Kalamazoo Coaches, Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsFeb 28, 194666 N.L.R.B. 171 (N.L.R.B. 1946) Copy Citation In the Matter of KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. and UNITED AUTOMOBILE WORKERS, A. F. L. Case No. 7-C-1351.-Decided February 28, 1946 DECISION AND ORDER On July 26, 1945, the Trial Examiner issued his Intermediate Re- port 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 out in the copy of the Intermediate Report attached hereto. Thereafter, the respondent and counsel for the Board filed exceptions to the Intermediate Report and supporting briefs. On February 12, 1946, the Board heard oral argument at Washington, D. C. The respondent and the Union participated in the argument. The Board has reviewed the Trial Examiner's rulings made at the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Inter- mediate Report, the exceptions of the respondent and counsel for the Board, the contentions advanced at the oral argument before the Board and in the briefs submitted by the parties, and the entire record in the case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Examiner with the additions herein- after set forth. We agree with the Trial Examiner's finding that the respondent violated the Act by discharging employees Garrison and Prolo on February 26, 1942, and employees Lee and Wikel on March 24, 1944. In agreement with the Trial Examiner, we find that by such conduct the respondent discouraged membership in the Union and thereby interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. We further agree with the Trial Examiner that the respondent discriminatorily dis- charged employee Garrison on May 20, 1942, and employees Stinson and Lee on July 14, 1944, thereby discriminating in regard to their hire and tenure of employment and discouraging membership in the 66 N. L . R. B., No. 14. 171 172 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Union.' We also agree with the Trial Examiner that the respondent's conduct, as fully set forth in the Intermediate Report, constituted a refusal to bargain within the meaning of Section 8 (5) of the Act,2 and that it engaged in other conduct, more fully revealed in the Intermediate Report, violative of Section 8 (1). THE REMEDY We have found that the respondent violated the Act by, among other things , ( 1) unlawfully inducing employee Garrison to resign from the Union in June 1942 ; ( 2) by refusing to bargain with the Union in June 1942, except upon an illegal condition ; ( 3) by the statement of Dennis , the respondent 's president, that the respondent would not deal with an outsider but would deal with an "inside" organization , by his suggestion that the employees elect a "committee" and by the conduct at the plant of a ballot thereon ; ( 4) by Foreman Burkhart 's proposal that a certain named employee act as the chair- man of the "committee"; (5) by assembling the employees to question them about the bargaining committee 's statements ; (6) by the re- spondent 's efforts to effect the removal of two employee members of the bargaining committee; and (7 ) by the respondent 's efforts to discourage employee Lee's union activities by promising to relieve him of pressure if Lee would curtail such activities . We have also found that the respondent discriminatorily discharged a number of employees and failed to bargain with the Union within the meaning of the Act. Upon the entire record we infer and find that the respondent, by the foregoing course of conduct , and particularly by the discharges, has displayed an attitude of opposition to the purposes of the Act. Because of the respondent 's unlawful conduct , and the underlying purpose manifested thereby, we are convinced and find that the unfair labor practices which it has committed are persuasively related to the other unfair labor practices proscribed by the Act, and that danger of the commission in the future of any or all of the unfair labor practices listed in the Act is to be anticipated from the re- 'In so finding, we have considered the fact that at the time of the discharge of employees Lee and Stinson, the contract then in effect included a closed-shop provision. See N . L. R.B. V. Walt Disney Productions, 146 F. ( 2d) 44 ( C. C. A. 9), enforcing 48 N. L. R. B. 892. Counsel for the Board Excepted to the Trial Examiner's failure to find that the respondent 's conduct in (1) refusing to take any steps to prevent its foreman from working overtime without a helper , after the Union had complained about this alleged violation of the contract, and (2 ) taking unilateral action in putting into effect a speed-up in production without previously notifying and consulting the Union about such action, in itself violated Section 8 (5) of the Act. We have considered these matters as part of the entire course of the respondent's conduct indicating a refusal to bargain . Conse- quently, we find it unnecessary to determine whether these acts , standing alone, consti- tute such a violation. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 173 spondent's conduct in the past .3 The preventive purposes of the Act will be thwarted unless our Order is coextensive with the threat. We shall therefore order the respondent to cease and desist not only from the unfair labor practices herein found, but also from in any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. We shall also order the respondent to take the affirmative action recom- mended by the Trial Examiner. ORDER Upon the entire record in the case, and pursuant to Section 10 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, the National Labor Rela- tions Board hereby orders that the respondent, Kalmazoo Coaches, Inc., Kalamazoo, Michigan, and its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall: 1. Cease and desist from : (a) Discouraging membership in United Automobile Workers, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, or in any other labor organization, by discharging or refusing to reinstate any of its employees, or by discriminating in any other manner in regard to their hire and tenure of employment or any term or condition of their employment; (b) Refusing to bargain collectively with United Automobile Workers, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, as the exclusive representative of all its employees at the Kalamazoo, Michi- gan, plant, excluding supervisory employees with authority to hire, promote, discharge, or discipline, or otherwise effect changes in the status of employees, or effectively recommend such action, clerical employees, and confidential clerks; (c) Bargaining with individual employees concerning wage and other grievances, to the exclusion of the exclusive bargaining repre- sentative, and from imposing an illegal condition to bargaining with the exclusive bargaining representative; (d) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing its employees in the exercise of the rights to self-organization, to form labor organizations, to join or assist United Automobile Workers, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, or any other labor organization, to bargain collectively through representa- tives of their own choosing, and to engage in concerted activities for 3 See N. L. R. B v. Express Publtshtng Company, 312 U. S 426; May Department Stores Co v. N. L. R. B., 326 U. S. 376. 174 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection. as guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action, which the Board finds will effectuate the policies of the Act : (a) Offer to Charles Garrison, Wilford Lee, and Harry Stinson immediate and full reinstatement to their former or substantially equivalent positions, without prejudice to their seniority or other rights and privileges; (b) Make whole Charles Garrison for any loss of pay he has suffered by reason of the respondent's discrimination against him, by payment to him of a sum of money equal to the amount he normally would have earned as wages from April 27, 1945, to the date of the respondent's offer of reinstatement, less his net earnings during said period; (c) Make whole Wilford Lee and Harry Stinson for any loss of pay they have suffered by reason of the respondent's discrimination against them, by payment to each of them of a sum of money equal to the amount which each normally would have earned as wages from the date of their discriminatory discharge to the date of the respondent's offer of reinstatement, less their net earnings during said period; (d) Upon request, bargain collectively with United Automobile Workers, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, as the exclusive representative of all the respondent's employees in the above-described appropriate unit, with respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, or other conditions of employment; (e) Post at its plant in Kalamazoo, Michigan, copies of the notice attached hereto, marked "Appendix A." Copies of said notice, to be furnished by the Regional Director of the Seventh Region, shall, after being duly signed by the respondent's representative, be posted by the respondent immediately upon the receipt thereof and main- tained by it for sixty (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. (f) Notify the Regional Director for the Seventh Region in writing, within ten (10) days from the date of this Order, what steps the respondent has taken to comply herewith. MR. GraAxn D. REILLY took no part in the consideration of the above Decision and Order. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. APPENDIX A NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYEES PURSUANT TO A DECISION AND ORDER 175 of the National Labor Relations Board, and in order to effectuate the policies of the National Labor Relations Act, we hereby notify our employees that : We will not in any manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce our employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization, to form labor organizations, to join or assist UNITED AUTOMOBILE WORKERS, A. F. L. or any other labor organization, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection. We will offer to the employees named below immediate and full reinstatement to their former or substantially equivalent positions without prejudice to any seniority or other rights and privileges previously enjoyed, and make them whole for any loss of pay suffered as a result of the discrimination. CHARLES GARRISON, WILFORD LEE, HARRY STINSON. We will bargain collectively upon request with the above- named union as the exclusive representative of all employees in the bargaining unit described herein with respect to rates of pay, hours of employment or other conditions of employment, and if an understanding is reached, embody such understanding in a signed agreement. The bargaining unit is : All employees, excluding supervisory employees with authority to hire, promote, discharge or discipline, or otherwise effect changes in the status of employees, or effectively recommend such actions, clerical employees, and confidential clerks employed at our plant in Kalamazoo, Michigan. We will not bargain with individual employees concerning wages and other grievances, to the exclusion of the exclusive bargaining representative, and we will impose no illegal condi- tions to bargaining with the exclusive bargaining representative. All our employees are free to become or remain members of the above-named union or any other labor organization. We will not 176 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD discriminate in regard to hire or tenure of employment or any terra or condition of employment against any employee because of member- ship in or activity on behalf of any such labor organization. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC., Employer. Dated .................. By.................................... (Representative ) ( Title) NOTE : Any of the above-named employees presently serving in the armed forces of the United States will be offered full reinstatement upon application in accordance with the Selective Service Act after discharge from the armed forces. This notice must remain posted for 60 days from the date hereof, and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. INTERMEDIATE REPORT Mr. Mozart G. Ratner, for the Board. Messrs. Frank F. Ford and F. N. Schroen, of Kalamazoo , Mich., and Mr. Edwin F, Steffen, of Lansing, Mich., for the respondent. Messrs. Earl Falconer and George Rogers , of Lansing, Mich., and Mr. Claude Brice, of East Prairie, Mo., for the Union. STATEMENT OF THE CASE Upon a third amended charge filed on April 9, 1945, by United Automobile Workers, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, herein called the Union, the National Labor Relations Board, herein ealled the Board, by Its Regional Director for the Seventh Region (Detroit, Michigan), issued its com- plaint dated April 13, 1945, against Kalamazoo Coaches, Inc., herein called the respondent, alleging that the respondent at Its plant in Kalamazoo, Michi- gan, had engaged in and was engaging in unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 8 (1), (3), and (5) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the National Labor Relations Act, 49 Stat. 449, herein called the Act. Copies of the complaint accompanied by notice of hearing thereon were duly served upon the respondent and the Union. In respect to the unfair labor practices, the complaint, as amended at the hearing, alleged in substance that from about April 13, 1942, to the date of the Issuance of the complaint the respondent interfered with the efforts of the Union, which represented all employees in an appropriate unit,' to bargain collectively, and failed and refused to bargain collectively with the Union in good faith or to recognize, negotiate, bargain, or treat with the Union as exclusive representative of all the employees in the unit in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, and other conditions of employment, or in the presentation and settlement of grievances concerning such matters, by : (1) bargaining individually with employees without notifying the Union of such bargaining; (2) granting individual wage Increases and otherwise affect- 1 The unit was alleged to be all employees except supervisory, clerical employees, and confidential clerks. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 177 ing the terms and conditions of employment of employees in the unit without notifying the Union; (3) discharging , abusing, disparaging, threatening, and vilifying employees who acted in the capacity of officers, stewards, committee- men, and representatives of the Union because of their efforts to negotiate, bargain for, and present grievances on behalf of the Union and the employees in the unit, thereby causing them to leave the employ of the respondent ; (1) promoting officers, stewards, committeemen, or representatives of the Union and of employees in the unit to supervisory positions with the respondent for the purpose of preventing them from engaging in concerted activities on behalf of the Union and of the employees in the unit; (5) in January 1943, and March 1944, seeking to induce employee Wilford Lee to leave the employ of the respondent and from January 1944, keeping said Lee under surveillance because he had attempted, as an officer, steward, committeeman, or representative of the Union , to negotiate , bargain for , and present grievances on behalf of the Union and of the employees in the unit; (6) about June 1944, offering to release said Lee from such surveillance on condition that he abandon or mini- mize his aforesaid activities on behalf of the Union and of the employees in the unit; (7) on about March 20, 1944, discharging said Lee and employee Francis Wikel because each of them had engaged in aforesaid activities on behalf of the Union and of the employees in the unit; (8) about March 1944, attempting to preclude specified employees from serving on the bargaining committee of the Union and as representatives of the Union and of the employees in the unit; (9) interfering with, disparaging, and vilifying the efforts of the Union, its officers, stewards, committeemen, and representatives to negotiate, present grievances, and bargain collectively on behalf of employees in the unit; (10) on about May 24, 1942 , discharging Charles Garrison and- thereafter refusing to reinstate him, and on about June 2, 1942, inducing, urging, and persuading said Garrison to leave the employ of the respondent because he joined or assisted the Union, or engaged in activities with other employees for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection ;' and the complaint , as amended , further alleged that the respondent discharged Charles Garrison and Irving Prolo both on about February 26 and March 3, 1942,' and Wilford Lee and Harry Stinson on about July 14, 1944, because they joined or assisted the Union or engaged in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection, and that for this reason the respondent since July 14, 1944 , refused and continues to refuse to reinstate said Lee and Stinson" The respondent's answer admitted that it had promoted officers of the Union and other employees in the bargaining unit but denied the purpose alleged in the complaint ; admitted the discharge of Lee, Wikel, and Stinson on the respective dates, but denied that it was for the cause alleged in the complaint ; and either specifically or in effect denied all other allegations of unfair labor practices of the complaint. Affirmatively , the answer alleged that Lee and Wikel were discharged on about March 20, 1944, because they used vile, profane and unbecoming language in the presence of female employees in the office during a meeting between the bargaining committee of the Union and the ' This clause was added to the complaint by motion made and allowed at the hearing as related hereinafter. 3 The original date was changed from February 2 to February 26 and March 3 by amendment made at the hearing. s- The foregoing acts were alleged to constitute interference, restraint and coercion, as well as indication of failure and refusal . to bargain collectively. 686572--46-13 178 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD respondent and alleged that Lee and Wikel were subsequently reinstated. It further alleged that Lee and Stinson were discharged on about July 14, 1944, because Lee continually refused to carry out instructions as given him by his foreman or supervisory official and continually attempted to bring about dissatisfaction among all the employees ; because Lee attempted to coerce man- agement by his unlawful activities and thereby induced other employees to quit their employment with the respondent ; because beginning on July 11, 1944, Lee in concert with Stinson, by arbitrary, uncooperative, insolent and inde- pendent conduct by both, brought about delay in the delivery of a repair job; because during the same period Lee and Stinson attempted to coerce customers of the respondent to pay them amounts in addition to their regular hourly rate, promising thereby to speed delivery of the said repair job; and because Lee and Stinson consistently refused to carry out the instructions of man- agement and Lee dominated Stinson to the extent that Stinson joined Lee in talking back and arguing with the foreman ; and that Stinson was dis- charged prior to the expiration of his probationary period because he performed his work in an unsatisfactory manner. Pursuant to notice, a hearing was held on April 26 to 28, May 2 to 4, and May 14 and 15, 1945 at Kalamazoo, Michigan, before the undersigned Trial Examiner, duly designated by the Chief Trial Examiner. The Board and the respondent were represented by counsel and the Union by representatives. Full opportunity was afforded all parties to be heard, to examine and cross- examine, witnesses, and to introduce evidence bearing upon the issues. At the, second day's hearing, Board counsel moved to amend the complaint by adding additional dates of discharge of Charles Garrison, which were alleged in the offered amendment as violations of Section 8 (3) of the Act (whereas the earlier discharges, alleged to be violations of Section 8 (1) of the Act, remained unmodified), by adding certain conclusions concerning violations of Section 8 (1) of the Act, and by omitting the name of one employee named in the original complaint as having been discharged in violation of Section &, (1) of the Aet. The motion was granted. At the conclusion of the case, Board's counsel moved to amend the complaint to conform to the proof with respect to such matters, as to names and dates. This motion was granted. Thereafter counsel for the Board and the respondent argued orally before the undersigned and declined the opportunity to file briefs. Upon the entire record in the case, and from his observation of the witnesses, the undersigned makes the following : FINbINOS OF FACT I. THE BUSINESS OF THE RESPONDENT The respondent is a Michigan 'corporation, having its place of business in Kalamazoo, 'Michigan, 'where it^ Is engaged in manufacturing, repairing, dis- tributing, and selling inter-city type passenger busses. During the 6 months preceding December 1944, the respondent purchased raw materials for use in its 6perations I valued in -excess • of $145,000. More than 50 percent of such materials was shipped to the respondent from places outside the State of Michigan. During the same period the respondent's receipts from sales of products manufactured, repaired, sold, and distributed were in excess of $300,000. More than 95 percent of its products was shipped from Kalamazoo to places outside the State of Michigan. The respondent admits that It is engaged In commerce within the meaning of the Act. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. II. THE ORGANIZATION INVOLVED 179 United Automobile Workers, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, is a labor organization admitting to membership employees of the respondent. III. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Interference, restraint, and coercion; the discriminatory discharges; the refusal to bargain 1. Chronology of events leading to the Union's contract with the respondent On February 22, 1942, certain employees of the respondent, including Charles Garrison' and Irwin Prolo, became interested in the formation of a union. They held a meeting in a cigar store that night and were addressed by a representative of the Union. In 2 or 3 days they procured 15 applications from among the 26 or 27 employees of the respondent. On February 25, 1942, a second meeting was held and temporary officers were elected. Garrison was elected president and Prolo was elected financial secretary. On the morning of February 26, 1942, Garrison and Prolo were discharged. This precipitated a walkout. The employees called Lester Washburn, then the Union's Regional Director at Lansing, Michigan, who told them to return to work. Washburn then telephoned the respondent and made an appointment for a conference. As Instructed by Washburn, the employees, with the exception of Garrison and Prolo, returned to the plant. Soon after their return they were assembled by President Dennis and Vice-President Fred Schroen. Dennis asked why they had walked out. Employee Francis Wikel replied that it was because they had discharged Garrison and Prolo. Dennis said they had fired men before and asked why they did not walk out then. Wikel replied that they now had a union. Dennis acted surprised and said he wanted them to be more specific. Employee Earl Johnson said he objected to discussing it without having an International Representative present. Dennis stated that he would not discuss affairs at the plant with an outsider but that he was willing for them to organize within the plant. Thereafter, Washburn met with Dennis, Schroen, and an attorney representing the respondent and negotiated the reinstatement of Garrison and Prolo. At this meeting Washburn raised the question of recognition, and the respondent's attorney said they would think about it. A few days later the respondent assembled the employees in the presence of Dennis, Schroen, and Frank Ford, the respondent's attorney. Ford, after being introduced as the respondent's attorney, addressed the employees and advised them, if they felt they could afford to pay union, dues after they had paid their insurance, lodges, and social activities, to join the Union ; other- wise to take the money home to their wives and children. After this address the respondent distributed a leaflet, setting forth a resume of the Michigan Mediation Board Law which had been prepared for the respondent at its request by Ford,' and concluding with the suggestion that the employees elect 4 Until shortly before the Union started organizing , Garrison had been a foreman. He resigned his foremanship to take a group leadership on an hourly basis. "Ford testified that at the time he was requested to prepare the contents of the leaflet the respondent informed him that "there were some minor differences with one or two men and that the Union was being talked of . . " Ford testified that he believed the two men were Garrison and Prolo. 180 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD a committee to represent them .6 Following Ford's speech , Dennis told the employees that he was willing that they organize if a majority wanted a union . The employees told Dennis that the Union had a majority , but Dennis said he preferred to conduct a ballot on it. Shortly thereafter the respondent called upon the employees to cast ballots on the question of whether they wanted an "inside" or "outside" organization . The ballot slips were blank slips of paper on which the employees were to write "yes" or "no" and some of the employees did not understand the wording of the proposition to be voted on and cast blank ballots. On the afternoon of the day on which the ballots were cast, Foreman Burkhart called the employees together. The result of the election was announced as favoring a "company union" and Burkhart asked them to nominate a president or chairman. When no nomina- tions were made, Burkhart proposed employee Earl Johnson as chairman and suggested that they have a representative in each department' In early March, Washburn met again with Dennis and Schroen to discuss recognition of the Union . Dennis informed him that the employees no longer wanted the Union, told of the election, and offered to show him the ballots, which Washburn refused to inspect. That night Washburn met with the Union. The next day Garrison and Prolo were again discharged.3 Following this, Washburn conducted negotiations with the respondent which resulted, 8 or 9 days later, In the reinstatement of Prolo and Garrison with back pay. On April 10, 1942, the respondent and the Union executed a tentative agree- ment providing for recognition of the Union as the sole bargaining representa- tive, for negotiation of grievances, for a closed shop, and for continuation of the existing seniority rules. The tentative agreement provided that it was to remain in effect until the execution of, and be incorporated in, a complete agreement .9 E The concluding portion of the leaflet read : THE TERMS OF THIS LAW ARE CLEAR AND WE BELIEVE THE LAW IS ENTIRELY FAIR. We have never known , however that there are any differences between us and our employees or of any labor dispute. THE MANAGEMENT of this company WILL NOT DEAL WITH ANY OUTSIDER OR ANY OUTSIDE AGENT OR REPRESENTATIVE in regard to any matters until we are informed that he is authorized to represent A MAJORITY OF OUR EMPLOYEES. The law provides for the creation of a "union", "employee association", "com- mittee", "agency" or "representation plan " formed for the purpose of dealing with employees concerning any grievances or terms or conditions of employment Any such committee, agency or representation THAT A MAJORITY OF YOU EMPLOYEES WISH TO SELECT OR ELECT, the management will be glad to meet with any time in regard to any grievances , terms or conditions of your employment. The State Law further provides , however , that it is unlawful for any employee or for any other person to force or attempt to force any person to become a member of any labor organization or to refrain from engaging in employment. We will be glad if you will elect by ballot any committee of 10, 12 or 15 of the employees provided they are elected by and are authorized to represent a majority of our employees. 7 Johnson told Dennis that he regarded the chairmanship and the committee - selected as purely social. 8 Garrison testified that he was informed by a foreman that he was discharged this time for discussing union activities with another employee . Prolo was similarly told by a foreman that his discharge was for union activities. On March 13, 1942, the Union filed a charge with the Regional Director alleging violations of Section 8 (1), (2), and ( 3) of the Act. The charge was withdrawn without prejudice on April 20, 1942. 9 The bargaining unit described will be set forth in a subsequent section hereof. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 181 When Garrison became a group leader, employee Francis Wikel had been transferred from the trimming and final assembly department to the paint department, and a question arose as to whether Wikel had lost seniority thereby. To settle this, Garrison on May 20, 1942, asked Dennis to meet with the bargaining committee of the Union, which he did. As a result of the meeting the matter was settled, but Dennis apparently was not pleased with the outcome, and, on leaving the meeting, he told Garrison that perhaps he should give him the keys to the place, and he called Garrison several vulgar names. Dennis left the plant, returned later slightly under the influence of liquor, but not drunk, again called Garrison vulgar and abusive names, pushed his finger into Garrison's nose, and said he would like to smash it. Garrison became angry and told Dennis that under the circumstances the thing for Dennis to do was to discharge him again, which suggestion Dennis promptly acted upon.'° Subsequent to Garrison's third discharge, the Union, which was holding con- ferences with Dennis and Schroen concerning the terms of a full contract, insisted that Garrison's reinstatement be agreed to as a part of the settlement of issues. At a conference which was being held on June 2, 1942, in the Park- American Hotel at which Dennis, Schroen, Washburn, Garrison, a Federal Conciliator and a State Mediator were present, Dennis' dislike of Garrison proved the major obstacle to a settlement. During a recess, Schroen called Garrison out into the corridor, told him that because of the way Dennis felt toward Garrison an agreement would never be reached as long as he insisted on returning to the respondent's employ and asked Garrison to drop out. Garrison told Schroen that if he were reinstated with back pay, given the bonus provided for in the proposed contract, and a recommendation signed by Schroen, and if the contract were executed, he wou d resign . Schroen agreed. They returned to the meeting and Schroen announled the arrangement reached with Garrison. Thereupon the parties signed the contract and the collateral agreement for the settlement of Garrison's claim , and Garrison signed a resignation to become effective as of the end of the working day on June 4. The discharges of Garrison and Prolo by the respondent on February 26 and in early March 1942 were clearly for the purpose of discouraging union organization and activities, and by such discharges the respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of the rights guar- anteed in Section 7 of the Act. With regard to Garrison's third discharge, on May 20, 1942, Garrison's sug- gestion to Dennis that he discharge him, does not, in the opinion of the under- signed, preclude his discharge from being discriminatory . As Garrison testified, "You can just take so much." The abuse which led to this discharge grew out of Dennis' displeasure over Garrison's effort to negotiate the settlement of a grievance. But for Dennis' antipathy for unions and union activities the undersigned is convinced that Garrison would not have been discharged on this occasion The undersigned therefore finds that by such discharge the respondent discriminated in regard to Garrison's hire and tenure of employ- ment in violation of Section 8 (3) of the Act. 30 Prior to February 1942, Dennis had not criticised either Prolo or Garrison and had never before called Garrison names. After February 1942 Dennis treated Prolo rudely also and several times openly criticised Prolo before other employees although be had never done so before. 182 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 2. The bargaining relationship of the Union and respondent ; refusal to bargain The contract of June 2, 1942, was of one year's duration, automatically renewing from year to year unless amended." Throughout the period covered herein this contract continued in force unchanged. The charges of refusal to bargain in this case are in the main not based upon a refusal to recognize or to contract with the Union in the first instance but rather are based upon the theory that the respondent, after the making of the contract, though com- plying in form did not comply with the spirit of true collective bargaining as contemplated by the Act in its dealing with the Union on matters not specifically covered by the contract. One of the principal complaints of the Union concerned the difficulty it encountered in getting the respondent to deal with the bargaining committee on individual increases as well as general ones. In order to prevent individual increases without the knowledge of the bargaining committee, the Union requested from the respondent a list of wages of the employees. At least two unsuccessful attempts were made to procure such a list in 1942. Some- times the respondent would grant raises bargained for by the bargaining committee, notify the committee when the raise became effective, and sign the slip indicating that the grievance had been settled. But sometimes the respon- dent would tell the bargaining committee that it could not give a requested raise yet two or three weeks later would grant such raise to the individual, following individual dealing, without notifying the bargaining committee; some- times the respondent would grant raises bargained for individually only; and sometimes the respondent refused to sign the grievance slip indicating that the bargaining committee had settled the grievance. Wilford Lee, as chair- man of the bargaining committee, during 1943, spoke twice to President Schroen " about individual bargaining. The first time, he told Schroen that, under the contract, bargaining was to be done only with the bargaining com- mittee and not with individual employees. Schroen asked if Lee meant he could not talk to anyone out in the shop. When Lee told him he could but not about individual increases, Schroen, according to Lee's credited testimony, said that he could talk to anyone in the shop about anything he wanted to. On the second occasion when Lee spoke to Schroen about individual bargaining, Schroen said if Lee did not like it, why did he not quit. On one occasion after Lee had succeeded in reaching an understanding with Superintendent Leonard Wood about individual increases bargained for, Wood refused to sign the grievance slip as settled because he did not want to "stick his neck out" in view of Schroen's attitude. Wood did most of the bargaining for the respondent. He told Lee that he would back Lee up and would warn individuals who sought to bargain for themselves but that he could not control it if "management" went over his head. While Wood sought to live up to the terms of the contract, he "The parties stipulated at the hearing that the appropriate unit was all employees, excluding supervisory employees and employees with power effectively to hire or dis- charge, and clerical employees and confidential clerks employed at the plant. This essentially agreed with the provisions of the contract. All the employees in the unit are, by requirement of the closed-shop contract, members of the Union. The respondent did not contest the majority of the Union. The undersigned finds that, at all times material herein, the Union represented a majority of the employees in an appropriate bargaining unit. In November 1942, for reasons mainly concerning financial matters, the respondent's board of directors removed Dennis as president and Schroen was made president and general manager. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 183 felt that in some matters the bargaining committee was trying to tell him how to run the Company. The routine prescribed by the bargaining committee for dealing with individual raises was one example, according to Wood, of the bargaining committee's trying to run the Company. He resented this. In further regard to wages, the Union requested the respondent to set up job classifications with minimum and maximum rates within those classifica- tions and a plan whereby employees could get automatic increases until they reached the top of their bracket. At the time, the respondent had no fixed rates except a minimum which applied to all classifications alike.18 At the first conference concerning this matter, Wood told the bargaining committee that the respondent had its own classifications, which Wood gave them. The committee contended that too many men were put in a residual group and also that there was no maximum or minimum within the classifications. The respondent refused to make any changes. The Union's International Repre- sentative was called in at a second conference, at which the Union had a list of job classifications and rates established by the International, and a Federal Conciliator was called into a- third conference. The respondent refused to change its position and the matter was referred to the War Labor Board. The respondent's position, as shown by a referee's report, was that the respon- dent, having few employees, was obliged to transfer about 85 percent of them from one job to another in order to keep them occupied and that disputes would result when an employee would be transferred from a higher to a lower paying job. As to this objection the referee's report stated: "The Company's chief objection to job classification appears to be a fear that the Union will insist on the employee receiving his regular rate of pay when transferred to a job paying less. The Union indicated that this practice is now followed and this was admitted by the Company." The Regional War Labor Board on May 11, 1943, issued a Directive Order, directing the respondent and the Union to renegotiate the question of job classifications and to submit their agreed classifications or separate claims regarding them. A Second Directive Order of the Regional War Labor Board on September 25, 1943, ordered the submitted classifications and rates to be in effect. From this time on the respondent furnished the bargaining committee with a list of wages and rates of the employees, and the Union would check its accuracy with the employees. This practice disclosed that occasionally individual employees had received raises of which the bargaining committee had not been informed and that the foreman notifying the employee of his increase had told him not to say anything about it because it might cause hard feeling or cause others to think they were entitled to a raise. Once the bargaining committee complained to the respondent that a foreman was working overtime without any union member working with him, a practice expressly forbidden by the contract. Wood said he would speak to the fore- man about it. The foreman continued his solitary overtime work, however. When the committee complained again. Wood told them that the foreman was doing it on his own initiative and the respondent could do nothing about it. Finally Lee, himself, spoke to the foreman, requesting him to stop the practice, and the foreman stopped. On occasions the respondent considered the Union's grievances as substantial and agreed to improve certain conditions complained of. Some of these were v The minimum starting rate was provided for by the contract . The contract also permitted the matter of wages to be reopened at any time by either the Union or the respondent. 184 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD settled, but in several cases the respondent either failed to effect the promised improvement or delayed to an extent which might cause the most patient to lose faith in the respondent 's promises . Some of the grievances were regarded by the respondent as petty and as a waste of valuable time.14 Superintendent Wood felt that many of these minor grievances might have been settled at lower levels without the whole bargaining committee coming to him . Wood once told the whole bargaining committee that it seemed to him they were making up a lot of grievances and coming to the office just to smoke. But in April 1944 Wood told Lee he was doing too much running around. Lee explained that he was settling grievances.16 Wood said it was not necessary for him to settle them and that he should bring them to the office 1' About March 1944, when Wood complained that the bargaining committee was making up grievances in order to come to the office to smoke, he inaugu- rated a plan , with the approval of the bargaining committee, to meet once a week and have the foremen present . This plan failed to function satisfac- torily to the Union because on the appointed day Wood was likely to be too busy, or the respondent would want to rush a bus out, so the meeting would be postponed to the following day. According to Lee's credited testimony the following would then transpire . The committee would ask, the next day, when the meeting would be, and Wood would say, "Maybe late this afternoon." Then, about 5 minutes before quitting time, Wood would say, "Come on, boys, we have a little time. Let's get it over with" Then Lee would refuse to meet because of the insufficiency of time, and on the following day when the com- mittee would go to Wood, the latter would say, "What have you got? . . . We've got to get out a bus. What is the trouble anyway? What is the main trouble?" The committee would then try to state their case as fast as they could but they were dissatisfied because they were being rushed" Wood sometimes told the bargaining committee that he would give raises requested "to pacify" the boys in the shop. In a bargaining committee confer- ence with management in early 1944, Schroen, who seldom attended such con- ferences," was present and, after saying something about pacifying, called 31 Wood enumerated some of the grievances that he considered petty. One was a com- plaint from the employees who were torch soldering. The respondent had introduced a new method for them , and they complained that it was too hard on their bands, as they had to stand on a platform and hold the torch above their heads, and also that the new method caused a vibration which cracked the solder . Wood told the foreman to settle the grievance , "if they felt the fellows was going to walk off the job, to use their own judgment , either they could use the floor type fan for torch soldering as the old way, the usual procedure , and for the foreman to make the decision, so I left it up to their own decision ." Another "petty" grievance was a complaint that the clock was off and the men did not get their full 5-minute rest period. '" Art. II, Sec . 4, of the contract provided : "Any Committeeman of the Union will be permitted to leave their department at any time to adjust grievances not in their own department." "Schroen testified , "During 1944, there was an awful lot of bickering, carrying this book around , that they wanted the foreman or the superintendent to sign the grievance. They would go all over the shop, walking from one end to another, and it seemed to me like there was so very much of it was uncalled for, and causing a complete disruption throughout the department ... . 3 The Union held a regular meeting on the first Monday in the month right after work. Often , however, on such night Wood would ask the men to work right through and the membership attendance was thereby affected The committee asked Wood not to do that, and Wood said he would try to remember but never did. "Schroen testified that he relied on Wood because he did not have time to be a "referee" to the men. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 185 the bargaining committee a bunch of kids. Wikel, a member of the committee, remarked that if they were children so was the management, to which Schroen replied, according to Wikel's credited testimony, "If you don't like it, why don't you quit?" Other examples of the bargaining relationship between the Union and the respondent will be related in the following section 19 3. The discriminatory discharges of Lee, Wikel, and Stinson John Wilford (Bill) Lee, previously mentioned, was employed by the respon- dent as a stray painter in September 1941. Prior to the time of the respondent's recognition of the Union, Lee's relations with Schroen had been exceptionally friendly29 One evening during the ante -recognition period of the Union, while Lee was working overtime, he, Dennis, and Schroen were discussing the forma- tion of the Union. Dennis asked Lee what he thought of the Union. Lee replied that he was 100 percent for organized labor but that he had worked at another shop where a union was being formed and he had participated and been discharged and he did not wish to be discharged again. Dennis said Lee need not worry ; if he just "played ball" with them everything would be all right.n On April 20, 1942, Lee Joined the Union. In August of that year he was elected recording secretary . During this period the bargaining committee gave discouraging reports of their efforts to settle grievances with the respondent. In January 1943, two of the three members of the bargaining committee resigned, saying that they were not getting anywhere. Lee asked to be put on the bargaining committee and he and Al Muller were elected to replace those who had resigned. The third member of the committee, Francis Wikel, had been elected in October 1942. The committee elected Lee as chairman. At the time of Lee's election to the committee there were several grievances pending. The first was the Union's request for job classification with maximum and minimum rates therein . This matter was settled as above related.' The second was the objection to secret individual increases . As previously related, Lee spoke to Schroen about this matter twice .n Schroen took umbrage 19 The complaint charges that the respondent promoted union officers for the purpose of preventing them from engaging in concerted activities . The evidence disclosed that the respondent had promoted two employees to foremanship . One was president of the Union at the time he was promoted . The other was president at the time he was first offered the promotion but at the time of his acceptance he was vice president and a member of the bargaining committee . The respondent did not consult the Union before offering the promotions, but gave the offerees time to take it up with the membership. The undersigned finds no basis for inferring that the respondent made such promotions for the purpose alleged. $9 Lee's brother was a partner in a firm for which Schroen had worked before he went with the respondent. 21 This finding is based on , Lee's credited testimony Dennis did not testify, za Other grievances pending were : ( 1) request for Improved ventilation , which Lee testified was not settled or Improved while be was working for the respondent . ( At some time, the date of which was not shown , the respondent Improvised a one -bladed fan to alleviate the situation caused by dust from the bandsaw , according to Wood's testimony) (2) a request for a guard for a saw on which accidents had occurred , which the respondent promised to take care of but did not during Lee 's period of employment ; ( 3) a request for a welder 's shield to keep the flash from the eyes of the other workmen , which request resulted in the respondent 's furnishing of a small shield not satisfactory to the men In the shop ; ( 4) a complaint about sanitary conditions In the men 's toilet which condition the respondent finally rectified in the fall of 1944 m Schroen admitted on cross -examination that some of the men had spoken to him about individual increases and that he had spoken to some of them. 186 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD at this, regarding Lee's insistence upon such a restriction as an officious inter- ference with his personal liberty, and unwarrantedly interpreted Lee's state- ment as an attempt to deny him the privilege of saying "good morning" to the men. As previously found, Schroen refused to stop talking to the men about individual increases. In December of 1943, the Union made complaint to Wood that the plant was too cold in the morning. Apparently the cold was, several times, the result of a breakage of the automatic stoker worm. One morning in January 1944, when the men arrived and found the plant cold, they walked out, returning 2 hours later." When Wood spoke to the men, objecting to their walking out, especially without notice, Lee told him according to Schroen, "We told you to get it fixed. Why didn't you get it fixed? You have been warned about it." Wood and Schroen, however, both considered the walkout as unwarranted, and Schroen concluded that Lee and Wikel were personally responsible" After Lee was elected to the bargaining committee, Schroen's prior friendly attitude toward him disappeared. Whereas he had, before January 1943, received favorable comments on his work, he received only criticism thereafter. Wikel, who was employed in 1937 by the respondent's predecessor, was, during the period from about February 1942 to June 1944, working as a painter with Lee. One night in the summer of 1943 while Wikel and Lee were working overtime they noticed that Schroen came in quietly and watched them from behind a bus. Thereafter, Schroen, Wood, or foremen other than their own frequently watched them. Lee testified that he noticed this more just before a meeting of the Union or after a meeting of the bargaining committee with the respondent. Schroen testified that at various times he would go through the shop to inspect the work and the employees would volunteer that Lee was getting too big for his breeches. In February 1944 Lee was elected president of the Union. As such he continued to sit in on bargaining committee meetings with management. Wikel became chairman of the bargaining committee. Schroen reported to Lee in a meeting with the bargaining committee that the men in the shop had told him that Lee was playing "big shot" ; that the employees did not have grievances; that Lee was just making them up; and that the men did not like Lee as president. Lee asked the men at a union meeting about this and they denied having spoken to Schroen. Schroen spoke to Wood about the subject, asking him to keep better control of Lee "and see if it was an indication from the employees themselves . . ." One time Schroen suggested they call the men together so he could hear from them instead of from Lee what their grievances were. When the men were assembled, Schroen asked them if they had anything against him or if they had any grievance 2+ According to Wood's testimony the grievance concerning the lack of heat had pre- viously been settled by having a man from the time department stay nights and arrive early to fire up. Presumably this man merely filled the stoker bin because on this occa- tion, Schroen testified, they had to fire the furnace by hand. = Schroen testified on direct examination : "I found that most of this was agitation on the part of Mr. Lee and Mr. Wikel, and maybe one or two others " On cross-exanuna- tion, in response to a question of whether Lee and Wikel were complaining about the heat because they were on the bargaining committee and spoke for the men or whether it was a personal complaint, Schroen answered • "I couldn't exactly say. That was just their way of doing things, they always had their noses into everything; if there was any kick coming, they would be the first to squabble about it." Schroen, on cross-examination, named some of the things into which he regarded Lee and Wikel as "putting their noses" and the undersigned finds that they were matters which were legitimate subjects for collective bargaining. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 187 to present. No one spoke up. Later at a union meeting Lee asked the men why they had not spoken up. They told him that they did not want to "stick their necks out" and besides it was the function of the bargaining committee to present grievances. On another occasion after Lee had requested Schroen to stop speaking to the men about individual increases, Schroen insisted that all the men be assembled so that he could ask them about it. Early in 1944 Wood told Lee and Wikel that he was going to have to split them up because they were "cooking up" too many grievances. On Friday, March 17, 1944, the respondent issued a notice to foremen of an intended increase in the number of busses that were to be made weekly thereafter. The foreman showed this to Lee. Lee informed Wikel and said he thought it was a matter that should be discussed with the respondent. Wikel agreed and arranged for a meeting with Wood. At the arranged time the bargaining committee and Lee went to Wood's office. Lee addressing Wood, opened the discussion by asking, "What in the hell is the big push going on here?" Wood told Lee to watch his language, indicating that an employee named Miss Dunn was present. Lee suggested to Wood that he ask her to leave, but Wood said she had her work to do; so she stayed. The bargaining committee then proceeded to discuss the speed up with Wood, asking how it was to be accomplished. Wood explained that they had to get more busses out and the only way to do that was to work a little harder. Lee asked if Wood thought the men would want to work harder without getting paid more. Wood said that the employees would have to meet the schedule anyway 2° On Friday, March 24, without previous warning, Lee and Wikel were dis- charged. According to contract procedure, the bargaining committee was called into Wood's office, where Wood and Schroen were, and there Lee and Wikel were informed of their discharge. They asked the reason. Schroen replied that they were discharged for misconduct, which he explained was the use of "strong language" in the presence of a female employee. Then Schroen added, according to the credited and undenied testimony of Lee and Wikel, "I will be going into the army soon, and I don't want a couple of 'sabotaging hoodlums' running this place while I am gone." Lee asked Schroen to define "sabotage" and Schroen said, ". . . telling the men to lay down on the job, not to get out production. . . . Lee called a meeting of the Union for the next day and asked Claude Brice, International Representative, to be there. At this meeting Lee asked the members if he had ever asked them to "lay down" on the job and they replied that he had not. At the meeting It was decided to negotiate for the rein- statement of Lee and Wikel. On Monday, March 27, Brice telephoned Wood and arranged a meeting for that afternoon. Brice and the bargaining committee met with Wood and the latter refused to reinstate Lee or Wikel. Wood then asked permission to speak to Brice alone. The bargaining committee consented and left. Wood then asked Brice to agree that either Lee or Wikel be removed from the bargaining committee. Brice asked why, and Wood said that they hatched up too many grievances working together and that some of them were petty and he thought things would go better if the team were separated. Brice refused to do that and explained to Wood that it had taken a great deal of time to get adjustments of grievances and that that caused bad labor relations, and he mentioned also the fact that many individual increases had been granted, unknown to the a' Wikel quoted Woods as saying, "If you don't like it, you can kiss it." During the course of the meeting, Wikel used a few "hells" anc "damns." 188 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Union, and told Wood that failure to recognize the fact that this was a matter for collective bargaining caused disharmony. Wood replied that he was sorry but that was company policy. Brice listed other grievances that had not been settled , such as the request for a guard for the saw , the request for improvement of toilet room facilities, and the speed up. The meeting closed with Brice's request that Wood prepare a statement of terms on which the respondent would reinstate Lee and Wikel. The following day Wood wrote, offering reinstatement to Lee and Wikel with restoration of their seniority rights but without back pay, on condition that they should make a full apology "to the group who were in my office on Friday, March 17, also with the recommendation that one of the above be removed from the Bargaining Committee giving either the metal or wood department representation . . .11 27 On the evening of the receipt of this letter the Union met, and agreed that Lee and Wikel should apologize to the office girl but turned down the suggestion for removal of one of the two from the bargaining committee. The following day, Brice and the bargaining committee met with Wood, who agreed to reinstate the men if they apologized to Miss Dunn. This was done. At a meeting following the reinstatement of Lee and Wikel, Wood told the bargaining committee they were a "bunch of little kids" that made up a lot of grievances and did not know what they were talking about. Schroen, who was present, agreed and added, according to Lee's credited and undenied testimony, "You unions are having your fling now, but after the Presidential election I think things will get a little different." ,Superintendent Wood, a young man of 27 when he was employed in the summer of 1942, undertook within a few weeks after his arrival to reduce overtime work. After a period of slump, when the force was reduced to 16 men, production was increased in late 1942. Whereas they had been producing a bus a week, the production time was shortened and more employees were added to the wood and metal shops. No painters were added because the painters had not been occupied full time with painting and were shifted around When the respondent began putting out two busses a week, the painters were occupied full time with painting. It took about 23 to 28 hours to paint a new bus, including the preparatory work. Thus, if the painters did not work nights, it would take about 3 days to paint a bus. In 1942 the painters worked at least one night each week.28 During 1943, when the respondent was trying to step up its schedule, the painters might be asked to work through until 9 p. in or to come back at 9 or 12 o'clock. They would then put in from 2 to 4 nights a week. Lee and Wikel did not like these hours, although they did not object to working overtime once in a while. The men in the metal and 47 The last two paragraphs of Wood's letter read : After discussing this matter with the Union and its representatives , Mr. Brice, I have come to the conclusion that the Management and the Union can come to a very satisfactory working condition This can be accomplished only by handling each case as presented by the Bargaining Committee in a more diplomatic way, and not ridiculing the supervisory department or the Management in trying to bargain From today the Union contract will be the sole guidance of any procedure and its handlings in the future Any deviation from the contract in the past will be dropped immediately . If this is done, and both parties abide by it, I, in my own mind, know that a satisfactory agreement can be reached in every manner 21 Wood testified that the other men refused to work in the plant when the painters were using yellow chromite, so it was necessary to have the painters do that work at night. Also if a bus reached the paint shop Wednesday night and had to be out on Friday, the painters would have to work nights. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 189 wood departments were older, and they refused to work overtime. The result was that by the time the bus reached the paint shop the respondent was always pressed to meet its delivery date and the burden of making up time usually fell to the painters, who were frequently asked to work overtime. By March 1944, the respondent had about 33 workers but still had 2 painters. About the latter part of May 1944, Lee went to a doctor to find out why he was losing weight and had bleeding gums. The doctor advised rest and no overtime work. Lee went to Wood and asked him to try to get someone else in the paint department to help him out so he would not have to work so much overtime. Wood promised to do so. Shortly thereafter the respondent received an order for five busses. The first one was rushed because the bus was needed for a run ; so the painters worked all night on it. They asked Wood not to have them work so hard on the next one but Wood said, "Go ahead and get this one out. After this it won't happen again." But Lee was still requested to and did work all night on the third and fourth. One evening in early June, Acting Foreman Muller S° asked Lee to work overtime. At first Lee promised to do so but later Lee went to Wood and said that he would not do so unless he received the raise of 2 cents an hour which was pending as the subject of bargaining. Wood told him that the reason he could not get it was because of the way Schroen felt toward Lee Lee asked if he could speak to Schroen and, with the permission of the bargaining committee, Lee had a private talk with Schroen in an effort to improve their relations. Schroen asked what the matter was. Lee told him that he felt that Schroen was bucking him and hindering the other men in the Union from getting what they wanted, and then he traced their relations from the time when they used to play golf together to the time after he got on the bargaining committee, when Schroen was constantly watching him and criticizing him. Schroen asked how Lee liked working under pressure. Lee replied that he did not like it and would like to be relieved of it. Schroen said, according to Lee's credited and undenied testimony, "Maybe if you would stop trying to run into this office every five minutes with grievances, and trying to play such a big shot in the Union, that maybe we will let you off from under this pressure." With regard to the raise, Schroen told Lee that he would put him on probation for a couple of weeks and if he behaved himself he would get the raise at the end of that time. With that, understanding Lee worked that night. On June 10, 1944, Wikel was transferred from the paint department to the trim department. On June 15, Harry Stinson was hired to assist Lee. That night Lee was requested to work overtime and he refused. Foreman Muller then asked Stinson if he would work overtime 30 Stinson, who had learned that Lee was not going to work overtime because he had not yet received the promised raise, said he did not want to cause trouble with Lee. Muller asked if he would work if Lee approved, and Stinson said he would. Lee said it was all right with him, and Stinson consented to work, but reluctantly, as he lacked confidence in his ability to work without Lee. That night Stinson sanded a bus, mixed some paint, and started to spray paint the bus. He was not expe- rienced in enamel work, and the job did not go well; so Stinson checked out su Muller became foreman officially on June 8, 1944, but for a month prior to that he had served in lieu of the foreman who was on vacation. 3"Stinson testified that this occurred on the second day of his employment, but the second day was Friday and would not have fitted with the timing of the other occurrences he testified to. 190 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD in disgust and went home intending to quit. After remaining away a day, Stinson returned for his pay check . Underkircher , the respondent 's treasurer, asked him why he had not returned to work , and Stinson told him he did not want to return , that he did not like working conditions , and that he did not want to work there until his job was frozen. Underkircher told Stinson he had just written a letter asking him to return to work but that he had not mailed it yet ; so he read the letter to Stinson . Underkircher called in Foreman Muller and asked if there was anything wrong with Stinson's work. Muller said there was nothing wrong with his work , but that he had mixed his paint a little thin and had had a little trouble . Stinson returned the following Monday and worked continuously until the time of his discharge as hereinafter related. During the first week in July, Muller went to Stinson and told him , according to Stinson 's undenied and credited testimony , "You are doing your job all right. I thought you could do it." On July 3, 1944 , Douglas Ramsay , a customer of the respondent , who oper- ated a line known as the Colonial Bus Lines in the Carolinas , brought to Kala- mazoo for repairs a bus he had purchased from the respondent . The bus had been in a wreck and was badly damaged , one side having been ripped off. Schroen told Ramsay that it would take five or six working days to repair it . The plant was closed over July 4. On Wednesday , July 5 the plant was too crowded to bring the bus in; but the respondent began working on it outside the plant by removing the torn metal , taking out the seats and luggage racks, and remov- ing part of the ceiling . Except for repair of the seats that had been taken inside the plant, nothing was done on the bus until Friday night or Saturday, when the bus was moved into the plant. The men worked on the bus all day Saturday and Monday and part of Tuesday. About 8 :30 or 9 a. m. on Tuesday , July 11, Lee was instructed to get the Colonial bus ready for painting . At that time the bus was in the metal shop. All the windows were out except five of the seven windows on the left side of the bus. Lee looked at the work sheet and noted that it called for replace- ment of torn jamb rubber. Since the jamb rubber on the five remaining win- dows was nearly all torn , Lee requested of Foreman Muller that these windows be removed so that he would not have to spray the inside of the bus with the windows in. His reason for requesting this was that the enamel fog, which Is heavy and hangs in the , air, would not be able to escape readily and would be injurious to his health . New busses never have the windows in when they are painted inside and the respondent had never had a repair job which had had to be repainted inside . Muller went to Wood and returned to say that the windows would not be taken out. Lee then asked Wikel, as chairman of the bargaining committee, to make out a grievance slip and to take the matter up with Wood as a grievance . This Wikel did, and after he had procured the signatures of Lee and Stinson , he and the bargaining committee and Lee took it to Wood . Wood was adamant , however. Lee attempted to reach Brice by telephone but was unsuccessful ; so he returned to the Colonial bus where Stinson was feather edging and did some cleaning work. At about 10:30 a. m . Lee called a meeting of the executive committee on the outside of the plant . That committee decided to call Earl Falconer, then Regional Director of the Union . Lee explained to Falconer the nature of the grievance . Falconer advised Lee to agree to paint this bus but to file a griev- ance to see that it did not happen in the future and then told Lee that Brice would come the next day. Falconer also suggested that Lee ask Wood for the office fan to put in the bus. The bargaining committee and Lee then returned KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 191 to Wood and told him that Lee would paint this bus if it did not happen in the future. Wood said "O.K." While they were meeting with Wood, Schroen walked into the office and remarked, with a vulgar expression of disgust, about the number of men "wasting time." When Lee said that they were trying to settle a legitimate grievance, Schroen uttered a vulgar and contemptuous expression, the nearest proper equivalent of which would be "nonsense." ' The committee went out, and Wikel prepared a slip for settlement of the griev- ance on the agreed basis, but when he took it to Wood, the latter refused to sign it because, he said, they might sometime get a bus for repair where all the windows were in. This refusal, Wood testified, created quite an uproar. Wood agreed to lend the painters the office fan, but they did not take it. Wikel and Lee testified that from their experience the fan would not have been of much value. Altogether Lee put in only about 1 hour's work on the Colonial bus between 9 a. in. and noon . Stinson lost about 30 or 40 minutes from work. At lunch time Lee called another meeting of the executive committee to see if they wanted him to proceed with the painting without getting a settlement of the grievance. That committee decided he should proceed with the work. Early that afternoon the Colonial bus was moved to the paint shop and Lee and Stinson worked steadily the rest of the day ; by quitting time the primer was put on " A little after 7 a. in. on Wednesday, July 12, Brice came to the plant, encountered Wood in the shop, and asked for a meeting. Wood said he was too busy. Brice said they had a grievance they wanted to negotiate and they regarded it as important. Wood replied that he knew what the grievance was and that there was no use of a meeting as they were not going to take the windows of the bus out. That same day Schroen talked to Wood and said, "What in the dickens do they want these windows out for? You can paint a job much more satis- factorily with the windows in. Haven't you told them to leave the windows in? What is all the argument about?" Wood replied, according to Schroen, "Well you know Lee. He is going to have those windows out come hell or high water . . . ." Schroen told Wood, "Let's put a stop to this monkey- business, and get down to earth and get some work done on that job." Schroen testified that he was so mad he was ready to " tear the place loose." On Wednesday afternoon Ramsay spoke to Wood or Schroen about the length of time it was taking to get his bus out and, although the painters were not consulted, he was promised that the painters would work that night. Schroen thought the painters were just "piddling around" and he told Wood to try to get them to see that the respondent was justified in asking them to paint the interior with the windows in "because it is just merely a matter that anyone with a little common-sense would know, that paint will travel out a lot faster if the side wall is closed . . . ." Schroen testified that he could not see any justification "for their bull -headed refusal to work on it," and he told Wood he had better start cleaning house and get rid of "some of these fellows we have got on our hands ." He further testified : I gave him [Wood] complete instructions before I went away [on a trip to Chicago]. I said, "You know how this fellow Lee is. We fired him once before for carrying on, and we had to swallow our pride and take Hl The rest of the time was spent on preliminaries such as feather edging , cleaning, glazing , sanding, and masking , which required about 4 hours ' time for two men. Schroen testified that on Tuesday five men were doing the work the painters should have done. Schroen was mistaken about this. When the bus was in the trim shop, five men were working on the bus, but they were doing other work, according to Foreman Muller. 192 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD him back. You have got to get yourself out of this mess you are in. You just can't get anything done when they are bucking you all the time." I just raised the dickens to get the place cleaned up. I was leaving it up to him. When Muller asked Lee that afternoon to work overtime, Lee, feeling ill, explained, and refused Muller's request. Stinson also declined to work overtime." During the time from July 5 on, Ramsay spent a good deal of time around the plant and became familiar with all the men. He passed pleasantries with them and "kidded" them. By Wednesday, however, Ramsay was beginning to grow impatient, as he wanted to have his bus back in operation by Saturday. On either Wednesday or Thursday morning Ramsay was in the paint shop and told Lee and Stinson in what they took to be a "kidding" way that they were two of the slowest painters he had ever seen. Lee replied in jest that maybe it would be 2 or 3 weeks before they would get the bus out." Stinson, intending to joke but not being so understood by Ramsay, said if Ramsay would give them 50 cents more an hour they might come back and work that night. Ramsay said that this was an insurance job and he was not authorized to pay anything extra. Later he told Wood of this incident and said, according to Wood, "If I have to do it to get my job home, I will be glad to." The same afternoon Ramsay returned to the paint room with Muller and asked the painters to work that night, saying that he would pay them the 50 cents an hour extra. Lee told Ramsay that Stinson had been joking, that they had no intention of taking it, and that the enamel that they had been spraying would not be dry enough that night, anyway, to permit further work. Lee showed Ramsay and Muller that the paint had not begun to set up yet" On Friday, July 14, while Lee and Stinson were working on the Colonial bus, Lee had to strain some paint to refill his gun" Stinson came up to Lee to have his gun refilled also and was waiting until Lee was through filling his. At this moment Foreman Muller came up and asked Stinson if he did not have anything to do. Lee had previously told Stinson he thought they were being watched and that he should watch his step and work to the best of his ability. Stinson turned to Muller and asked if Muller had any reason to discharge him ; if he did, to do it, but if not, to stop riding him. Muller walked away without saying anything. On Friday morning the painters had finished spraying the inside top of the bus, and the bus was moved to the trim shop shortly after lunch time. During Friday forenoon Foreman Muller had a number of times called Lee off his work on the Colonial bus to paint parts of other busses." Once he asked Lee to paint the switch panel and instrument panel on the next bus in line. Lee at the time was painting the angles on the outside of the windows, a Job that takes considerable time. Lee, as leadman, sent Stinson on the panel assignment and continued to work on the Colonial bus. Schroen had left town on Wednesday and returned around noon on Friday. On his return, Schroen saw the bus still in the paint shop and learned from " On Wednesday afternoon Lee lost some time because of the fact that four or five pails of paint that he procured from the stock room were mislabeled. " Ramsay testified that Lee said on one occasion that the bus was getting out as fast as any. "Lee testified that it takes enamel 12 hours to dry enough to mask. Muller asked Lee and Stinson to work both Wednesday and Thursday nights. They refused both times "The paint job called for one coat of primer and two coats of enamel. W There were similar interruptions of the work on Tuesday, KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 193 Wood and Ramsay that the painters had refused to work nights. Ramsay complained that the painters had delayed the job. Schroen spent a good share of the afternoon talking to Wood and Muller "trying to make a solution." Sohroen, on Muller's suggestion that Stinson was still on his 30-day proba- tionary period, decided to get rid of Stinson. Then they passed to a consid- eration of Lee's case and decided to discharge Lee. Schroen testified : "So we went along to Mr. Lee's situation, and decided, and definitely made up our mind, I did, that I was going to have a show-down with these boys at four- thirty, and felt that they would be discharged. As a matter of fact, I had my mind all made up that he was going to be discharged unless they could convince me otherwise. Lee and Stinson worked all Friday afternoon on the Colonial bus, with the exception of odd jobs which Muller assigned them on other busses, assisting the trimmers and doing touch-up work. At quitting time that day, at Schroen's instruction, Muller called the bar- gaining committee together and told them to come to Wood's office, announcing that Stinson was being laid off. At this time Muller gave Stinson his check. Brice had dropped in as he was passing and Schroen invited him in, too. The committee, together with Brice, Lee, and Stinson, met Schroen, Wood, and Muller in Wood's office. Muller asked Stinson what he was doing there in view of the fact that he had received his check, and Schroen told Stinson he had no business in the meeting as it was no concern of his. Brice then asked why they were discharging Stinson and Muller said for insubordination and refusal to work overtime when he was most needed. Schroen interjected that that was not the reason; that the reason was that Stinson had not completed his 30-day probationary period and they were not satisfied with his services. Brice checked with the committee who told him it was Stinson's 29th day of employment and Brice told Stinson that the contract permitted that and that Stinson should leave and see him that night. When Stinson left, Schroen announced that they had a "little surprise" for Lee, that they were discharging him. Brice asked what for, and Muller said for not working overtime" Schroen said that was wrong, that they were discharging Lee for insubordina- tion. Brice asked what he meant by that and Schroen said for refusing to take orders. Lee asked what he meant by that, and Wood said that Muller had asked him to paint an instrument panel and a switch panel and he had not done so. Lee said that he had been working on the Colonial bus and he had told Stinson to paint those parts and that he did not regard that as insubordi- nation. Brice said that under the contract Lee was entitled to a review before the bargaining committee, and Schroen replied, according to Brice's, Lee's, and Wilkel's credited testimony, "This is a review." Brice said he could not see that and that Lee was not discharged yet because he did not have his check. Schroen reached under Wood's desk pad and pulled out Lee's check and release and handed it to Lee. After saying that they would see Schroen later, Brice left with Lee. On about July 20, pursuant to a dispute filed by the Union with the State Mediation Board and the Conciliation Service, a meeting was held in Wood's office between Brice, the bargaining committee, Schroen, Wood, Steffen, the respondent's attorney, and a representative of the Conciliation Service. At this meeting, Schroen gave as reasons for Lee's and Stinson's discharge : not taking orders from the foreman, that they caused a lot of trouble around the 37 Wood testified that Lee's refusal to work overtime did not enter into his decision to discharge Lee. 68657?- -46-14 194 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD plant, that they had held up construction of the customer 's bus, and had tried to "bribe" the customer for more money. The respondent refused to reinstate Lee and Stinson. During the meeting one of the members of the bargaining committee raised the matter of individual increases which did not go through the committee . Steffen said that was the respondent 's policy and its right and that raises would continue to be given that way. The Conciliator explained that that was a matter for collective bargaining . Steffen then asked if any grievances remained unsettled and the committee named some . Steffen wrote them down and said he would see what could be done. Later that day Brice encountered Schroen and Wood in the lobby of the Park American Hotel They talked for a while , Schroen saying that Brice was wrong in supporting Lee and that with him gone they would have better labor relations in the plant. 4. Conclusions a. With respect to refusal to bargain and with respect to inter fereaice, restraint , and coercion The evidence convincingly establishes that the respondent , after recognizing the Union as the sole bargaining agent, continued to deal with individuals about wage increases to the exclusion of the Union and in disregard to the Union's right to be notified thereof and to be present at the settlement of the individual grievance. Although Superintendent Wood agreed to channel such matters through the bargaining committee, President Schroen did quite the contrary. He emphatically declared his intention to talk to the men about anything he wanted to, and he continued to deal with individuals concerning their rates of pay and in certain instances gave the raise through individual bargaining that had shortly before been turned down in collective bargaining." Such conduct in itself constitutes a refusal to bargain within the meaning of the Act 89 In this and in other matters herein related the respondent demon- strated a misconception of the extent of its duty to bargain. The respondent never refused to meet the bargaining committee, although it was not always prompt in keeping its appointments and sometimes attempted to rush the meet- ings through; but a recognition of the formalities of collective bargaining is not enough. The Act contemplates that employer and representative of the employees approach the problem of the settlement of grievances in a spirit of friendly co-operation, in an effort to find a solution for their differences. This was not the respondent's attitude. Although the grievances presented clearly related to wages, hours, and working conditions, the respondent unwarrantedly regarded some of them as an invasion of managerial functions. In such matters as those involving the request for wage classification, with maximum and minimum rates therein and the speed-up, the respondent's mind appeared closed before bargaining commenced.40 Too often the respondent's attitude appeared to be: We will grant you an audience to present your grievance and, if we think that grievance merits action, we will adjust it when we can get around to it, but, if we think there is no merit in the grievance, we will say so, and ea Tinder the contract , the respondent had agreed that , if any individual employee presented a grievance concerning wages , among other things, it would instruct such employee to take the matter up with the bargaining committee , Thus the respondent disregarded its contractual as well as its statutory duty 80 Medo Photo Supply Corp v . N L. R R , 321 U. S 1378 : J I Case Co v N L R Il , 321 U. S 332; Order of Railroad Telegraphers v Railway Express Agency, 321 U. S. 342. 40 This is not to say that an employer Is obliged to grant every demand, but he is required by the Act to consider legitimate subjects for bargaining with an open mind KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 195 then we do not want any argument about it" Some of the grievances that to the employees were important, the respondent regarded as petty. With these the respondent would become irritated and it would seek to discourage them. It openly showed its resentment to the bargaining committee, criticised them, called them "little kids," and in other ways belittled them and sought to dis- courage them in their efforts to represent the Union." The undersigned finds that, on June 2, 1942, the respondent refused to bar- gain without imposing an illegal condition, and that, while the respondent thereafter observed the formalities of bargaining, it failed to engage therein with an open mind in a genuine effort to find a solution, through bargaining, to the issues raised by grievances presented, and it by-passed the bargaining process on more than one occasion. By such conduct the respondent has refused and is refusing to bargain with the Union within the meaning of Section 8 (5) of the Act. The respondent's conduct in connection with the settlement of Garrison's claim to reinstatement on June 2, 1942, was likewise a violation of the Act. Dennis' refusal to consummate the proposed contract except upon the improper condition that Garrison's claim be dropped in itself constituted a refusal by the respondent to bargain in good faith with the Union. Schroen's undertaking to appease Dennis' animus for the Union by inducing Garrison to leave the respondent's employ, although it may been prompted by no malice on Schroen's part toward Garrison, merely perpetuated the wrongful discrimination. Fur- thermore, the incident was evidence of the respondent's disrespect for its April 10 agreement of recognition of the Union as the sole bargaining agent. The deal made privately with Garrison at a time when the respondent and the Union were assembled for the purpose of collective bargaining is in itself a refusal to bargain within the meaning of Section 8 (5) of the Act. b. As to the discharges of Wikel, Lee, and Stinson If the sole reason for the discharge of Wikel and Lee in March 1944 was for the use of profanity in the presence of a female employee, their discharge would not be a violation of the Act. The undersigned is satisfied, however, At Sehroen testified : . . . even after they were told the windows would be left In, they still took all day to cause a disturbance and lay down on the job ." The undersigned believes that if the respondent had made a genuine effort to deal with the painters' grievance and demonstrated an interest in the employees' problem, a solution could have been reached satisfactory to both employer and employee. " The bargaining committee on occasions may have lacked tact and diplomacy , but the burden of fair and friendly dealing falls on both. The respondent's disregard of its obligations under the contract and under the Act without doubt provoked harsh words. If Lee was , on occasion , "bull -headed", the respondent was equally so. As stated by former Chaiiman Millis in his concurring opinion in Matter of Howard Foundry Com- pany, 59 N. L. P. B 60: "This case presents a pointed illustration of the need for special care and forebearance in administration of collective bargaining relationships .. . The idea, all too prevalent among some employers, that the obligation imposed by the Act to bargain collectively with majority representatives of their employees ceases upon the execution of an agreement, and by the same token overzealousness on the part of union business agents and new committeemen, are both responsible for much industrial unrest and instability. Square dealing and consideration assume in these days ever increasing significance . Let resentment and resistance . . . obstruct the peaceful machinery set up by agreement and the whole purpose of collective bargaining is likely to fail . . . It is not and must not be a usual function of the Board to enforce or administer collective bargaining agreements . . . Yet, maladministration of agreements now and then, but always unfortunately, force the Boaid to intervene in or even to coi rect situations which impinge upon the law " 196 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD that this was not the sole reason. The penalty was out of proportion to the nature of the offense. The profanity, so far as the evidence discloses, was limited to "hell" and "damn," words which are so common in men's speecn now-adays that business women have long ago ceased to be shocked by them. The evidence has convinced the undersigned, and he so finds, that the principal reason for the discharge of Lee and Wikel on that occasion was that they had shown the temerity to criticize management's decision to increase produc- tion speed without discussing with the Union ways and means as they affected the employees. By such discharge, therefore, the respondent did interfere with, restrain, and coerce its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. Lee, an aggressive chairman of the bargaining committee and president of the Union, was not always tactful in his approach of the representatives of the respondent, as is evident from his opening statement at the meeting to discuss the speed-up. But some of the statements shown by the evidence to have been made by management representatives to the bargaining committee indicate an equal lack of tact. Lee's efforts on behalf of the Union met with contempt and ridicule from Schroen. The latter paid little attention to what transpired in bargaining committee meetings with Wood except to note that such meetings kept the men from their jobs and prevented him from stepping up the schedule of production. When things went well with the bargaining committee, it is doubtful that Schroen heard about them, but when Wood would have difficulty in trying to get Lee to "see management's point of view" then Schroen would hear about Lee's "bull-headedness." That Lee's activities on behalf of the Union was a cause of great irritation to Schroen is plain. He testified that he never had anyone express himself on grievances before as Lee and Wikel did. He looked upon their activities not as those of union represen- tatives, which they were in fact, but as individuals who were always sticking their noses into things that did not concern them. The man he had once been friendly with became, through his legitimate union activities, which were distasteful to Schroen, an irritation which Schroen could scarcely endure. But for the restraining influence of the Act, the undersigned is convinced that Schroen would have discharged Lee for such activities long before he did. It required only slight additional cause therefore to induce Schroen to discharge Lee on the occasions when he did. The nominal cause for Lee's March dis- charge was his profanity, but the essential cause was Schroen's opinion of him as a "sabotaging hoodlum" induced by Lee's union activities. Schroen's appraisal of Lee was utterly lacking in objectivity, in the opinion of the under- signed. Schroen could view Lee only as a malcontent and as an obstructionist It can be seen that the turmoil created by the grievance filed on the Colonial bus job was more than enough added fuel to heat Schroen's disposition toward discharging Lee to the boiling point. The respondent adduced testimony giving as reasons for Lee's discharge : slowness in performing the work on the Colonial bus job; lack of cooperation on that and other jobs; refusal to take orders; Lee's temperament; and the attempt to charge a customer extra for overtime. With regard to the first, the undersigned finds that, omitting the hours when Lee was not working on the bus because he was processing the grievance or doing other assigned work, the work did not take more hours than would be normal on such a job. The testimony shows that Lee and Stinson worked neither faster nor slower than v Asked if the grievance concerning the windows influenced his decision to discharge Lee, Wood answered , "Well, I imagine it had a part in the picture, yes." KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 197 usual . While the respondent did not assign Lee's refusal to work overtime as a cause of discharge," Wood testified that he regarded Lee as non-cooperative when Lee refused to work overtime on the Colonial bus. In measuring the speed with which the bus might have been painted from Tuesday afternoon on the undersigned is satisfied that Schroen was considering the elapsed time and the failure of the painters to work overtime after he had promised his customer they would. The evidence of lack of cooperation was given by Wood and Muller. The objection appears to be that Lee had occasionally forgotten to paint the under- side of a bus and had overlooked touching up little spots, such as screws. This was also characterized by Muller as insubordination " The undersigned cannot regard the fault as either insubordination or refusal to cooperate. In view of the rush the respondent was always in after a bus reached the paint shop, it is not surprising that a few details were overlooked. Muller claimed that he knew the Colonial bus was unpainted on the underside on Friday afternoon at 3:30 and that that influenced him in recommending Lee's discharge. The undersigned does not credit this portion of Muller's testimony. The Colonial bus job was not completed until Saturday morning, but Muller did not see to it that the bottom was painted before it was delivered to the customer. A specific instance of "insubordination" given by Muller was Lee's failure to paint a switch panel and instrument panel when he directed him to. Bnt Muller conceded that Lee had,delegated that job to Stinson who had performed it, that he did not tell Lee he wanted him personally to do the job, that it was customary for him to leave to Lee the direction of Stinson's work, and that, although he thought Stinson was not as capable of doing that job as Lee because it was a "fussy" job, he did not pay much attention to whether or not Stinson did the work satisfactorily. In the opinion of the undersigned, Muller's "complaints" about Lee appear suspiciously like an effort to build up reasons after Lee's discharge had already been decided upon. In any event, the under- signed finds that, even if such causes did enter into his discharge, Lee's union activities were the determining factor. With regard to Lee's temperament, Schroen would have it appear that Lee was a man with a violent temper who would go into tantrums of rage and throw things about. The undersigned finds that Lee had a temper which occasionally flared up when provoked by what Lee regarded as unjust accusa- tions or unreasonable attitudes of management but that his temper did not carry him into tantrums in which he threw things about, nor did it result in any physical violence. Schroen was not testifying from observation as to the throwing episode and obviously confused Lee with another man who had thrown a piece of machinery in a fit of temper. That man had been discharged without opposition from the Union. "The contract limited the number of required hours of work and Wood testified that a man could not be discharged for refusing to work overtime. "Muller testified : " . . . lie would argue with me as to whether or not there was such a screw that wasn ' t painted, and I was constantly being reminded by Mr Schroen that there were screws getting by in previous busses that I didn 't know about, and he had me check them pretty close ." And in another part of his testimony Muller said, . , he would make me point out particular screws and particular parts that should have been touched up , that he would leave to see if I would catch them [ a conclusion on Muller's part ], and I would have to go around and check each thing that I wanted to make sure was done , and I would tell him about it He would say, 'Okay , I will go right back and do that ' And he would go back , and he might get half of them and lie might get all of them , depending on how he happened to feel " 198 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD The undersigned finds that Lee did not seek additional compensation from Ramsay. If he concurred in Stinson 's ill considered jest, this was not one of the causes for Lee's discharge . Muller not only heard Lee explain to Ramsay that Stinson was joking , but he saw that the paint was not dry enough to have ,permitted further work even if Lee and Stinson had been willing to work overtime. Furthermore, this reason was not assigned as a cause by the respondent at the time of Lee's discharge, but was mentioned for the first time in the meeting of July 20 The cause assigned for Stinson 's discharge was first given by Muller as his refusal to work overtime, but Schroen said that was wrong and that the real reason was that Stinson was on 30 days' probation , which time had not expired, and that they were not satisfied with him. The undersigned finds that this was a justification that suggested itself after Stinson's discharge had already been proposed and decided upon and that the real reason for Stinson's discharge was the same as Lee's, that is, the delay occasioned by the processing of the grievance concerning the windows in the Colonial bus together with the additional influencing factor that the painters refused to work overtime to make up for the time already lost . The only example of Stinson 's work which might have been regarded as unsatisfactory was the work he did the night he worked without Lee at the commencement of his employment. About a week before Stinson's discharge , Muller told him he was performing his work satisfactorily . Evidence that Stinson was not discharged for unsatisfactory service appears in Schroen 's own testimony where he related his Friday's activities : So I called Wood into my office and I said, "I don't know how you feel about this situation , but there has got to he something done damn quick." He said, "You know we try to do the best we can, but we just can't get cooperation with Lee and Wikel." It was all in the paint shop and the trim shop . It was all on that side of the building . So at that time, we decided with Mr, Wood and Mr. Muller , and I believe Mr . Muller said, "If you are having so much trouble in the shop here, why don't you get rid of Stinson ? He is on probation, you have got the right to do It." I hadn't thought of that just at the time. The "trouble" Schroen was concerned with was the grievance procedure that interfered with production schedules. A couple of discharges would suffice to curb the tendency to press grievances. With Stinson as with Lee nothing was said about Stinson's suggestions to Ramsay of extra overtime pay until the meeting of July 20 . Even when Ram- say told Wood about it, Wood made no effort to speak to Stinson about it. Wood's failure to pursue the matter suggests that Wood learned that Stinson had not seriously intended to accept additional compensation . In any event It is clear from the record that this incident was not regarded by the respondent as the reason for Stinson's discharge. It is found therefore that the respondent discriminated in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of Wilford Lee and Harry Stinson by discharging them on July 14, 1944, and thereafter1refus- ing to reinstate them. By the discharge of Lee and Stinson for engaging in legitimate union activities, the respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in the Act. c. As to interference , restraint , and coercion The undersigned finds that by the discharge of Union President Garrison and Financial Secretary Prolo in February and March 1942, and the discharge KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 199 of Garrison in May 1942; by inducing Garrison to resign in June 1942; by refusing to bargain with the Union in June 1942, except upon an illegal condi- tion ; by the statement by respondent's President Dennis in February 1942, to a group of employees that the respondent would not deal with an outsider, but would deal with an "inside" organization, the suggestion that the employees elect a "committee," the conduct of a ballot thereon, and Foreman Burkhart's proposal of a certain employee as chairman of the "committee"; by the conduct of Dennis in calling Garrison vulgar and abusive names in May 1942; by Schroen's going over the heads of the bargaining committee to assemble the employees to question the bargaining committee's statements ; by the respond- ent's efforts to effect the removal of Lee or Wikel from the bargaining com- mittee ; by Schroen's effort to discourage Lee's union activities by promising to relieve him of pressure if Lee would curtail such activity ; and by the respondent's acts that have heretofore been found to be violations of the Act, the respondent has interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. Iv. THE EFFECT OF THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES UPON COMMERCE The activities of the respondent set forth in Section III, above, occurring in connection with the operations described in Section 1, above, has a close, inti- mate, and substantial relation to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States, and tend to lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing, commerce and the free flow of commerce. V. THE REMEDY Since it has been found that the respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices, it will be recommended that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act. It has been found that the respondent by discharging Charles Garrison and Irwin Prolo in February and March 1942 committed unfair labor practices. In each instance the respondent reinstated them with back pay. It has also been found that the respondent again committed an unfair labor practice by dis- charging Garrison on May 20, 1942. It has been found that this discharge was not completely remedied since the respondent agreed to a reinstatement of Garrison only on condition that he resign. While Garrison accepted such condition, his acceptance did not remedy the wrong. The respondent's act of requiring Garrison's resignation as a condition to entering into a collective bargaining agreement, was a violation of a public.statute which cannot effec- tively be settled by an individual. The undersigned will therefore recommend that the respondent offer Charles Garrison immediate and full reinstatement to his former or substantially equivalent position without prejudice to his seniority or other rights and privileges. Since no charge was filed on Garrison's final discharge, and, for a period of nearly 3 years, no claim was made that it constituted an unfair labor practice, the undersigned will recommend that the respondent make Garrison whole for any loss of pay he may have suffered by reason of its discrimination against him by payment to him of a sum of money he would normally have earned as wages only from April 27, 1945, (the date of the amendment to the complaint when his last discharge was first 200 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD averred to constitute a violation of the Act) to the date of the respondent's offer to reinstate him, less his net earnings4i during such period. It has been found that the discharge of Lee and Wikel in March 1944, was an unfair labor practice, but they were both reinstated without prejudice to their seniority and other rights and privileges and given full back pay. The only remedy now necessary to remove the effects of that unfair labor practice will be the posting of the notice hereafter recommended. It has been found that the respondent discriminated in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of John Wilford Lee and Harry Stinson by dis- charging them on July 14, 1944, and thereafter refusing to reinstate them. It will therefore be recommended that the respondent offer to each of them imme: diate and full reinstatement to their former or substantially equivalent posi- tions without prejudice to their seniority or other rights and privileges, and make them whole for any loss they may have suffered by reason of the respond- ent's discrimination against them by payment to each of them of a sum of money equal to the amount he normally would have earned as wages from the date of his discharge to the date of the respondent's offer of reinstatement, less his net earnings48 during such period. It has been found that the respondent at the outset refused to bargain with the Union without imposing the illegal condition of Garrison's resignation and that thereafter the respondent has failed to sustain its obligation to bargain within the meaning of the Act. It will therefore be recommended that the respondent cease and desist from such practices and, on request, bargain with the Union as the exclusive representative of all its employees in the appropriate unit. Upon the basis of the above findings of fact and upon the entire record in the case, the undersigned makes the following: CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. United Automobile Workers, A. F. L., is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2 (5) of the Act. 2. By discriminating in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of Charles Garrison, John Wilford Lee, and Harry Stinson, the respondent has engaged In and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (3) of the Act. 3. All employees, excluding supervisory employees with authority to hire, promote, discharge, or discipline, or otherwise effect changes In the status of employees or effectively recommend such actions, clerical employees, and con- fidential clerks, employed at the respondent's plant, constitute a unit appropri- ate for the purposes of collective bargaining, within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act. 4. United Automobile Workers, A. F. L., was on April 10, 1942 , and at all times thereafter has been, the exclusive representative of all the employees in the above-described unit for the purpose of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (a) of the Act. &' By "net earnings" is meant earnings less expenses , such as for transportation, room, and board , incurred by an employee in connection with obtaining work and working else- where than for the respondent , which would not have been incurred but for his unlawful discharge and the consequent necessity of his seeking employment elsewhere. See Matter of Crossett Lumber Company, 8 N. L. it. B. 440. Monies received for work performed upon Federal, State, county, municipal, or other work-relief projects shall be considered as earnings. See Republic Steel Corporation v. N. L. R. B, 311 U. S. 7. u See footnote 47, supra. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 201 5. By refusing on June 2; 1942, to bargain except upon an illegal condition, and by refusing thereafter to bargain with the Union by discouraging its employees from exercising their rights collectively to bargain and present grievances, and by failing and refusing to bargain exclusively with the Union, the respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (5) of the Act. 6. By interfering with, restraining, and coercing its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act, the respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (1) of the Act. 7. The aforesaid unfair labor practices are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. 8. The respondent has not violated the Act by promoting officers of the Union to the positions of foremen. RECOMMENDATIONS Upon the basis of the above findings of fact and conclusions of law, and upon the entire record in the case, the undersigned recommends that the respondent, Kalamazoo Coaches, Inc., its officers, agents, successors, and as- signs, shall: 1. Cease and desist from : (a) Discouraging membership in United Automobile Workers, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, or in any other labor organization of its employees by discharging or refusing to reinstate any of its employees or in any other manner discriminating in regard to their hire and tenure of employ- ment or any term or condition of their employment ; (b) Refusing to bargain collectively with United Automobile Workers A. F. L., as the exclusive representative of all its employees in the above- described appropriate unit ; (c) Discouraging the representatives of the Union from presenting grievances to it and from negotiating thereon ; (d) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing its em- ployees in the exercise of the rights to self-organization, to form labor organiza- tions, to join or assist United Automobile Workers, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, or any other labor organization, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or pro- tection, as guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action, which the undersigned finds will effectuate the policies of the Act : (a) Offer to Charles Garrison, Wilford Lee, and Harry Stinson immediate and full reinstatement each to his former or substantially equivalent position without prejudice to his seniority or other rights and privileges ; (b) Make whole said Garrison, Lee, and Stinson in the manner set forth in the section entitled "The remedy" above ; (c) Upon request bargain collectively with United Automobile Workers, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, as the exclusive representa- tives of all the respondent's employees included in the above-described appro- priate unit ; (d) Post immediately at its plant in Kalamazoo, Michigan, copies of the notice attached hereto, marked "Appendix A." Copies of said notice, to be furnished by the Regional Director of the Fourth Region, shall, after being 202 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD duly signed by the respondent's representative, be posted by the respondent immediately upon the receipt thereof and maintained by it for sixty (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. It is further recommended that, unless on or before ten (10) days from the date of the receipt of this Intermediate Report, the respondent notifies said Regional Director in writing that it will comply with the foregoing recom- mendations , the National Labor Relations Board issue an order requiring the respondent to take the action aforesaid. As provided in Section 33 of Article II of the Rules and Regulations of the National Labor Relations Board, Series 3, as amended, effective July 12, 1944, any party or counsel for the Board may within fifteen (15) days from the date of the entry of the order transferring the case to the Board, pursuant to Section 32 of Article II of said Rules and Regulations file with the Board, Rochambeau Building, Washington 25, D. C., an original and four copies of a statement in writing setting forth such exceptions to the Intermediate Report or to any other part of the record or proceeding (including rulings upon all motions or objections) as he relies upon, together with the original and four copies of a brief in support thereof. Immediately upon the filing of such state- ment of exceptions an&/or brief, the party or counsel for the Board filing the same shall serve a copy thereof upon each of the other parties and shall file a copy with the Regional Director. As further provided in said Section 33, should any party desire permission to argue orally before the Board, request therefor must be made in writing within ten (10) days from the date of the order transferring the case to the Board. JAMES It,. HEMINGWAY, Trial Examiner. Dated July 26, 1945. APPENDIX A NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYEES PURSUANT TO RECOMMENDATIONS OF A TRIAL EXAMINER of the National Labor Relations Board, and in order to effectuate the policies of the National Labor Relations Act, we hereby notify our employees that : We will not in any manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce our employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization, to form labor organiza- tions, to join or assist UNITED AUTOMOBILE WORKERS, A. F. L., or any other labor organization, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection. We will offer to the employees named below immediate and full reinstate- ment to their former or substantially equivalent positions without preju- dice to any seniority or other rights and privileges previously enjoyed, and make them whole for any loss of pay suffered as a result of the discrimination. CHARLES GARRISON , JOHN WILFORD LEE, HARRY STINSON We will bargain collectively upon request with the above-named union as the exclusive representative of all employees in the bargaining unit KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. 203 described herein with respect to rates of pay, hours of employment or other conditions of employment, and if an understanding is reached, embody such understanding in a signed agreement. The bargaining unit is: All employees, excluding supervisory employees with authority to hire, promote, discharge or discipline or otherwise effect changes in the status of employees or effectively recommend such actions, clerical employees, and confidential clerks employed at our plant in Kalamazoo, Michigan. We will not bargain with individual employees concerning wages or rates of pay. Individual employees may personally present grievances to us, but such grievances will be adjusted only through negotiations with the duly selected bargaining representative of the employees in the afore- said appropriate unit. All our employees are free to become or remain members of the above-named union or any other labor organization. We will not discriminate in regard to hire or tenure of employment or any term of condition of employment against any employee because of membership in or activity on behalf of any such labor organization. KALAMAZOO COACHES, INC. Employer. NOTE : Any of the above-named employees presently serving in the Armed Forces of the United States will be offered full reinstatement upon application in accordance with the Selective Service Act after discharge from the Armed Forces. This notice must remain posted for 60 days from the date hereof, and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation