as establishing that SIU, Canada, could have established a lawful pri- mary picket line around the SS Shaw, while that vessel was at Con- tinental's premises, with the object of Inducing Continental's employ- ees not to load the vessel; on such cases as Pure Oil Company 24 and Interborough News Company 25 as establishing that SIU, Canada, could have addressed nonpicket line appeals to Continental's employ- ees in the form of "hot cargo letters," convention appeals, and the like, so long as such appeals only induced action at the situs of the dispute; and on cases such as Milwaukee Plywood Company,26 and Columbia- Southern Chemical Corporation,27 as establishing that Local 418, though not involved directly in a dispute with Upper Lakes, could engage in exactly the same kind of inducement of secondary employees as SIU, Canada, lawfully could have done. While there is an appearance of logic to the argument as spelled out by Local 418, all minor premises have by no means been proven. Thus, while the Board has indicated in certain cases that a secondary union w See, for example , Oil Workers International Union, Local Union 346 CIO (The Pure Oil Company ), 84 NLRB 315 , 318, and International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauf- feurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, Truck Drivers and Chauffeurs, Local Union No. 807 ( Schultz Refrigerated Service, Inc .), 87 NLRB 502, 504, 21 See Local 791, International Union of Electrical , Radio and Machine Workers, AFL- 010 (General Electric Company ) v. N.L.R.B., 366 U.S. 667, subsequently cited with ap- proval in the Supreme Court's decision in United Steelworkers of America, AFL-CIO ( Carrier Corp .) v. N.L.R.B., 376 U.S. 492. Z' The record does not show the precise reasons why SIU, Canada , did not picket the SS Shaw but it appears that it was enjoined from picketing Upper Lakes vessels in the Chicago area. zi Sailors Union of the Pacific, AFL (Moore Dry Dock Company ), 92 NLRB 547. .% Oil Workers International Union, Local Union 346, CIO (The Pure Oil Company), 84 NLRB 315. See also Moore Dry Dock Company , supra. 25 Newspaper and Mail Deliveries ' Union of New York and Vicinity ( Interborough News Company ), 90 NLRB 2135. See also International Organization of Masters , Mates and Pilots of America, Inc., AFL-CIO, et al. (Chicago Calumet Stevedoring Co., Inc.), 125 NLRB 113. 28 Chauffeurs, Teamsters and Helpers "General" Local No. 200 (Milwaukee Plywood Company ), 126 NLRB 650. ' United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipefitting Industry of the United States and Canada (AFL) Local 106, at al. (Columbia-Southern Chemical Corporation ), 110 NLRB 206. 410 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD violates Section 8(b) (4) (B) if its inducements of secondary employ- ees are more in support of unlawful inducements of the same employ- ees by the primary unlon,28 no case has been cited in support of the proposition that such inducements necessarily constitute legitimate primary activity in the absence of such unlawful inducements by the primary union. The Colombia Chemical case merely establishes that secondary unions may induce primary employees to respect the pri- mary picket line posted at their employer's place of business on a com- mon situs, even though it has been posted by another union. Milwau- kee Plywood establishes no more than that a secondary union may induce secondary employees, whom it represents, to respect a primary picket line posted by another union at a fixed primary situs. These cases do not establish the principle that a secondary union may induce secondary employees to respect a nonexistent or "phantom" picket line around an ambulatory primary situs, temporarily located on their employer's premises. Indeed, in Fairway Farms, Inc.,20 the one case involving such activity which has been brought to our attention, the Board found that appeals of a secondary union to secondary employ- ees, whom it represented, asking them not to load the trucks of the pri- mary employer, constituted violations of Section 8(b) (4) (B). Thus, the Fairway Farms decision stands for the proposition that, in the absence of a lawful primary picket line around the ambulatory pri- mary situs when it is present at a neutral employer's premises, the sec- ondary union may not induce the employees of that neutral employer to refuse to make deliveries of their employers' products to the pri- mary employer if such action is within the scope of their normal duties. We see no reason to reach a different result herein; nor do we believe a different result is required by the Pure Oil and Interborough News decisions 30 In those cases, primary unions addressed appeals to employees of neutral employers at their employers' premises, which, in essence, notified the secondary employees that the primary employer was strike bound and asked the secondary employees to refuse to per- form services at the primary employer's premises if and when their normal duties would bring them to such premises. In each of those cases, the non-picket-line appeals were in implementation of permis- sible picket line activity at the primary situs. The problem posed in each case was the familiar, yet difficult, one of determining whether the nonpicketing appeals were intended to induce action only at the 29 United Marine Division , Local 333 , International Longshoremen's Association (Inde- pendent); et al., (New York Shipping Association ), 107 NLRB 686; Retail Fruit & Vege- table Clerks Union, Local 1017, and Retail Grocery Clerks Union, Local 648, Retail Clerks International Association , AFL-CIO ( Crystal Palace Market ), 116 NLRB 856, enfd. 249 F. 2d 591 (C.A. 9). 20 Local 584 , International Brotherhood of Teamsters , Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America ; Local 182, International Brotherhood of Teamsters , etc., (Fairway Farms, Inc.), 141 NLRB 638. Panel of Members Rodgers, Fanning, and Brown. 80 See also Moore Dry Dock Company, supra, and Chicago Calumet Stevedoring Co., Inc., supra. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 411 primary situs and thus amounted to no more than a request not to cross a primary picket line, or were directed towards inducing action directed against the secondary employer in order to force it to cease dealing with the primary employer. It is apparent in each case that the existence of the primary picket line confronting the secondary employees, when they came to perform services for their employer at the primary employer's premises, was a crucial factor in the Board's conclusion that the nonpicketing appeals of the primary union "amounted to nothing more than a request to respect a primary picket line at the Employer's premises." 31 Contrary to Local 418's conten- tion, these cases do not establish the right of a secondary union to induce employees of a secondary employer, at whose premises the ambulatory situs is temporarily located, to refuse to perform services for their employer in the absence of a lawful picket line. Rather, we think these decisions comport with our conclusion that, at least in a case such as this one, where the labor dispute is between a primary employer with an ambulatory situs and a union other than the one which seeks to induce secondary employees to take action because of that dispute, there must be some clear and contemporaneous notice given by the primary union to the employees appealed to, and to the neutral employer at whose premises the dispute becomes active, that the labor dispute involved is between it and the primary employer. Unless such notice is given, the dispute takes on the appearance and character of a dispute between the "inducing" union and the neutral employer over the latter's dealings with the primary employer rather than of a dispute between the primary union and the primary employer. In cases involving picketing of an ambulatory situs temporarily located at a neutral's premises, the Board, in recognition of the fact that- ... picketing which induces secondary employees to respect a picket line is not the equivalent of picketing which has an object of inducing those employees to engage in concerted conduct against their own employer in order to force him to refuse to deal with the struck employer... 32 applies the Moore Dry Dock tests 33 to determine whether the picketing has one or the other of these objects. These tests require, in effect, that 33 Pure Oil Company, supra, cited in each of the other cases herein discussed. Although, in Interborough News, the primary union did not picket "each and every one" of the en- trances to the primary premises, the Trial Examiner did find that the picketing placed the secondary employees, who were asked not to make newspaper deliveries to those premises , on notice that the premises were strikebound. 32Local 761, Electrical Workers, IUE (General Electric Company) v. N.L.R.B., 366 U.S. 667. 33 The Moore Dry Dock tests require that picketing and accompanying appeals be limited in time and place to the immediate vicinity of the primary situs ; that the primary employer be engaged in his normal business at such situs ; and that the union clearly identify that its dispute is with the primary employer. 412 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD the picketing union give notice to the neutral employer's employees, as well as to all other employees who have business with the neutral employer, that its dispute is with the primary, not the netural employer. Though these tests impose some limitation on the union's freedom to picket the primary employer, they nevertheless do protect its right, and the right of `other unions who would aid its cause, to appeal to all employees approaching the picket line to extend the union member's traditional gesture of support to the primary union, namely a refusal to cross its lawful picket line in order not to contribute to the opera- tions the picket line is endeavoring to halt, while at the same time they protect the neutral employer, at whose premises the dispute is located, from becoming an object of secondary pressure. The underlying considerations that lead the Board in ambulatory situs situations to infer an unlawful objective when picketing deviates from Moore Dry Dock standards also dictate a like inference where pressures are exerted against the neutral employees by a secondary union in the absence of a picket line directed at the primary employer while the situs of the dispute is lodged at the neutral premises. A fail- ure to draw an inference of illegality in such circumstances would give, it seems to us, greater freedom to secondary unions to disrupt the business of the neutral employer whose premises temporarily house the primary ambulatory situs, than is given under our Moore Dry Dock tests to the primary union directly involved. Moreover, to permit such conduct on the theory that a "phantom" or "invisible" picket line is to be presumed even though there is no picket line in fact, would pro- vide a ready device for evading the effects of an injunction prohibiting picketing that might be obtained against the primary union 34 It as It should be noted that the record reveals that a few weeks prior to the arrival of the SS Shaw at Continental 's dock, Connor , president of Local 418 , gave Gunther Gold- schmidt, superintendent of Continental 's grain elevator , a list of ships owned by Upper Lakes Shipping , and informed him that there would be trouble loading those ships be- cause they would be picketed as a result of the labor conflict between SIU, Canada, and Upper Lakes . Shortly thereafter , the SS Erickson, one of the ships listed , appeared at Continental 's dock. A picket line was established around the ship and it was not loaded until after the picket line was removed pursuant to an injunction obtained by Continental. Two weeks later , the SS Shaw docked for the purpose of receiving Continental 's grain. Though the SS Shaw was not picketed because of the fact that Continental had obtained the aforementioned injunction, as was pointed out to Connor by an official of Continental, Local 418 members employed by Continental refused to load the ship. It should also be noted that the parties to the primary dispute, Upper Lakes Shipping, the owner of the SS Shaw , under a foreign flag, and SIU , Canada , were both beyond the jurisdiction of the Board to prosecute or protect in matters directly relating to their primary dispute (Incres Steamship Co. v. Maritime Workers , supra; McCulloch v. Sociedad National de Marineros , supra ). Charges filed by the SIU against Upper Lakes and the rival Canadian National Maritime Union and Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Workers alleging violations of Section 8(a) (1), (2 ), and (3 ) and 8 ( b) (1) (A) and (2) of the Act were accordingly dismissed by the General Counsel on February 19, 1963. State action directed at such matters was, therefore , not preempted under San Diego Building Trades Council, et at. v. J. S. Garmon, et al., 359 U.S 236 Conduct in connection with such a dispute which is found to have a proscribed object under Section 8 ( b) (4) (B) in relation to an employer within the Board's jurisdiction , however, is clearly cognizable under the Act. Great Lakes District, Seafarers' International Union of North America, AFL-CIO, et al. (Upper Lakes Shipping, Ltd.), 139 NLRB 216. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 413 would also destroy the careful balance now existing between the right of the primary union, and those unions who would take up its cause, to appeal to employees approaching struck "ambulatory" premises to refrain from entering those premises, and the right of the neutral employers to remain free from pressures directed towards forcing them to cease dealing with the primary employer. Accordingly, as Local 418 engaged in the acts of inducement com- plained of in response to appeals for support made by SIU, Canada, long before the primary situs in the form of the SS Shaw was located at Continental's premises, as Local 418's inducements were not in im- plementation of a lawful SIU, Canada, picket line nor of any other contemporaneous notice by SIU, Canada, that it was engaging in a pri- mary dispute with Upper Lakes Shipping, and as Local 418 made direct threats to Continental of trouble elsewhere if it persisted in using Upper Lakes ships to transport its grain, we find that Local 418's inducements of Continental employees to refuse to load Conti- nental's grain on the SS Shaw, as well as its direct threats to Conti- nental officials, were engaged in with an object of forcing Continental to cease dealing with Upper Lakes Shipping, and, therefore, violated Section 8(b) (4) (i) and (ii) (B) of the Act.35 [The Board adopted the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order.] MEMBERS BROWN and JENKINS, dissenting in part : For the reasons set forth in the majority opinion, we concur with our colleagues' conclusion to dismiss the instant complaint against Sea- farers' International Union. We disagree, however, with their further finding that ILA, Local 148, violated Section 8 (b) (4) (i) and (ii) (B) of the Act. As we analyze the case, Upper Lakes, a Canadian corporation, and SIU, Canada, were involved in a primary labor dispute and Respond- ent Local 418 engaged in sympathy action in support of the striking union's cause. Accordingly, even though SIU, Canada, is not a party Respondent, we initially turn our attention to the nature of its conduct and the concomitant question whether such conduct constitutes lawful primary strike action. For it is our understanding both from prior Board and court decisions that the liability of a secondary or stranger union engaged in sympathy action is linked closely with the legality of the striking union's own conduct under Section 8 (b) (4) of the Act.36 We find no merit in Respondent 's contention that General Counsel's conduct in issuing the instant complaint was unfair , arbitrary , or capricious. 86 See Milwaukee Plywood Company, 126 NLRB 650 , enfd. 285 F . 2d 325 (C.A. 7) ; Truck Drivers Union Local No. 413, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen & Helpers of America, et at. v. N.L.R.B., 334 F. 2d 539 , 542-546 (C.A.D.C.), cert. denied 379 U.S. 916 . See also, New York Shipping Association , 107 NLRB 686, and Crystal Palace Market, 116 NLRB 856 , enfd. 249 F . 2d 591 ( C.A. 9). In New York Shipping Association and Crystal Palace Market, for example, the striking union engaged 414 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 1. Background analysis concerning SIU, Canada's conduct In most cases involving an industrial facility, a struck employer's plant occupies a fixed geographical location and these premises are, in effect, coterminous with the situs of the primary dispute. There are certain special mobile industries, however, including that involved herein, where the primary situs is roving or ambulatory and not limited to a fixed location. Thus, the Upper Lakes' ships are properly deemed the "sites" of the primary dispute in which seamen represented by SIU, Canada, are seeking recognition from Upper Lakes 37 Where a roving primary situs is temporarily located at the premises of a neu- tral employer, we have a so-called "common situs" situation. The gen- eral principles pertaining to common situs situations were developed in Moore Dry Dock (92 NLRB 547) and were designed to balance two competing interests, namely, labor's right to engage in primary strike action vis a vis the insulation of neutral employers from economic pres- sures flowing from disputes not of their own making. Provided that the striking union complies with Moore Dry Dock con- ditions, it may engage in lawful primary picketing, albeit on the prem- ises of a neutral employer38 In such circumstances, the Board has also held in Moore Dry Dock, Pure Oil Company,30 and Chicago Calumet Stevedoring Co. Inc., 40 that so-called "hot letters" written by the strik- ing union appealing to other labor unions representing employees of neutral employers not to cross a picket line to perform services at the situs of the dispute constitute lawful primary activity. Direct oral appeals by representatives of the striking union to employees of neu- tral employers inviting action at the situs have likewise been accorded a protected status.41 The Board's rationale was that the letters and oral appeals invited action only at the situs of the dispute and were thus tantamount to a striking union's resort to the traditional primary weapon of establishing a picket line to appeal to neutral employees at the situs not to enter the struck premises. Significantly, neither the fact that the inducement actually took place on a neutral employer's premises nor that it had an object falling within the statute's literal language militated against the Board's "lawful primary action" findings. in 8(b ) ( 4) conduct because its picketing at a neutral employer ' s premises failed to comply with Moore Dry Dock. In such circumstances , where a secondary union lent its support by inducing its membership not to cross a picket line at the secondary sites, the Board found that the unions were acting in concert or as joint venturers and the secondary union was held jointly accountable for the 8 ( b) (4) violation. 87Sailors' Union of the Pacific, AFL ( Moore Dry Dock Company ), 92 NLRB 547, and Seafarers' International Union of North America, Atlantic and Gulf District , AFL-CIO (Salt Dome Production Co.) v. N.L.R.B., 265 F. 2d 585 (C A.D.C.) reversing 119 NLRB 638. 31 "The location of the picketing is an important but not decisive factor." United Steel- workers of America (Carrier Corp.) v. N.L.R.B., 376 U.S. 492, 499. 39 84 NLRB 315. 40125 NLRB 113. 41lnterborough News Company, 90 NLRB 2135. GRAIN ELEVATOR , FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS , ETC. 415 This rationale is equally relevant here. In furtherance of its pri- mary labor dispute, SIU , Canada, could have followed Upper Lakes' ships and engaged in lawful primary picketing at Continental 's dock, provided that it complied with Moore Dry Dock. Additionally, prior to the time that Continental 's employees arrived at the picket line, SIU, Canada , could have appealed to them either directly or indirectly through their bargaining representative , Local 418 , to refrain from performing services at the sites. While SIU , Canada , was not engaged in picketing during the cru- cial period herein ,42 it did, through its president , Hal Banks, make ver- bal overtures of like import to Continental 's employees. Banks addressed a Great Lakes District meeting of the ILA in Detroit on March 1, 1963 , and encouraged the delegates , who included , inter alia, members of Local 418 employed by Continental , to support his union in its dispute with Upper Lakes by refusing to load vessels of the struck employer . If this conduct of SIU, Canada, were an issue, we would have found, consistent with the Pure Oil, Interborough News, Moore Dry Dock, and Chicago Caleumet, Stevedoring approach, that Banks' plea constituted traditional lawful primary strike action; this is so because such conduct only invited action at the situs by neutral employees of Continental whose mission contributes to Upper Lakes day-to-day operations which the strike was endeavoring to halt.43 Our colleagues , however, would apparently reach an opposite con- clusion because of the absence of picketing which clearly designates the primary employer and defines the geographical boundary of the primary dispute when the situs rests on a neutral employer 's premises. It is their view that in the absence of such picketing the possibility exists that Continental, a neutral, will be completely enmeshed in a labor dispute not of its own making . We agree that the Board must vigorously enforce its Moore Dry Dock conditions , lest such possibility becomes reality . But the simple answer to the majority 's contention is that the record evidence refutes it here. For SIU , Canada, did not induce Continental 's employees to engage in a general strike against their own employer; nor did Continental 's employees refuse to load grain on ships owned by companies other than Upper Lakes 44 In essence, then, Continental was not enmeshed in the instant dispute to any greater extent that if SIU, Canada , had maintained a lawful picket around the SS Shaw which resulted in a refusal by Continental's employees to load grain on that ship. Indeed, it can be persuasively argued that the absence of a picket line here afforded Continental, a "The SS Erickson had been picketed in the spring of 1962. However , that picketing. was enjoined , apparently as a result of a State court proceeding, for reasons undisclosed by the record. '3 Steelworkers ( Carrier Corporation ) v. N.L R B., supra, at 498-499. "Id. at 499. 416 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD neutral, greater protection-it removed the possibility that various third parties arriving at the situs to do business with Continental (unrelating to loading Upper Lakes' ships) might refrain from doing so upon observing a picket line around the struck ship. In these cir- cumstances , we cannot subscribe to our colleagues' willingness to attach controlling significance to the absence of actual picketing at the situs in distinguishing between lawful primary and -unlawful secondary activity.45 2. ILA, Local 418's liability Having concluded that the striking union's oral appeals to Con- tinental's employees constituted traditional primary strike action, we now consider whether Local 418 has committed any unfair labor prac- tices. Initially, it should be emphasized that Local 418's actions were at most coextensive with those of the striking union. Thus, in direct response to SIU, Canada's, plea for support, Local 418 merely appealed to its membership not to load Continental' s grain on Upper Lakes' ships at elevators A and B at the port of Chicago, and Local 418, in turn, advised Continental's officials that these particular ships would not be loaded.46 Clearly these limited appeals only invited action at the primary situs by those employees of Continental whose duties con- tributed to the daily operations of Upper Lakes which the strike was endeavoring to halt. It therefore follows that Local 418 was not engaged in unlawful secondary action. Nor does the fact that Local 418 is a stranger union militate against this conclusion. The Board has long recognized the validity of this basic tenet. Thus, in Milwaukee Plywood Company, 126 NLRB 650, the Board commented significantly : The fact that one labor organization rather than another is engag- ing in allegedly unlawful conduct does not afford a basis to resolve the issue of legality [primary strike versus secondary boycott]. Here the conduct of [the secondary union] ... was not substan- tially different from the impact of the picket line itself ....` tT To date, in analyzing sympathetic action cases under Section 8(b) (4), the Board has endorsed the position that the key question is not "by ' The difficulty of resting a legal conclusion on such a tenuous ground is highlighted here by the fact that picketing was once in progress , was subsequently enjoined , and yet was still allegedly continuing as of the date of the hearing , albeit in the form of an "invisible picket line." " We do not attach any significance to Moyer's partially ambiguous testimony that Connor remarked to him on one occasion that he had a message from Scotty Opherson of the SIU that if Continental persisted in trying to load Upper Lakes' ships it would have difficulty in getting railroad boxcars in and out of Continental 's plants and that Connor told him (Moyer) on another occasion that Continental would have trouble at its Texas elevators. 47 126 NLRB 650, 651 . See also, Truckdrivers Local 413 v. N.L R B., supra, footnote 36. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC, 41 7 whom" economic pressure is being brought to bear but whether the pressure is brought to bear on the primary employer at a situs of the dispute. as we read the legislative history of the provisions of Section 8 (b) (4) (A) here involved, Congress was not concerned to protect primary employers against pressures by disinterested unions, but rather to protect disinterested employers against direct pressures by any union.48 [Emphasis supplied.] Practically speaking, this has meant that a union engaged in sympa- thetic action takes a calculated risk that the striking union's conduct constitutes lawful primary action rather than an unlawful secondary boycott. And, as we have seen above, SIU, Canada's, conduct clearly fell within the former category. In view of all the foregoing, we would find that Respondent ILA, Local 418, was engaged in lawful primary activity and dismiss the entire complaint. CHAIRMAN MCCULLOCII and MEMBERS FANNING and ZAGORIA took no part in the consideration of the above Decision and Order. la Columbia-Southern Chemtical Corporation, 110 NLRB 206, 209. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE Upon the filing of a charge on April 12, 1963, and an amended charge on April 17, 1963, by Continental Grain Company, hereinafter called Continental, and a charge filed by Continental on April 22, 1963, in Case No. 13-CC-351, the General Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board, by the Regional Director for Region 13, on June 20, 1963, issued his order consolidating said cases, and a complaint against Respondent Grain Elevator, Flour and Feed Mill Workers, International Longshore- men Association, Local 418, AFL-CIO, herein called Local 418, and Respondent Seafarers' International Union of North America, herein called Seafarers, alleging that both Respondents had engaged in and were engaging in conduct violative of Section 8(b)(4)(i) and (ii)(B), and Section 2(6) and (7) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, 29 U S C. Section 151 at seq., herein called the Act. In substance, the complaint alleges that in furtherance of a dispute which Respond- ent Seafarers had with Upper Lakes Shipping, Ltd., a Canadian corporation hereafter referred to as Upper Lakes, both Respondents have, since on or about March 1, 1963, ordered, requested, and appealed to employees of Continental, members of, or repre- sented by, Respondent Local 418, to refuse to perform services or load Continental's grain on ships operated by Upper Lakes, and that since on or about February 15, 1963, Respondent Local 418 has threatened Continental with a strike by its employees repre- sented by that Local if Continental attempted or persisted in doing business with Upper Lakes. The complaint further alleges that as a result of the conduct of both Respondents aforementioned, employees of Continental have refused, and are refus- ing, to perform services for Continental, and that an object of all of said conduct was, and is, to force or require Continental to cease doing business with Upper Lakes. By their separate answers, each Respondent denied the commission of any unfair labor practice.i 1 Respondent Seafarers also contends that the complaint against that organ,ation should be dismissed because, it claims, no copy of the charge in Case No 13-CC-351 was ever served upon that Respondent The contention is without merit, and the motion to dismiss based on that ground is denied At the hearing before me, the parties stipulated that a copy of the aforementioned charge, attached to a petition for an injunction against both Respondents herein brought 418 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Pursuant to due notice, a hearing was held before Trial Examiner David London at Chicago, Illinois, on July 30, July 31, and August 1, 1963, in which the General Counsel, the Respondents, and the Charging Party participated and were represented by counsel, afforded full opportunity to present evidence, examine and cross- examine witnesses, and to present oral argument. Motions, on which ruling was reserved, are disposed of in accordance with the conclusions that follow. Since the close of the hearing, briefs were received from all of the parties aforementioned and have been duly considered. Upon consideration of the entire record in the case,`' the briefs, and my observation of the witnesses while testifying, I make the following: FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS 1. THE PERTINENT COMMERCE FACTS Continental is a Delaware corporation engaged in the business of buying and selling grain in domestic and foreign markets, and exports approximately 25 percent of the total grain exports of the United States. In the fiscal year ending May 31, 1963, Continental shipped from its elevators located at Chicago, Illinois, more than 66 million bushels of grain having a value of approximately 100 million dollars. During the period June 1, 1962, to February 28, 1963, Continental shipped from its Chicago elevator facilities to States other than the State of Illinois grain valued in excess of $50,000. On the entire record I find that Continental is, and at all times material herein has been, an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. H. THE LABOR ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED The complaint alleges, both Respondents admit, and I find that Respondent Local 418 and Respondent Seafarers are labor organizations within the meaning of the Act. III. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. The background As previously found, Continental is engaged in the business of buying and selling grain in domestic and foreign markets, and exports approximately 25 percent of all grains exported from the United States. To handle this business, Continental main- tains grain elevators at Chicago, Illinois, Boston, Massachusetts, Norfolk, Virginia, New Orleans, Louisiana, Galveston, Texas, and Portland, Oregon. At Chicago, Con- tinental maintains five such elevators, two of which are known as elevators A and B, and it is with activities at elevator B that we are concerned. Elevator B, having a storage capacity of approximately 6 million bushels of grain, is located on the Calu- met River, a tributary of Lake Michigan, where it receives grain by rail, truck, barge, and ship, and is equipped to load grain on boxcars, barges, and boats. In furtherance of its export business originating from elevator B, Continental con- tracts with various shipping lines to transport its grain by large lake freighters from that elevator, via the Great Lakes, to St. Lawrence Seaway ports from which the grain is then transshipped by ocean liners to Europe and other foreign ports. Among the carriers so engaged by Continental is Upper Lakes, with whom Continental has had similar arrangements for the past 15 years. Upper Lakes maintains a grain elevator at Three Rivers, Canada, a St. Lawrence Seaway port, having a capacity of approximately 6 million bushels. Since grain shipped by Continental to that port for subsequent transshipment abroad must fre- by the Board's Regional Director pursuant to Section 10(1) of the Act, and pending in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, as Civil No 63C804, was duly served on the Respondent Seafarers by a United States marshal at Brooklyn, New York, in May 1963, the exact day, however, not being disclosed by the record herein. However, Seafarers, in their brief, ask that I take "judicial notice . . . of the proceedings in the Federal Court involving the 10(1) petition of the General Counsel " I have clone so, and find that the petition and charge aforementioned were served on the Seafarers in Brooklyn on May 23, 1963. See International Longshore- men's and Warehousemen's Union, at at., CIO (Waterfront Employees Association of the Pacific Coast), 90 NLRB 1021 ; National Union of Martine Cooks and Stewards, CIO (Pacific American Shipowners Association), 90 NLRB 1099 2 Seafarers' unopposed request, attached to its "Memorandum of Law Submitted to Trial Examiner," to make 37 specified changes in the transcript of testimony herein is hereby granted. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 419 quently be kept in storage at that facility for prolonged periods of time pending ship- ment and, since any use of public elevators at St. Lawrence ports must of necessity be for a short period of time, it is essential to Continental's maintenance of its export business through the St. Lawrence Seaway to have a storage facility available in a St. Lawrence Seaway port such as Three Rivers. Under the current contract between Continental and Upper Lakes, Continental obtained the use of elevator space up to 2,800,000 bushels from Upper Lakes at its Three Rivers facility. In return for the use of that facility, Continental pays Upper Lakes the officially published tariff rates approved by the Canadian Government. During all times relevant herein, Upper Lakes was engaged in a work dispute in Canada with Seafarers' International Union of Canada, a chartered affiliate of Respondent Seafarers herein.3 Being aware of this dispute, Julius Mayer, an executive vice president of Continental, hereafter referred to as Mayer, shortly prior to May 15, 1962, called Jack Conner, president and business representative of Local 418, the other Respondent herein, and which union was, and since 1938 has been, the collective- bargaining representative of Continental's employees at elevators A and B. Mayer told Conner that Continental expected an Upper Lakes ship to be in very shortly and asked whether he "would be helpful in instructing his men to load it." Conner replied • "I am not going to tell my men to load or not to load; that's up to them," but added that they were supporting the SIU dispute and he therefore did not think his men would unload any Upper Lakes ships. Within a few days of this conversation, the SS Erickson, operated by Upper Lakes, arrived at the dockside of elevator B for the purpose of taking on a load of Continental grain. Upon its arrival, pickets took their place "both from the waterside and also from the landside." Continental asked its employees to load the Erickson while the pickets were theie but they declined to do so After an injunction was granted against this picketing, the Erickson was loaded on May 18, and departed. Shortly, before May 30, 1962, Mayer again called Conner and asked him whether he would be helpful in trying to load the SS Shaw, another Upper Lakes vessel, which was expected in a day or so at elevator B. Conner again replied he would not tell the men to load or not to load. Mayer asked Conner whether, since Continental "had the pickets removed on the Erickson," and assuming that there would be no further picketing, would his men load the Shaw. Conner ieplied: "Even if there is no picket line, there is an invisible picket line around these ships " He further informed Mayer "that pickets or no pickets, injunction or no injunction, an injunction can order men to stop picketing but they cannot order men to work." Instead, Conner suggested to Mayer that he bring in "boats other than Upper Lakes ships and [Mayer wouldn't] have any trouble loading those" other ships. On this occasion Conner also stated, as he had "before, that they were committed to support the SIU in their dispute with Upper Lakes." The Shaw arrived at elevator B on May 30, 1962, but Continental's employees refused to load that boat until about July 9, 1962, during a 30-day truce "arranged between the then Secretary of Labor Goldberg and the SIU and ILA . . . during which the Upper Lakes ships could be loaded." During this truce period, two other ships of Upper Lakes, the Houghton and the Norris, were loaded without incident, but the SS Leitch, which arrived after the truce period had expired, could not be loaded and left Chicago empty.4 8 The New York Times of October 21, 1963, summarizes the genesis of that dispute, and the events that followed, in the following dispatch from Ottawa, dated October 20, 1963: "The trouble began in 1960 when the Canadian Labor Congress expelled the Seafarers' International Union of Canada, a branch of the United States-based Searfarers' Inter- national Union. Mr. [Hal C.] Banks, [president of the Canadian Seafarers' Union], had sought to expand the influence of the Canadian Seafarers' Union by raiding the member- ship of other Canadian maritime unions . The [Canadian] Labor Congress set up the Canadian Maritime Union to fight Mr. Banks' union . In 1962, the new union won its first big victory. It signed a contract with Upper Lakes Shipping, Ltd, of Toronto. One result was that about 350 members of Mr Banks' union on Upper Lakes ships lost their jobs. The Seafarers retaliated by picketing Upper Lakes ships in United States ports, and longshoremen refused to unload their cargo. There was much violence and harass- ment of Canadian crews in United States ports. The action against Upper Lakes has continued." * As the heading of this portion of my Decision indicates, the findings entered in section III, A above are intended for background purposes only, to give meaning to events occur- ring on and after February 15, 1963, the period encompassed by the complaint and the bill of particulars herein. No findings of violation pertaining to conduct prior to Febru- ary 15, 1963, are entered herein. 212-809-66-vol. 155-28 420 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD B. The locale When grain is first received at elevator B, it is placed in temporary storage bins where it may remain for a few hours or a few years. When grain is to be loaded on a ship, it is removed from the storage bins through conveyors up into a scale where it is weighed for official weight. It is then transferred to shipping bins and remains there until the shipping bin is opened allowing the grain to pour through a spout affixed to the elevator and projecting onto and over the hold of the vessel to be loaded, thus conveying the grain from the shipping bin to the boat. All of the aforedescribed work is performed by employees of Continental, all of whom are represented by, and are members of, Respondent Local 418. The spouts which convey the grain from the shipping bins to the vessel are affixed to the outside of the elevator and can be raised and lowered vertically through the operation of mechanism on a platform affixed to the outside of the elevator. It is impossible to move the spouts horizontally, a requisite to placing them over the hold of the ship in a loading position, by the operation of the aforesaid mechanism. In order to obtain the necessary horizontal motion of the spouts, a rope, attached to the spout, is thrown by one of Continental's employees working on the dock to someone working on the ship who catches this rope and proceeds to manually pull the spout horizontally to a position above the particular hold of the ship to be loaded. It is customary, in the port of Chicago, that grain trimmers, members of Local 101, International Longshoremen's Association, are the individuals on board ship who catch the rope and pull the spout to the loading position over the ship's hold. How- ever, this work is not necessarily done by grain trimmers and, in other ports, it is done by members of the ship's crew. When grain trimmers are used in tht operation of loading a lake vessel at Continental's grain elevators in the port of Chicago, these trimmers are never employed, either directly or indirectly, by Continental. Instead, they are in the employment of a stevedoring company hired by the operator of the vessel to be loaded. C. The sequence of events On or about February 15, 1963,5 prior to the opening of the shipping season on the Great Lakes, Mayer called Conner, the president and business representative of Local 418, and asked him whether Continental would be "able to load Lakes ships" during the approaching season and whether "he would be helpful in seeing that these boats [were] loaded." Conner replied that he was "sorry, but the dispute between Upper Lakes and SIU not [having] been settled, . [they] again were going to support the SIU," that he did not believe the Upper Lakes ships would be loaded, and that the situation in 1963 would be "the same as it was" in 1962. He also told Mayer that Continental had no trouble loading "other ships" in 1962 and, if Conti- nental used such "other ships" in 1963, Continental would have "no difficulty" getting those other ships loaded. Late in February, Conner called Mayer on the telephone, informed him that an ILA meeting would be held in Detroit a few days later, and asked that permission be granted to allow two Continental employees, Jack Garvey, a trustee of Local 418, and George Novosel, shop steward of that local at elevator B, to attend that meetings Conner stated he was making the request because "the question of the Upper Lakes shipping dispute with the SIU which was stopping the loading" of the ships would undoubtedly come up for discussion, and that it would be wise for these two men, as officers of Local 418, "to hear or participate" in the deliberations of that meeting. Mayer granted the request. Early in March, Mayer asked Conner what had happened at the Detroit meeting and whether Continental would "be able to load any ships" in 1963. Conner replied that ships would not be loaded, that "Hal Banks, president of SJU of Canada," had asked "the convention in session to again support them [in 19631 as they had" in 1962, and that the action taken at the meeting to grant such support was by a unanimous vote. He also told Mayer that "Jimmy Hoff a" had attended that meeting. Shortly before April 12, Conner informed Mayer that there would be a meeting at a Chicago hotel at which one "Tanner and others from the union in Chicago," not otherwise identified, would meet with various representatives of local Chicago unions. Conner stated that he expected to be at the meeting as would Garvey and Novosel. On or about April 15, Mayer telephoned Conner and asked what had occurred at the meeting. Conner replied that Tanner had advised the group that "as far as Chicago was concerned, the SIU had had the full cooperation the previous year and asked them again to cooperate with them." Shortly after this meeting, Gunther 5 Unless otherwise indicated all reference to dates hereafter are to the year 1963 6 Garvey described the meeting as an "ILA convention of the Great Lakes District " GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 421 Goldschmidt , elevator superintendent at elevator B, telephoned Garvey who had attended the meeting aforementioned , to inquire as to what had taken place at that meeting and was informed that there was no change in the situation. The Howard L. Shaw, an Upper Lakes ship engaged in the transportation of grain on the Great Lakes, arrived at elevator B on April 21. Shortly before its arrival, Mayer telephoned Conner and advised him that the Shaw was due to arrive soon and requested that Conner assist Continental in getting the ship loaded. Conner replied that he was sorry that he could not help Continental, that Mayer knew that Local 418 was committed to assist the SIU , and that he would not ask his men, or refrain from loading. Mayer suggested to Conner that perhaps there would be no picket line when the Shaw docked and asked why, in that event, there would be any difficulty in loading the Shaw. Conner replied that there "is an invisible picket line around those ships." He further informed Mayer that he had a message for him from Scotty Aubusson of the SIU, not otherwise identified, that if Continental persisted in its attempts to load Upper Lakes ships that it would have trouble getting railroad boxcars in and out of their facilities , since the SIU had the full cooperation of the American Brotherhood of Trainmen. On May 21 Continental made two attempts to load the Howard L. Shaw at elevator B. At the first attempt, approximately 10 a.m., David Borchert, assistant superin- tendent at that elevator, gave a written order to Garvey to load the ship. Garvey transmitted this order to other employees at the elevator who are customarily engaged in the loading operation. All work necessary to load the ship up to and including placing the grain in the shipping bins was done , but the employees refused to take the further steps necessary to facilitate loading of the grain on the Shaw . Superin- tendent Goldschmidt then ordered the employees, all of them members of Local 418, to raise the shipping spouts, throw the ropes on board the ship, and release the grain through the spouts but the employees refused to do so. Each employee was ordered by Goldschmidt to perform these functions and each employee refused. When Goldschmidt ordered Garvey to throw the ropes over board, to break the shipping seal and load the boat, Garvey refused, stating that he had two reasons for refusing, one was fear of physical harm, and the second that he would have to refuse on the advice of legal counsel for Respondent Local 418. Later on the same day, Conner told Mayer that he had a message for him- that if Continental persisted in its attempt to load Upper Lakes ships, Continental would have difficulty at their Texas elevators. Mayer asked Conner to identify the origin of the message but the latter refused to do so except to advise Mayer that it was one of the parties to the court proceedings in which Continental was then involved. At that time, Continental was engaged in litigation involving Local 418 and SIU but not with any other parties. The Shaw was not loaded on May 21. On May 29 Mayer arrived at elevator B about 1:20 p.m. with a copy of a tem- porary restraining order entered that day by Judge Holland of the United States district court. By that order, both Respondents herein were enjoined and restrained from engaging, or inducing or encouraging any employees of Continental to engage, in a strike or refusal in the course of their employment to handle any commodities or to perform any service, or to threaten or coerce Continental where, in either case, an object thereof was to force or require Continental to cease doing business with Upper Lakes. The order further required Local 418 and its officers and agents to withdraw all requests and appeals to employees of Continental to refrain from loading grain of Continental upon Upper Lakes' ships, and to advise said employees that they were free to perform any and all services for Continental in loading grain on Upper Lakes' ships. Mayer told Goldschmidt to call Garvey and Novosel so that they could be shown the order of Judge Holland. The aforementioned union officials were called to Goldscbmidt's office where each was given a copy of the order to read, and Mayer informed them that a United States marshal would soon arrive to serve certified copies of the order. After reading the order, Garvey said he wanted to read it again, and then said- "I guess this is it," whereupon Borchert gave Garvey a writ- ten order to load the Shaw. Goldschmidt went to the dock and told the Continental employees to prepare everything for loading He then returned to the elevator office where he asked Borchert if the grain had been moved to the shipping bins. Borchert replied that there was already enough grain in those bins to commence the loading operation. Goldschmidt and Borchert returned to the dock area where they found Garvey and Novosel and two other Continental employees Goldschmidt was surprised to see Novosel on the dock as he had never before seen him at that part of the elevator 422 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD during a loading operation. This was so because Novosel's duties were performed exclusively within the confines of the elevator. Goldschmidt asked Garvey why Novosel was on the dock and Garvey replied that as steward it was his responsibility to be there. Goldschmidt thereupon ordered Nick Toth, a Continental employee, to load the Shaw at which time Garvey said. "I for myself would have to refuse to load the boat." Goldschmidt thereupon again gave Toth the order to load the boat but the latter answered that he was sorry, he was afraid. Borchert left the group on the dock and returned to the office where he met Lawrence Banks and Tommy O'Connor, grain trimmers and members of Local 101, ILA, and also officers in the Chicago Grain Trimmers Association, a stevedoring company which does grain trimming work upon ships. When Goldschmidt told Banks and O'Connor that Continental was preparing to load the Shaw and were waiting for the trimmers to go aboard, Banks and O'Connor stated that their men would go aboard the Shaw and do the trimming. The Continental employees were informed of this and were again ordered to load the Shaw After Novosel asked Mayer if the men could have a few minutes to think it over, the employees walked a short distance away. They returned a few minutes later at which time Novosel informed Mayer that the men would not load the vessel. About that time, Conner and the United States marshal arrived at elevator B. Mayer, Borchert, Conner, and the marshal went to the dock where the marshal served each employee with a certified copy of the temporary restraining order. Conner, who was also served, suggested that everyone go into the Company's lunch- room to discuss the matter. All of Continental's employees, Goldschmidt, Borchert, Mayer, Conner, and the marshal then retired to the lunchroom where Conner read aloud the temporary restraining order but omitted reading the last paragraph of the order. The marshal told Conner that he should have finished reading the order in its entirety and then proceeded, himself, to read the portion of the order which Conner had omitted. Conner suggested that everyone leave the lunchroom except meribeis of Local 418 whereupon Goldschmidt, Borchert, Mayer, and the marshal left and went to the adjoining parking lot where Conner joined them a few minutes later. When Conner informed the group as they were departing from the lunchroom that the men were going to vote, the marshal said: "You better go in and tell them not to, it might be violating the law." About 5 minutes later, Conner rejoined Mayer and the marshal and announced that "they are not going to work, they are not going to load the boat." The Shaw was not loaded on May 29. On June 17 a United States marshal served each Continental employee at elevator B with a copy of an injunction. After service thereof, Borchert again gave the order to load the Shaw and, as on previous attempts, grain was moved as far as the shipping bins but the employees refused to perform any other function to load the vessel. On June 20, Mayer came to elevator B about 10 a.m. while the employees were assembled in the lunchroom. Borchert again ordered the men to load the Shaw but they again refused. After the attempt to load the Shaw at elevator B on June 20 was unsuccessful, the boat proceeded to Continental's elevator A where it arrived on the afternoon of June 20. Mayer instructed the superintendent of that elevator to order the men to load the Shaw. After this order was given, Hubert Simmons, union steward for Local 418 at elevator A, polled the men as to their willingness to follow the order and they indicated that they would not do so When Simmons informed Mayer that he was doing this as an officer of the union, Mayer asked the employees if they were willing to have Simmons speak for them in this regard. They answered that it was their wish and continued their refusal to load the Shaw. A similar request to load the vessel on June 21 at elevator A again met with a refusal by the employees to load the vessel. The findings entered above are based on the credited, undenied testimony of wit- nesses called by the General Counsel. The only witness called in behalf of either Respondent was Howard Schulman, General Counsel for Respondent Seafarers International, and his testimony was restricted to the relationship between that organization and its chartered district affiliates. D. Concluding findings 1. The liability of Local 418 As just indicated, no factual problems are presented herein and it is only the legal conclusions to be drawn from that uncontradicted record which remain for considera- GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 423 tion. Analysis of that record compels the conclusion that Respondent Local 418 must be found guilty of violations of Section 8(b) (4) (i) and (ii) (B) of the Act .7 The record abounds in undisputed testimony that Respondent Local 418 induced or encouraged employees of Continental to cease loading grain on Upper Lakes ships, and threatened, coerced, and restrained Continental, all in order to force and require Continental to cease transporting its grain on Upper Lakes' ships and to cease doing business with Upper Lakes. Among the reasons that compel that conclusion is the undisputed evidence pertaining to the following conduct of that union's officers and agents: (a) Conner's statement to Mayer on or about February 15, 1963, detailed above, that because the dispute between Upper Lakes and the SIU had not been settled, the Upper Lakes ships would not be loaded at Continental's docks during the coming season. (b) Conner's statement of the same day that if Continental would use "other ships" than those operated by Upper Lakes, it would have no difficulty in getting those "other ships" loaded. (c) Conner's statement to Mayer following the Detroit ILA convention that because of the unanimous vote of that assembly, in which Conner, Garvey, and Novosel participated, to again support the plea of "Han Banks, president of SN of Canada," as they had in 1962, Upper Lakes ships would not be loaded at Conti- nental's docks in 1963. (d) Conner's statement to Mayer on or about April 21, when the Shaw was expected at elevator B, that he could not help Continental in getting that ship loaded because of the Local 418 commitment to assist the SIU, and because there was an "invisible picket line" around Upper Lakes ships. (e) Conner's threat of the same day that if Continental persisted in its attempts to load Upper Lakes ships it would have trouble in getting railroad boxcars in and out of its facilities. (f) Conner's threat to Mayer on May 21 that if Continental persisted in its attempts to load Upper Lakes ships, it would have difficulty at its Texas elevators. (g) Garvey's inducement of Toth on May 29 not to participate in the loading of the Shaw. (h) Novosel's announcement on May 29 after meeting with the other members of Local 418 that the men would not load the Shaw. Respondent Local 418, in its brief, urges a number of considerations upon me which, it contends, require a dismissal of the action against that organization. I find all of them to be without merit. It is first argued that the refusal of the members of Local 418 to load the Shaw was the result of their individual action, in nowise induced or encouraged by their union, and that the record contains no direct evidence that any official of Local 418 specifically induced, instructed, or encouraged any of its members not to load Upper Lakes ships. On the entire record I have no hesitation in finding that the refusal by members of Respondent Local 418 to load the Sliaw "was an integral part of a program formulated and effectuated by Respondent [Local 418] as a labor organization, inspired and sponsored by the union officials-its admitted agents-and directed, as has been noted, at unlawful objectives." Truck Drivers and Helpers Local Union No. 728, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, AFL-CIO (Genuine Parts Company), 119, NLRB 399, 405. 7 That section of the Act reads as follows : (b) It shall be an unfair labor practice for a labor organization or its agents- ( a a a a a (4) (i) to engage in, or to induce or encourage any individual employed by any per- son engaged in commerce or in any industry affecting commerce to engage in, a strike or a refusal in the course of his employment to use, manufacture, process, transport, or otherwise handle or work on any goods, articles, materials, or commodities or to perform any services; or (ii) to threaten, coerce, or restrain any person engaged in commerce or in an industry affecting commerce, where in either case an object thereof is:.. . a k a 4 a a a (B) forcing or requiring any person to cease using, selling, handling, trans- porting, or otherwise dealing in the products of any other producer, processor, or manufacturer, or to cease doing business with any other persons, . . . Pro- vided, That nothing contained in this clause (B) shall be construed to make unlawful, where not otherwise unlawful, any primary strike or primary picketing ; 424 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Thus, there is undenied proof here that on February 15, 1963, Conner, who was not employed by Continental, told Mayer that "the dispute between Upper Lakes and SIU had not been settled and, as far as we are concerned, we are again going to support the SIU." Why did Conner ask Mayer for permission to allow Garvey and Novosel, as union officials, to "participate" in the ILA meeting in Detroit, where "the question of the Upper Lakes Shipping dispute with the SIU" would be con- sidered, if not to impress upon Mayer that that meeting would govern the future policy and action of Respondent Local 418 pertaining to that dispute. And, what conclusion can be drawn, other than the one reached by me, from the refusal of Garvey and Novosel to thereafter load Upper Lakes vessels in light of their par- ticipation, as delegates from Respondent Local 418, in the unanimous vote of that meeting to continue their Local's support of the SIU. The contention that the refusal to load the Shaw was the individual and unsolicited act of Continental's employees, not induced by Local 418, is also completely negated by the incidents of May 29, 1963, after the temporary restraining order of the Federal court heretofore described was served on the Continental employees and Conner. It will be recalled it was after Conner met privately with the members of his union to discuss that order that he announced, in their presence, that notwithstanding the court order "they [were] not going to work, they [were] not going to load the boat." Nor was any explanation offered for Novosel's unusual and unnecessary presence on the dock when the employees refused to load the Shaw except that provided by Garvey, an officer of the local, that, as shop steward, it was Novosel's responsibility to be there. Under all the circumstances present here, no straining is required to reach the conclusion that the action of the Continental employees in refusing to load Upper Lakes boats was concerted union action-the means by which a collec- tively formulated policy was given effect, and I so find. In light of the finding just announced it would appear to be unnecessary to consider the further contention of Local 418 that, because no official of that union specifically or directly instructed any of its members not to load the Shaw, the complaint against that organization must be dismissed. Assuming, arguendo, the absence of such direct evidence, it has never been held that a complaint charging unfair labor prac- tices must be dismissed because of the absence of such direct evidence Indeed, "direct evidence of a purpose to violate the statute is rarely obtainable, . . . and the Board may, [therefore], give consideration to circumstantial evidence as well as that which is direct." Hartsell Mills Company v. N.L.R.B., 111 F. 2d 291, 293.8 All that is required in this proceeding against a labor organization, "as in the case of employer violations falling within the ban of Section 8(a) of the Act, [is] a realistic analysis of conduct. . . . Under both subsection (a) and (b) of Section 8, a trier of fact is not foreclosed from finding violation because of the absence of direct evidence." Seafarer's International Union of North America, AFL-CIO (Haninier- mill Paper Company,), 100 NLRB 1176, 1185. To contend here, that the employees were acting independently in the exercise of their own free will, rathei than con- certedly in furtherance of the stated union policy as clearly and repeatedly announced by Conner, its president and business agent, and by Garvey, its officer trustee, is, as the General Counsel argues, "to divorce reason and reality from the scope of human experience." Nor is it fatal here that the record fails to disclose that, in espousing the cause of the SIU, Respondent Local 418 imposed any threat of disciplinary action on its members as a means of obtaining their cooperation in the enforcement of its policy to deny Continental the transportation facilities of Upper Lakes. As the Supreme Court said, "The words `induce and encourage' are broad enough to include in them every form of influence and persuasion. There is no legislative history to justify an interpretation that Congress by those terms has limited its proscription of secondary boycotting to cases where the means of inducement or encouragement amount to a `threat of reprisal or force or promise of benefit.' Such an interpretation would give more significance to the means used than to the end sought. If such were the case there would have been little need for § 8(b) (4) defining the proscribed objectives, because the use of `restraint and coercion' for any purpose was prohibited in this whole field by § 8(b) (1) (A)." International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 501, et al. (Samuel Langer) v. N.L.R.B. 341 U.S. 694. In Truck Drivers and Helpers Local Union No 728 (Genuine Parts Company), 119 NLRB 399. 407, the Board concluded that "a union's conduct can come within the reach of the statute where the Union sponsors, authorizes, or otherwise encourages, the unlawful activity, even though it may not compel or require its members to engage in it." 8 See also N.L.R.B. v. Link-Belt Company, 311 U.S. 584, 602; Northern Virginia Steel Corp . v. N.L.R .B., 300 F . 2d 168, 174 (C.A. 4). GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 425 Respondent Local 418 next contends that the General Counsel has failed to prove that Garvey, Novosel, and Simmons were agents of Local 418. In this connection, it should be remembered that the findings of violation entered above have been based primarily on conduct engaged in by Conner, whose authority as president and busi- ness agent of that local is unquestioned. I therefore find it unnecessary to further consider the extent of authority, as agents of that local, vested in these three men as trustee or shop stewards, except to note that it was undisputed that Garvey and Novosel participated as delegates of Local 418 at the Detroit ILA convention and contributed part of the unanimous vote which established the policy of their union with respect to the existing dispute between Upper Lakes and the Seafarers. Finally, Respondent Local 418 contends, in this connection, that "as a matter of law, even if the General Counsel had proved the allegations of the complaint and bill of particulars, they would not constitute violations of Section 8(b) (4) (i) and (ii)(B) of the Act, [because] primary activity is not affected by the provisions of Section 8(b) (4) of the Act and the alleged conduct of the Respondents was primary." It will be observed that the argument is addressed to the contention that the conduct of both Respondents was primary and therefore not violative of the Act. Whatever merit, if any, this contention has with respect to the liability of the Respondent Sea- farers, a subject treated in later portions of this Decision, it has no application to the activities of Local 418 against Continental. That local had no dispute with Continental, nor were its members engaged in a primary stake against their employer because of any such dispute. The sole object of their activity was not primary in connection with any dispute they had with their employer, but secondary, to render support to the strike being waged against Upper Lakes by the latter's employees. To establish that Continental was not the neutral or secondary employer that Congress sought to protect by enacting Section 8(b)(4) of the Act, Local 418, in its brief, quotes and relies on the following legislative history of that section as "succinctly [pronounced] by the principal author of the Act, Senator Taft, when he said: This provision makes it unlawful to resort to a secondary boycott to injure the business of a third person who is wholly unconcerned in the disagreement between an employer and his employees. 93 Cong. Rec. 4323. The secondary boycott ban is merely intended to prevent a union from injuring a third person, who is not involved in any way, in the dispute or strike . It is not intended to apply to a case where the third person is, in effect, in cahoots with or acting as part of the primary employer. Cong. Rec. 8709." [Emphasis added by Local 418.] Relying on the portion of that history which it emphasized as indicated above, Local 418 then argues that because Continental also availed itself of Upper Lakes' storage facilities in Canada, their operations are so "integrated [that] they must be deemed a single employer, or a joint venture, or an alliance of interest," and not the neutral employer entitled to the protection of Section 8(b)(4). I am, of course, in complete agreement with Local 418 that the statement of Senator Taft succinctly states the congressional intent of Section 8(b)(4). I cannot, however, conclude that the Senator's statement can be construed as implying that Congress intended only to make it "unlawful to resort to a secondary boycott to injure the business of a third person [whose business] is wholly unconcerned ... [or] not involved" with the business of the struck employer, as Local 418 seems to imply by the emphasis placed on the above quotation and upon which it apparently relies. To so interpret the legislative history would make it impossible to ever invoke that section. In the state of our complex industrial life, no employer engaged in the most simple business operation or activity can ever be deemed to be "wholly uncon- cerned" and "not involved in any way" with the affairs or business of another employer from whom he buys, or to whom he sells, goods, materials, or services. Instead it was made clear by Senator Taft that the protection of Section 8(b)(4) was intended for "the third person who is wholly unconcerned in the disagreement between [the primary] employer and his employees, . . . [and] not involved in any way in [the] dispute or strike." Here, it was undisputed that Continental was "wholly unconcerned" in the disagreement between Upper Lakes and its employees and not involved in any way in the dispute or strike between those two parties. It is next argued that "the identity or community of interest and intimate inner relationship between Continental and Upper Lakes is [so] manifest [that] it would be only by ignoring the realities of economic life that one could consider Continental a neutral." Among the considerations urged in support of this argument, is the 426 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD contention that because Upper Lakes also provides storage facilities for Continental at Three Rivers, the two corporations "must be deemed a single employer, or a joint venture, or an alliance of interest." In support of that contention, Local 418 cites and relies on National Union of Marine Cooks and Stewards, et al. (Irwin-Lyons Lumber Company), 87 NLRB 54, Warehouse and Distribution Workers Union, Local 688, Teamsters (Bachman Machine Company), 121 NLRB 1229, and J. G. Roy and Sons, Company, 118 NLRB 286. All of these are inapposite for, in all of them, the business of the primary and secondary employers were commonly owned and con- trolled, thereby making them, in effect, one employer. Here, however, the record affirmatively establishes that Continental and Upper Lakes are completely independent of each other, with no common stockholders, officers, directors, business interests, or control. The relationship between Continental and Upper Lakes is the same as exists between any carrier and its customers or patrons who avail themselves of that carrier's carriage and storage facilities. To establish that Continental was not a neutral employer within the scope of the Act, Local 418 also likens Continental's status to that of an employer performing "struck work" thereby destroying its status as a neutral, and therefore not entitled to invoke the protection afforded neutral employees by Section 8(b) (4), citing N.L.R.B. v. Business Machine and Office Appliance Mechanics Conference Board, Local 459, International Union of Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers, CIO (Royal Type- writer Co.), 228 F. 2d 553 (C.A. 2). To merely state that this comparison is appli- cable here is to require its rejection. There is no evidence in the record to warrant the conclusion that Continental, or its employees, performed, or were asked to perform, the struck work of Upper Lakes employees 9 By reason of all the foregoing, I find and conclude that Continental was, and is, a neutral employer entitled to the protection provided by Section 8(b) (4) of the Act. The search in all cases of alleged secondary boycotts is to ascertain the objective of the picketing or inducement of those involved in that activity. Here, it is con- clusively established that what Local 418 expressly sought was to have Continental and its employees, unconcerned in the dispute with Upper Lakes, stop using Upper Lakes ships-stop doing business with Upper Lakes, an activity specifically. proscribed by Section 8(b) (4) (i) and (u) (B) of the Act 10 Whatever rights the Seafarers of Canada may have had to enlist the aid of another union, in other situations, and by other means,11 resort may not be had here to the cooperation of Local 418 to achieve an objective proscribed by the Act 12 There remains for consideration, with respect to the liability of Local 418, the extent to which the decision of the Supreme Court in Local 761, International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, AFL-CIO v. N.L.R.B., 366 U S. 667, generally referred to as the General Electric case, and the decision of the Board in Local Union No. 5895, United Steelworkers of America, AFL-CIO (Carrier Cor- poration), 132 NLRB 127, both being frequently cited by Local 418 in support of its position, are controlling, or relevant to the problem posed here. Briefly stated, both General Electric and Carrier were so-called common situs cases-situations where the struck employer and the secondary employer were performing separate tasks on the premises of the struck employer. Wheie, in such cases, the Union repre- senting the striking employees pickets the entrance used by all employees entering the common situs aforementioned, a balance must be struck between the striking union's right to picket, and the interest of the neutral or secondary employer to be free from such picketing. The Board, with subsequent court approval, struck that 0 On occasion , but not always , Continental 's dock foreman, Toth , goes aboard the ship and, by means of an intercommunication phone plugged into the dock, gives instructions to Continental employees controlling the flow of grain into the spouts . He engages in no task normally performed by members of the ship 's crew. 10 International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Asbestos Workers ( Speed- Line Manufacturing Co., Inc. ), 137 NLRB 1410; Local Union 825, International Union of Operating Engineers , AFL-CIO ( Nichols Electric Company ), 138 NLRB 540 ; Local 584, International Brotherhood of Teamsters , Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of Amer- ica, et at. (Fairway Farms, Inc.), 141 NLRB 638. n E.g., the trimmers, employees of another secondary employer, a stevedoring company, who had to board the Shaw to perform their work on that vessel, could legally be induced to refrain from doing so. 12 See, in this connection , Truck-Drivers Union Local No. 413, International Brother- hood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America , at at. ( The Patton Warehouse, Inc.), 140 NLRB 1474; International Organization of Masters, Mates and Pilots of America, Inc ., et at. (Chicago Calumet Stevedoring Co , Inc.), 125 NLRB 113, 126-127. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 427 balance in the earlier Moore Dry Dock case,13 and there prescribed four standards or conditions for picketing which, if complied with, would be presumptive of valid primary activity. Geneial Electric and Carrier, however, presented a factual situation not present in Moore Dry Dock or in most common situs cases-a separate gate to the struck employer's premises used exclusively by the employees of the secondary employer. The issue posed by that situation was whether the mere fact that the picketing occurred at a gate used exclusively by the employees of the secondary employer conclusively established that the picketing was directed at the employees of the secondary employer and therefore violative of Section 8(b) (4) of the Act. The Supreme Court answered the problem in General Electric and, observing that "the key to the problem is found in the type of work that is being performed by those who use the separate gate," added another refinement of the rule promulgated in Moore Dry Dock, to wit: "the work done by the men who use the gate must be unrelated to the normal operations of the [secondary] employer and the work must be of a kind that would not, if done when the plant were engaged in its regular operations, necessitate curtailing those operations." The Board, in Carrier, applied that formula. The two cases, however, and indeed all Moore Dry Dock cases, have no relevance or application here for at least two reasons. First, the picketing or inducement of which complaint was there made was imposed by the striking union representing the employees of the primary employer. Here, however, the inducement with which we are presently concerned was imposed by the union representing the employees of the secondary employer who had no dispute with their employer. In General Electric and Moore Dry Dock cases, the employees of the secondary or neutral employer were engaged in work on the primary or struck employer's premises, creating the so-called common situs. Here, the Shaw, the situs of the dispute, was docked in the Calumet River, a navigable body of water open to the public. While the Shaw is docked alongside Continental's elevator and dock, no part of the vessel is actually located on Continental's premises.11 2. The liability of Respondent Seafarers' International The only evidence in the record by reason of which the General Counsel seeks to impose liability on the Respondent Seafarers' International pertains to the speech made by Hal Banks on or about March 1, 1963, at the convention or meeting of the Great Lakes District of the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA). It will be recalled that it was at this meeting that Banks sought and obtained the coopera- tion, inter alia, of Local 418, in the dispute that his organization had with Upper Lakes. The critical factor upon which both the General Counsel and the Charging Party rely is that at the time the aforementioned request was made, Banks was not only president of the Seafarers' International Union of Canada with whom Upper Lakes had its controversy, a fact which is not disputed, but that he was also vice president of the Respondent Seafarers' International Union of North America. Sea- farers' International Union of Canada not having been made a party to this proceed- ing, it is then argued "that it is not for Mr. Banks at this late date to choose which hat he was wearing at the convention, but he must be held to have attended the convention in whatever capacity or position he occupied with both Canadian and American organizations." It is undisputed that Respondent Seafarers' International is a parent organization having four affiliated district organizations known as Seafarers' International Union of North America, Atlanta and Gulf District. SIU, Pacific District; S1U, Great Lakes District; and SIU of Canada. Each district has a separate charter, adopts its own constitution, and "has complete autonomy." Each affiliate maintains its own headquarters and branch offices, and elects its own officers. All contracts are with the appropriate affiliates. The problem under consideration was considered by the Board in Seafarer's Inter- national Union of North America (Hammermill Paper Company), 100 NLRB 1176, 1183-1185, an earlier proceeding against this same Respondent. The Board there summarized the applicable law in the following language: In the administration of the Act, the Board has recognized that labor organiza- tions are to be treated "as legal entities , like corporations, . . . [which] can only >s Sailor&' Union of the Pacific, AFL (Moore Dry Dock Company), 92 NLRB 547 14 The contention that the Board is without jurisdiction to proceed herein because the Shaw is a foreign vessel is without merit. No jurisdiction is asserted here over either the Shaw, its crew, or Upper Lakes, Ltd. 428 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD act through their duly appointed agents." Sunset Line and Twine Company, 79 NLRB 1487 , 1507. In the case just cited , the Board summarized the "funda- mental rules of the law of agency which ... must control ... decision of issue of responsibility" in this case , as follows: 1. The burden of proof is on the party , asserting an agency relationship, both as to the existence of the relationship and as to the nature and extent of the agent 's authority . In this case , for example , it was incumbent upon the General Counsel to prove, not only that the acts . . . alleged in the com- plaint were committed , but also that those acts were committed by agents of the Respondent Unions, acting in their representative capacity. The Respondents ' failure to introduce evidence negating the imputations in the complaint did not relieve the General Counsel of that burden. 2. Agency is a contractual relationship , deriving from the mutual consent of principal and agent that the agent shall act for the principal . . . Authority to act as agent in a given manner will be implied whenever the conduct of the principal is such as to show that he actually intended to confer that authority. Applying the foregoing principles to the instant proceeding , it must be concluded that the General Counsel has failed to establish that Banks' conduct may legally be imputed to the Respondent Seafarers ' International . The constitution of neither that organization , nor its Canadian affiliate, were introduced into evidence . The mere fact that these two labor organizations are affiliated , without more , is not sufficient to establish the responsibility of Respondent International Seafarers ' for the conduct of the Canadian district. United Mine Workers v. Coronado Company, 259 U.S. 344; Coronado Company v. United Mine Workers, 268 U.S. 295. Not only has the General Counsel failed to sustain the burden of establishing that Banks was acting for the Respondent International by his appeal at the Detioit con- vention , but the only evidence in the record shedding any light on the capacity, or in whose behalf , he was serving by his appeal at that meeting , indicates that he was appearing and appealing in behalf of Canadian district of the Seafarers . Thus, Mayer testified that when he asked Conner what had transpired at that meeting, be was informed that "Hal Banks, president of SIU of Canada," had asked the convention to again support them as they had in 1962. And Garvey testified with reference to the same meeting that Banks "talked about his union-SIU of Canada ." In that state of the record it must be concluded that the General Counsel has failed to establish by the necessary preponderence of the evidence that Respondent Seafarers ' Inter- national was guilty of the conduct alleged in the complaint . It will , therefore, be recommended that the complaint charging that organizationw ith unfair labor prac- tices be dismissed. IV. THE EFFECT OF THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES UPON COMMERCE The activities and conduct of the Respondent Grain Elevator , Flour and Feed Mill Workers, International Longshoremen Association , Local 418, AFL-CIO, occurring in connection with the operations of Continental Grain Company described in sec- tion I, above, have a close, intimate , and substantial relation to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States of the United States and lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free flow of commerce. V. THE REMEDY Having found that the Respondent Local 418 has engaged in unfair labor practices in violation of Section 8(b) (4) (i ) and (ii ) (B) of the Act , I recommend that it be required to cease and desist therefrom and to take certain affirmative action designed to remedy the unfair labor practices and otherwise effectuate the policies of the Act. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. Continental Grain Company is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. 2. The Respondent Local 418 is a labor organization within the meaning of the Act. 3. By inducing and encouraging employees of Continental Grain Company to engage in strikes or refusal in the course of their employment to load grain or other commodities on vessels operated by Upper Lakes, Ltd., or to perform other services, with the object of forcing Continental Grain Company to cease doing business with Upper Lakes, Ltd., the Respondent Local 418 has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 8(b) (4) (i) (B) and Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR & FEED MILL WORKERS, ETC. 429 4. By threatening, coercing, and restraining Continental Grain Company with an object of requiring that Company to cease'doing business with Upper Lakes, Ltd., the Respondent Local 418 has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 8(b) (4) (ii) (B) and Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 5. Respondent Seafarers' International Union of North America has not engaged in the unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint. RECOMMENDED ORDER Upon the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, and pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Act, it is recommended that the National Labor Relations Board order that the Respondent Grain Elevator, Flour 'and Feed Mill Workers, International Longshoremen Association, Local 418, AFL-CIO, its officers, agents, and repre- sentatives , shall: 1. Cease and desist from engaging in, or inducing or encouraging individuals employed by Continental Grain Company, or any other person engaged in commerce, or in an industry affecting commerce, to engage in, strikes or refusals in the course of their employment to use, manufacture, process, transport, or otherwise handle or work on any goods, articles, materials, or commodities, or to perform any services, where an object thereof is to force or require Continental Grain Company, or any other employer or person, to cease doing business with Upper Lakes, Ltd. 2. Take the following affirmative action which is necessary, it is found, to effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Post in conspicuous places in each of the Respondent Local 418 business offices, meeting halls, and all places where notices to members are customarily posted, copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix." 15 Copies of said notice, to be furnished by the Regional Director for Region 13, shall, after being duly signed by authorized representatives or an authorized representative of said Respondent, be posted by said Respondent immediately upon receipt thereof and be maintained by it for 60 consecutive days. Reasonable steps shall be taken by said Respondent to insure that such notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (b) Mail signed copies of the notice to the Regional Director for Region 13, for posting by Continental Grain Company, said employer being willing, at all locations where notices to its employees are customarily posted. (c) Notify said Regional Director, in writing, within 20 days from receipt of this Decision and Recommended Order, what steps have been taken to comply herewith.16 It is further recommended that the allegations of the complaint charging that Respondent Seafarers International Union of North America violated the Act be dismissed. 15 In the event that this Recommended Order should 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." 11 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 the Respondent has taken to comply herewith " APPENDIX NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR AND FEED MILL WORKERS, INTERNATIONAL LONGSHOREMEN ASSOCIATION, LOCAL 418, AFL-CIO Pursuant to a 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 you that: WE WILL NOT engage in, or induce or encourage individuals employed by Continental Grain Company, or any other person engaged in commerce or in an industry affecting commerce, to engage in , strikes or refusals in the course of their employment to use, manufacture, process, transport, or otherwise handle or work on any goods, materials, articles, or commodities, or to perform any services, where an object thereof is to force or require the aforesaid employers or persons to cease doing business with Upper Lakes, Ltd. 430 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD WE WILL NOT threaten, coerce, or restrain Continental Grain Company, or any other person engaged in commerce or in an industry affecting commerce, where an object thereof is to force or require the aforesaid employers, or any other employer or person, to cease doing business with Upper Lakes, Ltd. GRAIN ELEVATOR, FLOUR AND FEED MILL WORKERS, INTERNATIONAL LONGSHOREMEN ASSOCIATION, LOCAL 418, AFL-CIO, Labor Organization. Dated------------------- By------------------------------------------- (Representative) (Title) This notice must remain posted for 60 consecutive days from the date of posting, and must not he altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. Employees may communicate directly with the Board's Regional Office, Midland Building, 176 West Adams Street, Chicago, Illinois, Telephone No. Central 6-9660, if they have any questions concerning this notice or compliance with its provisions. Hunter Metal Industries, Inc. and Local 810, Steel , Metals, Alloys and Hardware Fabricators and Warehousemen , affiliated with International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Ware- housemen & Helpers of America . Cases Nos. 29-CA-50 (for- merly 2-CA-9939) and 29-CA-50-3 (formerly 2-CA-9939-3). October 29, 1965 DECISION AND ORDER On August 9, 1965, Trial Examiner Samuel Ross issued his Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that Respondent had engaged in certain unfair labor practices and recommending that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action to remedy such unfair labor practices. On the same date, the case was transferred to the National Labor Relations Board. On August 24, 1965, the Trial Examiner issued an errata thereto dated August 23, 1965. Thereafter, on September 13, 1965, Respondent filed "Exceptions by the Employer to the Trial Examiner's Decision." 1 The Board, in its consideration of the matter, found that the document filed as excep- tions by the Respondent did not conform with the requirements set forth in Section 102.46 (b) of the Board's Rules and Regulations, Series 8, as amended, for the filing of proper exceptions. The Board there- upon, by order dated September 23,1965, gave notice to the Respondent that it must submit proper exceptions on or before October 4, 1965, and that if none were received within the time provided, the Board would reject and strike the document referred to above and would adopt as its Order the Recommended Order of the Trial Examiner. Thereafter, counsel for Respondent notified the Board by letter that, in his opinion, the exceptions were proper and should have been accepted by the Board. Counsel did not undertake to file a brief or any additional or revised exceptions. 'At the request of the Respondent , the Board extended the time for filing exceptions to September 13, 1965, and the time for filing briefs to September 20, 1965. 155 NLRB No. 41. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation