Haag Drug Co., Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsFeb 16, 1968169 N.L.R.B. 877 (N.L.R.B. 1968) Copy Citation HAAG DRUG COMPANY, INCORPORATED Haag Drug Company , Incorporated , and Hotel, Motel , Cafeteria and Restaurant Employees and Bartenders Union Local No . 58, affiliated with Hotel & Restaurant Employees and Bartenders In- ternational Union , AFL CIO, Petitioner. Case 25-RC-3429 February 16, 1968 DECISION ON REVIEW BY CHAIRMAN MCCULLOCH AND MEMBERS FANNING, BROWN, AND ZAGORIA On June 7, 1967, the Regional Director for Re- gion 25 issued the attached Decision and Direction of Election in the above-entitled proceeding, in which he found the requested unit, consisting of 1 of the Employer's II restaurants, to be an ap- propriate unit for bargaining. Thereafter, the Em- ployer filed a timely request for review of the Re- gional Director's Decision on the grounds that in making his unit finding he departed from National Labor Relations Board policy, that he made factual findings which were clearly erroneous, and that compelling reasons exist for the Board to recon- sider its present policy as to the presumptive ap- propriateness of a unit comprised of a single loca- tion in a retail chain operation. I On June 29, 1967, the National Labor Relations Board, by telegraphic order, granted the request for review. The Board has considered the entire record in this case with respect to the issues under review and hereby adopts and affirms the Regional Director's Decision and Direction of Election. It was for many years our policy in retail chain- store operations to find that an appropriate unit should embrace all the employees within an em- ployer's administrative or geographic area.2 However, we reexamined this policy in Sav-On Drugs, Inc., 138 NLRB 1032, and concluded that it had overemphasized certain factors and had un- duly prejudiced the right of self-organization which the Act guarantees. As we said in that case (138 NLRB at 1033): Reviewing our experience under that [our prior] policy we believe that too frequently it has operated to impede the exercise by em- ployees in retail chain operations of their rights to self-organization guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act. In our opinion that policy has overemphasized the administrative grouping of merchandising outlets at the expense of factors such as geographic separation of the several In effect, the Employer. in its request for review, urges an employer- wide I I restaurant (2 State) unit , contending that "every meaningful thing" about the single restaurant sought is "dependent on the enterprise of eleven ( 1 1) restaurants as a whole " 2 See , e g, Safeway Stores, Inc, 96 NLRB 998, Weis Markets, Inc., 125 NLRB 148, Daw Drug Co, Inc, 127 NLRB 1316. 877 outlets and the local managerial autonomy of the separate outlets; and it has ignored completely as a factor the extent to which the claiming labor organization had sought to or- ganize the employees of the retail chain. We have decided to modify this policy and to apply to retail chain operations the same unit policy which we apply to multiplant enterprises in general. Therefore, whether a proposed unit which is confined to one of two or more retail establishments making up an employer's retail chain is appropriate will be determined in the light of all the circumstances of the case. Our experience has led us to conclude that a sin- gle store in a retail chain, like single locations in multilocation enterprises in other industries, is presumptively an appropriate unit for bargaining. In cases subsequent to Sav-On Drugs, we have con- sistently found such units appropriate unless coun- tervailing factors were present.3 In the instant case, we have, as the Employer requests, again reviewed our policy in retail chain operations, and we con- clude, for the reasons discussed below, that the pol- icy comports with the purposes of the statute and is consistent with related Board policy, and therefore is entitled to continued adherence. In order to establish a valid bargaining obligation, the Act requires only that a "majority of the em- ployees in a unit appropriate" for bargaining freely designate a particular representative (Section 9(a)). (Emphasis supplied.) It is elementary that more than one unit may be appropriate among the em- ployees of a particular enterprise, and our choice in a particular case "involves of necessity a large mea- sure of informed discretion." Packard Motor Car Company v. N.L.R.B., 330 U.S. 485,49 1. The basic statutory standard guiding the exercise of our discretion in this regard is Section 9(b), which directs us to select units to "assure to em- ployees the fullest freedom in exercising the rights guaranteed by this Act" -which rights, of course, include both joining a labor organization or refrain- ing from doing so (Section 7). Absent a bargaining history in a more comprehensive unit or functional integration of a sufficient degree to obliterate separate identity, the employees' "fullest freedom" is maximized, we believe, by treating the employees in a single store or restaurant of a retail chain opera- tion as normally constituting an appropriate unit for collective-bargaining purposes. The employees in a single retail outlet form a homogeneous, identifia- ble, and distinct group, physically separated from the employees in the other outlets of the chain; they generally perform related functions under im- mediate supervision apart from employees at other 3 See, a g., Frisch's Big Boy 711-Mar, Inc., 147 NLRB 551, 151 NLRB 454, enforcement denied 356 F 2d 895 (C.A. 7), Merner Lumber and Hardware Company, 145 NLRB 1024, enfd 345 F.2d 770 (C.A. 9), Purity Food Stores, Inc., 160 NLRB 651, enforcement denied 376 F.2d 497 (C.A 1), cert. denied 389 U.S 959, Davis Cafeteria, Inc, 160 NLRB 1141. And see also Capital Bakers, Inc, 168 NLRB 908. 169 NLRB No. 111 878 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD locations; and their work functions, though parallel to, are nonetheless separate from, the functions of employees in the other outlets, and thus their problems and grievances are peculiarly their own and not necessarily shared with employees in the other outlets.4 Our conclusion in this regard is consistent with our practice in industries other than retail chains. We have consistently found that a single-location unit in a multilocation enterprise is a presumptively appropriate unit for bargaining. Thus, Section 9(b) of the Act specifically recognizes a "plant" unit as appropriate, and we have long held that a unit con- fined to the single plant of a particular employer is presumptively appropriate.5 And in the insurance industry, we have deemed the district office as that industry ' s analogue of a single -manufacturing plant.6 In each of these instances, the determinative factors in finding the single -location unit ap- propriate were those factors discussed above in supporting the appropriateness of a single -store unit in a retail chain. We are unable to perceive any reason why retail chain operations should be treated differently. Indeed, to draw a distinction between the single -chain store and the single plant in a multiplant enterprise or the insurance district office would artificially disadvantage the organiza- tional interests of chain store employees, simply because their employer operates a chain rather than a single- store enterprise and would vest the chain operator with absolute power alone to control the scope of the appropriate unit. Further, we do not believe that bargaining on a less than chainwide basis would prove disruptive to the chain employer's operation. Bargaining in less than employerwide units has been effectively con- ducted in other industries without such results, and no reason has been presented, nor are we aware of any, which indicates that the situation would be dif- ferent in the retail chain industry. It does not neces- sarily follow that organization of only a portion of the chain would likely result in a lack of uniformity of working conditions through the chain or, if it would, that this necessitates rejecting a unit such as is here sought. In any event, though chainwide uniformity may be advantageous to the employer administratively, it is not a sufficient reason in itself 4 This is not to say that units smaller than a single-location unit are inap- propriate . In some circumstances , employees of a particular store (e.g., the meat department in a grocery store ) may perform work of such a dif- ferent nature from that of the other employees that a separate unit would be approriate . Mock Road Super Duper, Inc., 156 N LRB 983. Nonselling employee units in department stores have also been found appropriate. Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union (Saks & Co.) v. N.L.R.B., 385 F.2d 301 (C.A.D.C.), enfg. 160 NLRB 682. In this regard, we note that we have often found a departmental unit in a plant ap- propriate for bargaining . S. D. Warren Company v. N.L.R.B., 353 F.2d 494 (C.A. 1), cert. denied 383 U.S. 958. Nor are we saying that a group of retail outlets would not likewise con- stitute an appropriate bargaining unit . Under conventional criteria govern- ing the establishment of bargaining units, a unit composed of two or more retail outlets would also be an appropriate unit if there were a sufficient for denying the right of a separate, homogeneous group of employees, possessing a clear community of interest, to express their wishes concerning col- lective representation. We are of course aware that retail chain opera- tions generally are marked by a high degree of cen- tralized administration. Thus, most retail chains maintain central profit-and-loss records of the in- dividual stores, keep central payroll records, handle the chainwide purchasing and merchandising of goods, directly pay all vendors, and perform other similar functions. But these services, we must emphasize, are essentially recordkeeping or ad- ministrative functions that have little or no direct relation to the employees' day-to-day work and em- ployee interests in the conditions of their employ- ment. We find these functions are of little sig- nificance in determining whether or not the em- ployees at a single location comprise an appropriate unit for bargaining. Centralized administrative con- trol can be just as readily maintained whatever the scope of the bargaining unit. More significant is whether or not the employees perform their day-to- day work under the immediate supervision of a local store manager who is involved in rating em- ployee performance, or in performing a significant portion of the hiring and firing of the employees, and is personally involved with the daily matters which make up their grievances and routine problems. It is in this framework that the communi- ty of interest of the employees in a single store takes on significance, for the handling of the day-to-day problems has relevance for all the employees in the store, but not necessarily for employees of the other stores.' Accordingly, we believe that, where sub- stantial autonomy is invested in a local store manager to handle the matters discussed above, this is more significant in determining the appropriate- ness of a unit than the existence of central record- keeping and merchandising functions. It is for these reasons that we will adhere to our policy in retail chain operations of finding the single store a presumptively appropriate unit. That pre- sumption is of course not a conclusive one and may be overcome where factors are present in a particu- lar case which would counter the appropriateness of a single-store unit. For example, we have been degree of geographic or administrative coherence , and common interests of employees in the outlets. 5 See, e .g., Temco A ircraft Corporation, 121 NLRB 1085, 1088, fn. 11; Dixie Belle Mills , 139 NLRB 629, 631; cf., Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. v. N.L.R.B.,313 U.S. 146,164-166. 6 See Metropolitan Life Isurance Co., 156 NLRB 1408, 1414 (decision on remand from 380 U.S. 438), and cases cited therein. ' This is true even in chain operations where the actual day-to-day su- pervision of a store is, in part , in the hands of a dual -function official, who daily divides his time between actual in-store supervision and the per- formance of central office functions . The handling of the employees' day- to-day problems is no less a local matter merely because the official responsible for the day- to-day supervision of the store also performs cen- tral office functions. HAAG DRUG COMPANY, INCORPORATED hesitant to disturb an existing , stable bargaining relationship , and, where such relationship has ex- isted in a multistore unit and there is a reasonable expectation of continued stability in that unit, we will find the multistore unit appropriate . See Meijer Supermarkets , Inc.; 142 NLRB 513 , and The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., Inc., 153 NLRB 1549 . Also, where an individual store lacks meaningful identity as a self-contained economic unit, or the actual day-to -day supervision is done solely by central office officials, or where there is substantial employee interchange destructive of homogeneity , these circumstances militate against the appropriateness of a single-store unit. See, e.g., Mary Carter Paint Co., 148 NLRB 46 ; Caribbean Restaurants , 162 NLRB 676 . And a combination of factors may lead to finding appropriate a citywide unit (two stores in a multicity chain), e.g., where the stores are geographically proximate , they are sub- ject to common supervision , and employees are frequently interchanged between the stores. See Spartan Department Stores, 140 NLRB 608. We are mindful of recent decisions by the U. S. Courts of Appeals for the Seventh and First Cir- cuits, denying enforcement of single-restaurant and single-store units in retail chain operations . Frisch's Big Boy Ill-Mar, Inc., 147 NLRB 551; 151 NLRB 454, enforcement denied 356 F.2d 895 (C.A. 7); Purity Food Stores, Inc., 160 NLRB 651, enforce- ment denied 376 F.2d 497 (C.A. 1), cert. denied 389 U.S . 959. We note, however , that these holdings are inconsistent with decisions in these and other circuits affirming the Board's findings that single-store units were appropriate ." Moreover, we believe those decisions unduly emphasized the relevance of central administration , a factor which, as discussed above, we feel is of little significance in determining the question . Also, we believe that both courts misinterpreted our holding in Weis Markets, Inc., 142 NLRB 708. In that case, we found that a citywide unit (two stores) in a multicity chain was appropriate because ' of a combination of factors: the two stores were geographically proxi- mate, there were frequent transfers of employees among the intracity stores, and the union sought no other unit while the employer argued that the two- store unit could not be appropriate . In stating our reasons for finding the citywide unit appropriate, we pointed , out that our decision in Sav-On-Drugs had not eliminated the possibility that a unit coex- tensive with an employer 's administrative or geo- graphic area would be found appropriate , but had merely added the possibility that a single -store unit could also be ' appropriate . Our holding in Weis Markets is thus consistent with Sav-On-Drugs and 8 N L R.B. v Sun Drug Co., 359F 2d408,412-413 (C.A 3),enfg. 147 NLRB 669, N L R.B v. Winn-Dixie Stores , Inc, 341 F.2d 750, 755 (C A 6), enfg. 143 NLRB 848, 860-861 , cert demed 382 US 830; N L R.B v Merner Lumber and Hardware Company. 345 F 2d 770, 879 with our discussion here; Weis Markets merely stands for the proposition that citywide units may be appropriate for bargaining, despite the single- store presumption, where countervailing factors are present. Accordingly, we conclude that the court decisions in Purity and Frisch do not compel a reversal of our policy. Since we believe our policy in retail chain operations is consistent with the aims of the statute and with our policies in other indus- tries, we will continue to adhere to the policy of finding single-store units presumptively appropriate until the Supreme Court rules on the issue. In the instant case, the Regional Director has set forth the relevant facts in considerable detail, and we find it unnecessary to repeat those facts here. We note briefly, however, that the central headquarters performs those administrative and merchandising functions typically performed by the central office of a retail chain operation: it keeps all personnel and payroll records, it negotiates all con- tracts with vendors, it pays all bills and keeps all financial records, it establishes the budget for each individual restaurant, it maintains a profit-and-loss statement for each restaurant, it establishes pay scales for the particular jobs, and establishes all per- sonnel policies. Also, a company vice president is in charge of all restaurant operations, and he is assisted by one official who oversees all the restau- rant operations. Each restaurant has a manager, who orders all the restaurant's needs from the ven- dors, contracts for major repairs, does approximate- ly 60 percent of the hiring, fixes wage rates within the ranges established by headquarters, trains em- ployees, makes recommendations to headquarters with regard to employees, and discharges em- ployees. As the Director found, transfer of em- ployees among the restaurants is minimal. From these facts, and those discussed in more detail in the Director's Decision, it is clear that no factors are present to rebut the presumption of the appropriateness of the single-store unit. The cen- tralized administrative functions are related entirely to the Employer's own records and have little or no direct relation to the employees' day-to-day work. While employee benefits have been centrally established, and the uniformity thereof is of some significance, no greater control or uniformity has been shown here than is characteristic of retail chain store operations generally. We see no reason to permit this centralization to overshadow such im- portant factors as infrequent interchange and com- munication among the employees of the various restaurants and the separate immediate supervision by the local manager who hires and fires the restau- rant employees, rates employee performance, and 771-772 (C A. 7), enfg. 145 NLRB 1024 , cert, denied 382 U S 942; N L.R B v Primrose Super Market of Salem, Inc , 58 LRRM 2863 (C A. 1), enfg. without opinion 148 NLRB 610, cert. denied 382 U.S. 830, mo- tion for reconsideration demed 353 F.2d 675 (C.A 1) 880 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD is involved in their day-to-day grievances and problems. Further, the functions of the employees at one restaurant are entirely separate from the other restaurants in view of the geographic separa- tion and the minimal amount of interchange. Thus, we conclude that a single-restaurant unit here is an appropriate unit for bargaining. Accordingly, the case is hereby remanded to the Regional Director for Region 25 for the purpose of holding an election pursuant to his Decision and Direction of Election except that the period for determining eligibility shall be the payroll period immediately preceding the date below.9 9 A corrected election eligibility list, containing the names and ad- dresses of all the eligible voters , must be filed by the Employer with the Regional Director for Region 25 within 7 days after the date of this Deci- sion on Review and Direction of Election . The Regional Director shall make the list available to all parties to the election . No extension of time to file this list shall be granted by the Regional Director except in extraor- dinary circumstances . Failure to comply with this requirement shall be grounds for setting aside the election whenever proper objections are filed. Excelsior Underwear Inc., 156 NLRB 1236. DECISION AND DIRECTION OF ELECTION Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before a Hearing Officer of the National Labor Relations Board. The Hearing Officier's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the Act, the Board has delegated its powers in connec- tion with this case to this Regional Director. Upon the entire record in this case, the Regional Director finds: 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act and it will effectuate the pur- pose of the Act to assert jurisdiction herein. 2. The labor organization involved claims to represent certain employees of the Employer. 3. A question affecting commerce exists con- cerning the representation of certain employees of the Employer within the meaning of Sections 9(c)(1) and 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 4. The Employer operates a chain of 35 full-line and 6 discount drugstores in Indiana and Ohio, as well as 11 restaurants.' Six of the eleven restau- rants are located in Indianapolis and the remaining five in Kokomo, Bloomington , Fort Wayne, and Marion, Indiana , and Lima, Ohio. Judicial notice is taken that restaurant 206, the establishment con- taining the unit sought by Petitioner, is located ap- proximately 3 or 4, 5 or 6, 9 or 10, 11, and 14 or 15 miles, or an average of about 8 or 9 miles from the other five Indianapolis restaurants. The Employer also franchises or licenses a number of indepen- dently owned enterprises, herein called licensees, to operate restaurants which, like all but one2 of the Employer's own, use the trade name, "Huddle," and are in many respects difficult to distinguish from the Employer's own restaurants. Concededly, the licensee's restaurants are not part of the ap- propriate unit. In the past, pursuant to petitions under the Act, representation elections have been held among (a) the Employer's warehouse3 employees in 1956, as well as (b) its drugstore employees (exclusive of restaurant employees) in four Indiana counties (in- cluding Marion County) in 1963 and 1966.4 No cer- tification of representatives, contract, or history of collective bargaining resulted from any of the elec- tions. Headquarters of the restaurant operations, along with the drug operation, is located in the company office in Indianapolis. Among other functions it houses the corporate officers and offices. All Em- ployer-owned Huddle operations are administered by Theodore J. Shaver, vice president of Huddle Restaurant operations, who stands on the same level of supervision as the vice president in charge of drug operations and immediately subordinate to Vice President in Charge of Sales Latter and Secre- tary-Treasurer Steele, who in turn are immediately subordinate to President Moxley. Personnel Director Martin, whose responsibilities are em- ployerwide, reports to President Moxley and Secre- tary-Treasurer Steele. Liaison between Shaver and the store managers is maintained by a single super- visor, who, together with Shaver, visits the various restaurants checking on operations. Headquarters maintains substantial control over the operations of the various units. The Employer's president "in the final analysis" establishes labor policy and the comptroller prepares the various restaurants' budgets. Headquarters negotiates contracts with the vendors with whom the restaurants deal, and fixed asset expenditures require headquarters ap- proval. Other elements of liaison or control are found in the fact that the restaurants remit or report cash intake to headquarters, and report purchases, sales, labor and other costs, warehouse requisitions, and hours worked by employees for payroll pur- poses. A plethora of standardized intracorporate forms are used for reporting purposes; i.e., each restaurant is not permitted to make its own forms. Based on the material submitted by the individual resturants, headquarters prepares a monthly profit- and-loss statement for each restaurant. The Em- ployer does not maintain a clerical force at the respective restaurants and substantial clerical and administrative work relating to the restaurants is An additional or twelfth restaurant was temporarily closed at the time of the hearing. 2 Preemption of the name in Ohio by a competitor bars the Employer using the name, Huddle, for its Lima operation. ' The warehouse services both the Employer 's drug and restaurant operations. ' Petitioner was one of two joint petitioners in the 1966 proceeding. HAAG DRUG COMPANY, INCORPORATED performed at the headquarters. Thus, the headquar- ters office recruits personnel, prepares paychecks, keeps and maintains financial, personnel, and other records, pays bills incurred by the restaurants, and administers workmen's compensation, and group insurance plans.5 Advertising is generally prepared or handled by the headquarters-located advertising departments and the personnel department tem- porarily transfers employees between restaurants and drugstores to meet the daily needs of the or- ganization. A maintenance department performs minor maintenance on Indianapolis operations. Costs of operation of the headquarters are prorated among the restaurants and the drugstores. Addi- tionally, the Employer maintains a warehouse used by both the drugstores and restaurants, as well as some of the licensees as a source of supply. An effort is made to maintain uniformity of ap- pearance among the various restaurants. All save one? use the trade name, Huddle,8 use "out front" or exhibition cooking, generally seat 105 to 120 persons,9 serve a standarized semipermanent menu,1° and have the same or similar kitchen equip- ment, parking facilities, decor, and general layout. I' In many other respects, conditions are uniform at least in the restaurant division of the Employer's operation. Thus, there is a uniform pay scale sub- ject to local variation within the established range, a uniform fidelity bond requirement, a standard operations manual,12 which governs many person- nel matters, and a standard or substantially stan- dard policy governs the supply and laundering of uniforms, vacations, group insurance, holidays, discounts, paid leave of absence, meals, Christmas and Thanksgiving bonus, and timeclocks. 5 Of necessity, much of this work is done on the basis of facts and re- ports submitted by the individual restuarants. 6 As it is for many of the franchised restaurants ' See in, 2, supra s As do a number of the admittedly nonunit separately owned franchised restaurants. Two of the eleven seat only 52 to 68 persons. As do some of the franchised operations with minor exceptions. 11 As do some of the franchised operations. i 2 Which is prepared by the Employer's central headquarters. 13 As do some of the franchised restaurants. 14 Subject to a check of whether the applicant is disqualified on the basis of prior unsatisfactory service. is Although both hiring and changes in range are subject to the approval or require the initials of the personnel director and the vice president in charge of Huddle operations, in view of their extremely slight contact with the employees, to say nothing of job applicants, it is found the effective power lies with the manager. Indeed, newly hired employees can be on the payroll and working before either of the two officials who allegedly must approve their hiring even know about it. 11 In connection with Petitioner 's cross-examination of the witness who identified the exhibit that purported to reflect the degree of transfer and in- terchange of employees between the Employer's various restaurants, without objecting to Petitioner's questions, which went to the issue of why original and more complete records in the Employer's possession could 881 Local administration is vested in the restaurant manager. Each manager orders his own self-deter- mined needs from suppliers selected by headquar- ters or the Employer's warehouse. 13 Similarly, ex- cept for Indianapolis restaurants which use the Em- ployer's maintenance crew for minor repairs, the manager, after determining the need therefor con- tracts with Employer designated mechanics for major and minor repairs. Although some hiring is done through headquarters, 60 percent of the hiring is done by the manager'14 who at the time of hiring, as well as throughout his employment, fixes the em- ployee's pay rate within a rate range for each clas- sification prescribed by headquarters. 15 The manager trains and rates employees, makes recom- mendations as to employees with questionable ratings, and discharges employees. Although, as previously noted, in many respects there is uniformity in standard wages, hours, and working conditions throughout the Employer's operation, in other respects differences exist. Thus, many of the restaurants have different hours with concomitant different shift hours for employees. Employee clas- sifications differ in various restaurants, some using a cashier-hostess, others simply a cashier and others, neither. Although, as noted above, the restaurants are generally of substantially the same size, the manning schedules vary from 2 part- and 13 full-time employees to 23 full- and 7 part-time employees. Interchange and transfer between the various restaurants in the chain is insignificant and averages not more than 1.1 ,permanent and 2.5 temporary transfers per week's in a group of approximately 200 employees.17 not have been submitted in lieu of the 10 week summary specially prepared for the hearing , Employer's counsel instructed its witness as fol- lows: "I'll instruct the witness to tell the Union, attorney for Union, `Because we didn't want to do it , goddammit.' Put a comma before the goddammit. That's on the record .. I'll instruct this witness whenever I feel like it . Counsel is arguing with the witness ." In response to Peti- tioner's explanation it was seeking to find out whether "this thing is representative or not," Employer's counsel asserted, "I instruct the wit- ness to tell counsel for the union that you have nothing to say on the sub- ject. We are not going to argue about this. All this is argumentative. If you want to attack this exhibit by innuendo, do that in your brief." In the cir- cumstances, where Petitioner's attempt to explore the representative status of the Employer's statistics was seriously obstructed the exhibit must be carefully scrutinized. At the outset, it is noted that the Employer's business is affected and normally will be increased by holidays. Addi- tionally, both Christmas and New Year's Day are paid holidays for em- ployees In such circumstances it is a reasonable inference that the Christ- mas-New Year's week would provide more than the normal number of temporary transfers. In point of fact, it appears that twice the average number of temporary transfers occurred in the 2-week payroll period end- ing December 3 1, which furnishes internal evidence within the exhibit it- self that the Christmas-New Year's payroll period is not representative. That payroll period ending December 31, accordingly , has been disre- garded in computing temporary interchange of employees. 17 Employees retain seniority and any and all benefits incident thereto in the case of temporary or permanent transfer. 882 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Conclusion From the above it would appear that while the Employer, in a significant measure, controls and seeks to maintain uniformity among, performs ad- ministrative and clerical functions of various sorts for, and uses various standard forms in, its various restaurants, the degree of control or uniformity is not unusual or a type unexpected in a chain of retail establishments. Indeed, what would be totally unexpected would be a situtation where each unit of a commonly owned chain functioned in its un- controlled discretion. Additionally, it is noted that many of the separately owned licensed or franchised restaurants (whom all agree are outside the unit) bear many of the attributes that the Em- ployer urges to establish the need for a multirestau- rant unit. It would seem that if such factors are sig- nificant considerations in determining whether several restaurants should be merged in a single unit, they would require the merging of the licensed and Employer-owned restaurants in a single unit, which obviously and admittedly is not the case. From still another point of view, it is clear that the considerations advanced in opposition to the unit petitioned for do not disprove the appropriate- ness of the unit sought. Thus, the Employer's, or headquarters', relationship to all the restaurants it operates is substantially the same. If this relation- ship is controlling in making unit determinations, then only an Employerwide unit, be it 7, 2,18 or 50 statewide in scope is appropriate. Again, obviously the law does not require employees to organize in national, or employerwide units or forfeit their rights under the Act, although, of course, they are free to do so if they so elect. The issue for decision is not whether the restaurant employees may or- ganize on a nationwide, statewide, or citywide unit, but whether they must. 19 Phrased differently, the issue presented is whether the Employer's form or extent of organiza- tion controls the unit into which employees must or- ganize . This is clearly not the case. Thus, Section 9(b) of the Act sets forth the criterion to be used in determining the appropriateness of units where it says: The Board shall decide in each case whether, in order to assure to employees the fullest freedom in exercising the rights guaranteed by this Act, the unit appropriate for the purpose of collective bargaining shall be the employer unit plant unit or subdivision thereof. [Emphasis supplied.] One of the most significant rights guaranteed to employees by the Act is the right to exercise or refuse to exercise the right of self-organization. Although at a time in the past the Board did look to considerations such as those relied on by the Em- ployer, including the form of employer organization and whether various practices and intra-coporate forms were standardized to determine the units into which the employees must organize, it rejected these practices in Sav-On Drugs, Inc., 138 NLRB 1032, where it said: Reviewing our experience under that policy we believe that too frequently it has operated to impede the exercise by employees in retail chain operations of their rights to self-organiza- tion guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. In our opinion that policy has over emphasized the administrative grouping of merchandising out- lets at the expense of... geographic separation of the several outlets and [their] local managerial autonomy ... and it has ignored completely as a factor the extent to which the claiming labor organization had sought to or- ganize the employees of the retail chain. We have decided ... to apply to retail chain opera- tions the same unit policy which we apply to multiplant enterprises in general. In the subsequent Dixie Belle Mills case (139 NLRB 629) the Board redefined the multiplant criterion as follows: A single-plant unit, being one of the unit types listed in the statute as appropriate for bargaining purposes, is presumptively ap- propriate. Therefore, unless such plant unit has been so effectively merged into a more com- prehensive unit by bargaining history, or is so integrated with another as to negate its identity, it is an appropriate unit, even though another unit, if requested, might also be appropriate. . .. It has not been the Board's policy to compel labor organizations to seek representation in the most comprehensive grouping, or indeed in any larger unit unless an appropriate unit com- patible with that requested does not exist. Therefore, the critical question in each case is whether the requested unit is appropriate. Applying these principles hereinabove discussed to the instant case, it is clear that the various restau- rants have neither been merged into a multiplant unit by bargaining history, nor are they so in- tegrated with one another as to lose their separate identity. Nor, returning to the statutory criterion for 11 As it is in the instant case. 19 Thus, the Board has repeatedly held that in any given situation not only one, but several units may well be appropriate. Skagg's Pay Less Drug Stores, 134 NLRB 168; Buy Low Supermarket, Inc., 131 NLRB 23. Quite possibly, an employerwide, or a statewide, or a citywide unit, or a unit conforming to an administrative division of the Employer's opera- tion may be appropriate. However, it by no means follows from this that the storewide or plantwide unit is inappropriate. Indeed, quite to the con- trary, absent situations not here present, a store or plantwide unit is al- ways appropriate. Dixie Belle Mills, Inc., 139 NLRB 629. This does not mean that an employerwide unit is, ipso facto, inappropriate, since the statute does not command that the Petitioner represent a majority in "the" appropriate unit . Rather, Section 9(a) of the Act provides that a labor or- ganization is the representative of employees when it is selected by a majority of the employees in "an" appropriate unit. Accordingly, the fact that an employer-, state-, and/or city-wide unit is appropriate does not in anyway negate the fact that the'ingle store or plant unit may not also be appropriate. Miratile Manufacturing Company, Inc., 124 N LRB 48. HAAG DRUG COMPANY, INCORPORATED unit determinations, does it appear that most of the factors relied on by the Employer (such as form of employer organization and the standardization of manuals, forms, decor, etc.) are dispositive of the question of whether or not the unit sought is one which will "assure to employees the fullest freedom in exercising the rights guaranteed by [the] Act." Indeed , two other factors developed in the record bear more significantly on the appropriateness of the unit sought from the point of view of the statuto- ry criterion, to wit, the distance and the degree of transfer and interchange between the restaurants. Basically, the choice presented is a single-store or restaurant unit, or a city-, State-, or employer- wide unit. Considered solely from a citywide point of view, the evidence of interchange reflects that during the 8-week period there were two occasions when employees temporarily transferred and two occasions when an employee permanently trans- ferred from unit 206 to unit 232, and two instances of temporary transfer between unit 206 and unit 202, plus a single incident when an employee trans- ferred between units 205 and 206. In the 8-week period there were no permanent transfers or tempo- rary interchange between unit 206 and units 203 and 238. Add to this the substantial distances between the various restaurants in the city, ranging up to 14 and 15 miles and averaging 8 or 9 miles, 20 Except as heremabove noted, the record does not reflect disagree- ment between the parties as to the composition of the unit. 21 An election eligibility list, containing the names and addresses of all the eligible voters, must be filed by the Employer with the Regional Director within 7 days of this Decision and Direction of Election The Re- gional Director shall make the list available to all parties to the election In order to be timely filed such lists must be received in the Regional Office, National Labor Relations Board, Region 25, Sixth Floor, ISTA Center, 883 and the conclusion is inevitable that the geographi- cal separation of the restaurants and lack of oppor- tunity for communication among the employees em- ployed at the several restaurants constitutes a suffi- cient impediment to the right of and opportunity for self-organization as to preclude a finding that the ci- tywide and not the single-restaurant unit is the only appropriate unit. What has been - said of the citywide unit applies with equal and greater force State- or employer-wide units. In the circumstances, the statutory criterion for unit determination precludes the Regional Director from making a unit deter- mination which would require the employees' self- organizational efforts to be conducted on a citywide or broader basis. In accordance with Petitioner's contention , and contrary to the Employer, a unit limited to restaurant 206 is found appropriate. For reasons hereinabove set forth , it is found the following employees of the Employer constitute a unit appropriate for the purpose of collective bar- gaining within the meaning of Section 9(b) of the Act: All regular and regular part-time employees at the Employer ' s restaurant at 3 805 South East Street , Indianapolis , Indiana, but excluding all of- fice clerical employees , managers , assistant managers , professional employees , guards and su- pervisors as defined in the Act.20 [Direction of Election21 omitted from publica- tion.] 150 West Market Street, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204, on or before June 14, 1967 . Under Board directives , no extension of time to file this list may be granted except in extraordinary circumstances, nor shall the filing of a request for review operate to stay the filing of such list Failure to comply with this requirement shall be grounds for setting aside the election when- ever proper objections are filed. Excelsior Underwear, Inc, 156 NLRB 1236. 350-212 0-70-57 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation