Mistletoe Operating Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsFeb 19, 1959122 N.L.R.B. 1534 (N.L.R.B. 1959) Copy Citation 1534 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD and that the employees were advised they could vote any way they wanted to and their jobs would not be affected thereby. As to this objection, and as to all the other objections, the Regional Director found in the course of his investigation no probative evidence in support thereof.' Accordingly, he recommended they be overruled. Having considered the objections, the Regional Director's report, and the exceptions thereto, we find in agreement with the Regional Director that the objections do not raise substantial and material issues with respect to the conduct of the election. Accordingly, the objections are hereby overruled. As the Union has not secured a majority of the valid votes cast in the election, we shall merely certify the results thereof. [The Board certified that a majority of the valid ballots was not cast for Local 103, Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Work- men of North America, AFL-CIO, and that said organization is not the exclusive representative of the Employer's employees in the unit found appropriate.] 5 Specifically , the Regional Director found that no objectionable conduct affecting the results of the election had occurred between August 15, the date of the Decision and Direction of Election , and September 12, the date on which the election was held. See F. W. Woolworth Company, 109 NLRB 1446. We have fully considered and find no merit in the Union 's request that the Board overrule the cutoff doctrine in the Woolworth case, supra, which holds that only alleged objectionable conduct occurring after the date of the decision and direction of election in a Board -ordered election will be considered. The Union asserts in its brief that the evidence it submitted in support of the objections and pending unfair labor practice charges provides grounds to set aside the election. As above noted , the Regional Director found otherwise , and we agree, so far as concerns such evidence relating to the objections which was timely submitted and disclosed in the Regional . Director ' s investigation . The Union does not allege further evidence which would not be foreclosed by the Woolworth cutoff rule. It appears , in any event , that the discharge of Hall took place prior to the Woolworth cutoff date, and that the discharges of Green, Griffin , and Huckaby did not occur until September 15, 1958, 3 days after the election , and therefore could not have affected the results of the election. Mistletoe Operating Company and Building Service Employees, Local 245, AFL-CIO, Petitioner. Case No. 16-RC-2424. Feb- ruary 19, 1959 DECISION AND DIRECTION OF ELECTION Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before Evert P. Rhea, hearing officer. The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. Upon the entire record in this case the Board finds : 1. The Employer is a partnership of M. Murray McCune and Gordon A. McCune, and is engaged in the business of real estate management in Tulsa, Oklahoma. In 1957 the Employer entered 122 NLRB No. 161. MISTLETOE OPERATING COMPANY 1535 into a contract with the Sunflower Corporation, an Oklahoma corpo- ration, whereby it agreed to operate, maintain, service, and manage an office building in Tulsa, known as the Shell Building, which is owned by Sunflower. Under the terms of the agreement, the Em- ployer furnishes all operating and maintenance services and such other services to tenants of the building as are provided for in leases running between the tenants and Sunflower. During the first 11 months of calendar year 1958, the Employer received approximately $89,500 from Sunflower for operating and management expenses and for fees for its services. In addition it received approximately $12,000 from tenants of the Shell building for services performed in their behalf as well as an undisclosed amount from the owner of a small office building in Oklahoma City, which it also manages under a similar kind of contract.' As is indicated above, Sunflower owns the Shell building, which building is its only physical asset. Of Sunflower's 500 outstanding shares of stock, 245 are held by the Employer's partners as indi- viduals. M. Murray McCune is a director and president of Sun- flower, and Gordon A. McCune is its vice president. The remaining shares of stock and the remaining directorships, and the office of secretary-treasurer are held by the Tulsa Rig, Reel and Manufac- turing Company or by officers or directors of that corporation. Sun- flower has no employees, and although it enters into leasing agree- ments with tenants in the Shell Building, the Employer collects the rentals and transmits them to Sunflower. The principal tenant of the Shell building is the Shell Oil Company which pays rental fees for space and services in excess of $100,000 per annum to Sunflower. The parties stipulated that Shell Oil Company is engaged in inter- state commerce' The Employer contends that its operations are purely local and do not affect commerce within the meaning of the Act, and that in any event, as it is merely the contract manager of the Shell Building, and not the owner, its operations do not satisfy the Board's recently announced jurisdictional standard for office building operations. Ever since the enactment of the National Labor Relations Act in 1935 the Board has consistently held to the position that it better effectuates the policies of the Act and promotes the prompt handling of cases not to exercise its jurisdiction to the fullest possible extent under the authority delegated to it by Congress. For the first 15 years the Board exercised its discretion in this area on a case-by-case basis. In 1950 the Board first adopted certain jurisdictional stand- ards designed to aid it in determining where to draw the dividing 1 This building 's only tenant is Shell Oil Company. 2 The Board has asserted jurisdiction over Shell Oil Company operations in numerous proceedings. 1536 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD line between exercised and unexercised jurisdiction. In 1954 the Board reexamined its jurisdictional policies in the light of its expe- rience under the 1950 standards and' revised' its jurisdictional stand- ards.. At that time the Board noted that "further changes in cir- cumstances may again require future alterations of our determinations one way or another." 3 Consistent with this practice of periodic review of its jurisdictional policies and as a direct consequence of the Supreme Court's decision in P. S. Guss, d/b/a Photo Sound Products Manufacturing Company v. Utah Labor Relations Board 4 denying to the. States authority to assert jurisdiction over enterprises over which the Board declines to exercise its statutory jurisdiction, the Board undertook a thoroughgoing review of its existing juris- dictional policies and of the standards through which such policies were implemented. This review persuaded the Board that the time had come to revise its jurisdictional policies "so that more individ- uals, labor organizations and employers may invoke the rights and protection afforded by the statute." In the Siemons Mailing Service .5 the Board fully set forth the general considerations which persuaded it that this could best be accomplished by the utilization of revised jurisdictional standards as an administrative aid in drawing the jurisdictional dividing line. The Board has chosen this case to set forth the revised standard applicable to enterprises engaged 'in the operation and management of office buildings. The Board has determined that it will effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction over all enterprises engaged in the man- agement'and operation, (whether as owners, lessors, or contract man- agers) of office buildings, if the gross revenue derived from such buildings amounts to $100,000, of which $25,000 must be derived from organizations whose operations meet any of the Board's jurisdictional standards, exclusive of the indirect outflow and indirect inflow standards established in the Siemons Mailing case." This new standard eliminates the requirements contained in the 1954 standard as announced in the McKKinmey case,' that an em- ployer must own or lease the office building involved, must utilize the building primarily to house its own offices, and must otherwise be engaged in interstate commerce, because we believe that this standard should be designed to measure the effect on commerce of a labor dispute between the employees who service and maintain an office building and their employer. Such disputes affect commerce because they interfere, or tend to interfere, with the conduct of the 8 Edwin D. Wemyss, an individual , d/b/a Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Stockton. 110 NLRB 840, 842. 353 U.S. 1. 6122 NLRB 81. 6 Siemons Mailing Service, supra. 7 McKinney Avenue Realty Company, 110 NLRB 547. MISTLETOE OPERATING COMPANY 1537 interstate commercial activities carried on within the building.' Manifestly such effect is not dependent upon the fact that the em- ployer to the employees involved, provides the maintenance and service functions necessary to the operation of the building as an incident of an ownership or leasehold interest, rather than pursuant to a contractual arrangement, as here, with the owner of the build- ing. Nor does the effect depend upon the fact that the interstate activities interfered with, are those of the employer of the employees rather than those of a tenant of the building.' Turning now to appraisal of the impact on commerce of the Em- ployer's operations, we find no merit in the Employer's contentions that its operations do not fall within the Board's jurisdiction, and are, in any event, not within the minimal requirements of its juris- dictional standards. The Shell Building, which the Employer op- erates pursuant to a contract with the Sunflower Corporation, is occupied by several tenants, including the Shell Oil Company. Sunflower Corporation receives in excess of $100,000 in rental fees from Shell Oil Company alone. Accordingly, we find that the Em- ployer's operations satisfy the requirements of the office building standard, as set forth above, and that it will therefore effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction herein.10 2. The labor organization involved claims to represent certain employees of the Employer. 3. A question affecting commerce exists concerning the representa- tion of employees of the Employer within the meaning of Section 9 (c) (1) and Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act. 4. The Petitioner seeks to represent all building service employees, including janitors and janitresses, employed by the Employer at the Shell Building in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The Employer contends that three employes of similar classification, employed by the Employer at the office building it manages in Oklahoma City, should be in- cluded in the unit. The three Oklahoma City employees perform work comparable to that performed by the employees whom Peti- tioner would include in the unit, and are under the same supervision. However, such supervision consists merely of a weekly inspection of the facilities made by one of the McCune brothers. There is no interchange or contact between the employees at the two locations, which are many miles distant from each other. Accordingly, under these circumstances, and in view of the fact that the Petitioner does not seek to represent them, we shall exclude the Oklahoma City employees. 8 N.L.R.B. v. Tri -State Casualty Insurance Company, 188 F . 2d 50 (C.A. 10). 9 See Butler Brothers v. N.L.R.B., 134 F. 2d 981, 983 (C.A. 7). 10 In view of our disposition of this aspect of the case, it is not necessary to determine whether the Employer and Sunflower Corporation constitute a single employer for juris- dictional purposes. 505395-59-vol. 122-98 1538 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD We find that all building service employees, including janitors and janitresses, employed by the Employer in the operation and main- tenance of Shell Building in Tulsa, Oklahoma, excluding office clerical employees, professional employees, engineers, guards and watchmen, and supervisors as defined in the Act constitute a unit appropriate for purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9(b) of the Act. [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication.] MEMBER RODOERS took no part in the consideration of the above Decision and Direction of Election. Interior Enterprises , Inc. and Gerald T. Goard, Gary Alan Hodgins, Frederick H. Keith , James S. Gibson , Robert A. Main, Donald Eugene Loesche , Sherman C. Krause , Guy Benjamin Shepard, John Arnold Hovland , Harry A. Ward, Bobby Fischer,, Louis S. Hodges, Lynn M . Flint, Frank B . Gregory, and Billy D. Shelden Interior Enterprises, Inc. and International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of Amer- ica, Local No. 959. Cases Nob. 19-CA-.1509, 19-CA-1609-1 to .19-CA-1509-14, respectively, and 19-CA-1511. February 20,1959 DECISION AND ORDER REMANDING CASE On July 7, 1958, Trial Examiner James R. Hemingway issued his Intermediate Report in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that the Respondent, a carrier by air, is not an employer within the meaning of Section 2(2) of the complaint on the ground, as set forth in the copy of the Intermediate Report attached hereto. Thereafter, the General Counsel filed exceptions to the Intermediate. Report ac- companied by a supporting brief. The Respondent also filed a brief. The Board has considered the Intermediate Report, the exceptions and briefs, and the entire record in the case, and finds merit in the General Counsel's exceptions. Section 2(2) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, provides: The term "employer" ... shall not include . . . any persons subject to the Railway Labor Act...." In addition to others, not pertinent here, the Railway Labor Act subjects to its coverage: 122 NLRB No. 180. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation