Parker Brothers and Co., Inc.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsDec 9, 1952101 N.L.R.B. 872 (N.L.R.B. 1952) Copy Citation 872 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 6. The strike of July 25, 1951, was caused and prolonged by the Respondent's unfair labor practices. 7. The aforesaid unfair labor practices are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2 ( 6) and (7) of the Act. [Recommendations omitted from publication in U is volumue.] PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. and INTERNATIONAL BROTHER- HOOD OF TEAMSTERS, CHAUFFEURS, WAREHOUSEMEN AND HELPERS, AFL, LOCAL No. 968. Case No. 3S-Cd-141. December 9, 1952 Decision and Order On June 4, 1951, Trial Examiner J. J. Fitzpatrick issued his Inter- mediate Report in the above-entitled proceeding finding that the Re- spondent engaged in and was engaging in certain unfair labor prac- tices in violation of Section 8 (a) (1), (2), and (3) of the Act, and recommending that it cease and desist therefrom and take certain affir- mative action, as set forth in the copy of the Intermediate Report at- tached hereto. The Trial Examiner also found that the Respondent had not engaged in certain other alleged unfair labor practices in violation of Section 8 (a) (2) and (5) of the Act and recommended that the complaint be dismissed as to such allegations. Thereafter, the Respondent; International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers, AFL, Local No. 968, the charging party, herein called the Teamsters; and the General Counsel filed exceptions to the Intermediate Report and supporting briefs. The General Coun- sel also filed request for permission to file reply brief, and attached thereto General Counsel's reply brief. The General Counsel's request and his reply brief pertained solely to the question, raised for the first time in the Respondent 's exceptions and brief, of the General Counsel's failure to serve Shell Workers Independent Union, herein called the Independent, with notice of hearing and complaint, and of including it as a party in the proceeding. The Independent was alleged in the complaint as having been domi- nated, assisted, and supported by the Respondent, and particularly, that it was assisted in the form of a contract with the Respondent con- taining an illegal union-security clause requiring membership in the Independent as a condition of employment, and requiring that the em- ployees execute an authorization for the deduction by the Respondent of membership dues from their wages to be paid over to the Independent. 101 NLRB No. 147. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 873 On October 22, 1951, the Board issued an Order Remanding Case, in which it granted the General Counsel's request to file a reply brief, and on the basis of the Board's own motion remanded the case to the Trial Examiner to permit the General Counsel properly to join the Independent as a party, pursuant to Section 102.8 of Board Rules and Regulations, and to afford the Independent, as a party, full opportunity to participate in the proceeding. Thereafter, the General Counsel served upon the Independent copies of the pertinent formal papers in the proceeding, and on February 5 and 6, 1952, a further hearing was conducted before Trial Examiner Fitzpatrick. On June 18, 1952, the Trial Examiner issued his Supplemental Intermediate Report, which is attached hereto, with respect to the record made in the further hearing. He found, in substance, that the procedural defect in the initial failure of the General Counsel to make the Independent a party was cured by the subsequent action of the General Counsel in naming and serving the Independent as a party, and in affording it an opportunity in the further hearing to cross-examine all the witnesses who testified at the original hear- ing, to introduce evidence, and to participate fully in the proceeding. Thereafter, the Respondent and the Independent filed general ex- ceptions to the Supplemental Intermediate Report and supporting briefs. The Board 1 has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner made at the hearings and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the In- termediate Report and the Supplemental Intermediate Report, the respective exceptions to each of these Reports, the supporting and reply briefs, and the entire record in the case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Trial Exam- iner, with the-following additions and modifications: 1. We are of the opinion that the Independent has properly and effectively been made a party in this proceeding, satisfying the pro- visions of Section 102.8 of Board Rules and Regulations,2 and, inter alia, any requirement in the opinion of the Supreme Court in the Consolidated Edison case.3 Consequently, we need not consider, as did the Trial Examiner, whether the General Counsel's initial failure formally to make the Independent a party constitutes such a pro- 1 Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3 (b) of the Act, the Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three -member panel [ Members Houston , Murdock, and Styles]. 1 Section 102.8 of the Board 's Rules (Series 6 ) defining the term "party" is substantially the same as Section 203.8 of the Rules, which is set forth in full in the Supplemental Intermediate Report , attached hereto. 9 Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc., at al., 305 U. S. 197, 231 , discussed in detail in Supplemental-Intermediate Report. 874 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD cedural defect as would have otherwise precluded the issuance of our Order herein, in whole or in part.' 2. We agree with the Trial Examiner that the Respondent assisted and supported the Independent in violation of Section 8 (a) (1) and (2) of the Act, by engaging in the specific conduct set forth in the Intermediate Report, particularly in the execution and application of an illegal union-security contract requiring membership in the In- dependent as a condition of employment.' The illegality of the con- tract, we find, stems from the fact that it was executed in the absence of a union-shop authorization election then required under the pro- visions of Section 9 (e) of the Act, as was found by the Trial Ex- aminer, and the additional fact that the employees were obligated under the contract to pay dues retroactive for the 30-day grace period after the beginning of their employment, during which period, under the proviso to Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act, membership as a condition of employment could not validly be required in a union-security agreement. In addition, we find that the Respondent also violated Section 8 (a) (1) and (2) of the Act by coercing the employees with respect to their execution of a checkoff authorization for the benefit of the Independent. Thus, as shown in the Intermediate Report, the Re- spondent enforced its contract with the Independent, which provided in part : The Company agrees that each new employee when hired shall be presented with a printed form of application for membership in the Union, which shall contain an authorization for deduction from the employee's pay of the amount of his initiation fee and monthly fees in the Union which form shall be executed by the new employee . . . [Emphasis added.] Therefore, in view of the coercion applied by the Respondent in this respect, we adopt the holding of the Trial Examiner that the em- ployees are entitled to the reimbursement of all fees and dues deducted from their wages since December 27, 1949,11 and paid over to the Independent.' 4 We reject as without merit the Independent's contention that, insofar as the Section 8 (a) (2) allegations in the case are concerned, the limitation provision in Section 10 (b) of the Act was tolled only from the time the Independent was made a party, and that because these alleged unfair labor practices were not proved to have occurred within 6 months immediately preceding the service on the Independent as a party, these allegations in the complaint should be dismissed. The limitation clause in Section 10 (b) of the Act expressly and unambiguously relates only to the Board's power to issue a complaint, and thus limits the Board in proceeding against "respondents," as distinguished from "parties." ' Julius Resnick, Inc., 86 NLRB 38. ' This date antecedes by not more than 6 months the date of the filing of the original charge herein, pursuant to the limitation provision of Section 10 (b) of the Act. ' See Federal Stores Division of Spiegel, Inc., 91 NLRB 647. See also N. L. R. B. v. I. Spiewak i Sons, 179 F. 2d 695 (C. A. 3). PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 875 As the General Counsel filed no exceptions to the Intermediate Report in these respects, we do not pass upon the Trial Examiner's failure to find, and upon his factual conclusions preliminary thereto, (a) that the Respondent dominated the Independent in violation of Section 8 (a) (2) of the Act; and (b) that the Respondent engaged in conduct, other than that specifically found in the Intermediate Report,8 which independently constituted interference with the em- ployees in violation of Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act. 3. We are also in accord with the conclusion of the Trial Examiner that the Respondent discharged L. W. Miller from his employment in violation of the Act, and that Miller should therefore be reinstated and made whole for any loss of pay he suffered as a result thereof. In our opinion, Miller's discharge is attributable directly to the Inde- pendent's action after the strike in rejecting Miller as a member of that organization, and formally notifying the Respondent to this effect." As already shown, the existing contract between these par- ties required, albeit without statutory sanction, membership in the Independent as a condition of employment. The Independent's notice to the Respondent we view as tantamount to a request for Miller's discharge. In the circumstances of this case, including the timing of Miller's discharge following shortly upon the Respondent's receipt of the Independent's notice, it is reasonable to conclude, as we do, that the Respondent so interpreted the Independent's notice, or in any event, undertook to discharge Miller because of such notice of Miller's rejection by the Independent. We find, therefore, that the Respondent discriminatorily discharged Miller, thereby encourag- ing membership in the Independent in violation of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. Moreover, we believe, in any case, that Miller's discharge by the Respondent was inextricably related to the protected con- certed activities carried on by Miller during and after his participa- tion in the strike, whether these activities be regarded as favoring or opposing the Teamsters or the Independent. Consequently, whether Miller's discharge is considered as violative of Section 8 (a) (1) or 8 (a) (3) of the Act, the remedy recommended by the Trial In affirming the Trial Examiner 's finding that the Respondent violated Section 8 (a) (1) by urging its employees to abandon the Teamsters and bargain through the Independ- ent, we view the statements in question as more than mere expressions of opinion by the Respondent . When considered in context with the Respondent's unlawful acts of assistance and support of the Independent , these statements must be regarded as further active manifestations of the Respondent 's intent to aid one of two competing unions, thus amount- ing to verbal pressure not protected by Section 8 (e) of the Act. Corning Glees Works, 100 NLRB 444. The Independent 's letter to the Respondent dated June 19, 1950 , reads as follows : "This is to notify you, the Committee of the Shell Workers Independent union have rejected Mr. L. W. Miller for Membership in the Organization , upon evidence and proof, of the Members in that Department , we request that you do not hold any Int fee or dues from his pay check." ( sic) 876 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Examiner and ordered herein is required, in our opinion, to effectuate the policies of the Act. Like the Trial Examiner, we are constrained to regard the Respondent's many and varied reasons assigned as cause for Miller's discharge as merely pretexts for its actual discriminatory purpose. 4. We concur too with the Trial Examiner's finding that the Re- spondent did not unlawfully refuse to bargain with the Teamsters. However, we do not adopt his conclusion that a unit which embraces 56 truck drivers at all of the Respondent's plants is necessarily the appropriate unit for collective bargaining. As fully described in the Intermediate Report, the Teamsters' representation evidence of 32 authorization cards was confined to a basic group of 36 concrete mixer and 2 dump truck drivers, under the separate supervision of McCollum, at the Respondent's Engle Street plant, in Houston, Texas.7° The Engle Street plant also employs, under Hilty's general yard supervision, 8 yard employees who devote the majority of their time to miscellaneous trucking duties. In addition, the Respondent operates, in Houston, a plant or shipyard located at Greens Bayou, where 5 winch truck drivers function, under Sykora's supervision, as part of a major repair crew. A third plant of the Respondent en- gaged in sand and gravel operations in Columbus, Texas, 95 miles from Houston, employs 5 employees, under Clark's supervision, who drive dump trucks essentially in and around those premises. The total of the enumerated drivers at the 3 plants thus constitutes the unit found by the Trial Examiner. On the basis of this record evidence, we do not agree that only a company-wide unit of all truck drivers is appropriate, but hold that a unit less comprehensive in scope may also be appropriately How- ever, with respect to such an over-all unit of 56 drivers. we do agree with the Trial Examiner that the Teamsters did not represent an uncoerced majority 12 With respect to any less comprehensive unit which may be appropriate, we are of the view that the Teamsters, in making its bargaining request, did not clearly communicate to the Respondent a sufficiently specific description of the unit for which it desired, to bargainl3 Thus, the Teamsters' sole written demand of 10 It appears that in the Teamsters' strike of May 4 , 1950 , all of the 28 participants were from this basic group of 38 drivers. 11 We note that the Respondent 's unit position in the case is, in order of preference, (1) all employees , (2) all drivers at the Engle Street plant , and (3 ) all drivers at the three plants. 32 Of the 32 drivers who signed authorization cards, 9 testified in regard to alleged coercive organizational conduct by the Teamsters , of whom we find at least 5 were coerced by statements of representatives of the Teamsters to the effect that they would lose their jobs if they did not join the Teamsters. The required majority of 29 in the unit of 56 drivers was therefore lacking. 13 See The C . L. Bailey Grocery Company , 100 NLRB 94 . Members Houston and Styles, although dissenting in the Bailey case , deem themselves bound by the principle of law stated therein , and find that the instant case is governed by that principle insofar as the refusal to bargain issue is concerned. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 877 the Respondent stated merely that "a majority of your employees are now members." 14 And in telephone conversations with the Re- spondent, the Teamsters' unit claim, as found by the Trial Examiner, was narrowed merely to the category of truck drivers. No further clarification of the unit was made by the Teamsters, although, as already noted, it had limited its organization to the 38 mixer and dump truck drivers under McCollum; and its unit position, as re- vealed in the trial of the case, was that it desired to represent only this basic group of 38 McCollum drivers, or alternatively, the entire group of 46 drivers at the Engle Street plant.15 Accordingly, we shall dismiss the Section 8 (a) (5) allegation in the complaint. Order Upon the entire record in this case, and pursuant to Section 10 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, the National Labor Relations Board hereby orders that the Respondent, Parker Brothers and Com- pany, Inc., Houston, Texas, its officers, agents, successors, and assigns : 1. Cease and desist from : (a) Recognizing Shell Workers Independent Union as the repre- sentative of any of its employees for the purpose of dealing with the Respondent concerning grievances, labor disputes, wages, rates of pay, hours of employment, or other conditions of employment, unless and until said organization shall have been certified by the National Labor Relations Board. (b) Performing or giving effect to any contract with the Shell Workers Independent Union, or to any modification, extension, sup- plement, or renewal thereof, unless and until said organization shall have been certified by the National Labor Relations Board 16 (c) Interfering with, lending support to, or assisting the Shell Workers Independent Union, or any other labor organization of its employees. (d) Discouraging membership in the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers, AFL, Local No. 968, or encouraging membership in Shell Workers Independent Union, or any other labor organization of its employees, by discharg- ing 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 employment. 14 The Respondent employs a total of about 345 employees. 15 Organizer Pate testified that the Teamsters was not aware that the Respondent had truck drivers at any place but the Engle Street plant. 16 However, nothing herein shall be construed to require that the Respondent vary or abandon the terms or conditions of employment established in any current agreement with the Independent , or any modification , extension, supplement , or renewal thereof, or any superseding agreement , or to prejudice the assertion by the employees of any rights they may have thereunder. 878 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD (e) Interrogating its employees concerning their membership and activities on behalf of International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers, AFL, Local No. 968, or any other labor organization; or promising benefits to its employees or otherwise unduly seeking to influence their selection or repudiation of, or adherence to, any labor organization. (f) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing its employees in the exercise of their rights to form, join, or assist International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers, AFL, Local No. 968, or any other labor organization, to bargain collectively through representatives of their choosing, and to engage in concerted activities for the purposes of collective bar- gaining or other mutual aid or protection, or to refrain from any or all such activities except to the extent that such right may be affected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organization (as authorized in Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act) 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) Withdraw and withhold recognition from Shell Workers Independent Union as the representative of any of its employees for the purpose of collective bargaining with respect to grievances, labor disputes, wages, rights of sharing hours of employment, or other con- ditions of employment, unless and until said organization shall have been certified by the National Labor Relations Board. (b) Reimburse all its employees whose fees and dues in the Inde- pendent were checked off, for the amounts thereof deducted from their wages since December 27, 1949. (c) Offer to L. W. Miller immediate and full reinstatement to his former or substantially equivalent position, without prejudice to his seniority or other rights and privileges, and make him whole in the manner described in the section of the Intermediate Report entitled "The Remedy." (d) Post at its Engle Street plant and its shipyard in Houston, Texas, and at its plant in Columbus, Texas, copies of the notice at- tached hereto marked "Appendix A." 17 Copies of such notice, to be furnished by the Regional Director for the Sixteenth Region, shall, after being duly signed by the Respondent's representative, be posted by the Respondent immediately upon 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. 77 In the event that this Order is enforced by a decree of the United States Court of Appeals, there shall be substituted for the words "Pursuant to a Decision and Order" the words "Pursuant to a Decree of the United States Court of Appeals, Enforcing an Order." PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 879 Reasonable steps shall be taken by the Respondent to insure that said notices are not altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. (e) Notify the Regional Director, in writing, within ten (10) days from the date of this Order what steps Respondent has taken to comply herewith. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED , insofar as the complaint alleges that the Respondent violated Section 8 (a) (5) of the Act, and that it domi- nated the Independent in violation of Section 8 (a) (2) of the Act, and that it engaged in surveillance and acts of interference with the employees' protected rights under the Act, as to which violations are not found herein, that the complaint be, and the same is hereby, dismissed. Appendix A NOTICE TO ALL EMPLOYEES Pursuant to a Decision and Order 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 withdraw and withhold all recognition from SHELL WORKERS INDEPENDENT UNION as the representative of any of our employees for the purpose of dealing with us concerning grievances, labor disputes, wages, rates of pay, hours of employ- ment , or other conditions of employment, unless and until SHELL WORKERS INDEPENDENT UNION shall have been certified by the National Labor Relations Board as the bargaining representative. WE WILL cease performing or giving effect to any contract with the SHELL WORKERS INDEPENDENT UNION, or to any modification, extension, supplement, or renewal thereof, unless and until said organization shall have been certified by the National Labor Relations Board. WE WILL NOT interfere with, assist , or support any labor organ- ization of our employees. WE WILL reimburse all of our employees whose fees and dues in the SHELL WORKERS INDEPENDENT UNION have been checked off since December 27, 1949, for the amounts thus deducted from their wages. WE WILL offer to L. W. Miller immediate and full reinstatement to his former or substantially equivalent position, without prej- udice to any seniority or other rights and privileges previously enjoyed, and make him whole for any loss of pay suffered as a result of the discrimination. 880 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD WE WILL NOT interrogate our employees concerning their mem- bership and activities on behalf of INTERNATIONAL BROTHER- HOOD OF TEAMSTERS, CHAUFFEURS, WAREHOUSEMEN AND HELPERS, AFL, LOCAL No. 968, or any other labor organization ; or prom- ise benefits to our employees or otherwise unduly seek to influence their selection or repudiation of, or adherence to, any labor or- ganization; or in any other manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce our employees in the exercise of their right to self-organi- zation, to form labor organizations, to join or assist INTERNA- TIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF TEAMSTERS, CHAUFFEURS, WAREHOUSE- MEN AND HELPERS, AFL, LOCAL No. 968, 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 protec- tion, or to refrain from any or all such activities, except to the extent that such right may be affected by an agreement requiring membership in a labor organization as a condition of employ- ment as provided in Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. All our employees are free to become, remain, or refrain from be- coming members Of INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF TEAMSTERS, CHAUFFEURS, WAREHOUSEMEN AND HELPERS, AFL, LOCAL No. 968, or any other labor organization. We will not, except to the extent that this right may be affected by an agreement in conformity with Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act, discriminate in regard to the hire or tenure of employment, or any term or condition of employment against any employee because of membership in or nonmembership in any labor organization. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC., Employer. Dated ---------------- By---------------------------------- This notice must remain posted for sixty (60) consecutive days from the date hereof, and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. Intermediate Report STATEMENT OF THE CASE Upon an original charge and an amended charge by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers, AFL, Local No. 968, herein called the Teamsters, the General Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board, through the Regional Director for the Sixteenth Region (Fort Worth, Texas), issued a complaint dated January 19, 1951, against Parker Brothers and Company, Inc., herein called the Respondent, alleging that the Respondent had engaged in and was engaging in unfair labor practices affect- PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 881 ing commerce within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (1), (2), (3), and (5), and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, 61 Stat. 136, herein called the Act. Copies of the charges were served upon the Respondent promptly after the filing thereof and copies of the complaint and notice of hearing thereon were duly served upon the Respondent and the Teamsters. With respect to the unfair labor practices, the complaint, as amended at the hearing, alleges that from on or about December 27, 1949, to the date of the issuance of the complaint, the Respondent has assisted, dominated, and con- tributed to the support of and interfered with the administration of the Shell Workers Independent Union, herein called the Independent, by (1) executing, observing, and continuing in full force and effect a contract with the Independent containing an illegal union-security clause, and wherein it required its employees and/or applicants for employment to execute as a term and condition of em- ployment applications for membership in the Independent and an authorization for deductions of dues to be paid the Independent; that pursuant to such au- thorizations the Respondent has deducted dues from the pay checks of its em- ployees and paid them to the Independent; (2) on or about April 28, 1930, and at all times thereafter, the Respondent through C. M. McCollum, supervisor of its truck drivers at the Engle Street plant, has interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of their rights as guaranteed in the Act; (3) on or about May 1, 1950, and at all times thereafter, Respondent has refused and continues to refuse to bargain with the Teamsters as the exclusive representative of all of its employees in an appropriate unit; and (4) on or about June 28, 1950, discharged L. W. Miller, and has since refused to reinstate Miller to his former or substantially equivalent position because he joined or assisted the Teamsters, refused to join or assist the Independent, failed to become a member of the Independent, or engaged in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid and protection. The Respondent's answer, as supplemented and amended at the hearing, admits certain allegations as to the nature of its business and the discharge and refusal to reinstate Miller, but denies that the Board has jurisdiction, or that the Respondent dominated the Independent or refused to bargain with the Teamsters; alleges that Miller was discharged for cause and that at all times material herein Respondent had a valid contract with the Teamsters covering the employees involved herein.' The Respondent's original answer also included a motion "to quash the charge herein" because (a) the original charge, dated June 27, 1950, "appears to have been abandoned and superseded" by the charge dated October 20, 1950; (b) the October 20 charge "purports to be an amended charge" and an amended charge is not authorized by law; and (c) the October charge alleging that Miller was unlawfully discharged is not signed by "an aggrieved party." The motion to quash was denied in its entirety. Also denied was a motion by the Respondent to dismiss the complaint because (a) the charges are "Insufficient in law," are vague and indefinite, and are not executed by a person aggrieved ; (b) some of the acts alleged occurred more than 6 months prior to the filing of the charges; and (c) the complaint contains no prayer for relief.' ' Other affirmative allegations In the answer will be referred to hereafter. I In view of this last contention, and at my suggestion, and for the information of the parties and the convenience of opposing counsel, the General Counsel stated on the record at the opening of the hearing the remedy that In his judgment should be applied in the event of a finding against the Respondent and in order to effectuate the purposes of the Act. This recommendation , modified at the close of the hearing , was reiterated again in General Counsel 's brief. 882 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD The answer also included a motion to dismiss the refusal-to-bargain allega- tion in the complaint as vague and indefinite, and to dismiss the allegation of domination of the independent because of insufficiency ; or, in the alternative, that the General Counsel be required to furnish a bill of particulars concerning the refusal to bargain and domination. The motion to dismiss was denied as was also the alternative motion for specificity on the refusal-to-bargain and domination allegations. As paragraph 8 of the complaint alleges that the Re- spondent's domination and support of the Independent is "not limited," to the execution and continuance in effect of the contract with that organization and the deduction of Independent's dues, the General Counsel, upon my request, stated on the record that other acts that he would rely upon to support the 8 (a) (2) allegations in the complaint consisted of evidence to substantiate the 8 (a) (1), (3), and (5) allegations of the complaint. Pursuant to notice a hearing was held at Houston, Texas, at various dates, starting February 13 and ending February 24, 1951, before J. J. Fitzpatrick, the undersigned duly designated Trial Examiner. The General Counsel, the Re- spondent, and the Union were represented by counsel and participated in the hearing, were afforded full opportunity to be heard, to examine and cross-examine witnesses, and to introduce evidence bearing upon the issues. At the opening of the bearing when the various motions above referred to were being disposed of, the General Counsel's motion was denied to strike certain affirmative allega- tions in the answer relevant to the refusal-to-bargain issue.' At the conclusion of the hearing the parties waived oral argument but were given time in which to file briefs and/or findings of fact and conclusions of law. Briefs have since been received from the General Counsel, the Teamsters, and the Respondent. Upon the entire record in the case, and from my observation of the witnesses, I make the following: FINDINGS of FAOT I. THE BUSINESS OF THE RESPONDENT Parker Brothers and Company, Inc., is a Texas corporation with its principal office and place of business in Houston, Texas. Its largest plant is located near Engle Street and Navigation Boulevard, and is referred to in the record as the Engle Street plant. It also operates a shipyard in Greens Bayou in Houston, and a gravel plant at Columbus, Texas, about 95 miles from Houston. The Re- spondent is engaged in the manufacture, sale, and transportation of shell; sand, ' The affirmative allegations were • (1) If the Teamsters ever secured any bargaining rights, said rights were forfeited by the Teamsters (a) calling the Respondent's employees out on strike in breach of a valid existing contract, containing a no-strike clause and (b) conducting a secondary boycott in violation of the criminal laws of Texas; (2) that the Teamsters assembled some of the Respondent's truck drivers in a tavern about April 27. 1950, furnished them with free beer, misrepresented the "binding force" of the Independent contract because the Independent had not been incorporated, and while many of such drivers were "intoxicated" and "not acting under their free will," induced them to authorize the Teamsters to represent them in collective-bargaining proceedings ; (3) that the Teamsters' bargaining requests were not in good faith because of the existing contract, and the Teamsters and Houston Building and Construction Council (with which the Teamsters was affiliated) ; (a) "pre-determined" that a strike should be called at the Respondent's Engle Street plant, and (b) attempted to force a closed shop on the entire building and trades industry in the city of Houston by picketing the Respondent and its customers and conducting a city-wide boycott. 4 Oyster shells dredged from Galveston Bay. The shells are broken into fine cinders and used in the manufacture of concrete and cement PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 883 gravel , cement, and concrete. It is also engaged in the business of building and repairing ships, boats, dredges, and tugs at its shipyard . During the fiscal year ending May 31, 1950, it aggregated $6,534,187.47 from the sale of its products and income from the shipyard. The sales included over $3,400,000 worth of products sold to the cities of Houston and South Houston , and the counties of Galveston and Harris , Texas, for the repair and construction of highways and buildings. It sold sand, shell, gravel, concrete, and rendered towing services to Trinity Port- land Cement Division of Portland Cement Company to the value of over $600,000, including 800,000 cubic yards of shell valued at $546,516.04,` which was utilized in the manufacture of over $2,000,000 barrels of cement . This cement sold for over $6,000,000, $1,895,400 in value thereof going to sources outside of the State of Texas. The Respondent sold $36,011 worth of oyster shells to Shell Builder Coin- pany, which used the shell to manufacture $451,276 worth of poultry and feed mixes, over half of which mixes were sent across the State line. The Respondent sold more than $200,000 in value of shell to the Texas Division of the Dow Chem- ical Company, which shell was used to make lime in the manufacture of certain types of metals and chemicals sold for over $2,000,000, 95 percent thereof going outside the State! The record discloses other manufacturing concerns purchas- ing substantial amounts of shell to be used in the manufacture of products from 10 to 50 percent of which products are sold outside the State of Texas. During the same fiscal period, the Respondent purchased a total of $2,826,564 37 worth of equipment, material, and merchandise consisting of engine parts, machinery parts, oil, gasoline, pumps, motors, gas, steel, lumber, electric power, asphalt, cement, sand, and miscellaneous equipment' It paid over $34,000 to the Central Light and Power Company of Columbus, Texas, and the Houston Light and Power of Houston, Texas, for electric power, purchased over $184,000 worth of oil, gasoline, asphalt, and fuel from numerous oil companies, including Eastern States Petroleum Oil Co. Inc., Gulf Continental Oil Company, Magnolia Petroleum Company, Sinclair Refining Company, Texas Oil Corporation, and Humble Oil and Refining Company and purchased equipment and supplies valued at more than $68,000 from the International Harvester Company, General Elec- tric Company, Electric Wire and Cable Company, Fairbanks-Morse & Company, and other large corporations appearing in the record, all of whom are engaged in interstate commerce. Although the Respondent contends that the nature of its business is such that it is not advisable for the Board to take jurisdiction over it, I find, in con- formity with the recently announced jurisdictional standards of the Board, that the Respondent is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act and that the Board should take jurisdiction thereof." II. THE ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers, AFL, Local No. 968, and Shell Workers Independent Union are labor organizations admitting to membership employees of the Respondent. ' These oyster shells were dredged from Red Fish and Hanna Reefs located from 12 to 15 miles o8 shore In Galveston Bay. 9 The oyster shells provided necessary calcium in the manufacture of the above products, but did not become a constituent part of the manufactured product. ' Included in the above total of $2,826,564.37 is the sum of $430,123 80 used In securing material to build and equip a dredge boat, a nonrecurring expense item. s Stanislaus Implement L Hardware Company, Limited, 91 NLRB 618; Hollow Tree Lumber Go, 91 NLRB 635; Minimax Stores, 91 NLRB 644; Hallsburton Portland Cement Company, 91 NLRB 717. 242305-53-57 884 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD III. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. Background and sequence of ercnts 1. The first Teamsters ' strike ; organization of the Association In the year 1937, after an organizing campaign, Teamsters' Local 367 struck Respondent to force recognition of it as the bargaining representative of its truck drivers! The strike was called off when the Respondent agreed to negoti- ate. Bargaining resulted in agreement on terms for a contract, but the strike was resumed after 3 weeks when the Respondent refused to execute a written contract with the Teamsters, with about half the Respondent's employees par- ticipating. It lasted several months, and there was bitterness and some violence. A restraining order was secured by the Respondent, a contempt proceeding fol- lowed, and the strike was finally broken. Thereafter, no serious effort was made by Local 367, or any other local of the Teamsters, to organize the Respond- ent's employees, until 1949, as will hereafter appear After the strike was broken as above found, an inside union was organized in 1937 in the Respondent's plants, known as the Independent Workers Benefit Association of Parker Brothers and Company, herein called the Association. The Respondent recognized and bargained with the Association as the exclusive bargaining representative of all its employees until the summer of 1946. During these years, as provided in the contracts, the Respondent deducted Association dues from its employee members' pay checks and turned the dues so collected into the Association's treasury. Largely because two of its officers were super- visors,10 the legitimacy of the Association as a bargaining agency for the employees was questioned and the Association voluntarily dissolved about August 13, 1946. The money it had accumulated in its treasury was donated to a crippled chil- dren's fund. Prior to the dissolution of the Association as a bargaining agency, the Sea- farers International Union, AFL, had been attempting to organize Respondent's marine employees, and on July 20, 1946, tiled with the Board a petition con- cerning their representation. 2. Organization of the Independent ; its contractual relations with the Respondent Before the dissolution of the Association as above found and about the time the Seafarers filed its petition for representation, a movement was started to organize a new union among the Respondent's employees in its various plants. Carl L. Yaws, leaderman in the repair crew at the Engle Street plant, assisted by George W. Williams and R. L. Bierman, welder and electrician respectively at the shipyard, sparked the movement. These 3, acting as a sort of informal committee, but after consultation with other employees and ap- parently with their approval, retained an attorney who prepared formal bylaws for the Shell Workers Independent Union. Yaws, Bierman, and Williams then circulated petitions among the employees adopting the bylaws and authorizing the Independent to act as their bargaining agent. By August 12 they had secured 64 signatures from the various plants, including several captains and mates of vessels owned and operated by the Respondent. Neither Supervisors Brown nor McCollum, officers in the Association as above found, took any part in this campaign nor did they become members of the Independent. At an ° In 1937, Local 367 was the only Teamsters' local in Aariis County, Texas, which includes the Houston area 10 C H Brown, Respondent's port engineer, was president, and C H. McCollum, in charge of the Respondent's truck drivers and hereafter referred to, was secretary of the Association. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 885 organizational meeting on August 12 , 1946, Yaws was elected president, Wil- liams, vice president , and Bierman , secretary of the Independent . These officers then continued their solicitation and by September considerably more than a majority of all the Respondent's employees had signed applications and dues- deduction authorizations. In October of that year , when the Seafarers ' petition for representation came on for hearing (Case No. 16-11-1893), the Independent intervened as did also the National Maritime Union (CIO). At that hearing the Independent con- tended that the alleged unit of maritime employees was inappropriate, and asked for a unit consisting of all the employees of the Respondent in all of its branches. On the second day of the hearing the Seafarers asked leave to withdraw its petition and on November 6 the request was formally granted by the Regional Director." After the formal withdrawal of the Seafarers' petition as above set forth, the Respondent recognized the Independent and began negitiating a contract with that organization as exclusive representative of all its employees in all of its plants, exclusive of professional and supervisory groups. On March 1, 1947, a 1-year contract containing an automatic renewal clause was executed. The contract required old employees who were Independent members to con- tinue their membership and required all new employees to join that union and sign a dues-deduction authorization. Although the contract as above found was not executed until March 1, 1947, the record discloses that the Respondent deducted monthly dues from the pay of its member employees beginning in November or December 1946, and thereafter. In January 1949, and again in January 1950, contracts were negotiated and executed with the Independent. Both contracts carried forward the union-security provisions of the 1947 contract and Respondent continued to enforce union-security provisions contained therein insofar as requiring dues authorizations and applications for member- ship by new employees until at least the fall of 1950. 3. Organization of the Teamsters' local Meanwhile, beginning about August 1949, John H. Pate, business agent for Local 968 of the Teamsters, started a campaign to organize the Respondent's truck drivers. About 10 applications were secured that fall and by May 1, 1950, the Teamsters had initiated as members 24 of the 37 or 38 truck drivers in the Respondent's Engle Street plant and had applications signed by several more drivers. On that date it sent a written request to the Respondent to recognize the Teamsters as the bargaining agent, and negotiate a contract. The request was refused. On the morning of May 4, after a strike vote the previous evening, and notwithstanding a provision in the current contract with the Independent prohibiting "strikes, slowdowns, or stoppages of any kind," all but 10 of the truck drivers at Engle Street failed to report for work. The strike thus in- augurated by the Teamsters and supported by the Houston Building and Con- struction Council, above referred to, lasted for several months. Pickets were established at the entrance to the Engle Street plant and there is evidence that other pickets followed Respondent's trucks for a while at least to its various customers in the Houston area in order to picket such trucks at their destination. On May 10, Respondent notified all striking drivers to return to work by May 15, or their jobs would be filled. On May 11, 2 strikers including L. W. Miller, returned to work. Other strikers followed at intervals during 11 So far as the record discloses , neither the Seafarers nor the National Maritime onion (who favored a unit similar to that asked by the Seafarers ) have taken any active interest in organizing Respondent's maritime employees since the withdrawal of the above petition. 886 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD the summer , and by early September all the strikers had returned to work except 1 or 2 who secured other employment , and the picketing ceased. All the strikers who returned to work, except Miller , signed applications to rejoin the Independent and were accepted into that organization . Miller applied for membership but was rejected by the Independent , of which fact the Respondent had knowledge. Miller was discharged on June 28 , 1950, and has not since been reinstated. About the middle of December 1950, Respondent and the Independent began negotiating the terms of a new contract . The contract as finally agreed to was executed February 1, 1951 , effective for 2 years from December 1 , 1950. The union-shop provisions of the previous contract were not included. B. Domination , support , and interference As previously found , the Independent was organized in 1946 at a time when Seafarers were claiming representation of part of the Respondent 's employees, and the previously recognized Association ( organized and officered by super- visors.) was voluntarily dissolving . After its organization dues of employee members were deducted from their wages by management , even before the con- tract providing for such deductions was executed . The union-security provisions in the 1950 contract and also in the 1949 contract , are as follows : All employees of the Company in the collective bargaining unit above de- fined who are members of the Union in good standing at the date of the execution of this agreement shall continue to remain members of the Union in good standing for the duration of this agreement as a term, and con- dition of their employment . All new employees who shall be hired after the execution of this agreement shall immediately upon their hiring, make ap- plication for membership in the Union , and upon the completion of their probation period, herein provided for shall become members of the Union, if accepted by vote of the Union membership , and shall pay to the Union their initiation fee and one month's back dues covering their probation period. Such new employees shall thereafter be required to remain mem- bers of the Union in good standing for the duration of this agreement as a term and condition of their employment . The Company agrees that each new employee when hired shall be presented with a printed form of appli- cation for membership in the Union , which shall contain an authorization for deduction from the employee 's pay of the amount of his initiation fee and monthly dues in the Union which form shall be executed by the new employee in triplicate , one copy thereof to be retained by the Company, and one copy thereof to be delivered by the Company to the Union, and one copy to be retained in application book and returned to the Union when completely filled. All employees of the Company in the collective bargain- ing unit above defined, who have not yet completed the probation period hereinafter defined, shall immediately upon the execution of this agree- ment make application for membership in the Union , by executing said ap- plication and initiation fees and dues deduction authorization form in triplicate, and upon completion of their probation period , if continued in the employ of the Company , shall join the Union , if accepted for member- ship by vote of the Union , and shall thereafter be required to remain mem- bers of the Union in good standing for the duration of this agreement as a term and condition of their employment. It is the intent hereof that all employees of the Company in the collective bargaining unit above defined, who have heretofore , or who shall hereafter PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 887 complete their probationary period shall be required to become and to remain members of the Union in good standing for the duration of this agreement as a term and condition of employment. Employees who fail to become members of the Union, or who after becoming members, fail to main- tain their membership in the Union in good standing, shall after ten (10) days' written notice by the Union to the Company, with copy thereof to the employee affected, during which ten (10) days the employee may have an opportunity to become a member of the Union in good standing, or to restore his membership in good standing, be discharged by the Company at the request of the Union. The Company agrees that in the reinstatement or reemployment of employees who have been heretofore or are hereafter laid off by the Com- pany due to no fault of their own, preference shall be given to qualified applicants who at the time of their layoff were members of the Union in good standing. To implement the above provisions, the Respondent provided new employees with Independent application and dues-deduction forms. There is ample cred- ible testimony that Respondent carried out the union-security provisions at least until September 1950.12 While the union-security provisions above set forth were legal at the time of the execution of the 1947 contract, such provisions became illegal in contracts executed after the effective date of the amendment to the Act (August 22, 1947), unless a union-shop election was held by the employees in conformity with a proviso in Section 8 (a) (3) and the terms of Section 9 (e) of the amended Act. No such elections have been held in the Respondent's plants. 1. Supervisor McCollum's activities The complaint also alleges , and the Respondent denies, that the activities of Supervisor McCollum not only constituted interference and restraint of the employees in the exercise of their rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act, but also constituted assistance and support of the Independent. About April 27, 1950, according to the credible testimony of McCollum, who had been secretary of the now defunct Association and was in charge of the truck drivers at the Engle Street plant, President Yaws and R. M. (Tony) Powledge, president and truck drivers' steward, respectively, for the Independ- ent, told him that the truck drivers were "badly dissatisfied." At that time McCollum questioned some of the drivers about their complaints and learned that they were being organized by the Teamsters. A driver, F. J. Schoenwitz, testified credibly and without denial that about a week before May 4 (when the strike started), McCollum asked him if he was "going out and join the [Team- sters] with the rest of the boys." On Friday, April 28, at McCollum' s sugges- tion , Steward Powledge called all the drivers to a meeting after work that evening in the plant. According to McCollum, he, at this meeting, told the drivers he understood that they had joined the Teamsters and that he then tried to get them to agree to let him and an Independent committee present their grievances to Captain W. R. (Bill) Parker, the Respondent's president and active head, but that the suggestion was rejected. Driver E. W. Dickey testified that at the time McCollum criticized the drivers for joining the Team- sters without first coming to him or to the Independent, and stated that he had 12 This is particularly true as to the provisions requiring the execution of dues-deduction authorizations and securing signatures from new applicants to Independent application forms. 888 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD had experience with the Teamsters and the drivers would "have a better oppor- tunity" with the Independent ; that when the drivers voted adversely on McCollum's suggestion that they take their grievances to Captain Parker, McCollum told them they were not "doing the right thing." This testimony of Dickey , most of which was corroborated by another driver , C. J. Mize, is credited. The vote against taking the grievances of the drivers to Parker was close at the above meeting, 15 for and 16 against . On the following day, Saturday, George H. Sager and 2 other drivers , after talking to McCollum , agreed to confer with Captain Parker about the complaints , but late that afternoon when they, accompanied by McCollum , arrived at the captain 's office, the latter had left for the day. On Monday , May 1 , after receiving from McCollum a detailed written report of the April 28 meeting with the drivers, above described, Captain Parker conferred with Sager and 2 other drivers including L. W. Miller, in company with a committee from the Independent including Steward Powledge . At this Monday meeting ( which McCollum did not attend ), Captain Parker offered to adjust satisfactorily all the drivers' complaints but Sager told him that the drivers intended to remain in the Teamsters ' local and that he had been elected steward of the organization. On May 3 the Independent received a communication on Teamsters ' stationery dated April 30, signed by 24 drivers , revoking any previous authorization to the Independent and announcing that their authorized representative for bargain- ing was the Teamsters . This notice was signed by the 24 drivers on Sunday, April 30, at the union hall. There is some question in the record as to whether any typewritten statement appeared on the paper at the time it was signed but there is ample credible evidence , and I find, that the signatures of the 24 were placed on the paper voluntarily just prior to their initiation into the Union and the signers understood that the purpose of the signature was to indicate that they wanted the Teamsters as their exclusive bargaining agent Two or three days after the strike started on May 4, McCollum talked over the telephone to striking driver L . W. Miller. There is dispute between Miller and McCollum as to who initiated this call , Miller testifying that McCollum called him and McCollum testifying that the reverse was true. The evidence indicates that at the time Miller needed money and secured financial help from McCollum . Therefore I find, as is substantially testified to by Joe Cortimiglia who was with Miller , that Miller phoned McCollum . I further find from testi- mony of Miller , Cortimiglia, as well as that of McCollum, that as a result of this telephone talk, in which Miller apparently indicated a willingness to return to work, McCollum prepared and gave to Miller a number of blank forms reading as follows : I hereby withdraw any authority which I may have given to the Inter- national Brotherhood of Teamsters , Chauffeurs , Warehousemen and Helpers, AFL, to represent me for the purpose of bargaining collectively with the employer concerning wages and conditions of employment, and requested that Miller secure as many strikers ' signatures thereon as pos- sible; that after a day or two Miller's efforts in this respect came to the attention of the Teamsters ' Business Agent Pate in charge of the strike ; that an argument developed and Miller offered to withdraw from the Teamsters but the offer was rejected ; that on or about May 10 , Miller ( as well as the other strikers ) having received a letter from the Respondent reading : Our records show that you have not reported for duty since the close of business May 3. We regret that unless you immediately resume your work as a truck driver , or furnish some adequate reason for not doing so, you will be permanently dropped from the roll as an employee of the company. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 889 You are therefore advised that unless you report for duty not later than Monday morning, May 15, at 7: 30 a. m. someone else will be permanently assigned to your job. Miller again phoned McCollum and said he and Cortimiglia were ready to re- turn to work, whereupon McCollum, after securing their Teamsters' dues books and their signatures to withdrawal forms from that organization, put them to work. The evidence shows without dispute, and I find, that in the various telephone and personal interviews between Miller and McCollum, as an in- ducement for Miller to abandon the strike and return to work without delay, McCollum promised him full pay for the week that he had lost during the strike. Conclusions as to Domination, Support, and Interference find that by renewing the previously quoted union-security provisions in the 1950 contract negotiated after the amendment to the Act, the Respondent restrained its employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act" Thereby the Respondent lent its support to the Independent in re- cruiting and maintaining that union's membership. Although the record fails to disclose any request by the Independent that any employee be discharged for failure to become a member, or maintain his membership in good standing, the Respondent kept its part of the bargain not only by deducting union dues but also by supplying new employees with Independent application and dues-deduc- tions forms for their signatures. Even if none of the union-security provisions had been enforced, their mere existence in the contract acted as a restraint upon employees and was evidence that the Independent and the Respondent were in accord in denying employment to any who refused to join the union. Fur- thermore, the union-security provisions agreed to do not satisfy the conditions in the proviso to Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act." When the Respondent in the spring of 1950 heard that the truck drivers were being organized, Supervisor McCollum asked driver Schoenwitz if he was going to join the Teamsters. The last of April McCollum called a meeting of the drivers on company property and sought to persuade them from using the Teamsters as their bargaining agent and use the Independent to deal with the Respondent. When this effort failed and the drivers struck, McCollum pre- pared blank forms rescinding the bargaining authorization to the Teamsters and gave the forms to striking driver Miller with instructions to obtain the signa- tures of other strikers thereon. He furnished Miller with a list of the other strikers and their home addresses, and promised that Miller would be paid for the time lost in the strike. Following this, on May 10, all the strikers were in- formed in writing by the Respondent that their jobs would be filled by others if they did not return to work by May 15. On May U, drivers Miller and Cortimiglia offered to resume their employment but McCollum first required that they surrender their Teamsters' books and sign withdrawals from that organization before returning them to their jobs. I therefore find that by (a) questioning its driver employees as to their union affiliations and urging them to abandon the Teamsters and bargain through the Independent and (b) furnishing Miller Teamsters' repudiation forms for strikers to sign and promising to pay Miller for time lost during the strike, and by requiring Miller and Cortimiglia to repudiate the Teamsters, the Re- spondent further interfered with the rights of its employees guaranteed by the Act, and assisted and supported the Independent. 13 Because of the limitations in Section 10 (b) of the Act no finding of any unfair labor practice is based on events prior to December 27, 1949. '4 Julius Resnick, Inc., 86, NLRB 38. 890 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD It is also contended by the General Counsel and the Union that the Respond- ent dominated the administration of the Independent in violation of Section 8 (a) (2) of the Act because Yaws, one of the organizers of the Independent and its president from 1946 up to the time of the hearing, was a supervisor, as was also D. A. Melgran, tugboat captain who participated in negotiating the 1950 contract with Respondent. Captain Parker described Yaws as "assistant" to Superintendent Hilty of the Engle Street plant. Respondent's records classify him as a foreman and some- times as a leaderman. Yaws described his duties as a general utility man, more or less directing common labor in the yard of that plant as instructed by Superin- tendent Hilty. Hilty corroborated Yaws in this respect. The preponderance of the evidence shows that Yaws works with his hands better than 75 percent of the time. He is paid by the hour the same as other ordinary employees and receives $1.35 for each hour's work, which is considerably less than the rate paid to some craftsmen 1' There is no credible testimony that he had authority to hire or fire, or to effectively recommend such action." At the time of the hearing, Melgran was a captain of one of the Respondent's tugs, but when he was acting on the negotiating committee for the Independent he was a tugboat mate. A mate is under the captain, but performs the same duties as the captain during the latter's absence. It is of course traditional that a ship captain normally has full control over his vessel and the employees thereon. However, in the restricted area where the Respondent's tugs usually operated (the ship channel from Houston to Galveston Bay), the captains have very little super- visory authority. True, while the tug is in motion, its captain is necessarily in command , and in the event of an emergency has authority to take on a deck hand to complete the trip, but even in this respect, it is the Respondent's practice to require him first to secure permission to do so from Marine Superintendent C. T. Parker, who has full charge of all tugboats." Aside from such temporary emergencies there is no credible evidence that Respondent's tugboat captains have any authority to hire or fire.1° While it is true that the captain can recommend promotions for deck hands, the decision thereon is made by the marine superin- tendent after full investigation on his part. I find that neither Yaws nor Melgran have duties that put them in the position of acting directly or indirectly for management in their official capacity as officers or members of a committee for the Independent " C. The discharge of L. W. Miller Miller first came to work for the Respondent as a truck driver on June 3, 1948. He continued at such work until his discharge as will hereafter appear on June 28, 1950. As previously found, he had been a member of the Independent Union "As president of the Independent, Yaws received $75 a month . The General Counsel contends that this amount , added to his hourly rate, adds up to a total commensurate with that received by supervisors, the inference being that Yaws , although he was an officer and on the bargaining committee with the Independent , did not press for higher pay for himself because of the financial benefits he was receiving from the union. In my judgment the evidence will not support any such inference. 11 Common laborer Becera 's testimony denied by Yaws and Superintendent Hilty, that when he returned to work for the Respondent in 1949, he was hired by Yaws is not credited I find that he was rehired by Hilty. 11 Each tugboat is equipped with a two-way radio which has direct connections with the marine superintendent. Is Deck band Norris Lawson testified that tugboat Captain Ralley discharged an oiler from the tugboat Sharon in 1949. Marine Superintendent Parker testified that the oiler in question (J A. Lawson) was transferred from the Sharon to another tugboat at his own request . (Neither Captain Railey nor J. A. Lawson testified . I credit C. T. Parker. 29 Somerville Buick, Inc., 93 NLRB 1603. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 891 but joined the Teamsters and went on strike on May 4, 1950. Within a few days thereafter he approached his supervisor, McCollum, about returning to work. At that time McCollum prepared and gave to Miller forms repudiating the Teamsters as bargaining representative and requested him to secure as many of the striking drivers' signatures thereto as he could. When this maneuver was discovered by the Teamsters, Miller reported for work. Before he was put to work about May 11, McCollum required him to sign one of the forms repudiating the Teamsters. A short time after he returned to work he applied to the Independent to renew his membership in that organization (from which he had withdrawn before going on strike). The Independent turned down his application and on June 19 wrote to the Respondent as follows : This is to notify you, the Committee of the Shell Workers Independent Union have rejected Mr. L. W. Miller for Membership in the Organization upon evidence and proof, of the Members in that Department, we request that you do not hold Int fee or dues from his pay check. On June 28, 1950, without any previous notice, Miller was summarily dis- charged. When he inquired the reason Assistant Foreman White said it was on instructions from Captain Parker. Miller asked if it was on account of his work and White replied that it was not, that he had always been a "good man." 20 The current contract with the Independent provided that any employee with two or more years "continuous service" was entitled to 2 weeks' vacation with pay, even if his service was terminated "for any reason" ; so Miller went to Captain Parker about the vacation pay. Parker denied that there was any such provision in the contract. Miller then appealed to Respondent's Attorney Bracewell. The latter agreed to talk to Captain Parker about it and to let Miller know the outcome. Bracewell telephoned to Captain Parker but the latter refused to pay Miller the vacation money. Bracewell testified that he got the "impression" from Captain Parker that Miller's conduct and language had antagonized the employees and that Parker felt if he made the payment he would have trouble with the men ; and that he told Miller he could not get the money for him but that "when this thing cleared up," Miller would probably receive it. Miller never received the vacation pay." It is alleged in the complaint that Miller was discharged because he joined or assisted the Teamsters and refused to join or assist or failed to become a member of the Independent, or engaged in other concerted activities for pur- poses of collective bargaining or other mutual aid and protection. The Respond- ent contends that Miller was discharged for cause. Captain Parker testified that Miller was negligent and incompetent as a truck driver. His testimony in this respect can be summarized as follows: (1) In 1948, Miller "tore up a truck." Parker talked about this incident to McCollum, foreman of the truck drivers at the Engle Street plant and heretofore referred to, and "Mac thought he could work it out." In 1950, after the strike started, Parker was notified that he was going to be sued "for thirty-five thousand dollars." (2) In 1949, a year before the strike, Miller collided with a Burlington- Rock Island train and had to be taken to a hospital. (No further particulars of either of the above incidents appear in the record.) (3) After he abandoned the strike and returned to work Miller, hauling concrete on the "King" job backed his truck on a concrete form, destroying it, and then cussed the Negro 20 This credited testimony of Miller's was not denied. White testified at the hearing, but was not questioned about the above talk. 21 The failure to pay Miller vacation pay is not alleged, nor was it litigated, as an unfair labor practice ; therefore no finding is made whether Miller was actually entitled to the money under the circumstances. 892 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD employee who was directing the backing. Captain Parker placated the foreman on the job but said nothing to Miller about the matter because he was short of drivers and Miller seemed to be "excitable." After this third incident, Parker caught Miller speeding in a truck, heard he had refused to deliver an order given him by the shipping clerk, and had a fist fight with some unidentified individual. The record shows without dispute-in fact, the Respondent admits-that at no time during his employment either before or after the May 1950 strike, was Miller ever criticized by management because of negligent driving, or warned that if he did not improve his work, he would be discharged. During most of his employment with the Respondent, Miller was entrusted with one of the better and more expensive mixer trucks. The same type of truck was returned to him after he quit the strike and returned to work. In view of these circum- stances, the incidents prior to the strike are rejected as a contributing cause of Miller's release from employment as his negligence therein, if any, was obviously later forgiven. Coming to the breaking of a concrete form and the speeding after Miller had returned to work, I find these incidents, assuming their accuracy, too trivial to explain an outright discharge, especially where no criticism was ever made to Miller about either happening.22 Furthermore, at the time of his release, he was informed that the discharge was not due to his work. McCollum, head of the truck drivers at the Engle Street plant, was not asked about Miller's dis- charge, and apparently he did not know the reason therefor 23 I therefore reject the Respondent's contention that Miller was released be- cause of his inadequacy or negligence as a driver .21 The record shows, and I find, that Respondent was aware of the fact that Miller was not liked by other employees, particularly after he returned to work in May 1950. At that time, he was rejected by the Independent as a mem- ber, although other employees who abandoned the strike and returned to work were accepted as members, because he worked against both unions and was a disturbing influence. Miller admittedly bragged to employees after his return that he would get paid by the Respondent for the period he was on strike and would also collect vacation pay. It is understandable why Miller's duplicity-and his talk about being, in effect, rewarded for it-should develop resentment among other employees, particularly those who had continued working throughout the strike. But that resentment of the employees would apply not only to Miller, but to some extent also to, the Respondent who was a party to the deal. The Respondent knew this and realized, as Captain Parker told Attorney Bracewell, that Miller was a "source of trouble." Influenced probably also by the provision in the existing contract requiring membership in the Independent as a condition of continuing employment and knowing that he had been rejected as a member of that organ- 2' Captain Parker testified that Miller was not told of these Incidents because the Respondent was short of experienced drivers due to the strike. That reason still obtained on June 28, at the time of the discharge, although to a lesser extent as some of the drivers had meanwhile returned to work. Nor did Captain Parker refer to either Incident when he instructed White to discharge Miller. 23 Captain Parker testified that he gave the discharge instructions to Assistant Foreman White rather than McCollum,, who normally would have received them, because be feared McCollum would disagree with his decision to fire Miller 24I have not overlooked the testimony of Captain Parker and two drivers that some of the Respondent's customers did not like Miller. However, the testimony in this respect was very general and no showing was made that animosity towards Miller in any way jeopardized Respondent's business. Also apparently, If this condition existed, it was true before as well as after the strike. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 893 Nation, the Respondent got rid of Miller. Under the circumstances, the discharge was brought about because of miller's union activities, or unsuccessful anti- union activities, whichever is preferred. In any event, in my opinion, it con- stituted either encouragement or discouragement of membership in a labor organization in violation of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. Moreover, even if the discharge should not be regarded as a violation of Section 8 (a) (3), it clearly amounted to interference in the protected right of Miller as an employee to engage in collective activity or not to do so, in violation of Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act. It will therefore be recommended that in any event and because of the discriminatory interference, Miller be offered reinstatement and made whole 2' as set forth in the remedy hereafter. D. The alleged refusal to bargain 1. The appropriate unit As of May 1, 1950, Respondent's total employees numbered about 345 in all its plants and on its boats. Included in this total group were 44 truck drivers, 38 of whom operate out of the Engle Street plant. In addition there were 12 employees not classified as truck drivers but who operated trucks a major portion of their time. As found above, the Teamsters on May 1, 1950, sent a written demand to the Respondent requesting recognition and bargaining negotiations. This letter, addressed to Captain Parker, reads as follows : This is to notify you that a majority of your employees are now members of General Drivers, Warehousemen & Helpers, Local Union 968. We desire to meet with you as soon as possible to prove representation for the purpose of negotiating for wages and working conditions for these men. A day or two prior to writing the above letter, Randy Miller, secretary- treasurer of the Teamsters and who signed the above letter, wrote Charles E. Jones, secretary of the Houston Building and Construction Council (of which the Teamsters was a member) asserting that the Teamsters represented a majority of the Respondent's "employees." On May 1, Jones also wrote Captain Parker, stating that "a majority of the Teamsters working for your company" had joined the Teamsters and requested a meeting to negotiate a contract. In telephone talks between May 1 and May 3 both Randy Miller and Jones made it clear to Parker that the Teamsters were interested in negotiating a contract covering only the Respondent's truck drivers. Although the complaint seems to allege a unit of truck drivers at the Respondent's Engle Street plant; ° the General Counsel in his brief states that a unit of truck drivers at the Engle Street plant, or of all of the Respond- ent's truck drivers, excluding office clerical, professional, and supervisory em- ployees is satisfactory. In May 1950, and several months prior thereto, the Teamsters was endeavoring to organize employees of the Respondent who were eligible to join that organization, i. e., all the Respondent's truck drivers, according to the credited and undisputed testimony of Teamsters' Business Agent Pate. w Cf. Rock4ngham Poultry Marketing Cooperative, Inc., 59 NLRB 486, 487. 26 The allegation in the complaint as to the appropriate unit does not mention Engle Street plant, but alleges a unit of truck drivers at the Respondent's "Houston office." The Respondent's main office presumably is at the Engle Street plant, although the record is not clear in that respect. 894 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD In this connection it is noted that the Respondent knew, as above found, that in 1937 the predecessor of Local 968 had organized its truck drivers, and in fact negotiated with them on that basis. There was nothing that developed in the Teamsters' later campaign, or in that organization's request for recog- nition, to cause the Respondent to believe that Local 968's ideas of a bar- gaining unit in any way differed from that sought by its predecessor. I there- fore find that on or about May 1, 1950, the parties hereto "assumed and under- stood" 24 that the Teamsters claimed to represent a majority of the employees in a unit consisting of all the Respondent's truck drivers with the above exclusions. It is the Respondent's position that in view of its past history of collective bargaining with the Independent that a unit consisting of all of its employees with the above exclusions, is the appropriate one, i,ut it agrees that a unit limited to all truck drivers may also be appropriate. The question then to be deter- mined is which of these two units is the more appropriate under the circumstances. For many years it has been the Board's practice to sever craft units from existing industrial units provided an appropriate showing of interest is made. Although craft units usually include highly skilled workmen, the practice has also been applied to truck drivers and other allied workers.28 I therefore find that the truck drivers of the Respondent in all its plants, e'^clusi.ve of all other employees including office clerical, professional, and supervisory employees constitute an appropriate unit.22 It is of course also true and the Board has found that truck drivers in one plant or one division thereof may be an appropriate unit where they constitute homogeneous and identifiable groups. However, in the instant case, the record discloses that all the truck drivers of the Respondent in all its plants do about the same type of work and receive about the same amount of pay. Further- more, Captain Parker is in direct touch and has close over-all supervision of each of the plants. 2. The Teamsters' alleged majority In the telephone talks he had with Randy Miller and Charles E. Jones between May 1 and 3, Captain Parker refused to recognize or deal with the Teamsters because (1) that union did not represent a majority in the unit, and (2) the 1950 contract with the Independent barred such recognition. That was also the Respondent's position at the hearing. As heretofore found, the Respondent, as of the first of May 1950, employed a total of 56 truck drivers in its various plants. The Teamsters produced authorizations from 32 of these drivers. This computation eliminates the card signed by James S. Butler, who the evidence shows was not an employee of the Respondent as of the above date, but includes Robert Jordan, who was a member of another local of the Teamsters as of May 1, but was working for the Re- spondent at that time, and later transferred to Local 968. The above showing is adequate to establish a majority representation in the unit unless, as con- tended by the Respondent, the employees who signed these authorizations were coerced into doing so. In this respect, there is credible testimony on the part of a number of truck drivers that, prior to signing the authorization cards, they were told In the 17 Barlow-Haney Laboratories, Inc., 65 NLRB 928. 29 Swift t6 Company, d/b/a New England Dressed Meat and Wool Company, 81 NLRB 1197. 20 Barlow-Haney Laboratories, Inc., supra; Potomac Electric Power Company, 73 NLRB 1291. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 895 presence of other drivers by Teamsters' officials, or in the presence of such officials without any denial or repudiation thereof, that they had to join that organization or they would lose their jobs. Thus, drivers John J. Cotrone, Joe Cortimiglia, L. E. Cobb, and J. M. Gray testified that Teamsters' Business Agent Pate told them in the presence of other employees that in order to continue working for the Respondent, they would have to join the Teamsters. A. C. John- son, who signed an authorization at the Teamsters' party at Kelsey's Cafe the evening of April 25 or 26, testified that Pate told the employees present that if they did not join the Teamsters they would be relieved of their jobs. C. G. Powledge testified that Randy Miller, secretary-treasurer of the Teamsters, made a similar remark in the Kelsey Cafe.80 C. J. Mize and A. E. Fox credited both Pate and Miller with like statements. George Sager, Teamsters' steward and heretofore referred to, testified that at Kelsey's he heard statements made by various drivers in the presence of Pate and Miller and not denied that if the Teamsters were recognized by the Respondent, employees would "have to belong to stay on." In my judgment, the above statements were coercive because they contained threats, or implied threats, of loss of employment "reasonably calculated to have an effect" on the listener without regard to the Teamsters' ability to carry out the threat'1 In fact the Board in G. H. Hess, Incorporated," found that a state- ment 3 days before an election, "If you don't vote for the Union the girls will refuse to work with you," conveyed a threat of economic reprisal, i. e., that Basnett would, through the efforts of the union, be deprived of her job should she vote against the Union. In that case, the Board made this significant statement : While it is true that Basnett did in fact vote, we cannot assume that less stout-hearted employees would not have refrained from casting their ballot as a consequence of such intimidatory utterances . . . the test is whether the conduct or statements are reasonably calculated to interfere with the employees' exercise of freedom of choice. Furthermore, we cannot assume, under the circumstances, that Basnett's vote actually represented a free and uncoerced choice for or against a bargaining representative." In the ease at bar, several of the employees above referred to, namely, Corti- miglia, Powledge, Johnson, and Fox, subsequent to hearing the threatening statements, joined the Teamsters and struck. The General Counsel contends that this constituted a ratification of the previous authorizations. In view of the language above quoted in the Hess case, there may be some question as to whether there was ratification under the circumstances. Assuming such action on the part of the 4 named employees is sufficient to constitute a clear expression of their voluntary desires, in spite of the previous threats, the Teamsters would, at most, have only 28 in the unit of 56, less than a majority ; and this does take into account the coercive influence of the above threats on other less "stout- hearted" truck drivers. "The Respondent's contention, that there was so much drinking at Kelsey's Cafe that some of the employees signed cards not knowing what they were doing. is rejected as lacking in proof There was some beer drinking at the cafe that night-as there was also at the meeting McCollum called at the plant on April 28-but only one man became intoxicated and he had signed a card prior to the cafe meeting. 91 Smith Cabinet Manufactui ing Company, Inc, 81 NLRB 886. -1' 82 NLRB 463. 31 See also N L R. B. v D A Dourian Export Corp, 138 F. 2d 891, where the Second Circuit Court of Appeals found that the union had lost its majority because loss of fob threats to certain employees were not conditioned on the union's obtaining a closed-shop contract (which at that time was legal). In the present case, we have a situation where a closed chop Is illegal 896 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Under all the facts and circumstances of this case, taking into consideration the current contract with the Independent, Respondent's assistance to that union, and its animosity to the Teamsters, as found herein, I am not convinced it has been established that more than the 24 drivers who struck on May 4 °4 preferred the Teamsters to the Independent as their bargaining agent. I there- fore find, contrary to the contentions of the General Counsel and the Union, that the Teamsters on May 1, 2, and 3, 1950, and thereafter, did not represent an uncoerced majority of the Respondent's employees in the above unit. It follows, therefore, and I also find, that the Respondent did not violate Section 8 (a) (5) of the Act in refusing to recognize or deal with the Teamsters.35 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 of the Respondent described in section I, above, have a close, intimate, and substantial relationship to trade, traffic, and com- merce among the several States and tend to lead to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free flow of commerce. V. TIIE REMEDY Having found that the Respondent has engaged in certain unfair labor prac- tices, it will be recommended that it cease and desist therefrom and take af- firmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act. It has been found that by entering into an agreement with the Independent containing illegal security provisions and by other acts of interference with the rights of its employees and of support of the Independent, the Respondent has violated Section 8 (a) (1) and (2) of the Act. The Respondent does not dispute the illegality of these union-security provisions, nor seriously assert that the severance clause contained in the contract, which applies in f iituro,n saves the remaining contract provisions, but argues that, because the security provisions were not all enforced, and the contract has now been superseded by a later contract without such illegal provisions, there is no necessity to order Respondent to cease doing business with the Independent or to require it to reimburse employees for Independent dues checked off from their pay. This argument overlooks the fact that by assenting to the unlawful security provisions and by collecting the dues pursuant thereto, the Respondent lent Its support to the Independent not only in recruiting and maintaining its membership, but also in financing its activities. The effect of such violations was to coerce the employees of the Respondent into becoming and remaining members of the Independent. It was to avoid such coercive acts that Sections 8 (a) (3) and 9 (e) were included in the Act, and it would not effectuate the purposes of these sections to permit the Independent to continue to enjoy a representative status which it has strengthened by virtue of these illegal pro- visions 37 It will therefore be recommended that the Respondent cease and -"It is true that 28 truck drivers did not report for work on May 4, apparently 4 of the 28 did not want to cross the picket line, but returned to work later on. The fact that these 4 did not report for work that morning does not necessarily mean that they favored the sfrike, or the Teamsters. Business Agent Pate claimed that more than 24 truck drivers actually joined the Teamsters, but there was no adequate proof to support such contention. 31 In view of the above finding, I deem it unnecessary to discuss the other contentions presented on the refusal-to-bargain issue. ae Hickey Cab Company, 88 NLRB 327. 27 Julius Resnick, Inc., 86 NLRB 38. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 897 desist from recognizing the Independent or any successor thereto as the rep- resentative of any of its employees for the purpose of dealing with the Respond- ent concerning grievances, labor disputes, wages, rates of pay, hours of em- ployment, or other conditions of employment ; and that it cease and desist from performing or giving effect to any contract now current with the Independent or to any modification, extension, supplement, or renewal thereof unless and until the Independent shall have been certified by the National Labor Relations Board. It will also be recommended that the Respondent reimburse each em- ployee for the amount of fees and dues which it had checked off since December 27, 1949, and paid to the Independent, less any amount returned to it by the Independent" Also, it having been found that the Respondent discriminatorily discharged L. W. Miller, it will be recommended that it offer to Miller immediate and full reinstatement to his former or substantially equivalent position" without prejudice to his seniority and other rights and privileges previously enjoyed, and make him whole for any loss of pay he may have suffered by reason of the discrimination against him, by payment to him 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 earnings dur- ing that period." Loss of pay shall he determined by deducting his net earnings, If any, from a sum equal to that which he normally would have earned for each quarterly period or portion thereof. Earnings in one particular quarter shall have no effect upon the back-pay liability for any other quarter ; the quarterly periods shall begin with the 1st day of January, April, July, and October.41 Upon request, Respondent shall make available to the Board, or its agents, all records pertinent to the calculation of back pay. Upon the basis of the foregoing findings of facts and upon the entire record in this case, I make the following : CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen, and Helpers, AFL, Local No 968, and Shell Workers Independent Union, are labor organizations within the meaning of Section 2 (5) of the Act. 2. By interfering with, restraining, and coercing its employees in the exercise of their 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 (a) (1) of the Act. 3 By supporting and assisting the Shell Workers Independent Union, the Respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (2) of the Act. 4. By discriminating in regard to the hire and tenure of employment of L W. Miller, Respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (a) (3) of the Act. 5. The unfair labor practices aforesaid are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. 38 Federal Stores Ditision of Spiegel , Inc. 91 NLRB 647; Meyer cE Welch Incorporated, 91 NLRB 1102. 3° The Chase National Bank of the City of New York, San Juan, Puerto Rico, Branch, 65 NLRB 827. 4° Crossett Lumber Company , 8 NLRB 440 11 F W . Woolworth Company , 90 NLRB 289. 898 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 6. The Respondent has not violated (1) Section 8 (a) (1) of the Act by surveillance of Teamsters' meetings or of its employees' collective activities ; or (2) Section 8 (a) (5) of the Act by refusing to bargain with the Teamsters. [Recommendations omitted from publication in this volume.] Supplemental Intermediate Report On October 22, 1951, the National Labor Relations Board remanded the case' to the Regional Director for the Sixteenth Region for appropriate action. The main portion of the Board's Order is as follows : Order Remanding Case On January 19, 1951, the General Counsel issued the complaint in the above-entitled matter alleging, inter alia, (a) that the Respondent assisted, dominated, and contributed to the support of the Shell Workers Independent Union, herein called the Independent, in violation of Section 8 (a) (2) of the Act, and (b) that the Respondent executed and gave full force and effect to a contract with the Independent which contained an illegal union- security clause requiring membership in the Independent as a condition of employment, and requiring that employees execute an authorization for the deduction of membership dues from their wages to be paid over to the Independent. At various dates between February 13 and 24, 1951, pursuant to notice, a hearing was held before Trial Examiner J. J. Fitzpatrick, who, on June 4, 1951, issued his Intermediate Report finding certain of the unfair labor practices alleged. However, the Independent was not served with copies of the notice of hearing and the complaint and was not made a party to, nor did it participate in the proceeding. The Respondent, the Union, and the General Counsel filed exceptions to the Intermediate Report and supporting briefs. Thereafter, the General Counsel filed with the Board a request for permission to file a reply brief, and attached thereto General Counsel's Reply Brief. The General Counsel's request, which is hereby granted, and his reply brief, pertained solely to the question (raised by a party for the first time in the Respondent's ex- ceptions and brief) of the failure to serve the Independent with notice of hearing and complaint, and of including the Independent as a party in the proceeding. The Board, having duly considered all matter before it pertinent to the issue, does not rule upon any of the contentions op this question advanced by the parties. On its motion,' the Board remands the case to the Regional Director to permit the General Counsel properly to join the Independent as party, pursuant to Section 102.8 of Board Rules and Regulations, and to afford the Independent, as a party, full opportunity to participate in the proceeding, including such further hearing as might be requested by the Independent, or in lieu thereof, opportunity to file briefs. ' See Otte Elevator Company, 7 CA-343, remand order dated March 15, 1951. Thereafter, pursuant to the remand order, the Sixteenth Region served on Shell Workers Independent Union a copy of the charges herein upon which the ' Shell Workers Independent Union, party of the contract , was added to the caption fol- lowing action taken by the Regional Director pursuant to the Board's Order dated October 22, 1951 , hereinafter described. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 899 complaint was based, the complaint and the amendment thereto, the answer and supplemental answers of Parker Brothers and Company, Inc., the Intermediate Report, and the Order Remanding Case. Pursuant to notice a further hearing was held before me at Houston, Texas, on February 5 and 6, 1952. The Respondent Company and the Union were repre- sented by the same counsel as at the previous hearing. Messrs. Thomas M. Mobley and James R. Gough, of Houston, Texas, represented the Independent and Mr. James P. Wolf, of Fort Worth, Texas, represented the General Counsel. The hearing was for the purpose, as stated in the notice, of giving the In- dependent full opportunity to participate as a party pursuant to the Board's Order above described. At the opening of the hearing the Independent filed a written motion as follows : MOTION TO Dismiss CHARGE, COMPLAINT AND ORDER COMES NOW Shell Workers Independent Union, hereinafter called Inde- pendent, served with notice of this proceeding on or about January 10, 1952, and files this, its Motion to dismiss the Charge, Complaint and Order issued in this case for the reason same are barred by the six months statute of limitations in that no unfair practice is charged or alleged to have occurred within the six months immediately preceding any service of notice to the Independent. The service that was had on Parker Brothers & Company, Inc., does not operate to toll the limitations against the Independent since (a) service of the Independent did not follow, with reasonable diligence, service to Parker Brothers & Company, Inc; (b) there is, in law, no privity between Parker Brothers & Company, Inc. and Shell Workers Independent Union; and (c) other reasons to be enumerated in the Independent's sup- porting brief. Shell Workers Independent Union does not request any participation in the proceedings that have gone heretofore since same are void, having been effected without the participation of an indispensable party, and since the events there alleged and proved did occur during a period that is now barred by the six months statute of limitations. The motion to dismiss was denied. The General Counsel, the Union, and the Respondent Company each offered to make available all witnesses called by them and who had testified at the original hearing, for the purpose of permitting the Independent to cross-examine said witnesses or any of them. Counsel for the Independent stated on the record that he did not desire to question any of these previous witnesses and then offered testimony to show that the Independent was not served with a copy of the charge or the amended charge or made a party to the original action because of an oversight in the Sixteenth Regional Office. This testimony received in question and answer form as an offer of proof was rejected as immaterial to the issues. After due consideration that ruling is now reversed and the testi- mony is received. The Independent also offered, "if required," to file a formal answer to the complaint alleging, as it had in the above motion, that the statute of limitations in the Act prohibited any proceedings against the Independent .2 The Respondent also asked for and was granted leave to file a supplementary answer subsequent to the close of the hearing. Such supplementary answer has been received and 2 The Independent was advised at the hearing that an exhibit number would be reserved for the receipt of this answer subsequent to the close of the hearing , but no such answer has been received. 242:305--53--58 900 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD filed . It alleges that because of the Independent 's limitation plea no order can issue in the case that would have the effect of interfering with the con- tractual relationship between Respondent and the Independent , and asks that the complaint be dismissed in its entirety. At the conclusion of the rehearing the Independent renewed its motion to dis- miss. The motion is disposed of as hereafter appears. All parties waived oral argument, but briefs have been received from the General Counsel, the Respond- ent, and the Union SUPPLEMENTAL FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS As heretofore found the Independent did not take advantage at the oppor- tunity presented at the second hearing to cross-examine any of the witnesses who had testified at the original hearing. Although offered full opportunity to be heard, it contented itself with testimony on lack of diligence on the part of the Board's Regional Office in failing to serve the charge on the Independent and name it as a party prior to January 1952, and renewed its motion to dismiss. It is the position of the Independent, as stated in its motion to dismiss, and the Respondent as alleged in its supplemental answer, that the Independent not having been served with a copy of the charge or made a party at the inception of the action which alleged unfair labor practices starting in January 1950, it can not now legally be brought in, by belated service on it of the charge and the complaint, because of the 6 months' limitation in Section 10 (b) of the Act. The pertinent portions of Section 10 (b) reads as follows : Whenever it is charged that any person has engaged in or is engaging in any such unfair labor practice, the Board, or an agent or agency designated by the Board for such purposes, shall have power to issue and cause to be served upon such person a complaint stating the charges in that respect, and containing a notice of hearing before the Board or a member thereof, or before a designated agent or agency, at a place therein fixed, not less than five days after the serving of said complaint: Provided, That no complaint shall issue based upon any unfair labor practice occurring more than six months prior to the filing of the charge with the Board and the service of a copy thereof upon the person against whom such charge is made, unless the person aggrieved thereby was prevented from filing such charge by reason of service in the armed forces, in which event the six-month period shall be computed from the day of his discharge. Series 5 of the Board's Rules and Regulations, effective at the time of the original hearing, provided : See. 203.14 Service of Charge. Upon the filing of a charge, the charging party shall be responsible for the timely and proper service of a copy thereof upon the person against whom such charge is made. The regional director will as a matter of course, cause a copy of such charge to be served upon the person against whom the charge is made, but he shall not be deemed to assume responsibility for such service.4 As the charge and the amended charge in this case was made against the Re- spondent and service of the charges were admittedly properly served on it, there is no real question but that the proceeding against the Respondent as such is S After the close of the second hearing the Respondent moved to correct the record inso- far as certain aspects of the testimony of Bert H Tunks was concerned. There being no objection, the record is corrected as requested by the Respondent. 4 Now Section 102.14 in Series 6 of the Board's Rules and Regulations, effective March 1, 1951. PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 901 proper.` The question therefore is whether it is now too late to bring in the Independent as a party to the proceeding. The Board's Rules and Regulations effective in January 1951, provide: COMPLAINT Sec. 203.15 When and by whom issued ; contents ; service -After a charge has been filed, if it appears to the regional director that formal proceedings in respect thereto should be instituted, he shall issue and cause to be served upon all the other parties a formal complaint in the name of the Board stating the charges and containing a notice of hearing before a trial examiner at a place therein fixed and at a time not less than ten days after the service of the complaint. Sec. 203.8 Party.-The term party as used herein shall mean the regional director in whose region the proceeding is pending, and any person named or admitted as a party, or properly seeking and entitled as of right to be a party, in any Board proceeding, including, without limitation, any person filing a charge or petition under the Act, any person named as respondent, as employer, or as party to a contract in any proceeding under the Act, and any labor organization alleged to be dominated , assisted , or supported in viola- tion of Section 8 (a) (1) or 8 (a) (2) of the Act; but nothing herein shall be construed to prevent the Board or its designated agent from limiting any party to participate in the proceedings to the extent of his interest only." The original complaint alleged that the Independent was a party to a contract with the Respondent, and attacked the legality of that contract. It is clear from the above-quoted rules of the Board, and I find, that there was a procedural defect in failing to join and serve the Independent as a party ab initio. How- ever, subsequent to the hearing, and after the issuance of the Intermediate Report wherein the defendant was found to have violated Section 8 (a) (1), (2), and (3) of the Act, the General Counsel was permitted to join the Inde- pendent as a party pursuant to the Board's remand order above quoted. There- after the General Counsel named the Independent as a party, served it with a copy of all the formal papers in the proceeding up to that time, including the charges, the complaint and its amendment, the Intermediate Report and order remanding, and a notice of hearing on the issues. At the reopened hearing the Independent, as a party, was afforded an opportunity to cross-examine all the witnesses who testified at the first hearing and to participate in the pro- ceeding. This action by the Board and its General Counsel cured the procedural defect (which defect in any event could only affect a possible 8 (a) (2) finding an order), unless the Independent, under the circumstances, was an indis- pensable party from the beginning, as contended by the Independent and the Respondent. The question as to who are indispensable parties in cases involving non- recognition of favored unions, or Board orders having the effect of invalidating collective-bargaining agreements with them, has been considered a number of times by the Supreme Court of the United States. In N. L. R. B. v. Pennsylvania Greyhound Lines, Ine , 303 U. S. 261, decided February 28, 1938, no contract was involved but the issue was whether the Board had authority to order the employer to withhold recognition from an association found to have been com- H In its supplemental answer the Respondent seems to take the position that, because of the failure to serve Independent timely, the entire proceeding should be dismissed. In its brief the Respondent argues that the failure to serve Independent bars the Board from proceeding on the 8 ( a) (2) allegations only. "The same provisions ( with slight changes in the language of Sec. 203 15 ) appear in Sections 102.15 and 102.8 of the Board's present Rules and Regulations, Series 6. 902 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD pany dominated , without notice to the association and opportunity for a hear- ing. In that connection the Court said : As the order did not run against the association, it is not entitled to notice and hearing . Its presence was not necessary in order to enable the Board to determine whether respondents had violated the statute or to make an appropriate order against them. In Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc., et al. v. N. L. R. B., 305 U. S. 197, dated December 5, 1938, the question was whether the Board could invalidate contracts between the employer and the Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, in the absence of notice of hearing to the Brotherhood. In this case the complaint alleged interference and discrimination by the employers. One of the allegations of interference was that the employers were contributing support to the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and were coercing their employees to join that Union. The Board found illegal support of the Brotherhood, among other things because the employers had executed contracts with the Brotherhood subsequent to issuance of the complaint, and ordered the employers to cease giving effect to these contracts or from recognizing the Brotherhood as a representative of the employees. The Court noted that there had been no finding of domination of the Brotherhood in violation of Section 8 (2) of the Act, and that the validity of the contracts had not actually been litigated In holding that the Brotherhood had "valuable and beneficial interests in the contracts" and were entitled to notice and hearing before they could be set aside, it distinguished Pennsylvania Greyhound Lines ( supra ) in the follow- ing language: That case, however, is not apposite, as there no question of contract between the employer and employees was involved. The Board had found upon evidence that the employer had created and fostered the labor organi- zation in question and dominated its administration in violation of Section 8 (2). The statement that the "Association" so formed and controlled was not entitled to notice and hearing was made in that relation , Id. pp. 262, 270, 271. It has no application to independent labor unions such as those before us: In discussing the remedial authority of the Board the Court said: The power to command affirmative action is remedial, not punitive, and is to be exercised in aid of the Board's authority to restrain violations and as a means of removing or avoiding the consequences of violation where those consequences are of a kind to thwart the purposes of the Act. The continued existence of a company union established by unfair labor prac- tices or of a union dominated by the employer is a consequence of violation of the Act whose continuance thwarts the purposes of the Act and renders ineffective any order restraining the unfair practices. Compare National Labor Relations Board v. Pennsylvania Greyhound Lines, supra. Here, there is no basis for a finding that the contracts with the Brotherhood and its locals were a consequence of the unfair labor practices found by the Board or that these contracts in themselves thwart any policy of the Act or that their cancellation would in any way make the order to cease the specified practices any more effective. On March 4, 1940, in National Licorice Company v. N. L R. B, 309 U. S. 350, the Court had to decide whether the Board had authority to order the employer not to enforce individual employment contracts found to have been procured in violation of the Act and containing illegal provisions, in the absence of the PARKER BROTHERS AND COMPANY, INC. 903 employees as parties to the proceeding. The Court, recognizing that no tribunal had authority to make a binding adjudication of rights in personam of parties not brought before it by due process of law, pointed out that in the case before it there was no occasion to consider how far the contract rights of the employees could be restricted . In this connection the Court said: As the Board's power can be effectively exercised only on petitioner, the employees are entitled to notice and hearing only if the statute requires them to be made parties to the proceeding. Consequently, the only question we are called upon to decide is wh ether, in the circumstances of this case, the exercise of the Board's authority is such a departure from accepted modes of procedure as rightly to be regarded as beyond the power conferred on the Board by Section 10 of the Act. In concluding that the Board had not overreached its statutory authority, the Court pointed out that Board proceedings under the Act are not for the adjudication of private rights and there is no provision in the Act for the presence of private parties other than the employer charged with an unfair labor practice and commented : In a proceeding so narrowly restricted for the protection and enforce- ment of public rights, there is little scope or need for the traditional rules governing the joinder of parties in litigation determining private rights. The Court found that the right asserted by the Board was not one arising or derived from the contracts between the employer and the employees, but a public right vested in a public body charged "in the public interest with the duty of preventing unfair labor practices." It pointed out that the effect of the Board's Order was to preclude the employer from taking any benefit of the contracts which were procured through violation of the Act, and which are them- selves continuing means of violating it, and from carrying out any of the contract provisions, the effect of which would be to infringe the rights guaranteed by the National Labor Relations Act. After stating that the Board's Order did not prejudge the employees' rights under the contracts nor foreclose them from having such rights adjudicated, the Court found that they were not indispensable parties for the purposes of the Board's Order! In N. L. R. B. v. Indiana and Michigan Electric Company, 124 F. 2d 50 (C. A. 6), the facts as set forth in the circuit court's decision were as follows: The Board had found that the employer had dominated an association of its employees and entered into a contract with that organization. The Board's Order directed employer to cease giving effect to the contract and to withdraw all recognition from and completely disestablish the association. The associa- tion was not named as a party but filed a motion to intervene in the court proceeding. Both the association and the employer asked that the Order of the Board be set aside and that the cause be remanded with directions to permit the association to introduce proof and cross-examine the Board's witnesses. In its decision the Sixth Circuit reviewed in detail the three Supreme Court decisions heretofore referred to and came to the following conclusion : As we view the three foregoing controlling decisions of the Supreme Court, none of which expressly overrules the other, the test to be applied 9 In Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company v. N. L. R. B., 313 U. S. 146 , the Court reiterated, that a union found to be company dominated does not have to be included as a party where the Board order does not run against it. 904 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD as to whether the parties to bargaining contracts are necessary parties to a proceeding under the National Labor Relations Act is (1) if the facts show the right asserted by the Board is one arising solely out of the con- tract, the performance of which does not inherently result in a violation of the provisions of the Act, the beneficiaries of the contract or their representatives are necessary parties. (2) If the facts show that the contract is inherently unfair, or its performance will result in the con- tinuance of unfair labor practices as defined in the Act, the beneficiaries of the contract or their representatives are not necessary parties, but may be made parties to the proceedings in the discretion of the Board. In the case at bar, the Board found that respondent caused the Associa- tion to be organized and dominated it in the performance of the bargaining contract. It therefore follows that it is controlled by the Greyhound Lines and National Licorice Company cases and the Association was not a neces- sary party to the proceedings 8 In the instant case support of the Independent is found not only in the execu- tion and enforcement of the illegal provisions of the contract, but also by other independent acts of coercion to the detriment of the rival Teamsters. The Respondent in its brief cites it number of cases to support its position that the Independent was an indispensable party. Most of these cases have to do with the protection or assertion of private rights. But, as the Supreme Court said in National Licorice (supra), The proceeding authorized to be taken by the Board under the National Labor Relations Act is not for the adjudication of private rights (citing cases). It has few of the indicia of a private litigation and makes no re- quirement for the presence in it of any private party other than the employer charged with an unfair labor practice. The Board acts in a public capacity to give effect to the declared public policy of the Act to eliminate and pre- vent obstructions to interstate commerce by encouraging collective bar- gaining and by protecting the "exercise by workers of full freedom of association, self organization, and designation of representatives of their own choosing, for the purpose of negotiating the terms and conditions of their employment . . ." Section 1. The immediate object of the proceeding is to prevent unfair labor practices which, as defined by Sections 7, 8, are practices tending to thwart the declared policy of the Act. To that end the Board is authorized to order the employer to desist from such practices, and by Section 10 (c) it is given authority to take such affirmative remedial action as will effectuate the policies of the Act. Here the right asserted by the Board is not one arising upon or derived from the contracts. The Board asserts a public right vested in it as a public body, charged in the public interest with the duty of preventing un- fair labor practices. The public right and the duty extend not only to the prevention of unfair labor practices by the employer in the future, but to the prevention of his enjoyment of any advantage which he has gained by violation of the Act, whether it be a company union or an unlawful contract with employees, as the means of defeating the statutory policy and purpose. In N. L. R. B. v. Sterling Electric Motors, 109 F. 2d 194, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals on January 9, 1940, refused to enforce a Board Order disestablishing 8 This decision of the Sixth court was affirmed by the Supreme Court in 318 LT S 9, but the question of whether the association was an indispensable party was not raised before that tribunal. 11AFFENREFFER & CO., INC. 905 a company-dominated employees' association that had a contract, because the association had not been served. As will be noted, that circuit court of appeals decision was before National Licorice, supra, had been decided by the Supreme Court. At a rehearing where National Licorice was considered the circuit court adhered to its original opinion in refusing to order the association dis- established, but referred the matter for further testimony on an issue of fraud (112 F. 2d 63). The Board petitioned the Supreme Court for a writ of cer- tiorari. While this was pending the circuit court set aside its decree (114 F. 2d 738). Thereafter the Board filed in the circuit court additional evidence taken by it pursuant to the Court's direction, additional findings, and a recom- mendation that its original order be set aside. In granting this request of the Board the circuit court made the comments quoted in Respondent's brief (118 F. 2d 893). I find that dicta of no assistance here in the light of the decisions of the Supreme Court heretofore referred to. In the case before me, as previously noted, the Respondent supported and assisted the Independent in violation of Section 8 (a) (2) not only in executing the contract and carrying out its provisions, but also by other independent acts. I therefore find, consistent with the above decisions of the Supreme Court, that the Independent was not an indispensable party for the purpose of starting this proceeding insofar as the 8 (a) (2) allegations in the complaint are concerned. I further find that the procedural defect in failing to name and serve the In- dependent as a party at the first hearing has been cured by the Board's remand order and the later service on the Independent together with the opportunity afforded it to cross-examine witnesses and present proof at the rehearing. I therefore deny the Independent's renewed motion to dismiss as to it, and find that it has been properly joined as a party, afforded an opportunity to be heard, to cross-examine all witnesses who testified at the original hearing, and otherwise participate in the proceeding. [Recommendations omitted from publication in this volume.] HAFFENREFTER & Co., INC. and THOMAS M. BROOKS LOCAL No. 14, INTERNATIONAL UNION OF UNITED BREWERY, FLOUR, CEREAL, SOFT DRINK AND DISTILLERY WORKERS OF AMERICA, C. I. O. and THOMAS M. BROOKS. Cases Nos. 1-CA-1043 and 1-CB-166. December 9,1962 Decision and Order On May 20, 1952, Trial Examiner Ralph Winkler issued his Inter- mediate Report in this proceeding, finding that the Respondents had not engaged in unfair labor practices as alleged in the complaints and recommending that the complaints be dismissed, as set forth in the copy of the Intermediate Report attached hereto. Thereafter, the General Counsel filed exceptions to the Intermediate Report and a supporting brief, and the Respondents filed briefs in support of the Intermediate Report. The Board has reviewed the rulings made by the Trial Examiner at the hearing and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. 101 NLRB No. 160. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation