J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsMar 12, 1970181 N.L.R.B. 666 (N.L.R.B. 1970) Copy Citation 666 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc. and Textile Workers Union of America , AFL-CIO. Cases I I-CA-3834 and 1 I-CA-3861 March 12, 1970 DECISION AND ORDER BY CHAIRMAN MCCULLOCH AND MEMBERS BROWN AND JENKINS On October 30, 1969, Trial Examiner Laurence A. Knapp issued his Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that the Respondent 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. The Trial Examiner also found that the Respondent had not engaged in certain other unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint and recommended that these allegations be dismissed. Thereafter, the Respondent and the Charging Party filed exceptions to the Trial Examiner's Decision and supporting briefs. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three-member panel. The Board has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner made at the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Trial Examiner's Decision, the exceptions and briefs, and the entire record in this case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner, as modified herein.' The Trial Examiner concluded that the Respondent's discharge of Mrs. Betty S. Allen was discriminatorily motivated in violation of Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act. We find merit in the Respondent's exception to this finding. Mrs. Allen worked continuously as a weaver from July 1962 until August 21, 1968.2 When she reported In its exceptions , the Charging Party requested the Board to extend the scope of the Order recommended by the Trial Examiner so as to include all of the Respondent 's plants in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia We do not think that the circumstances of this case justify an extension of the Order beyond the plants located in the Roanoke Rapids area, as recommended by the Trial Examiner In our view , that Order is justified because it appears that some of the Respondent ' s unlawful conduct occurred in the context of activities at all of its Roanoke Rapids plants, or in all likelihood became known to the employees in such plants But in view of the nature of the violations herein found , we do not think that the affirmative provisioi s of our Order should be extended beyond the Roanoke Rapids'area The Trial Examiner , in the "Recommended Order " section of his Decision , recommended , inter aka , that the "Notice to Employees" be lead to all of the Respondent 's employees in each of its Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina , plants For the reasons set forth in the J P Stevens III and J P Stevens IV cases, we have modified the Recommended Order in this proceeding to provide for the reading of the notice only in the plants where the unfair labor practices in this case occurred for work at 4 p.m. on August 21, some looms on one of the three lines of looms that she tended were being cleaned by a process which puts the two being cleaned and some adjoining ones out of operation during the cleaning period. According to her own testimony, Mrs. Allen became provoked over the interruption caused by the loom cleaning because it affected her production and consequent wages. The Trial Examiner found that she may well have evidenced this irritation by her expressions and by some unwarranted degree of absence from, or inattention to, those of her looms which were operable. At about 6 p.m., assistant overseer William G. Freuler, Jr., one of Mrs. Allen's immediate supervisors, approached her at her job with the intention of discussing her behavior and sending her home unless she stayed on her job. Freuler told Mrs. Allen not to be so upset - that the loom cleaning would soon be completed. In response, Allen told him to go off and leave her alone. According to Mrs. Allen, Freuler was angered by her remark, and coming round a post separating them, bumped her into a loom, although she testified that she could not say that he did so intentionally. She responded by clutching him by the throat with both hands. Freuler in turn grabbed her hands and in dislodging them from his throat twisted them. He then told her that if she did not like it there she would have to go home. She answered by telling Freuler that if he wanted her to go he would have to send her home. This exchange was repeated. Whereupon, Freuler, obviously annoyed by her attitude, told her she was fired. At this point Freuler started toward Mrs. Allen, but although he did not touch her and Mrs. Allen admitted this, she again grabbed him by the throat. She claimed though that in breaking her grip, Freuler struck her arm and again told her she was fired. Mrs. Allen did not proceed to leave the plant, but instead went to her husband's place of work in the plant and told him that Freuler had attacked her and fired her. According to Mrs. Allen's testimony, when Freuler followed her to her husband's work station, Freuler told him that he also was fired, whereupon her husband attacked Freuler. A short time later, Superintendent James Smith, who was informed of the trouble by Freuler, arrived on the scene According to Mrs. Allen, on approaching her and her husband he said, "You two union birds come to the office," whereupon her husband likewise attacked Smith. The Allens were then led from the plant by security guards. The Trial Examiner found, essentially on the testimony of Mrs. Allen which he credited, that Mrs. Allen was discharged by Freuler as a result of a plan to discharge employees engaging in union activities and not, as contended by the Respondent, because of Mrs. Allen's assault on her foreman. The All dates hereinafter are in 1968 181 NLRB No. 97 J. P. STEVENS & CO, - INC 667 Trial Examiner rejected the ground tendered by the Respondent as a mere pretext. The Trial Examiner does not question that an employee's assault on a foreman is a justified ground for discharge But if we understand his reference to pretextual grounds for discriminatory action, the Trial Examiner in fact is saying that but for Mrs. Allen's union activities the Respondent would not have discharged her for her admitted violent attack on her foreman. The record is devoid of any evidence of comparable situations where conduct of the kind involved herein was not the subject of disciplinary action by the Respondent. We may agree with the Trial Examiner that the Respondent's history of opposition to union organization in its plants and its practice of ferreting out union supporters made it aware that Mrs. Allen was or had been a union supporter and that the history of the Respondent's past transgressions calls for a careful examination of the record and of the evidence bearing on the reasons assigned for the discharge of employees known to be or to have been union supporters.3 However, it is quite clear that the burden rests on the General Counsel to show that an employee was discharged for union activity.' The fact that there has been a history of unlawful hostility to unionization does not serve alone as a substitute for proof that the action taken in the present instance was discriminatorily motivated, nor does it serve to shift the burden to the Respondent to establish its innocence. To conclude, as does the Trial Examiner, that because the Respondent has repeatedly violated the Act, it "may be taken for granted" that Mrs. Allen was a "marked person," is to say that its employees who have engaged in union activities with its knowledge are thereafter forever immune from the imposition of any disciplinary action by the Respondent. This is a conclusion that we cannot accept.' The Act's grant of rights to employees to engage - in organizing activities, to belong to a union, and to engage in collective bargaining was not intended to deprive management of its right to manage its business and to maintain production and discipline .6 It is evident to us that Freuler's confrontation with Mrs. Allen occurred while Freuler was exercising his authority to maintain production and discipline, and that the conduct of Mrs Allen in 'N L R B v Dan River Mills, Incorporated , Alabama Division, 274 F 2d 381, enfg in part 121 NLRB 645 'J P Stevens & Co. Inc. 163 NLRB 217, 218, enfd 388 F 2d 896 (C A 2) 'See for example our findings in J P Stevens & Co , Inc , 157 NLRB 869, enfd 380 F 2d 292 (C A 2), J P Stevens & Co, Inc , 163 NLRB 217, enfd 388 F 2d 896 (C A 2), J P Stevens & Co , Inc , 167 NLRB No 37, enfd 406 F 2d 1017 (CA 4), J P Stevens & Co, Inc, 167 NLRB No 38, enfd 406 F 2d 1017 (C A 4), and J P Stevens & Co, Inc (Dublin- Nathaniel Plants ), 171 NLRB No 163, enfd 417 F 2d 533 (C A 5), in which we did not find that all the alleged discriminatory discharges were unlawful 'Mitchell Transport , Inc , 152 NLRB 122, 123, enfd sub nom Hawkins v N L R B , 358 F 2d 281 (C A 7), Sutherland Lumber Company, Inc, 176 NLRB No 143, TXD assaulting Freuler was a clear act of interference with the exercise of that authority. One piece of evidence that the Trial Examiner relied upon as proving the existence of a plan to weed out union supporters was Superintendent Smith's remark before he was assaulted by Mrs. Allen's husband - "You two union birds come to the office " Although the remark was a disparaging one, it could well have been intended as nothing more. At most it reflected Smith' s antiunion animus, but this, without more is not an unfair labor practice.' In any event, it is clear, as the Trial Examiner found, that Mrs. Allen was discharged by Freuler before Smith ever came on the scene. A discharge which is prompted by a serious act of violence can hardly be conceived as the product of a long-harboured plan to get rid of union supporters Even if we assume that the Respondent was not averse to being rid of Mrs Allen and all other employees who supported the Union, the manner in which Mrs. Allen's discharge was accomplished suggests that it was a spontaneous reaction to her violent misconduct. Discharges for less grievous conduct have been found justified, even though they were made by employers otherwise engaged in antiunion activities 6 We have examined the facts dealing with Mrs. Allen's discharge very carefully and we find, on the record as a whole, that she was discharged for cause and not because of her union activities. Accordingly, we shall order that the complaint be dismissed with respect to the allegation that the Respondent discriminatorily discharged Mrs. Allen. ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board adopts as its Order the Recommended Order of the Trial Examiner, as modified herein, and hereby orders that the Respondent, J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc., Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall take the action set forth in the Trial Examiner's Recommended Order, as so modified: 1. Delete all portions of the Recommended Order and attached Appendix which relate to employee Betty S. Allen. 2. Substitute in paragraph 2(g) the phrase "in each of the plants where the unfair labor practices found herein have occurred," for the phrase "in each of the said plants." 3. Substitute the following for the last paragraph of the Recommended Order: 'N L R B v McGahey, d/b/a Columbus Marble Works, 233 F 2d 406, 409, enfg in part I I I NLRB 1162 'Talladega Cotton Factory, Inc , 106 NLRB 295, 298-299, enfd 213 F2d208(CA 5) 668 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD "IT IS HEREBY FURTHER ORDERED that the complaint herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed insofar as it alleges that the Respondent violated the Act by discharging Mrs. Betty S. Allen, by allegedly warning employees not to talk to union organizers, and by allegedly threatening to discharge employees who signed union authorization cards." TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE LAURENCE A KNAPP, Trial Examiner: I heard these cases, consolidated for purposes of hearing and decision, at Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, on May 27 and June 10 and 11, 1969, following pretrial procedures in compliance with the National Labor Relations Act, as amended (herein called "the Act").' The questions presented are whether Respondent (I) discriminatorily discharged one employee in August and another in November 1968, and (2) made certain coercive statements to employees in November 1968, in violation of the Act FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS 1. THE BUSINESS OF RESPONDENT; THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED Respondent is engaged in the manufacture of textile products and associated operations at many plants in the United States The plants involved herein are located at Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina At these plants the complaint alleges, Respondent admits, and I find that during the calendar year preceding issuance of the complaint Respondent manufactured , sold, and shipped to points outside the State of North Carolina products valued in excess of $ 100,000 . Respondent is engaged in commerce and in operations affecting commerce withip the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. The Charging Party, Textile Workers Union of America, AFL-CIO (herein sometimes called "the Union ") is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act II. THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Pertinent Background Concerning Respondent's Prior Violations of the Act Respondent's record of persistent, grave, and frequently blatant violations of the Act extending over the period 1963 to the near-present is established by a lengthy series of decisions of the Board and of the reviewing courts. Since I consider that Respondent's past illegal conduct should be taken into account in determining certain of the issues presented in this case, I will at the outset undertake a review of the prior, and as it will appear, interrelated cases. In 1963 the Union launched an organizing drive among the employees at many of Respondent's plants, including the plants involved in this case. In response to this The underlying charges were filed on February 20, April 1 1, and March 25, 1969 The complaint , containing an order of consolidation was issued on April 30, and amended on May 14 , 1969 Respondent denies all allegations of unfair labor practices stated in the complaint as amended campaign, the Board found in the first Stevens case (157 NLRB 869) that Respondent sought to defeat the union movement at some 20 of its plants by massive threats of reprisal, promises of benefit, coercive interrogation and surveillance, and like unlawful acts, and by discharging some 71 employees because of their union or other protected activity under the guise of one pretext or another Some 17 of these discharges took place at one or another of the Roanoke Rapids area plants. Upon review of this Board decision, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed (380 F.2d at 301) the Board's conclusion that Respondent. . through its plant superintendents, acting in collaboration, initiated and pursued a pattern of conduct the purpose of which was to crush the union movement With scant regard for the means employed other than their effectiveness, it interfered with, restrained and coerced its employees in the exercise of their rights under the Act, flagrantly, cynically, and unlawfully. In the second Stevens case (163 NLRB 217), involving some eight of Respondent's plants, the Board found that in the months following the events of the first case Respondent continued on its path of repressive threats, promises of benefits, coercive interrogation and the like, as well as by discharging some 19 employees because of their union activities and/or because they testified adversely to Respondent. Two of these discharges were at one of Respondent's Roanoke Rapids plants In reviewing the Board's decision in this second case the Second Circuit Court of Appeals approved (388 F.2d at 903) the following conclusion of the Trial Examiner concurred in by the Board: The record in the 1965 hearing reflects the continued, systematic determination of this employer as revealed by the record of the 1964 hearing, to destroy the union root and branch by discharging its most active members on any pretext which might come to hand, or could be invented, by threatening to discharge others unless they came to management and renounced the Union, and by provoking the resignation of still others from Respondent's employment No other conclusion can be drawn than that Respondent has largely succeeded in its purpose. As the Union's campaign continued, so did Respondent's countercampaign of coercion, as found in ensuing Board decisions In a third Stevens case (167 NLRB No 37) involving the period April 1965 - April 1966, the Board found Respondent guilty at various of its plants of (1) further threats of reprisals, promises of benefits, surveillance, coercive interrogation, and the like, and of (2) further discharges of some 17 employees, and the discriminatory treatment of others, because of their union activities and/or because they had testified adversely to Respondent Five of these discriminatory discharges took place at Roanoke Rapids plants In this third case, the Board, in considering appropriate remedies, referred to Respondent's "record of extensive and flagrant unfair practices" and quoted with approval the following observations of the late Trial Examiner Boyd Leedom: . . I have the inescapable but independently reached conviction, . . from having heard innumerable witnesses at the trial, and having carefully digested and reviewed their testimony from the typewritten transcript, that many of the witnesses called by J. P. STEVENS & CO., INC. 669 Respondent testified as they did pursuant to a policy, made at a higher level of management than theirs, to defeat this Union ' s organizational effort at the cost, if necessary , of committing unfair labor practices and then denying the unlawful acts of the process .. . In the fourth Stevens case ( 167 NLRB No 38) the Board found that in 1966 Respondent had discharged three employees at three different plants because of their union activities , " in furtherance of the overall companywide campaign to weed out every last supporter of the Union ." (TXD) One of these discharges took place at one of the Roanoke Rapids plants ( Delta IV) involved in this case The Board 's findings and orders in the third and fourth cases were reviewed by the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit which , in an opinion issued on December 30, 1968, sustained the Board ' s findings of violation with the exception of one of the many discriminatory discharges and of but one of the many coercive acts found by the Board . And in approving various unusual provisions of the Board ' s order concerning remedial notices to be given by Respondent to its employees, the opinion of Judge Butzner , speaking for a majority of the court , refers (70 LRRM 2104, at 2108) to the continuation in these cases of the violations committed by Respondent in the earlier two, and to: The extended period of time during which the Company has persistently violated the Act, the varied forms which the violations have taken, and the fact that the company has discriminated against more than 100 employees in about half its plants in North Carolina and South Carolina. . The fifth Stevens case ( 171 NLRB No. 163) involved an effort which the Union began in 1967 to organize employees at the Respondent's plants in Dublin , Georgia. Here as in the previous cases the Board found that Respondent immediately countered with its established pattern of unlawful activity, i.e., coercive acts (such as surveillance of union meetings, interrogation of employees concerning employees ' union activities, and threats of plant shut -down and other loss of employment ), and the discriminatory discharge , under the guise of pretexts, of four employees prominent in the union organizational movement. On October 3, 1969, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals approved the Board ' s findings and enforced its order in this case. The sixth Stevens decision ( 177 NLRB No. 120) arose as a result of a drive which the Union initiated in June 1967 to organize the employees at Respondent ' s Black Hawk warehouse located in Greenville , South Carolina. The Board found that as part of a plan to defeat the Union in an election ordered by the Board , Respondent deliberately changed its methods of doing business at this warehouse in order to provide it with a pretext for laying off some 17 employees whom it considered were union supporters , in line with Respondent ' s "continuing policy . . . to frustrate the organization desires of Stevens' employees wherever located." In treating with the evidence in this case , I consider various aspects of Respondent ' s past conduct as especially worthy of consideration in relation to the issues of discriminatory discharge presented in this case, and, in particular , the following features of Respondent's rather uniform pattern of conduct as depicted in the prior decisions: a. Its blatant antipathy to and corresponding purpose to crush the union movement; b Its various unlawful methods of ascertaining the identity of union supporters among its employees, c. Its common practice to discharge union supporters, once their identity as such was ascertained or suspected, under the guise of pretexts; d Its use of and dependence on ordinary plant supervisors to ferret out union supporters and to find pretexts for their discharge; and e Its previous discharges of many employees at its Roanoke Rapids plants by means of the foregoing illegal methods. B. The Alleged Discriminatory Discharges I Mrs. Betty Allen Mrs Allen was continuously employed as a weaver in the No. 2 weaveroom of the Rosemary plant, one of Respondent 's several Roanoke Rapids plants, from July 1962 until August 21, 1968 (During some portions of this period several "Aliens" were employed in the No. 2 weaveroom These included , in addition to Betty Allen, her husband James, James' brothers Eugene and Pete (Leo), and Catherine Allen, Pete's wife .) In connection with the Union's organizational activity at the Roanoke Rapids plants , Betty Allen signed union cards, was present on one or another occasion at the local union hall, and was frequently at the home of one Maurine Hedgepeth, another worker at the Rosemary plant whom the Board found in the fourth Stevens case was discharged for her support of the Union and because she had testified adversely to the Respondent in the first Stevens case. Mrs Allen's immediate supervisors were William G. Freuler, Jr., assistant overseer , and Bill Robinson , general overseer , of the No 2 weaveroom . Bill Robinson has a brother, Robert , a former assistant supervisor in the No. 3 weaveroom of the Rosemary plant . Robert Robinson testified that from about the fall of 1964 until his discharge in March 1966 he and other supervisors in his weaveroom were required to turn in to their superior, the general overseer, weekly lists in which, using their best judgment , they classified employees working under them in one of three categories respecting the Union , i e., "for", "against", or "unknown "; and that General Manager Fuller held monthly meetings of supervisors at which the latter gave Fuller their estimates of the total employees in these categories Robinson further testified that in March 1965 he was told by his superior , the general overseer of weaveroom No. 3, to watch a particular employee because she was working for the Union and to find some pretext for issuance of a reprimand to her . Respondent did not seek to controvert the above testimony and I credit it. Robert Robinson further testified that in August 1967, after he had left Respondent ' s employ, he had a conversation with brother Bill, the general overseer of Betty Allen's weaveroom , in which he asked Bill why he had not rehired Catherine Allen (see supra ) who had previously quit . According to Robert , Bill, referring to all the Aliens, described them as working for the Union, and said that Catherine was "number one," and that he was rid of her and would get rid of the rest of them later on. In the course of his direct testimony as a witness for the General Counsel Robert Robinson further testified that he informed brother Bill that he had given a Board agent an affidavit incriminating Bill; that as a result of this conversation he obtained a copy of his statement from Board sources which he showed to Bill ; that Bill told him 670 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD he (Robert ) could not go through it, that to do so menaced Bill's job at Stevens and the future of both men in the textile industry ; that as a result he told Bill he would not testify and would retract what he had said in the statement adverse to Bill, that he and Bill jointly prepared a retraction letter (G. C. Exh. 4) which was sent to the Board ' s Regional Office, and that in a later conference with Mr Butler , counsel for the General Counsel , he informed Mr. Butler that he had submitted the retraction letter because of what he was up against and that his original affidavit (not in evidence ) was true. In his testimony as a witness for Respondent, Bill Robinson denied telling his brother that all the Aliens were for the Union , stated that he had never heard of Betty Allen or her husband as having been engaged in union activities of any kind, and asserted that if they had been for the Union they would have been outspoken and have "worked for it day and night" and "wouldn't have beat around the bush about it " On cross -examination, he denied that he sought to find out what employees were union supporters and, while denying that he knew who were for or against the union , stated that he might have an "opinion" on the subject and, that in his opinion, Betty and James Allen were not for the union and never had been He further testified that some employees had told their supervisors , but not him , that they were union supporters , but that none of the supervisors under him had relayed such reports to him or identified union supporters to him. With respect to the retraction letter, the essence of his testimony is that prior to their first meeting his brother had phoned him several times from Statesville respecting visitations made upon him by Board agents, and that in one of the conversations Robert informed him he had given to a Board agent a statement which was not true - that he was mad at the Stevens company and at Bill - and which he wanted to retract ; that he saw Robert in Statesville on several occasions thereafter with the following results: ( 1) at the first meeting Robert could not remember what incorrect statements were contained in his affidavit and agreed to obtain a copy from Board sources, (2) at the second meeting Robert, having received a copy of the affidavit, pointed out what parts of the affidavit were untrue and wrote up the retraction letter, and (3 ) at the third encounter later in Statesville his brother told him that at the time he had given his original affidavit he was so drunk he did not know what he had said to the Board representative and gave as an additional reason for wanting to retract the fact that some Aliens had come to work where he was then working and were misconducting themselves in various ways and for this reason he was quitting his job. I credit Robert Robinson ' s testimony over that of overseer Bill Robinson and find that in August 1967 the latter declared that the Aliens were union supporters and that ways would be found to get rid of them on this account In observing each brother on the stand I was more favorably impressed , demeanorwise, by Robert than by Bill , and I find some portions of Bill 's testimony, e g., that if Betty Allen had been for the Union she would have so exposed herself fully and freely , as incredible in the light of Respondent ' s practice of retaliation against identified union supporters Moreover , the statements attributed to Bill are fully consistent with the Respondent ' s well-established policy of eliminating union adherents and with its standard method of doing so, i e , pretexts seized upon by the employees' supervisors. In addition, blood is thicker than water and for this reason I believe that , absent countervailing circumstances as is the case here, Robert would not give testimony incriminating his brother unless it were true. I turn now to the evidence concerning the event immediately surrounding Mrs Allen's termination Mrs. Allen tended three lines of looms. When she came to work at 4 p m. on August 21 some looms on one of her lines were being cleaned by a process which puts the two being cleaned (and two or three adjoining ones) out of operation during the cleaning period. This situation still prevailed when the more crucial events occurring about 6 p.m took place During this period Mrs. Allen grew provoked over the interruption caused by the loom-cleaning (because, she said, being on a piecework basis, she was losing gainful production) and may well have evidenced this irritation by her expressions and by some unwarranted degree of absence from or other inattention to those of her looms as were operable, as her immediate supervisor, Freuler, testified was the case Freuler further testified that for this reason he was going to send Mrs. Allen home unless she stayed on her job and that, as I read the record, this is what he intended discussing with her when he approached her about 6 p m. Plainly, then, both Mrs Allen and Freuler were in provoked states of mind when they actually met. On the basis of both Mrs. Allen's and Freuler's testimony I find that about 6 p.m. Freuler came up to Mrs. Allen at her job and told her not to be so mad (or upset) - that the loom cleaning would soon be completed, and that in response she told him to go off and leave her alone. Combining Mrs Allen's testimony on direct and cross-examination, her version of events from then on is that. Freuler grew angry at her remark, came around a post separating them, and bumped her forcibly into a loom, so hard as to bruise her hip. She responded by clutching him by the throat with both hands, which he in turn grabbed and in dislodging them twisted them so as to leave red marks (clearly evident in a photograph in evidence, G C. Exh 3b, taken a couple hours later) Freuler then told her that if she did not like it there she would have to go home. She replied by explaining where she had been when absent from her job and told Freuler if he wanted her to go he would have to send her home Freuler again told her she would have to go home if she did not like it there and she repeated that if he wanted to send her home he would have to do so. Freuler then told her "By God, you are fired" and then, with Freuler's face "real red and mad" and with him starting toward her she grabbed him by the throat again, he twisted her by the arms and struck her across her upper left arm, and again told her she was fired. She then went to her husband's place of work in the same room, where he was a loom fixer, and told him how Freuler had attacked her and had said she was fired. Freuler then approached the two Aliens and, with his arm outstretched, told her husband he was fired too, whereupon her husband administered a beating to Freuler Somewhat later, weaving superintendent James Smith arrived on the scene and in approaching the two Aliens said "You two union birds come to the office" whereupon her husband likewise administered a beating to Smith The Aliens were then escorted from the plant by security guards. James Allen, Betty's husband, corroborated her testimony in the following respects: when his wife joined him following her scuffle with Freuler, she told him that Freuler had discharged her on the spot and her arms and shoulder bore red spots; (2) when Freuler came up to them Freuler, jerking off his eyeglasses, told him "You're fired too, what are you going to do about it?", and (3) J. P. STEVENS & CO., INC. 671 when Superintendent Smith later approached him and his wife Smith said "You two union birds come on out to the office." Freuler's version of the events following the initial exchange of remarks between him and Mrs. Allen at her work station about 6 p m. is as follows: When she told him to leave her alone he said he could not do that - that she had to stay on her job or he would send her home. She said he would have to send her home and he in turn told her to go home and return the next day when he would see her and they would talk the matter over (On cross-examination, Freuler said he told Mrs. Allen to return the next morning to talk to the overseer.) She then grabbed him by the throat, he pulled her hands away, and she went to join her husband He followed her to this location where he put a hand on Mr. Allen's shoulder and asked him to calm Mrs Allen down Thereupon Allen hit him, called him a dirty name and threatened to kill him, and continued to hit him Freuler denied that he knocked Mrs. Allen into a loom, asserted that their first physical contact was when she grabbed him by the throat, denied that he told her she was fired, and testified that he lacked authority to discharge, a decision which he testified would have been one for the overseer and plant manager to make. In reporting the incident that evening to overseer Bill Robinson , he then recommended to Robinson that Mrs. Allen be discharged for assaulting him. He repeated this recommendation the next day to Robinson, who concurred.' Weaving Superintendent Smith testified that Freuler notified him by telephone at his home about 6 15 p.m. on August 21 that there had been trouble at the plant, i.e , that James Allen had hit him; that he went to the plant where Freuler told him about the assault on him by James Allen and also informed him, without mentioning 'any assault by Mrs Allen, that he had had "trouble" with her, that he approached the Aliens with the intention of asking them to come to his office to talk but only managed to call Allen by name when Allen assaulted him; and that thereupon he instructed plant security guards to get Allen and his tools and send him home. He denied that when he approached the Aliens he told him "You two union birds come to the office." Respondent's witness, Herbert Ellis, a loo:.i fixer in Mrs Allen's weaveroom, testified that he had a clear view of and witnessed the entire altercation between Mrs Allen and Freuler from a smoking booth some 20 feet away; that Freuler did not bump Mrs. Allen into a loom, that their first physical contact consisted of Mrs. Allen's grabbing Freuler by the throat, that Freuler pulled Mrs Allen's hands away whereupon she left the scene; and that he did not observe Freuler strike Mrs. Allen on the arm With respect to this testimony, the General Counsel's rebuttal witness Sikes, a doffer in this weaveroom, testified that he witnessed part of the scuffle between Mrs. Allen and Freuler, which took place at the south end of the weaveroom; that there are two smoking booths in the room, one at the south end about 10 feet from where Mrs. Allen and Freuler were and one toward the north about 100 or more feet away; and that about 4 minutes after the Allen-Freuler encounter he proceeded to the north where 'Robinson talked with Freuler and Smith during the evening of August 21 and with Freuler again and with Beeks , the plant manager, on the morning of August 22 According to him he then recommended and Beeks agreed that Mrs Allen should be discharged , and a corresponding discharge paper, charging Mrs Allen with assaulting a supervisor, was signed by Robinson and Beeks that day and sent to the personnel office he saw Ellis in that smoking booth, which, he testified was the one Ellis used ' On the foregoing and other evidence and circumstances to be taken into account, the question is why did Respondent discharge4 Mrs. Allen, that is, because she assaulted Freuler as Respondent contends, or, as the General Counsel contends, on a pretextual basis but really on account of her union activities To start with we know from the previous decisions of the Board that we are dealing with a Respondent violently opposed to unionization, and bent on ferreting out the identity of Union supporters and eliminating them from its employ under the guise of pretexts, and that Respondent had previously engaged in such illegal practices at its Roanoke Rapids area plants and by such means brought about the discriminatory discharge of some 25 union adherents Hence, if Respondent knew, or merely considered, Mrs Allen to be or have been in the past a union supporter, it may be taken for granted that she was a marked person in Respondent's book and that Respondent would seek out or welcome a convenient opportunity to get rid of her for that reason On testimony I have credited, her general overseer, Robinson, did a year before her discharge know or consider her to be a union supporter and had her down as an employee to be eliminated What was the case with Robinson it is reasonable to infer was the case with Freuler, Robinson's assistant, and with Smith, Robinson's superior For Respondent's program of eliminating union adherents has in large part been implemented by disciplinary action taken by ordinary plant supervisors, and, as the evidence in this case and preceding ones shows, Respondent has enabled itself to execute such a program on a large scale by its pursuit of various procedures for collecting information identifying particular employees as real or suspected union supporters. Information so collected it must be assumed was intelligently disseminated among corresponding supervising personnel, in order to achieve Respondent's discriminatory objective. Hence, I reject Freuler's testimony that he had never heard that Mrs. Allen had had any connection with the Union,' and, as against 'Under examination by the Trial Examiner, Sikes also testified , first, that there were looms between the north smoke booth and the spot where Mrs Allen and Freuler were , so that one in the booth could not see Mrs Allen and Freuler, and then that Ellis could have seen the incident by looking through the looms Later he testified that if Ellis were standing up in the smoke booth he could have seen Mrs Allen and Freuler by looking over the intervening looms 'in his brief, counsel for the General Counsel interprets certain remarks of Mr Blakeney, counsel for Respondent , at the hearing (Tr 405-407) as meaning that Respondent asserts it did not discharge Mrs Allen but, rather, that she quit But Mr Blakeney did not express such a position instead, in response to a question by the Trial Examiner as to Respondent 's position, he merely made a recitation of certain pertinent events as Respondent viewed them , including a reference to Freuler's testimony that although he had instructed Mrs Allen to come in the next day she did not do so But Mr Blakeney went on to say that Mrs Allen's discharge was determined upon the next day and introduced the corresponding discharge paper into evidence He thus, at the most, avoided a direct answer to the Examiner's question In any case , I find that Respondent discharged Mrs Allen Its answer admits a corresponding allegation of the complaint , it took the position that it had discharged her in proceedings before the State Employment Security Commission in September 1968, and whether or not Freuler told her on the night in question that she was discharged , as I later find he did, there can be no doubt that this is what she would have been told had she appeared the next day 'in rejecting this testimony of Freuler 's I have also taken into account his further testimony that he had never heard of any employees being 672 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Smith's denial, I credit the Aliens' testimony that Smith said "You two union birds come to the office" when he approached them on the night of August 21.6 For the foregoing reasons, I also conclude that Robinson, Smith and Freuler were all parties to a plan to discharge Mrs. Allen because of her union activities at any convenient opportunity. Under all the circumstances, I have concluded that I should credit Mrs Allen's testimony over that of Freuler's as to what transpired in the incident between them Accordingly, on the record as a whole, I find that the following were the essential facts of the situation: that Freuler approached Mrs Allen with a view to taking some disciplinary action against her, that he bumped her against a loom when she told him to leave her alone and she responded by grabbing him by the throat;' and that there was some further fray in the course of which he discharged her on the spot I further find that he discharged her because of her union activities. In reaching this conclusion, I have taken into account my inability to regard Freuler, Smith and Robinson as credible witnesses on important points of fact; my previous findings that all three knew she was a union supporter and had her marked for elimination; the findings of the Board, sustained by the courts, that such a procedure for discharging union supporters is standard practice with Respondent, and Smith's reference to Mrs. Allen and her husband as "union birds" when he sought to call them into his office shortly after Freuler's encounter with Mrs Allen and shortly after Smith had talked with Freuler 2. Arnold Ray Hux Hux' employment began in 1959 and ended with his discharge on November 13, 1968 He worked on the first shift in the "Delta IV" finishing plant where his principal function was to mix various types of "size," that is, chemical mixtures put in cloth for finishing purposes and concerned with the Union, an assertion which I consider wholly incredible I likewise attach no significant weight to the testimony of various female employees called by Respondent who testified that at one time or another they had had some work association with Mrs Allen but had never heard her mention any connection on her part with the Union , in part because two of these witnesses admitted that employees did not talk or rarely talked about union matters at the plant, as can readily be believed Finally, I see no reason to discredit the proof relative to Mrs Allen's union activities and Respondent's corresponding knowledge merely because, as Respondent ' s proof establishes , she denied any union connection at the hearing before the State Employment Security Commission or in conversation with two personnel office clerks after her discharge She explained her untruth before the commission as springing from her fear of unemployability Without condoning her untruths, I do not consider them , under all the circumstances , as justifying a rejection of her contrary testimony in this case , '1 credit this testimony for the further reason that Smith testified he was going to tell the Aliens to come to his office when he approached them Considering the multitude of opening remarks Smith might have been about to make it is distinctly unlikely that the Aliens could hit upon and attribute to him a statement conforming generally to what he admits he was about to say unless, in fact, he said it I find that he did tell them to come to the office and, in doing so , described them as the "two union birds " '1 credit the witness Sikes' testimony and find that the witness Ellis was in the north smoking booth , some 100 feet away , rather than in the nearby booth , at the time of the incident Assuming that Ellis was merely mistaken as to what booth he occupied , I cannot credit his testimony that he clearly saw all that took place between Mrs Allen and Freuler in view of the distance to the north booth and the intervening looms which vary in composition with the type of cloth being finished. Hux' immediate supervisors were Philip J. Conwell, Jr., the assistant overseer in charge of the first shift (there were three shifts in all with, I infer, each having an assistant overseer), and Noel Weisner, the general overseer. Incidental to the Union's organizational campaign at Respondent's Roanoke Rapids plants, Hux had attended union meetings and signed union cards In addition, a photograph of Mr Hux and his wife, with both their faces readily recognizable by those who knew them, appeared in a union pamphlet distributed by union representatives at plant gates early in 1968 (Mrs Hux was one of the 17 Roanoke Rapids area employees found to have been discriminated against by Respondent in the first Stevens case - see 157 NLRB 869, at 945-946, and was later reinstated and was in Respondent's employ at the time of the hearing in this case) I consider it reasonable to infer that Respondent came into possession of copies of this pamphlet and that from it Hux' superiors were aware, not later than early 1968, of his association with the Union. While Hux had worked on a goodly number of Saturdays between September 1967 and January 1968, he had not been called for Saturday work after February 1968. No issue is tendered concerning this circumstance but it may account for the fact that in July 1968 Hux obtained a job working on Saturdays and Sundays at a local automobile service station; this "outside" job of his was known to his supervisors, Conwell and Weisner I turn now to the testimony concerning the events immediately surrounding Hux' discharge. To begin with, three facts are not in dispute, that is (1) that toward the end of his shift on Friday, November 8, 1968, Hux was told by Conwell to come to work the next day (Saturday), (2) that he declined to do so, and (3) that when he met with Plant Superintendent Crawford the next Wednesday, Crawford, in discharging him, told him the reason was his refusal to work the preceding Saturday. The General Counsel contends, however, that the reason assigned was a pretext, and that the true reason was Hux' support of the union. This contention requires an examination of the more detailed evidence and other surrounding circumstances. I deal first with the evidence relative to Hux' refusal to work on Saturday. Shortly after 3 p.m. (the exact minute is not important) Conwell told Hux to report for work on Saturday and as I infer from various circumstances of record, Conwell somehow made clear to Hux that the reason he was needed was because . "tommy dodd" material was going to be run that day.' From this point on the testimony as to what else happened on Friday varies and conflicts Hux' version is When Conwell told him to come in on Saturday, he told Conwell he could not do so on account of his service station job, for which it was too late for him to obtain a replacement, that Conwell made a reply which he understood meant that he must nevertheless come in, that he told Conwell he could get someone to work in his place on Saturday, to which Conwell made no reply; and that he then spoke to two employees - Junior Salmon and Walker - each of whom agreed to replace him on 'Materials other than "tommy dodd" had been run on the many preceding Saturdays, and for these other materials the first shift foreman, Charlie Birdsong , was competent to and did mix the corresponding size chemicals Birdsong was not able to mix the particular size required for "tommy dodd " material Hence , when "tommy dodd" was to be run on Saturday some size maker other than Birdsong was required ' J P. STEVENS & CO., INC. 673 Saturday Hux further testified that he then returned to the supervisor's office where he told overseer Weisner that Salmon and Walker were each available to work in his place; that Weisner said he could not let Salmon or Walker work - that it was Hux' job and he would have to "run" it; and that he then told Weisner ". that's up to you. I have got a replacement" and left the office Conwell testified that when he told Hux they were going to operate on Saturday, Hux merely said "not me" and left. He further testified that some 10-15 minutes later Hux came to the office (where, as I find, Conwell, Weisner, and two employees were present) and, sticking his head in the door said that if they were going to run "tommy dodd" on Saturday they should get somebody else to mix the size because he was "damned" if he would be working;' that he responded by telling Hux he had previously told him to come in on Saturday, and that Hux then left. Conwell further testified that when he first told Hux to come in on Saturday, Hux said nothing about a replacement, either his getting one or the Company getting one for him, and that Hux did not tell him on Friday that he had obtained a replacement Conwell did testify, however, that at a time not fixed in the record he did ask one employee (not identified in the record but whom he chose to approach because he knew that Hux knew this man could mix size) whether Hux had asked this employee to replace him and was told that Hux had not Conwell further testified that in the course of a conversation he had with Hux on Monday morning the following exchange took place I said. "But have you ever asked me to be off that I didn't try to make arrangements9" And Ray said, "Not that I can remember." He said, "But I told you I wasn't going to work Saturday," and I said, "Ray, you didn't ask me to get somebody in your place," I said, and I said "That's why I didn't get nobody in your place " Weisner testified that about 3:15 - 3:30 p m. (when he was unaware that Conwell had told Hux to work the next day) Hux stuck his head in the office door and said that if they were going to run "tommy dodd" the next day they could get somebody else to make the size, that he was "damned" if he was going to mix it, and that Conwell, in response, told Hux his job was going to run on Saturday. He further testified that about 3:40 p.m , when he was alone in the office, Hux again stuck his head in the door and told him again that if they were going to run "tommy dodd" the next day they could get somebody else to mix the size - that he was not going to work Weisner further testified that he did not relay to Conwell what Hux had said on this latter occasion and that neither he or Conwell made any arrangements on Friday to fill Hux' place on Saturday; and that Hux did not tell him on Friday that he had arranged for a replacement on Saturday When Hux failed to come in on Saturday, Conwell reported this to Weisner and then called in another first shift employee named Jesse Wallace to do the required size making When Hux reported for work on Monday morning, Conwell at Weisner's instructions, sent Hux to see Weisner. Weisner told Hux to come back the next day because Weisner had not had time to talk the matter over with Mr Crawford, the plant superintendent, that evening Weisner notified Hux not to come in until Wednesday 'The two employees present confirmed this testimony of Conwell as to Hux' refusal to work on Satuiday afternoon. When Hux came in on Wednesday, Conwell and Weisner went with him to Crawford's office where the latter, after obtaining Hux' admission that he had refused to work on the preceding Saturday, informed Hux that he was discharged because of his refusal and his failure to work as instructed.' ° The question before me is whether Hux' refusal to work was the reason for his discharge or only a pretext. I conclude that it was the latter. In a review of various of Respondent's employment policies in the first Stevens case, it was found that, prior to the advent of the Union, Respondent's employees "employed a large measure of job security." By way of illustration it was found, among other things, that "Discharge was not common"; that employees who quit were commonly rehired; that Respondent was permissive in the matter of employee use of "break time; that Respondent was lenient in the matter of reprimands, and that: Respondent was tolerant with respect to absences, particularly excused absences Even in the case of absences without prior notice when it was hard put to obtain replacements on the shift, Respondent's attitude was a lenient one and an employee might have several unexcused absences without being discharged or even written up As to the matter of employees replacing one another, Hux testified that he had replaced other employees and that this was common practice when employees wished to be off from work for a variety of reasons, including going to "a ball game, to go to a fair, most anything." Further testimony along these lines was elicited from two employees to the effect that it was usual for one employee to replace another who needed to be away from work and for the Company to permit employees to be absent for various reasons. Moreover, Conwell's testimony (supra) that he told Hux on Monday that he had not gotten anybody to replace Hux because Hux had not asked him on Friday to do so, confirms Respondent's utilization of the replacement procedure and its practicability in this very instance Accepting this testimony, I find that it was the normal practice of Respondent to excuse employees from work for good reason and to use qualified replacements for them when available as they were in the case. I further find, in resolution of conflicting testimony, that Hux told Conwell he could get someone to work in his place on Saturday and later told Weisner that either Walker or Salmon were available for this purpose, and that Weisner told Hux, in effect, that he had to work on Saturday irrespective of the availability of Walker or Salmon. Moreover, Conwell and Weisner could not have considered Hux' announced decision on Friday not to work on Saturday as presenting any serious problem since (1) they then made no effort to obtain a replacement for Hux and (2) were able readily to obtain one, in the form of Wallace, on Saturday morning. In short, the conduct of Conwell and Weisner in this regard strongly indicates their purpose to require Hux to work even though they knew he had a conflicting job at the service station; although other qualified employees were available to "Respondent offered uncontradicted evidence that in a telephone conversation Hux had with Conwell on Monday night Hux threatened to beat up Conwell and Weisner if he were discharged , and that Crawford brought this matter to Hux' attention in the Wednesday discharge interview (where Hux denied uttering the threat ) However, Respondent's evidence, including the testimony of Crawford , is that Crawford did not predicate Hux' discharge on this ground but rested it solely on Hux' refusal to work on Saturday 674 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD perform the necessary size making, and contrary to Respondent's normal practice of utilizing available replacements for employees having a need to be absent from a regular tour of duty In the circumstances, I cannot find that Hux' advance refusal to work, or his failure to do so, was the real reason for the discharge. Hence, the true reason must be found elsewhere and the most logical place is Hux' association with the Union. For this is a Respondent dedicated to the elimination from its employ of union adherents and equally dedicated to the use of pretexts to accomplish this objective Accordingly, on the record of Respondent's past conduct and all the circumstances of this case as previously found, I find that Respondent, utilizing Hux' refusal to work as a pretext, in fact discharged him because of his union affiliation and activities." C The Alleged Coercive Statements About November I, 1968, the employees of three of the Roanoke Rapids area plants were assembled by their supervisors and addressed, separately, by their respective plant superintendents From the explanations given by Respondent's witnesses (see infra) it would appear that the employees at all the Roanoke Rapids plants were so convened and addressed, however, the evidence adduced by the General Counsel refers only to what took place at three such plant employees gatherings The corresponding plants and superintendents were: The Patterson plant, Benjamin A Bobbitt, superintendent, the Fabricating plant, Mason Lee, superintendent; and the Delta IV or Finishing plant, Jesse T Crawford, superintendent About 200 employees were present at each of these meetings, held during working hours. The General Counsel contends that by remarks made at one or another of these meetings the employees were: 1. Warned that the Company would find out what employees signed union cards; 2. Warned not to talk with union organizers, and 3. Threatened that prounion employees would be discharged More specially, according to the complaint and the General Counsel's testimony, all three of the superintendents made the first statement and two of them uttered the other two As an overall matter, it may be noted that determination of the questions posed by these charges would have been facilitated if the record contained any evidence,`from either side, purporting to resemble a full and clear account of all that each of the superintendents said, which must have been considerable since each superintendent spoke for about 15 minutes. But the record contains no such attempted full account. Rather, on the General Counsel's past, the testimony of his witnesses is extremely brief and pertains only to remarks of the sort charged in the complaint. On Respondent's part, its testimony (that of the three superintendents) consists essentially of explanations as to why the meetings were called," some generalized description of some of the "The record contains reference to certain written reprimands and one oral one given to Hux in 1964, 1967, and in July and August 1968 But Respondent did not contend at the hearing, and in any case offered no proof, that Superintendent Crawford took these past matters into account in determining to discharge Hux Indeed , his testimony that he discharged Hux for the sole reason that he refused to (and failed ) to work on the Saturday indicates that these past items did not enter into his decision remarks made," and denials that the statements charged were made Moreover, although each superintendent addressed some 200 employees, the General Counsel produced only one witness as to each superintendent and two of these witnesses (Richardson and Arnold Ray Hux) admittedly did not pay close attention to what their respective superintendents were saying and otherwise, as their testimony shows, did not have a clear or trustworthy recollection as to some of the few remarks they testified about In these various circumstances, the resolution of conflicts in the evidence cannot be approached without a marked sense of uneasiness. - I Remarks concerning disclosure of the identity of card-signers The complaint charges that all three superintendents warned the employees that Respondent would find out which of them signed union cards As to Lee, the only testimony is his own. As to Superintendent Bobbitt, the General Counsel's witness Richardson testified that the Company would know who signed union cards - that the cards would "be brought and laid on their desks "' ° As to Superintendent Crawford, the General Counsel's witness Arnold Ray Hux testified that Crawford said signed cards would be brought out on a table where "folks could see them " But the entire testimony of these two witnesses, and particularly their testimony under cross-examination, satisfies me that neither had any clear recollection as to what the two superintendents actually said, and I believe the version given by the three superintendents as to what they did say is more accurate This version is that a situation could arise in which it would be necessary to produce signed cards in a public courtroom and the corresponding signing employees could be required to testify, and, by way of illustration, the superintendents referred to a Board proceeding involving its Statesboro plant where this procedure had taken place. In this connection, Lee testified that "we covered the dangers of signing union cards , or repercussions that can come from signing union cards," while Crawford testified that he pointed out the "danger" of an employer signing a union card thinking it could never be seen. Nevertheless, and whether or not the superintendents described their remarks as intended to refute some "confidential" wording on the union cards, what they said "According to Respondent 's witnesses, the employee assemblies were convened following a meeting or meetings between General Manager Fuller and plant superintendents and were prompted by Board and court rulings adverse to Respondent in prior Stevens cases, by Respondent's reinstatement of employees found to have been discrimmatonly discharged in those prior cases , and by corresponding publicity and rumors More specifically , one or another of Respondent 's superintendents testified, the meetings were called so that the Company could disabuse the employees of such erroneous notions as that they could do as they pleased while at work, that the Union was coming in regardless of an election , that anyone discharged would have to be reinstated with backpay, that the identity of union card signers would be known only to the Union, etc "Since Superintendents Bobbitt and Lee spoke from notes, I assume Superintendent Crawford did also. Bobbitt and Lee testified that they no longer had their notes, Crawford was not questioned in this regard "This testimony suggests that Bobbitt said the cards would find their way to company desks, and initially in his cross-examination Richardson testified that Bobbitt said the cards would be laid " face up" on a table without mentioning a court house or elsewhere Later, however, he said he understood from what Bobbitt said that the cards would be exhibited in a public proceeding in a courthouse In Hux' case, his cross-examination brought out a similar contradiction (see the following footnote) and otherwise revealed his uncertain recollection J. P. STEVENS & CO., INC. 675 was coercive . For, as the employees could not but be well aware, Respondent was given to ferreting out the identity of union supporters and, armed with such knowledge, to discriminating against them Bearing in mind also that two of the superintendents referred to the dangers signers would face as a result of public exposure of their identity, and that the superintendents gave the employees no counteracting assurances, the employees could reasonably, if not necessarily , regard the superintendents ' remarks as a warning that card signing carried with it the possibility of both exposure to Respondent and retaliation by it. See, N L.R B v Finesilver Mfg - Co , 400 F . 2d 644 , 645-646 (C A. 5). these, testified as follows He said everybody that signed a union card, they think that they wouldn't know about it, but it would be brought and laid on their desks, that the Company would know about it. And then he said they should be fired or would be put out Bobbitt denied saying that employees who signed union cards would be discharged. He further testified that in his talk he made the point that the Company still had the right to discharge employees where it was appropriate to do so, despite any contrary impression the employees might have gained from some publicity 2. The alleged warning not to talk to union organizers The complaint charges that a statement of this character was made by Superintendents Crawford and Lee As to Lee, the General Counsel offered no supporting evidence As to Crawford, his witness was Arnold Ray Hux, who testified that after Crawford got through reading "a Court Order" he got to talking and, among other things, said that "if any of the union people came to your house or talk to you about it or anything, just run them off " But on cross-examination Hux disclosed that he did not pay attention to some portions of Crawford's remarks, and that as to another of Crawford's alleged remarks he had both an uncertain and, as it turned out an erroneous recollection." Moreover, there is no other evidence that Crawford or the other superintendents were reading any court order on these occasions and, all of the evidence, I do not believe this was the case Hence, in this respect also I conclude that Hux exhibited a capacity for faulty recollection On the whole, therefore, it is my distinct impression and conclusion that, assuming Crawford made some remarks on this general subject of treatment of union organizers (about the nature of which it is idle to speculate) Hux' testimony cannot be taken as a reliable guide to what Crawford actually said. Bearing in mind Crawford's denial that he made the statement attributed to him in Hux' testimony, I find and conclude that the General Counsel has not sustained his burden of proof in regard to this matter.16 3. The alleged threat to discharge union card signers The complaint directs this charge against Superintendents Bobbitt and Crawford As to Bobbitt, the evidence of the General Counsel is contained in the direct testimony of the witness Richardson Richardson testified that at first Bobbitt read from a "sheet" but he did not pay- much attention to and did not remember what Bobbitt said during this period However, he testified he recalled remarks Bobbitt subsequently made and, among "This matter concerned whether Crawford had said that it would be in Board proceedings that employees' signed union cards could become public Under cross-examination , Hux several times denied that Crawford referred to a public or Board proceeding as the place where the cards would be exhibited , but later , when confronted with his pretrial statement, admitted that Crawford had referred to a Board hearing or proceeding in this connection "Employee Richardson testified that in Superintendent Bobbitt's remarks, Bobbitt told the employees to "run ofr' anybody who came to their homes to talk about a union But there is no such charge in the complaint and possibly for this reason , Respondent 's counsel did not cross examine Richardson on this subject In the circumstances, I have not taken this testimony into account in relation to the charge directed to Crawford As to Crawford, the General Counsel's witness as to his remarks was Arnold Ray Hux But Hux did not give any testimony that Crawford threatened prounion employees with discharge, as alleged in the complaint. Assuming that the following is the portion of his testimony relied upon by the General Counsel, he merely testified that Crawford said "that the Company could fire and hire whoever they wanted whenever they wanted to " Crawford's testimony is that, among other things, he referred to rumors going around that the Company no longer had authority to discharge anyone for any reason and that he told the employees the Company had had and still had the right to discharge when it was necessary " There may be some question whether Arnold Ray Hux' version of Crawford's remarks, if taken as a near-precise restatement of them, would sustain the rather specific charge in the complaint that Crawford threatened prounion employees with discharge However this may be, I am satisfied that Hux did not have a clear or reliable recollection as to what Crawford actually said but, rather, offered in his testimony only a loose and unreliable interpretation of more particular statements. Finally, my conclusion that the testimony of the General Counsel's witnesses is marked by fatal infirmities is fortified, in my mind, by my hesitance to believe that Respondent, despite its record of grave and persistent violations of the Act, would in assemblies of hundreds of its employees openly announce its intention to discharge any and all union card signers or supporters Accordingly, I will recommend that this charge of the complaint be dismissed for failure of proof by adequate credible evidence. "The General Counsel ' s witness Rochell Hux testified that in Superintendent Lee's speech he said that "if anybody , you know , signed any union cards or were caught signing any, they would be fired," and was cross examined as to this testimony However, counsel for the General Counsel did not seek to amend the complaint so as to include a corresponding charge involving Lee But even if Lee's remarks in this respect could be deemed to have been put in issue as a further alleged violation, I would not credit Mr Hux ' testimony over Lee's denial Asked to state what took place at the meeting, Mrs Hux obviously could remember very little and, under examination by the Trial Examiner, could not recall whether what Lee said about discharging employees related to their signing cards or engaging in other union activities on working time From her testimony and my observation of her I am satisfied that she cannot be considered a reliable witness as to what Lee actually said but, rather, was testifying to an erroneous impression she had gained by running together or otherwise confusing some things he did say, such as, possibly, his remarks about possible exposure of the identity of union card signers and other remarks about the Company ' s continued right to hire and fire for cause, which I find he made 676 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. By discriminatorily discharging Betty S. Allen and Arnold Ray Hux, Respondent has engaged in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(3) of the Act. 2. By the above discharges, and by warning its employees in a coercive manner that the identity of employees who sign union cards may become known to Respondent, Respondent has engaged in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(l) of the Act. 3 The aforesaid are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 4. Respondent has not engaged in any other unfair labor practices alleged in the complaint THE REMEDY Having found that the Respondent has engaged in unfair labor practices in violation of Section 8(a)(3) and (1) of the Act, my Recommended Order will provide that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act Because of the character and scope of the unfair labor practices herein found, and Respondent's previous and similarly grave violations at its Roanoke Rapids plants my Recommended Order will provide not only that the Respondent cease and desist from the specific unfair labor practices found, but also that it cease and desist from in any other manner interfering with, restraining, and coercing employees in the exercise of their rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act. I have found that the Respondent discharged two employees in violation of the Act. To remedy these unfair labor practices, my Recommended Order will provide that the Respondent offer each of these employees immediate and full reinstatement to his former, or a substantially equivalent position, without prejudice to his seniority or other rights and privileges, and make him whole for any loss of earnings he may have suffered as a result of the discrimination to the date of the Respondent's offer of reinstatement, less his net earnings during such period, with backpay and interest thereon to be computed in the manner proscribed by the Board in F W Woolworth Company, 90 NLRB 289, and Isis Plumbing & Heating Co, 138 NLRB 216.18 In the fifth Stevens case, 171 NLRB No 163, the Board stated that upon "review of all the relevant factors herein, including the Respondent's companywide history of extensive unfair labor practices" it was persuaded that "the conventional remedies would not be adequate to disabuse the employees of the effects or' Respondent's conduct, and accordingly included in its order unusual provisions generally conforming to those included in previous cases These unusual provisions of the order in the fifth case were recently sustained in full by the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in an opinion issued on October 3, 1969, with the court observing that "we assay the order in this atmosphere of persistent, long continued, flagrant violations occurring after and in spite of repeated declarations of illegality by Board and reviewing Courts " For the reasons expressed by the Board in its previous decisions and because of Respondent's previous violations "In the light of relevant Board decisions , of the unfair , provocative, and discriminatory treatment Respondent accorded to Hux , and of the fact that Hux never attempted to carry out his threat to beat up Conwell and Weisner, I see no reason on this score to preclude Hux from reinstatement at its Roanoke Rapids plants, I conclude that these unusual provisions are necessary to remedy, so far as possible, the effects of Respondent's violations in this case and include them in my Recommended Order In connection with the provisions of the order relative to the mailing, posting and reading of the notice to employees the record is not clear but it may be that Respondent operates at Roanoke Rapids plants in addition to those where the unfair labor practices in this case occurred. But because whatever number of plants there are, they are all situated on this one locality and all were involved in the Union's organizational drive, the employees at each one of this group of plants should receive the assurances which the provisions concerning notices are designed to provide. My Recommended Order so provides. RECOMMENDED ORDER The Respondent , J. P Stevens & Co., Inc, Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina , its officers , agents, successors, and assigns , shall: 1. Cease and desist from: (a) Discouraging membership in Textile Workers Union of America , AFL-CIO, or any other labor organization, by discriminatorily discharging any employees or by discriminating in any other manner with respect to their hire and tenure of employment or any term or condition of employment. (b) In any other manner interfering with , restraining, or coercing its employees in the exercise of their rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action which is necessary to effectuate the policies of the Act. (a) Offer to Betty S. Allen and Arnold Ray Hux immediate and full reinstatement to their former or substantially equivalent positions, without prejudice to their seniority or other rights and privileges previously enjoyed , and make each whole for any loss of pay suffered by reason of his discharge , in the manner set forth in the section of this Decision entitled "The Remedy." (b) Notify the above-named employees if presently serving in the Armed Forces of the United States of their 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. (c) Preserve and, upon request , make available to the Board or its agents , for examination and copying, all payroll records, social security payment records, timecards , personnel records and reports, as well as all other records necessary to analyze and compute the amount of backpay due under the terms of this Recommended Order. (d) Inform the employees of their rights under the Act and assure them that Respondent will not engage in the conduct from which it is ordered herein to cease and desist , and that Respondent will comply with the affirmative requirements of this order by mailing a copy of the attached notice marked "Appendix"" to each "in the event no exceptions are filed as provided by Section 102 46 of the Rules and Regulations of the National Labor Relations Board, the findings , conclusions , recommendations , and Recommended Order herein shall, as provided in Section 102 48 of the Rules and Regulations, be adopted by the Board and become its findings , conclusions and order, and all objections thereto shall be deemed waived for all purposes In the event J. P. STEVENS & CO., INC. 677 employee of each of its plants at Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, and posting copies thereof at the said plants for 60 consecutive days thereafter, in conspicuous places, including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. Reasonable steps shall be taken by the Respondent to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (e) Upon request of the Union, immediately grant the Union and its representatives reasonable access at each of its Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, plants, for a 1-year period, to its bulletin boards and all places where notices to employees are customarily posted. (f) Upon request of the Union, made within I year of the issuance date of this Decision, immediately give to the Union a list of the names and addresses of all employees in each of its Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, plants. (g) Convene during working time, by departments and by shifts, all its employees in each of the said plants, and a responsible official of the Respondent, at department supervisor level or above, or a Board agent shall read to department employees the contents of the attached Appendix A. (h) Notify the Regional Director for Region 11, in writing within 20 days from the date of its receipt of this Decision, what steps have been taken to comply herewith 30 IT IS HEREBY FURTHER ORDERED that the complaint herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed insofar as it alleges violations of the Act not found herein. The Act gives all employees these rights: To organize themselves; To form, join, or help unions; To bargain as a group through a representative they choose; To act together for collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection; and To refuse to do any or all of these things. The Board has also ordered us to assure our employees that: WE WILL NOT do anything that interferes with these rights You are free to join the Textile Workers Union of America, AFL-CIO or any other union, and, by majority choice, to select any union to represent you in bargaining with us. WE WILL NOT fire you, or punish you or treat you differently in any way because you join or favor a union The National Labor Relations Board found that when we fired Certain Employees we did this because these employees were for the Union. The Board found that this violated the Act. WE WILL give back to these employees their jobs and seniority, and WE WILL make up the pay they lost and also pay them 6 percent interest The names of these employees are: BETTY S ALLEN ARNOLD RAY HUX that the Board ' s Order is enforced by a judgment of a United States Court of Appeals , the words in the notice reading "Posted by Order of the National Labor Relations Board" shall be changed to read "posted pursuant to a judgment of the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board " "in the event that this Recommended Order is adopted by the Board, this provision shall be modified to read "Notify 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 EMPLOYEES Posted by Order of the National Labor Relations Board an agency of the United States Government After a trial at which all sides had the chance to give evidence, the National Labor Relations Board found that we, J. P Stevens & Co., Inc., violated the National Labor Relations Act, and ordered us to post this notice to inform our employees of their rights. J. P. STEVENS & CO., INC. Dated (Employer) By (Representative ) (Title) Note: We will notify the above-named employees if presently serving in the Armed Forces of the United States of their 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 is an official notice and must not be defaced by anyone. This notice must remain posted for 60 consecutive days from the date of posting and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. Any questions concerning this notice or compliance with its provisions, may be directed to the Board's Office, 1624 Wachovia Building, 301 North Main Street, Winston-Salem, North Carolina Telephone 919-723-9211 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation