Twin City Garage Door Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsOct 20, 1989297 N.L.R.B. 119 (N.L.R.B. 1989) Copy Citation • -TWIN CITY GARAGE DOOR CO 119 Nordpal Corporation d/b/a Twin City Garage Door Co. and Twin City Carpenters District Council, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, AFL-CIO. Case 18-CA-10237 October 20, 1989 DECISION AND ORDER BY MEMBERS CRACRAFT, HIGGINS, AND DEVANEY On May 11 1988, Admministrative Law Judge Burton Litvack issued the attached decision The Respondent filed exceptions and a supporting brief The National Labor Relations Board has delegat- ed its authority in this proceeding to a three- member panel The Board has considered the decision and record in light of the exceptions and brief and has decided to affirm the judge's rulings, findings,' and conclusions, 2 and to adopt the recommended Order ORDER The National Labor Relations Board adopts the recommended Order of the administrative law judge and orders that the Respondent, Nordpal Corporation d/b/a Twin City Garage Door Co, Minneapolis, Minnesota, its officers, agents, succes- sors, and assigns, shall take the action set forth in the Order 'The Respondent has excepted to some the judge's credibility findings The Board's established policy is not to overrule an administrative law judge,s credibility resolutions unless the clear preponderance of all the relevant evidence convinces us that they are incorrect Standard Dry Wall Products, 91 NLRB 544 (1950), enfd 188 F 2d 362 (3d Cir 1951) We have carefully examined the record and find no basis for reversing the findings 2 The Respondent argues, Inter aim, that It lawfully repudiated its 8(f) bargaining relationship with the Union The judge rejected this defense, finding that the Respondent was obligated 'to adhere to the terms and conditions of employment set forth in the successive commercial con- struction agreements, Including the existing 1986 through April 30, 1989 contract" We agree with the judge Where, as here, the Respondent signed the 1978 independent agreement, as modified, binding Itself to the Union-Associated General Contractors of Minnesota contract, covering commercial work, as well as to successor agreements between these par- ties, It could not repudiate its 8(f) relationship with the Union until It pro- vided timely nonce of termination As the Respondent did not notify the Union until November 2, 1987, in the middle of the 1986-1989 contract term, that it was repudiating any agreement it had with the Union, the Respondent was bound to the Union Associated General Contractors of Minnesota contract until its April 30, 1989, expnation See San Antonio Control Systems, 290 NLRB 786 (1988) Robert V Johnson, Esq , for the General Counsel Kevin C Berens, Esq and Joseph Dreesen, Esq (Berens and Tate, P C ), of Omaha, Nebraska, for the Respond- ent Roger A Jensen, Esq (Peterson, Bell, Converse & Jensen), of St Paul, Minnesota, for the Charging Party DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE BURTON LITVACK, Administrative LaW Judge Based on ongmal and first amended unfair labor practice charges filed, respectively, on September 28 and Novem- ber 9, 1987, by the Twin City District Carpenters Dis- trict Council, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, AFL-CIO (the District Council), the Regional Director of Region 18 of the National Labor Relations Board (the Board), issued a complaint in the above-captioned matter on November 9, 1987, alleg- ing that Nordpal Corporation d/b/a Twin City Garage Door Co (Respondent) engaged in acts and conduct vio- lative of Section 8(a)(1), (3), and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act (the Act) Respondent timely filed an answer, denying the "commission of any unfair labor practices The proceeding was scheduled for trial and heard by me on January 19 and 20, 1988, in Minneapolis, Minnesota At trial, all parties were afforded the oppor- tunity to examine and cross-examine witnesses, offer evi- dence, argue their respective legal positions, and file postheanng briefs Said documents were filed by counsel for the General Counsel and by counsel for Respondent Accordingly, based on the entire record herein, includ- ing careful consideration of the opposing briefs and my observation of the testimonial demeanor of the several witnesses, I make the following FINDINGS OF FACT I JURISDICTION Respondent, a Minnesota corporation, has an office and place of business in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and is engaged in the retail and nonretail sale, installation, and servicing of overhead garage doors During the calendar year ending December 31, 1986, in the normal course and conduct of its aforementioned business operations, Respondent derived gross revenues in excess of $1 mil- lion and purchased and received goods and products valued in excess of $50,000 directly from suppliers locat- ed outside the State of Minnesota Respondent admitted that, at all times material herein, it has been an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(2), (6), and (7) of the Act II LABOR ORGANIZATION Respondent admitted that the District Council has been, at all times material herein, a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act III THE ISSUES . The complaint alleges that Respondent engaged in conduct violative of Section 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act by failing and refusing to pay contractual wages and fringe benefits to those of its bargaining unit employees who were not members of affiliated local unions of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, AFL-CIO (the Carpenters Union), and violative of Sec- tion 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act by failing to pay wages 297 NLRB No 13 120 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD and benefits specified in collective bargaining agreements to those of its bargaining unit employees who were not members of the Carpenters Union by failing and refusing to comply with the District Council s request that bar gaining unit employees who refused to join the Carpen ters Union after their grace period expired be discharged as required by collective bargaining agreements and by repudiating collective bargaining agreements with the District Council In defense Respondent contends that no collective bargaining agreement was ever formed be tween itself and the Distnct Council that if any collec tive bargaining agreement was formed said contract covers only those employees who are engaged in the in stallation of garage doors on commercial jobsites that the District Council has waived all rights under any col lective bargaining agreement and that Respondent has properly repudiated an 8(f) collective bargaining rela tionship with the District Council IV THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A The Facts The record establishes that Nordpal Corporation was formed in 1968 by Ralph Nordick and Robert J Pa lumbo with each a 50 percent shareholder that the cor poration commenced doing business under the trade name Overhead Door Company of the Twin Cities Com mercial that the business consisted of selling and install ing garage doors pursuant to a franchise agreement with the Overhead Door Company and that the Company s garage door installation work primarily involved new commercial construction projects Nordick was the presi dent of the corporation and operated the business on a day to day basis while Palumbo was the secretary treas urer and his job function was that of the Company s commercial estimator By 1974 the Company had ex panded its business to include new residential construc tion projects however in that year according to Nor dick Overhead Door Company cancelled our fran chise to distribute that product As a result the corpo ration changed its trade name to Twin City Overhead Door Co while the Company obtained a new supplier for its garage doors the nature of its business operations remained basically the same—the sale of and mstalla tion of overhead garage doors on new construction projects In 1978 the corporation was again required to change its trade name In October of that year Nordick testified as a result of the settlement of a lawsuit mvolv ing use of the word overhead Nordpal Corporation commenced doing business as Twin City Garage Door Co Respondent herein As previously although the cor poration gradually began entirely assembling its own product the nature of its business continued—and re mains to date—to be the sale of and installation of over head garage doors on commercial and residential con struction projects Also in 1978, Palumbo retired and Nordick purchased his share of the business Further in 1982 Nordick hired Stephen Donohue to be Respond ent s general manager and in charge of its daily oper ations Since its inception in 1968 and continuing through at least November 1987 Nordpal Corporation employed in stallation employees to install its garage doors on new commercial and residential construction projects in the Minneapolis St Paul area with the complement of said individuals ranging from approximately 10 to 18 While admitting that some of the corporation s installers were members of the Carpenters Union Nordick did not be heve that the Company was an organized shop during the period 1968 through 1978 However General Coun sel s Exhibit 12 is an Agreement with the District Council executed by Nordick ' on behalf of Overhead Door Co Commercial on October 2 1968 which docu ment bound the latter to abide by and employ installers in accordance with the existing collective bargaining agreements between the District Council and the Assoc' ated General Contractors of Minnesota Minneapolis and St Paul Builders Division (covering commercial con struction) and between the District Council and the Min neapolis Home Builders Association (covering residential construction) 2 Carl Pierret, who worked for Nordpal Corporation under its three different names from 1969 until July 1987 as an installer testified that at the time of his hire not only was it common knowledge that the company was a union shop but also that Ralph Nordick informed him that everyone was required to join the Carpenters Union Contradicting Pierret Nordick denied ever requiring anyone join the union No one has ever been required to join the union at our company 3 In any event Pierret joined the Carpenters Union (Local 1644) soon after being hired received wages at the Car penters Union contractual scale and had fringe benefits paid on his behalf by the Company to vanous trust funds established pursuant to the applicable Carpenters contract According to Pierret, while most of the install ers were Carpenters members when he began working for Nordpal Corporation as the years passed the number of union members fluctuated as the company didn t always require them to be members of the Car penters 4 He testified further that by 1978 there were approximately 12 to 14 installers employed by the Com pany and that probably about half' were members There is no record evidence that Nordpal Corporation doing business as either Overhead Door Company of the Twin Cities Commercial or Twin City Overhead Door Co ever terminated the aforementioned Agreement with the District Council Nevertheless in early 1978 in the midst of a general organizing campaign targeted against nonunion garage door installers and apparently of the belief that Twin City Overhead Door Co was just such a nonunion company a District Council business I While not recalling that he had executed the document Nordick did not disavow his signature thereon 2 Said document further binds the signatory to any renewal additions modifications and extension thereof as to wages fringe benefits and working conditions and all other provisions specified in said contracts and states that this agreement shall remain in full force and effect until such time as it is terminated in writing by your organization or the un dersigned 3 No dick stated that he did not care if Installers joined the Carpenters Union 4 Echoing Nordick Plerret testified that new employees who were members of the Carpenters were permitted to retain their membership and that the Company paid to them union scale wages and made fringe benefit contnbutions on their behalf TWIN CITY GARAGE DOOR CO 121 representative, Richard Prior, was instructed by the Dis- trict Council to obtain a collective-bargaining agreement from the above company 5 The record evidence is not entirely clear as to the events of 10 years ago Thus, Ralph Nordick testified that, shortly after a picketing in- cident at a residential construction project on which Twin City Overhead Door Co installers were working, Harry Blue, the current executive business representa- tive 6 for the District Council and a business representa- tive in 1978, and another Carpenters official came to the company office and spoke to Palumbo and him Denying that what was discussed was in the nature of contract ne- gotiations, Nordick stated that Blue did inquire as to whether Nordick would execute a contract, and "we told them we wouldn't I was quite strong about that" Nordick argued that there was not a garage door installation company in the Twin Cities which was en- tirely union and that, if a company employed only Car- penters Union members, it would not be competitive doing residential construction work Nordick mentioned that there were many nonunion companies without "any overhead" doing those jobs and told Blue "don't bug us" until the Union obtained contracts from them Also, Nor- dick voiced a concern that the Union had no apprentice program, causing companies to train employees on the job While apparently unable to recall any 1978 discus- sions, Harry Blue recalled a meeting with Nordick and Palumbo sometime between 1970 and 1975 concerning the fact that "an agreement was in effect, but they were operating under another name" He added that the specific cause of the meeting was that "we had run on a nonunion person on the job" According to Blue, Nor- dick and Palumbo responded that "they'd take care of it Nordick testified that, a short while after Blue met with Palumbo and him, members of the Carpenters began picketing at the Twin City Overhead Door Co office and Richard Prior demanded that Palumbo, on behalf of the company, execute an independent agree- ment, recognizing the District Council as the exclusive bargaining representative of the Company's installation employees Prior recalled meeting with Palumbo on at least two occasions and leaving a collective-bargaining agreement at the company office According to Prior, he and Palumbo discussed the scope of the contract, with Prior saying it would cover both commercial and resi- dential work However, "[Palumbo] refused to sign one for both residential and commercial and there was a lot of discussion going on back and forth between myself and the secretary of the Council and the officials of Twin City" Prior continued, testifying that Palumbo ul- timately agreed to having employees performing com- mercial installation work covered by a Carpenters Union contract but that the "big hang-up" concerned employ- ees performing residential installation work—Palumbo "didn't want to have them union" Nordick, who lives in 6 According to Prior, who worked as a business agent for the District Council, from 1972 until 1982, I have to presume when they send me out there to sign a contract that [the company wasn't] organized I didn't know at the time, if they had signed a contract previous 6 As such, Blue is directly responsible for the activities of all business agents working for the District Council Fargo, North Dakota, testified further that Palumbo tele- phoned him, explained the nature of his conversations with Prior, and said, "we could get them off our butt by signing [the contract] " Nordick told Palumbo not to do anything until they met and discussed the situation According to Nordick, he met with Palumbo the next week at the Twin City Overhead Door Co office and discussed the contract with the latter, including to what they could agree As a result, Palumbo executed General Counsel's Exhibit 2, 7 the aforementioned "Independent Agreement," and Nordick drafted a letter, dated May 2, 1978, which was to accompany the signed contract Said letter, Respondent's Exhibit 2, reads as follows Mr Dick Prior Twin City Carpenters Council 842 Raymond Ave St Paul, Minn 55114 Dear Mr Prior, Enclosed is the agreement you people insist we sign You explained to us that you have to have it 7 Dated May 2, 1978, the document reads, in part, as follows INDEPENDENT AGREEMENT The undersigned employer hereby recognizes the Twin City Car- penters District Council as the exclusive bargaining representative of all carpenters, millwrights and piledrivers employed by the employ- er Consideration for this agreement are the mutual promises of the parties and their mutual purpose of establishing, maintaining and pro- moting sound and harmonious relations For all residential construction work, the employer hereby agrees to be bound by all of the terms and provisions of the collective bar- gaining agreement in effect between the Twin City Carpenters Dis- trict Council and the Minneapolis Builders and St Paul Area Build- ers Associations For all commercial construction work, the employ- er hereby agrees to be bound by all of the terms and provisions of the collective bargaining agreement in effect between the Twin City Carpenters District Council and the Associated General Contractors of Minnesota The employer further agrees to be bound by any renewals, addi- tions, modifications, extensions and subsequent agreements between the Twin City Carpenters District Council and the Minneapolis Builders and St Paul Area Builders Associations and the Associated General Contractors of Minnesota entered into after expiration of the agreements currently in effect, concerning all matters and provisions specified in said contracts The employer further agrees to be bound by all of the provisions of said contracts with reference to fringe benefits including pension, health and welfare, vacation, housing promotion and apprenticeship training The employer hereby acknowledges that he has received a copy of this agreement and copies of the above mentioned agreements be- tween the Twin City Carpenters District Council and the Minneapo- lis Builders and St Paul Area Builders Associations and the Associ- ated General Contractors of Minnesota This agreement shall remain in full force and effect until such time as It is terminated in writing by the Union or the undersigned em- ployer pursuant to the termination provisions of the agreements be- tween the Twin City Carpenters District Council and the Minneapo- lis Builders and St Paul Area Builders Associations and the Associ- ated General Contractors of Minnesota, then in effect If this agreement is signed for and on behalf of a corporation, then the person signing this agreement not only binds the corporation but also binds himself individually to the full and faithful performance of all of the terms and provisions of this agreement while the described bargaining unit is not specific to Respondent, there is no dispute that the only employees in the bargaining unit herein are Respondent s installation employees 122 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD on file or we can't employ union people Our un- derstanding of our arrangement with you is #1 We will continue to use union installers on new commercial work #2 Our service department does not work new construction and do not have to be union people Service department personnel can hang new commercial doors with or without union personel if it is a replacement job gotten thru service department #3 Our residential department will continue as it is until you get a garage door installer training put in place in your apprentice program We will then plug our installers into the program at the level they are on We understand with this agreement you will not picket our shop or bother our installers on the job Nordick testified that the letter was drafted for Palum- bo's signature, that he watched Palumbo sign it, and that after Palumbo did so, Nordick placed the contract and the letter in an envelope and put it on the secretary's desk for mailing to the District Council During direct examination, Respondent's current sole owner conceded that the signed contract and the accompanying letter was an offer—"our deal" for an agreement with the District Council While Nordick was unable to testify whether the Twin City Overhead Door Co secretary in fact deposited the envelope, containing the signed contract and the Pa- lumbo letter, in the mail, the record reveals that at least, General Counsel's Exhibit 2 was received by the District Council Thus, business representative Prior identified his signature on the bottom of the document, stating that he executed the document "a couple of weeks" after the date on which Palumbo did so and that he (Prior) signed it at the office of the District Council "probably before it was okayed by the Council" With regard to the accompanying letter, Respondent's Exhibit 2, Prior was unable to recall seeing it, 8 and Clayton Grimes, the current executive secretary of the District Counci1, 9 tes- tified that such a document does not exist in the District Council's files However, there is record evidence that it, indeed, was received by the latter Thus, Prior believed that Palumbo's letter arrived at the District Council's office "in the interim" during the "discussion going on back and forth between myself and the secretary of the Council at the time and the officials of Twin City" and recalled discussion on the substance of the letter inas- much as "if you can get a contract, you can get a con- tract and later you can work on another end of it, in other words, the commercial, or later you'll go after the residential Assuming that General Counsel's Exhibit 2 and Re- spondent's Exhibit 2 were together received by the as- 8 Prior did state, however, that the contents of R Exh 2 correspond to the content of the discussions he had with Palumbo 9 Grimes has held his position since 1982 and is responsible for main- taining the District Council's records and files Prior to assuming his cur- rent duties, Grimes was the District Council's executive business repre- sentative from 1977 until 1982 tnct Council, what effect was given to the latter by the District Council9 Initially, I note there is no record evi- dence as to what action, if any, the District Council took on the letter and that there is no reference to either the Palumbo letter itself or the contents thereof on the face of the "Independent Agreement," or to any other modifi- cation of said document's terms Nevertheless, according to Prior, "I'm sure there was a modification in this case" In this regard, he testified, "If [an employer sends] some kind of a letter or something like a cover letter you know, saying that they will be bound by this, this and this And if the District Council agreed to it or some- thing, they'd talk about it and then they would say, okay, we'll agree to this" Disputing Prior, executive sec- retary Gnmes" was ailamant that there was, in fact, no modification" with regard to the contract with Twin City Overhead Door Co He testified that, in 1978, busi- ness representatives and the executive secretary were au- thorized to approve independent agreements, that, "as a rule," these were not discussed by the District Council's members, and that employers would have been told "no" had any requested modifications from the exact terms of an independent agreement On the latter point, he added that "the only change I have ever seen on one of these contracts is the deletion of [the] last paragraph" and that other modifications are impossible due to the existence of a "favorite nations" clause in the Associated General Contractors' contract During cross-examination, Grimes further insisted that his predecessor, Donald Jackman, who was the executive secretary of the District Council for a time period including 1978, also never permitted modifications of the terms of Independent agreements Thereupon, he was confronted with Respondent's Exhib- it 5, a 1975 independent agreement between the District Council and Industrial Door Co, Inc , on the face of which Donald Jackson initialed acceptance of a modifi- cation of the initial paragraph While not conceding that Jackman likewise approved modifications to many agree- ments, Grimes did concede not knowing what Jackman may have approved with regard to each new contracting employer Whatever action was taken by Jackman and/or the District Council members regarding the con- tract with Twin City Overhead Door Co, Nordick's tes- timony was uncontroverted that, subsequently mailing the envelope, allegedly containing both General Coun- sel's Exhibit 2 and Respondent's Exhibit 2, to the District Council, he heard nothing from the former regarding ac- ceptance or rejection of the proposed agreement '2 10 Gratuitously commenting on the testimony and credibility of Prior, Grimes averred that he • has many times been incorrect" " With regard to that portion of the proposed modification of the agreement removing service department employees from coverage under the agreement, I note that service department work is nowhere defined in either the Carpenters Union commercial or residential agreements Clay- ton Grimes testified that it doesn t include It or exclude It But, I would say the policy is to enforce our contract 12 association collective-bargaining agreements to which Twin City Overhead Door Co would have become bound, if any, there is no record evidence that the District Council gave copies of said con- tract or contracts to Nordick, Palumbo, or any representative of the Company Indeed, although there have been successor collective bargain- ing agreements covering commercial and residential construction work Continued 'TWIN CITY GARAGE DOOR CO 123 The record clearly establishes that, while possibly be- coming bound to another collective-bargaining agree- ment with the District Council, other than continuing its past practice of paying contractual wages to and fnnge benefits on behalf of its installers who were Carpenters Union membefs, Nordpal Corporation, doing business as Twin City Overhead Door Co and, since October 1978, as Respondent, had no intention to comply—and has not complied—with the terms of any association collective- bargaining agreement to which it may have been bound pursuant to the terms of the "Independent Agreement" Thus, shown copies of the existing Associated General Contractors and Twin Cities Residential Builders Labor Association' 3 contracts, Stephen Donohue testified that, other than paying the established wages and fringe bene- fits, as set forth above, Respondent adhered to none of the enumerated terms and conditions of employment and has never done so while he has been employed as gener- al manager With regard to contractual wages and fringe benefits and union security," Nordick testified that, as Nordpal Corporation under its two trade names had done dunng the penod 1968 through May 1978, subse- quent to May 2, 1978, Twin City Overhead Door Co and, after October 1978, Respondent continued the prac- tices of not requiring its installers to become members of the Carpenters (Carl Pierret testified that, by said year, "probably about half' were members and that, by 1987, only two of Respondent's 12 to 14 installers were Car- penters members' s), of paying its installers who were or became members the existing contractual wages and fringe benefits," and of paying neither the contractual wages nor the fnnge benefits to its installers who were not Carpenters members Corroboration for the testimo- ny of Donohue and Nordick is found in General Coun- sel's Exhibits 4 through 9, which are fringe benefit trust fund report forms" submitted by Respondent from July (the most recent commercial and residential agreements are effective from 1986 until April 30, 1989), there is no evidence that Nordpal Corpo- ration, doing business as Twin City Overhead Door Co or, subsequent to October 1978, doing business as Respondent, has ever been given copies by the District Council According to Stephen Donohue, what Respond- ent has periodically received from the District Council are letters, similar to General Counsel's Exhibit 3(b), detailing the effective contractual wage and fringe benefit rates Other than said economic terms, there is no record evidence, establishing that Respondent has ever been aware of the contractual terms to which It allegedly is bound 13 Said Association is the successor to the Minneapolis Builders and St Paul Builders Association for collective bargaining over residential con- struction work 14 Both of the current commercial and residential construction Carpen- ters Union collective-bargaining agreements contain construction Indus- try-type union-security clauses, requiring membership in the Carpenters Union on the eighth day of employment and a signatory contractor to terminate any employee who fails to comply Such clauses have appar- ently been in the Carpenters Minneapolis and St Paul contracts since, at least, 1968 15 Pierret could recall no installer ever being terminated because he had not become a member 16 R Exh 5 is a fringe benefits report form submitted by Twin City Overhead Door Co on behalf of seven installers in January 1978 to the contractual fringe benefit trust funds Clayton Grimes testified that, to his knowledge, the trust funds do not accept contributions from a nonsignatory contractor ', On a monthly basis, the trust funds administrative office sends to each contracting employer a report form which is to be returned by the employer The administrative office prints the employee names on the form, based uopn the previous month's report form, and the employer is 1982 until October 1987 The number of installers for whom reports were filed during this period decreased from 6 to 2, while Respondent's complement, at all times, was in excess of 10 installers Furthermore, the record is replete with the testimony of Respondent's nonunion installers, stating that they earned wages below the contractual wage rate during 1987 and before The events which precipitated the filing of the instant unfair practice charges occurred during the spring and summer of 1987, are not in serious dispute, and involve a series of approximately six confrontations during which business representatives of the District Council' s discov- ered several of Respondent's non-Carpenters member-in- stallers working on new commercial construction projects in the Minneapolis-St Paul metropolitan areas Is In this regard, Carl Pierret testified that, throughout his tenure of employment by Nordpal Corpo- ration under its three business names, the nonmember-in- stallers performed the same garage door installation work as done by those installers who were Carpenters Union members According to four nonunion installers" who worked for Respondent during the above time period, on each occasion when approached, while work- ing, by business representative Gerald Beedle, the latter asked for the installer's name and to see his union card When informed by the installer that he was not a member, Beedle asked if the employee wanted to join If given a negative response, Beedle's practice was to re- quest that the installer leave the jobsite Thereupon, the installer telephoned Respondent's office and either Dono- hue or another official instructed him to leave the job- site Further, notwithstanding that the installation work may not have been completed by that employee, he would be assigned, by Respondent, to work at another jobsite the next day Beedle testified that the District Council considered the use of nonunion personnel by union-represented garage door installation companies to have been a senous problem in early 1987 Confirming the testimony of Robin Bakken and Carl Pierret, Beedle recalled encoun- tering them on a jobsite that spring Recognizing Pierret as a union member, Beedle asked Bakken to identify him- self and for his union membership After ascertaining supposed to write in the names of any additional bargaining unit employ- ees who have performed Carpenters' work during the month and for whom fringe benefit payments should be made According to Clayton Grimes, "the employer will pay contributions for every carpenter hours worked,' regardless if the employee is or is not a member of the Carpen- ters While the trust fund report forms bear the name Twin City Overhead Door Co, there is no dispute that Respondent continued making contri- butions and submitting the forms after October 1978 Asked why the trust funds administrative office never was notified of the name change, Donohue said, "It really didn't make any difference to me, the name of the company on the form I was paying on the benefits because of my arrangement with those employees" 19 All but one of the incidents involve business representative Gerald Beedle 19 Stephen Donohue testified that Respondent's usual practice was to have only its member-installers work on jobsites on which only union personnel were supposed to work and that he believed the projects, on which the incidents occurred, were not of that type 29 Those who testified were Robin Bakken, James Udell ., Brian Rother, and Mark Nordick Also, Carl Therret testified on this subject 124 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Bakken s identity and his lack of membership Beedle went through the procedures soliciting Bakken to join The latter was hesitant and insisted upon telephon mg Respondent s office He did so and was instructed to leave the jobsite Later that day in view of the afore mentioned industrywide problem and of a feeling there was a probability that Bakken would merely be trans ferred to another job, Beedle telephoned Respondent s office and spoke to Donohue stating that we re having problems with nonunion people on the jobs and not get ting signed up and we wanted to get some kind of re solve on it to get together on it And that when we come on the job they pack their stuff and leave and we know they are not leaving the company but we can t find them at all times We know it s a hide and seek game Donohue replied that they are not with us they are shop people They are not working in the field Despite Donohue s assurances Beedle remained unconvinced his belief became tangible in July at which time he confronted several of Respondent s install ers, including Bakken on another jobsite One Terry Ash was a Carpenters member but the remainder (Bakken, Jim Udell Brian Rother and Ken LaVasseur) were not members On this occasion the exchange be tween Beedle and the installers became heated and Beedle may have threatened" the employees to induce them to leave the jobsite Upset Beedle telephoned Don ohue telling him that he (Beedle) wanted to resolve the problem of Respondent scheduling nonunion personnel to perform work that comes under our contract Beedle added that other District Council business repre sentatives had also encountered nonunion personnel working for Respondent at Twin Cities area jobsites and that when propositioned to join, they would call their dispatcher and were told to leave the job Repeat mg his reply of their earlier conversation Donohue said that the installers on this job were service people they were only temporary and they were shop help Accord mg to Beedle he thereupon warned Donohue that if we couldn t get the situation straightened out he would tell general contractors not to subcontract work to Re spondent Donohue responded that Respondent would go nonunion and that in any event, there was no con tract between the parties 22 Beedle ended the conversa tion stating that the District Council believed that a col lective bargaining agreement existed as Respondent em ployed union personnel and paid fringe benefits on them 23 Thereupon Beedle reported the entire problem to his supervisor Harry Blue 21 Beedle denies threatening to physically remove Respondent s em ployees or saying anything about carpenters or union members but admits saying he had heard from people who were unhappy about their pres ence on the jobsite In contrast Brian Rother stated that Beedle had threatened to have some people come over and remove us he reported the incident to Donohue 22 In 1984 an attorney had advised Nordick and Donohue that no con tract between Respondent and the District Council then existed Re spondent failed to advise the Carpenters of its attorney s opinion 23 Donohue testified that he had two conversations with Beedle in July with regard to discovering five nonunion Installers on a job Beedle said that they had a problem and Donohue replied that he did not like Beedle threatening his employees Beedle asked what he would do and Donohue replied that he wasn t going to do anything at that time Two days later Beedle again called him asked what Respondent would do Blue, who at that time was attempting to resolve a grievance against Respondent filed by Carl Pierret 24 consulted with Clayton Grimes and together, they drafted and executed a letter dated August 26 1987 to Respondent Said letter General Counsel s Exhibit 10 reads as follows Steve Donahue Twin City Garage Door Co 4609 85th Avenue N Minneapolis Minnesota 55443 Mr Donahue As per your labor agreement with the Twin City Carpenters District Council you are in violation of Article 5 Union Security We hereby demand that Mark Nordick contact Business Representative Bruce Scharmer at Carpen ters Local #7 312 Central Avenue Minneapolis Minnesota telephone 379 9505 to join the Carpen ters Union or you must discharge him from your employ We further demand that Ron LaVasseur Brian Rother James Udell and Gary Helber contact Business Representative Jerry Beedle at Carpenters Local #87 411 Main Street St Paul, Minnesota telephone 224 5661 to join the Carpenters Union or you must discharge him from your employ These men are being referred to these specific Locals because they were contacted by the above mentioned Business Representatives at different job sites If you do not comply within three (3) working days, we shall proceed to arbitration Grimes testified that he spoke by telephone with Dono hue subsequent to sending the letter and that during the conversation they spoke about the status of the employ ees named in the letter Steve explained to me [that] these people work in the shop or in the office and that this job was an emergency and they were sent out to help complete the installation And I believe I mentioned to him that we were requesting that they join the Car penters Union and fringe funds be paid on them He explained to me why they were there that he felt the job was an emergency and that they were sent out there for a short period of time Grimes added that he mentioned that Respondent was in violation of their contract but that Donohue did not respond There is no dispute that in fact Respondent did not comply with the demands set forth in the August 26 letter and Donohue later told Gnmes that we are not doing anything different than we have done before and threatened to shut them down Upset Donohue telephoned Clayton Grimes regarding Beedle s threats Gnmes replied that he would speak to Beedle but that he also was aware of Respondent s utilization of non union personnel Donohue replied that we were in a real bind on [that] job we had gotten the matenal late and we threw a bunch of people at the job He added that one person was an office worker and one was a warehoube worker During cross examination Donohue admitted that Bakken and Udell were regular full time Installers 24 Pierret had been terminated by Respondent allegedly for refusing to work with a nonunion Installer on a jobsite TWIN CITY GARAGE DOOR CO 125 The original unfair labor practice charge herein was filed by the District Council on September 28, 1987 Ap- proximately a month later, on or about October 20, Grimes met with Nordick and Donohue at a restaurant in St Paul The subject matter of their conversation was settlement of the unfair labor practice litigation, with Nordick speaking at length that the company had always been a union employer and that it wished to remain a union employer Nordick offered two possible resolu- tions that Respondent would execute a new contract with the Distnct Council or that Respondent would no longer install its garage doors, instead subcontracting all such work to union subcontractors 25 No agreements were reached, and, on or about November 4, 1987, the District Council received the following letter, executed by Nordick and dated November 2 Twin City Carpenters District Council 842 Raymond Ave St Paul, MN 55114 ATTN Mr Clayton Grimes Dear Mr Grimes, We understand you claim to have a labor agree- ment with this company As you know, we do not agree However, in the interest of certainty, this is notice to you that this company hereby repudiates any agreement between it and your union According to Nordick, the letter was sent "because they claimed we had an agreement and I think that's what this all came out of" As one aspect of its defenses to the unfair labor prac- tice allegations, Respondent asserts that the District Council, by its conduct herein, has waived its right to file the instant unfair labor practice charges Initially as to the allged failure to pay contractual fringe benefits on behalf of non-Carpenters Union member-installers, Ste- phen Donohue testified that, on two occasions, in 1984 and in 1986, an auditor employed by the Carpenters fringe benefit trust funds conducted audits of Respond- ent's payroll records in order to ascertain if the latter had correctly reported the hours of work for the install- ers on behalf of whom Respondent made payments to the fringe benefit trust funds—the Carpenters Union member-installers According to Donohue, the individual who conducted the audits only asked for the payroll records for those individuals and examined the records of none of the nonunion installers During cross-examina- tion, Donohue admitted never informing the auditor that Respondent had other employees who performed the identical work and whose names did not appear on the report forms With regard to Respondent's failure to en- force the union-security clauses of the prior and existing association collective-bargaining agreements, Respondent contends that, since 1978, business representatives of the District Council have, on numerous occasions, found Re- 25 Respondent seems to have adopted the latter course of conduct Thus, the Installers, who testified, all stated that they have severed their employment relationship with Respondent, have joined the Carpenters, and, since October or November 1987, have been performing installation work for Respondent on a subcontract basis spondent's nonunion installers working on new commer- cial construction jobsites and that, other than demanding that said individuals leave the jobsite, the business repre- sentatives have never requested that Respondent adhere to the terms of any applicable union-security clause as to said employees 26 Thus, Nordick testified that business representatives of the District Council have inquired whether Respondent's nonunion installers have union cards on jobsites "off and on every year back to 1978" and that "they usually just send the guy home and we probably send a union guy back to finish the job "27 The only specific evidence of such card checks on job- sites during the penod 1978 through January 1987 was from Carl Pierret Asked how often Carpenters business representatives visited jobsites on which he was working during those years, he replied that "it would vary, but I suppose twice a month" Asked if, on those occasions Respondent's nonunion installers were approached, Pier- ret said, "It didn't happen often then, but it did" He added that, as a result of these confrontations, the non- union personnel ..left the jobsites With regard to the time period 1983 through January 1987, Pierret recalled busi- ness representatives visited projects on which he worked approximately twice a month, but he normally worked alone during this time period He added that he could not recall any nonunion installer having been terminated by Respondent after being confronted by a Carpenters business agent on a construction project Finally, Pierret testified that the Carpenters fined him in 1984 "because I was working with a nonunion person" and that, at his tnal, he commented to Gerald Beedle "that would be nice if the guy I was caught with would join the union" Pierret believed that the employee eventually quit without having joined 26 In this regard, while unaware of what the District Council's business representatives have done, Grimes admitted that 'I have never sent such a letter like [G C Exh 101 before" As to the practice of the District Council business representatives after having discovered a signatory con- tractor utilizing nonunion personnel, Grimes was somewhat contradicto- ry Thus, asked if the business representative would send a letter demand- ing compliance with the contractual union-security clause, Grimes replied "In the normal course of business, one of the business agents probably would have" Later, he explained that in Instances involving business agents finding Respondent's nonunion personnel on jobsites, 'the business agent calls the company and requests that the man join, the company usually tells the man to leave the job and that is usually the end of it" Gerald Beedle corroborated Grimes on this point He testified that, in regard to a 1984 incident during which he discovered Carl Pierret work- ing with a nonunion installer on a new commercial construction jobsite and which eventually resulted in the levying of an internal union fine against Pierret, he solicited the nonunion worker to join the Carpenters Thereupon, the individual telephoned Respondent s office and reported back to Beedle that he had been Instructed to leave the project Beedle then telephoned to Respondent, spoke to the "dispatcher" and was told that the worker was "only temporary" Inasmuch as the employee t seem to be an experienced person,' Beedle felt It unnecessary to invoke the union-security clause 27 Nordick insisted that rather than Respondent, it is the District Council business representative who "chases" the employee off a project or orders Respondent to do so Donohue contradicted Nordick on this point, testifying that whenever a Carpenters business agent finds a non- union installer on a jobsite, Donohue's practice is to talk to the employee, "determine the situation that the job was in and normally tell him to leave the premises Donohue added that such jobsite confrontations have occurred on a regular basis from 1983 through 1987 126 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD B Analysts At the outset, the record is manifestly certain as to three points First, no matter under which trade name it has operated during the 20 years of its existence, there has been—and continues to be—one employer herein Thus, whether doing business as Overhead Door Compa- ny of the Twin Cities Commercial, as Twin City Over- head Door Co, or as Twin City Garage Door Co, Nordpal Corporation has always been the sole corporate entity involved Further, Ralph Nordick has been either the 50 percent or only shareholder in the corporation and was in I968—and remains—its president and in over- all charge of the corporation's business operations More- over, while the corporation's trade name has been twice changed, such has resulted from legal difficulties and the essential character of the business has remained un- changed since 1968—the sale of and installation of over- head garage doors on new commercial and residential construction projects in the Minneapolis and St Paul metropolitan areas Accordingly, I find that Respondent, at all times material herein, has been—and is—the em- ployer herein Next, there exists no dispute that, since at least 1978 and continuing through October 1987, without offering the District Council an opportunity to bargain, Respondent has failed to comply with the union-security provisions of the successive collective-bargaining agree- ments between the District Council and the Associated General Contractors and between the District Council and the Twin Cities Residential Builders Labor Associa- tion, that, during said time period, without affording the District Council an opportunity to bargain, Respondent has failed to pay to those of its installer-employees who are not members of the Carpenters the wages and fringe benefits established by the aforementioned collective-bar- gaining agreements, and that, on or about November 2, 1987, Respondent repudiated "any" collective-bargaining agreement between itself and the District Council Based on Respondent's admissions in these regards, I conclude that it, in fact, engaged in the above-described acts and conduct The final indisputable point involves the atti- tude of the respective parties and is quite disturbing given the importance of collective bargaining That is, not only did Respondent fail to comply with its agree- ments with the District Council in the above manner but also it admittedly had no intent of ever complying with any term and conditions of employment of said agree- ments—seemingly entering into these solely for the sake of countenance and to permit it to work on those jobsites in the Minneapolis-St Paul municipal areas on which only union-affiliated employees could work On the other hand, despite Respondent's blatant—and hardly concealed—noncompliance, the District Council man- aged, for approximately 20 years, to act in virtual igno- rance of the former's perfidy, failing to follow up obvi- ous evidence of contractual breach, and not adhering to its own standard procedures 28 28 As to this, I note that not until 1987 did agents of the District Coun- cil bother to follow their usual practice of sending a letter to Respondent, demanding compliance with the contractual union security provision This is especially bothersome, given Carl Pierret's defense at his 1984 fine The complaint alleges that, by engaging in the above conduct since March 1987, Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1), (3), and (5) of the Act As its initial defense to these allegations, Respondent contends that no contract was consummated 29 between it and the District Council in 1978 and that, therefore, its 1987 conduct was not un- lawful inasmuch as no bargaining relationship existed be- tween the parties Further, counsel argues, if any agree- ment existed between the District Council and Respond- ent, it pertained only to new commercial construction work As a second defense, Respondent's counsel points to the District Council's inaction in enforcing its agree- ment since 1978, asserting that such constitutes a waiver of whatever contractual rights the District Council pos- sessed since 1978 Finally, Respondent argues that if a collective-bargaining relationship existed at any time ma- terial herein, such was governed by the principles of Section 8(f) of the Act and was lawfully repudiated by Respondent With regard to the matter of the formation of a contract between the District Council and Respond- ent in 1978, I note initially that, despite Ralph Nordick's asserted lack of recall, a collective-bargaining relation- ship between the parties actually commenced 10 years earlier, in 1968, when Nordick executed, on Respond- ent's behalf, a document, pursuant to which it agreed to employ carpenters (installers) in accordance with existing multiemployer contracts to which the District Council was a party and became bound to any renewals, exten- sions, or modifications of said agreements, and that there exists no record evidence that either party has given the required written notice to the other of its intent to termi- nate the 1968 agreement Nevertheless, acting as if there existed no ongoing contractual relationship, 30 the Dis- trict Council, as part of a campaign to organize the non- union garage door installation companies in the area, as- signed business representative Richard Prior to the task of obtaining an executed independent agreement from Respondent Thereupon, after picketing outside the lat- ter's office facility, Prior presented such an agreement to Respondent's secretary-treasurer, Robert Palumbo As to what thereafter transpired, we have, on one hand, only the testimony of the District Council's present executive secretary, Clayton Grimes, who, I be- lieve, exhibited scant, if any, knowledge as to what oc- curred between the parties in 1978 and whose testimony as to the District Council's past practice regarding con- tractual modifications, as set forth above, seemed wholly uninformed Accordingly, I shall not rely on his testimo- ny concerning the formation of any contract by the par- proceeding that the District Council was making no effort to have Re- spondent's nonmember-Installers join the Carpenters 28 There are two aspects to this defense—that the District Council never accepted Ralph Norchck s counteroffer and that the parties never reached a meeting of the minds on the contract s terms 38 The only conceivable source of confusion discernible from the record, which may have caused the District Council to act as It did, was Respondent s 1974 name change However, based on the testimony of Harry Blue that he was aware of the name change in 1975 and the sub- mission of a January 1978 trust fund statement, naming as the contracting party, Twin City Overhead Door Co, the District Council seemingly considered Respondent, under this new name, as a signatory contractor Therefore, the necessity for Prior to seek a new contract from Respond ent remains unexplained TWIN CITY GARAGE DOOR CO 127 ties in 1978 On the other hand, Respondent proffered two witnesses, Ralph Nordick and Richard Prior, who were involved in whatever was transacted between the parties in 1978 Prior impressed me as being a candid and straightforward witness, one who holds no pecuniary in- terest in the result of this proceeding I credit and rely on his testimony as to the circumstances surrounding Re- spondent's contract negotiations that year In contrast, Ralph Nordick's testimonial demeanor, for the most part, was that of a disingenuous witness However, his testi- mony regarding the execution of General Counsel's Ex- hibit 2 and the submission of Respondent's Exhibit 2 to the District Council is corroborated, in significant part, by Prior, therefore I credit and rely on those corroborat- ed aspects of Nordick's testimony Based upon the fore- going credibility resolutions, I find that, in the spring of 1978, nonunion garage door installation companies were a pnmary source of competition for Respondent, particu- larly with regard to residential construction work, and that, when Prior presented an independent agreement to Palumbo, the latter argued that Respondent would not agree to sign unless contractual coverage was limited to new commercial construction work and was subsequent- ly advised by Nordick to do nothing until they discussed the matter f • Placing what I believe next occurred in a legal con- text, under the well-settled tenets of contract law, an ex- pression of acceptance of an offer which vanes its terms is a counteroffer Such does not constitute an acceptance of a contract and must, in turn, be accepted uncondition- ally and according to its precise terms by the offer or for a contract to be consummated A Corbin, Corbin On Contracts, § 82 at 130-131 (1952), Steelworkers v O'Neal Steel, 321 F Supp 235 (S Dist Alabama 1969), Oregon Independent Grocers Assn v Meat Cutters Local 324, 236 F Supp 825 (D Oregon 1964), Philadelphia Transporta- tion Co v Transport Workers Union, 31 LRRM 2504 (1953) Of course, while the Board traditionally observes that the "technical rules of contract law do not necessar- ily control the making of collective-bargaining agree- ments," it will, on occasion, utilize said principles if nec- essary to the resolution of a particular case Ben Franklin National Bank, 278 NLRB 986 fn 3 (1986), Big John Food King, 171 NLRB 1491 (1968) Assuming arguendo the applicability of the rules of offer and acceptance to the instant matter, given the reservations of Palumbo and Nordick, I do not believe Respondent's intent was ever to accept the District Council's offer and merely execute the proffered short-form contract Rather,' I find that, in- asmuch as Prior testified that the contents of the letter constituted the subject matter of the back-and-forth dis- cussions between the District Council and Respondent and that he believed such a letter was received and con- sidered by the District Council, Nordick should be cred- ited that Respondent's Exhibit 2 was drafted by him and, along with the executed "Independent Agreement," placed, by him, in an envelope which was addressed to the District Counci1 3 ' and that, together, the two docu- 31 While there is no evidence that the envelope, which contained both documents, was deposited in the mail, given the fact that the "Independ- ent Agreement" was received by the District Council, I am convinced— ments were intended as—and constituted—Respondent's counteroffer—"our deal"—to the former Further, con- trary to Respondent's primary contention that such was never accepted by the District Counci1 32 given Prior's recollection, on which I rely, that "there was a modifica- tion in this case," I find that the District Council accept- ed33 Respondent's counteroffer and that, as the source for said modification could only have been the contents of Respondent's Exhibit 2, said acceptance must have conformed to the terms of the counteroffer, the only sig- nificant one of which was that Respondent's installers would not be covered by the terms of the existing multi- employer residential construction agreement 34 Counsel for the General Counsel argues that I should not have received the Palumbo letter as evidence and that, as there is no reference to it on the face of General Coun- sel's Exhibit 2, I should not construe it as limiting Re- spondent's obligations under the "Independent Agree- ment" Contrary to counsel, based upon my credibility resolutions and the record as a whole, I find—and am convinced—that the Palumbo letter, Respondent's Exhib- it 2, rather than modifying another agreement, was in- tended to be "an integral and essential part of the labor and find—that the Palumbo letter arrived at the same time in the same envelope 32 In so arguing, counsel for Respondent correctly cites the testimony of Clayton Grimes that employers who desire modifications in the Inde- pendent agreement would be told no, and that it was not the policy of the Distnct Council to give modifications However, Grimes was not in- volved in any decisions reached with regard to Respondent's contract in 1978, was unaware that his predecessor Jackman had approved modifica- tions such as in R Exh 5, and conceded being unaware of other such modifications Essentially, then, reiterating my finding above, Grimes testimony regarding the District Council's policy on contract modifica- tions in 1978 is of no value 33 While I note that Respondent heard nothing from the District Coun- cil regarding acceptance or rejection of what I perceive to have been its counteroffer, a labor organization's acceptance can be Inferred from its conduct following the making of an offer or counteroffer Capitol-Husting Co v NLRB, 671 F 2d 237 (7th Cif 1982) Herein, I note that the con- tractual fringe benefit trust funds continued to accept payments from Re- spondent Absent a collective-bargaining agreement, an employer is not obligated to make such payments (Operating Engineers Pension Trust v Gilliam, 737 F 2d 1501, 1503 (9th Cm 1984), Carpenters Southern Califor- nia Administrative Corp v Russell, 726 F 2d 1410 (9th Cm 1984)), and, according to Grimes, only signatory contractors are required to do so Further, to the limited extent such was done herein, business representa- tives did contact Respondent with regard to the employment of nonunion employees when such individuals were discovered on construction projects Finally, the fact that Prior did not subsequently contact Re- spondent, in my view, is significant to the point,of contract acceptance, for he originally solicited a collective-bargaining agreement Clearly, if the District Council were dissatisfied with Respondent s stated conditions or did not consider an agreement to have been consummated, Prior would have contacted Palumbo or Nordick While perhaps a stated ac- ceptance would have been the proper course or action, the lack of such, I believe, is not fatal to the existence of an agreement in these circum- stances 34 Analysis of R Exh 2 discloses that the only actual modification re quested concerns the applicability of the residential construction multiem ployer contract While Respondent also sought to exclude its service people from coverage, M fact, such work is,nowhere defined in either the commercial or residential agreements Pertinent to my conclusion that the District Council accepted Re- spondent s counterproposal is Richard Prior s observation that the Dis- trict Council would do what was necessary to achieve a contract— 'If you can get a contract, you can get a contract and later you can work on another end of it" Prior believed such was the District Council's position as to Respondent, and I so find 128 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD agreement between the parties" Philadelphia Transporta- tion Go, supra at 2505, Oregon Independent Grocers Assn, supra Further, it was identified by the individual (Pa- lumbo) who drafted and placed the letter (along with the signed "Independent Agreement') in an envelope, ad- dressed to the District Council Accordingly, I find that a successor agreement, to their 1968 contract," was con- summated by the District Council and Respondent in 1978, one which bound Respondent only to the terms of the existing Associated General Contractors' collective- bargaining agreement covering new commercial con- struction work and modifications, extensions, and renew- als thereof 36 Turning to Respondent's second defense to the instant allegations, that the District Council, by its conduct herein, has waived its rights under the 1978 agreement, I reiterate my view that the latter arguably acted irrespon- sibly as to enforcing its collective-bargaining agreements with Respondent Indeed, it seems incredible that the District Council' undertook an effort to fine Carl Pierret for working with a nonmember installer on a jobsite but ignored his entreaties that it require the nonmember em- ployee to join the Carpenters Union Surely such was hint that Respondent might not be honoring its contrac- tual commitments Nevertheless, the standard for waiver in Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act bargaining cases is a rather stringent one Thus, "national labor policy disfa- vors waivers of statutory rights by labor organizations and a labor organization's intention to waive a right must be clear before a claim of waiver can succeed" Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co v NLRB, 687 F 2d 633, 634 (2d Cir 1982) As also stated by the Board, "the burden [of proof] is on the party asserting waiver and such a waiver must be shown to be clear and unmis- takable" Pertec Computer Corp, 284 NLRB 810 fn 2 (1987) There is no question that an employer may not unilaterally change employees' terms and conditions of employment without first affording said employees' bar- gaining representative the opportunity to bargain over said changes NLRB v Katz, 369 U S 736 (1961) Coun- sel for Respondent asserted in his postheanng brief that the District Council has waived its right to bargain as it was well aware, since 1978, that the Company had not been adhering to its supposed obligations under the par- 35 Noting that the 1968 contract was never terminated pursuant to its terms, I find that, by picketing Respondent and soliciting It to sign an- other independent agreement in 1978, the District Council effectively gave notice to Respondent that it desired the 1968 contract be terminat- ed 36 Respondent argues that no true contract could have been consum- mated herein as there was no "meeting of the minds" by the parties In support, counsel cites two decisions—Caporale v Mar Les Inc , 656 F 2d 242 (7th Cm 1981) and Giardono v Jones, Case No 84 C 20026 (N Dist Illinois 1987) While I agree that said decisions are similar to the instant matter, both differ in one significant aspect Unlike the contractors in Ca- porale and Giardono, Respondent did not merely—or unwittingly—exe- cute a memorandum agreement, not fully cognizant of its terms and un- aware of the consequences Rather, crediting the testimony of both Nor- dick and Prior, Respondent engaged in extensive and substantive bargain- ing with the District Council and made a counteroffer, setting forth ex- actly what It believed the parties' contracts should cover When the Ds- met Council accepted the counteroffer—as I believe It did—the parties, in fact, reached a true "meeting of the minds" Moreover, Respondent has always been aware of its monetary obligations under the successive applicable Industry contracts ties' collective -bargaining agreement and initially pointed to the "frequent" occasions on which District Council business representatives caught Respondent's non- member-installers on jobsites and failed to require Re- spondent to enforce the contractual union-security clause against them However, the only direct evidence of such prior to 1987 came from the testimony of Carl Pierret, and, while testifying that confrontations did occur during which he was present, such "didn't happen often" Also, the record warrants the conclusion that Respondent's practice was to deliberately mislead the business repre- sentatives as to the status of the nonmember-installers Thus, Clayton Grimes and Gerald Beedle testified—and Stephen Donohue admitted—that the latter told the Dis- trict Council officials in 1987 that various nonmember-in- stallers, who had been caught by Beedle working on commercial construction projects, were merely working on an emergency basis, were not regular installers, or were shop employees Donohue so informed Beedle and Grimes, aware that his information was untrue More- over, Beedle, who appeared to be an honest witness and is credited herein, testified to a similar incident in 1984 wherein Respondent's dispatcher advised him that a non- member-installer on a jobsite was merely temporary Counsel also pointed to the two audits of Respondent's payroll records by an auditor for the contractual fringe benefit trust funds in 1984 and 1986 While these did not establish that nonmember-installers were employed by Respondent or that no fringe benefits were being paid on their behalf, the record is clear that the auditor was checking only on those employees for whom benefits had been paid and that Respondent never notified him that other installers, nonmember employees, were also performing Carpenters work Accordingly, the foregoing establishes that, at most, Respondent deliberately con- cealed its contractual breaches from the District Council, and, at least, the latter was no more than lax or negligent in pursuing its contractual rights Certainly, it cannot be said that the District Council's inaction in enforcing its rights ever arose to the level of "a clear and unmistak- able" waiver of its right to bargain, and no official of the District Council ever gave to Respondent the former's iriipnmatur to engage in its admitted contractual breaches Furthermore, assuming arguendo that the Dis- trict Council's past inaction constituted waivers in the early 1980s, it is clear that "a right once waived is not necessarily lost forever" Murphy Diesel Go, 184 NLRB 757, 763 (1970), NLRB v Miller Brewing Co, 408 F 2d 12, 14 (9th Cir 1969) In the circumstances of this case, Respondent's unilateral failure to adhere to the terms of its collective-bargaining agreement with the District Council during the 10(b) statute of limitations period was serious enough to require bargaining about them Id Therefore, I find Respondent's above defense to be with- out merit 37 37 In support for its waiver contention, Respondent's counsel cites to Greenleaf Motor Express, 285 NLRB 844 (1987), in which the Board con- cluded that a union had not waived its representational rights Counsel argues that the factors on which the Board relied to find no waiver therein are absent in the Instant factual context and that the Board would, Continued TWIN CITY GARAGE DOOR CO 129 Respondent's final defense to the complaint allegations is that it lawfully repudiated an 8(f) bargaining relation- ship with the District Council Initially, there can be no doubt that Respondent has been, and is, an employer en- gaged in the building and construction industry Thus, its employees are engaged in the installation of overhead garage doors on new commercial and residential con- struction projects in the Minneapolis and St Paul munic- ipal areas In these circumstances and as there is no record evidence that the Carpenters represented a major- ity of Respondent's installation employees at the time the parties entered into their 1978 collective-bargaining agreement, I conclude—and it is undisputed—that Re- spondent entered into its collective-bargaining relation- ship with the District Council pursuant to Section 8(f) of the Act 38 Recently, in John Dekkwa & Sons, Inc , 282 NLRB 1375 (1987), the Board reversed and clarified sev- eral principles of the law in this area, stating (1) a collective-bargaining agreement permitted by Section 8(1) shall be enforceable through the mecha- nisms of Section 8(a)(5) and Section 8(b)(3), (2) such agreements will not bar the processing of valid peti- tions filed pursuant to Section 9(c) and Section 9(e), (3) in processing such petitions, the appropriate unit normally will be the single employer's employees covered by the agreement, and (4) upon the expira- tion of such agreements, the signatory union will enjoy no presumption of majority status, and either party may repudiate the 8(f) bargaining relationship Id at 1377-1378 As I understand the argument ad- vanced by counsel for Respondent, while the Company may have been obligated to adhere to the Carpenters therefore, reach an opposite result Initially, I am not as sanguine as counsel that the District Council's failure to uncover Respondent's perfi- dy was entirely the fault of the former Rather, Respondent deliberately sought to conceal the exact status of its non-Carpenters Union members from the District Council Further, Inasmuch as the Board did not have before it the instant factual context, It is mere speculation as to how the Board would have ruled Therefore, I find Respondent's reliance upon Greenleaf Motor Express, supra, not controlling herein 38 Sec 8(t) of the Act reads as follows It shall not be an unfair labor practice under subsections (a) and (b) of this section for an employer engaged primarily in the building and construction Industry to make an agreement covering employees engaged (or who, upon their employment, will be engaged) in the building and construction industry with a labor organization of which building and construction employees are members (not estab- lished, maintained, or assisted by any action defined in section 8(a) of this Act as an unfair labor practice) because (1) the majority status of such labor organization has not been established under the provisions of section 9 of this Act prior to the making of such agreement, or (2) such agreement requires as a condition of employment, membership in such labor organization after the seventh day following the begin- ning of such employment or the effective date of the agreement, whichever is later, or (3) such agreement requires the employer to notify such labor organization of opportunities for employment with such employer, or gives such labor organization an opportunity to refer qualified applicants for such employment, or (4) such agree- ment specifies minimum training or experience qualifications for em- ployment or provides for priority in opportunities for employment based upon length of service with such employer, in the industry or in the particular geographical area Provided, That nothing in this subsection shall set aside the final proviso to section 8(a)(3) of this Act Provided further, That any agreement which would be invalid, but for clause (1) of this subsection, shall not be a bar to a petition filed pursuant to section 9(c) or 9(e) commercial construction agreement in effect at the time of the 1978 contract, Respondent, by dint of the above principles, was free to—and did—repudiate successor agreements thereto However, while the Board, as of the date of this decision, has apparently not yet considered, in the context of Section 8(1) of the Act, the liability under successive multiemployer association collecti■re- bargaining agreements of employers who are parties to short-form agreements, which bind them to such con- tracts, but who are not members of the signatory multi- employer associations, the Board has ruled upon the con- tinuing contractual liability of employer-members of mul- tiemployer bargaining associations who authorize their associations to bargain and enter into successive agree- ments, on their behalf, with labor organizations Thus, in Kephart Plumbing, 285 NLRB 612 (1987), Reliable Elec- tric Go, 286 NLRB 834 (1987), and Carthage Sheet Metal Go, 286 NLRB 1249 (1987), the Board, notwithstanding the existence of 8(0 bargaining relationships, concluded that the respective employers were bound by successor collective-bargaining agreements In Reliable Electric Go, the Board found that the employer's authorization to the multiemployer association which, as herein, was in the nature of a short-form recognition agreement and which had been obtained by the union, did not terminate at the end of any existing agreement, that the authorization bound it to future agreements, and that authorization continued until the employer undertook some action ef- fectively withdrawing the association's authority to bar- gain, and that such was not done Therefore, the Board concluded that a successor agreement was "binding, en- forceable, and not subject to unilateral repudiation by the [employed" as it "had not successfully revoked [the as- sociation's] bargaining authority" 286 NLRB at 1376 fn 12 Noting that Respondent was not an employer- member of the Associated General Contractors of Min- nesota, I nevertheless find the instant factual context, clearly analogous to those of the above Board decisions Thus, as in Reliable Electric Go, Respondent's contrac- tual liability did not cease at the expiration of the com- mercial construction agreement in effect at the time of the parties' 1978 contract Rather, Respondent agreed "to be bound by any renewals, additions, modifications, extensions and subsequent agreements" between the As- sociated General Contractors of Minnesota and the Dis- trict Council Further, and of critical import to this anal- ysis, as in Reliable Electric Go, the instant "Independent Agreement," by its explicit terms, "shall remain in full force and effect until such time as it is terminated in writing [by either party] " There is no record evidence that either Respondent or the District Council ever ter- minated their 1978 agreement according to its terms, and, inasmuch as Respondent apparently knowingly accepted the above provisions, I fail to perceive any reason why, as the employers in the above-cited Board decisions, Re- spondent should not be held to have been obligated to adhere to the terms and conditions of employment set forth in the successive commercial construction agree- ments, including the existing 1986 through April 30,1989 contract Accordingly, I find that said existing commer- cial construction contract is "binding, enforceable, and 130 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD not subject to unilateral repudication by the Respondent" (John Deklewa & Sons, supra at 1389) and that, by failing and refusing to enforce the union-security provision thereof and to pay to its installers, who are not members of the Carpenters Union, the existing contractual wages and fnnge benefits, and by repudiating the parties' 1978 "Independent Agreement," Respondent engaged in con- duct violative of Section 8(a)(1), (3), and (5) of the Act B F C Corp, 285 NLRB 583 (1987) CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1 Respondent is an employer engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) and (7) of the Act 2 The District Council is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act 3 All carpenters, millwrights and piledrivers em- ployed by Nordpal Corporation d/b/a Twin City Garage Door Co, excluding all other employees, office clerical employees, professional employees, guards and supervisors as defined in the Act, constitute an appropri- ate unit of Respondent's employees 39 for the purpose of collective bargaining under the Act 4 Since on or about March 28, 1987, by unilaterally failing and refusing to pay to its installation employees who are not members of the Carpenters Union the wages and fringe benefits specified in the existing commercial construction agreement between the District Council and the Associated General Contractors of Minnesota, Re- spondent discriminated against said employees and re- fused to bargain with the District Council as the repre- sentative of the employees in the unit described in para- graph 3 above for purposes of collective bargaining in violation of Section 8(a)(1), (3), and (5) of the Act 5 Since on or about August 26, 1987, by unilaterally failing and refusing to comply with the District Council's request that it adhere to the terms of the union-security provision of the existing commercial construction agree- ment between the District Council and the Associated General Contractors of Minnesota, Respondent has re- fused to bargain with the District Council as the repre- sentative of the employees in the unit described in para- graph 3 above for purposes of collective bargaining in violation of Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act 6 Since on or about November 2, 1987, by repudiating its 1978 collective-bargaining agreement with the District Council at a time when the existing collective-bargaining agreement between the District Council and the Associ- ated General Contractors of Minnesota, to which Re- spondent was bound, remained in effect, Respondent re- fused to bargain with the District Council in violation of Section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act REMEDY Having concluded that Respondent engaged in certain unfair labor practices violative of Section 8(a)(1), (3), and (5) of the Act, I shall recommend that it be ordered to cease and desist therefrom and take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act Im- 39 Although stated in terms of the bargaining unit as set forth in the "Independent Agreement," as specifically applied to Respondent, the bar- gaining unit encompasses only its installation employees nally, I shall recommend that Respondent be ordered to reinstate and adhere to the terms of its "Independent Agreement" with the District Council, including abiding by the terms, including the union-security clause, of the existing commercial construction collective-bargaining agreement between the District Council and the Associ- ated General Contractors of Minnesota, and to recognize and afford the District Council, as the bargaining repre- sentative of its installation employees, an opportunity to bargain regarding any changes in said employees' wages, hours, fringe benefits, or other terms and conditions of employment Next, I shall recommend that Respondent be ordered to reimburse any bargaining unit employees, including those who are not members of the Carpenters, for any wages they lost as a result of its failure to adhere to the terms of its "Independent Agreement" with the District Council since March 28, 1987, with interest as computed in New Horizons for the Retarded, 283 NLRB 1173 (1987) 40 Next, I shall recommend that Respondent be ordered to reimburse the fringe benefit trust funds, es- tablished under the 1986 through April 30, 1989 Associ- ated General Contractors of Minnesota commercial con- struction collective-bargaining agreement, to which Re- spondent is bound through its "Independent Agreement" with the District Council, for any payments, on behalf of Respondent's bargaining unit employees who worked on commercial construction projects, withheld since March 28, 1987, with interest 41 Also, in this regard, I shall rec- ommend that Respondent reimburse bargaining employ- ees for expenses incurred by them due to the failure to make such contributions 42 Finally, I shall recommend that Respondent post a notice to its employees, setting forth its obligations, and mail a copy of said notice to all its installation employees, who were employed as of March 28, 1987 On these findings of fact and conclusions of law and on the entire record, I issue the following recommend- ed43 ORDER The Respondent, Nordpal Corporation d/b/a Twin City Garage Door Co, Minneapolis, Minnesota, its offi- cers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall 1 Cease and desist from 49 In accordance with New Horizons for the Retarded, interest on and after January 1, 1987, shall be computed at the short-term Federal rate". for the underpayment of taxes as set out in the 1987 amendment to 26 U S C § 6621 Interest on amounts accrued prior to January 1, 1987 (the effective date of the 1986 amendment to 26 U S C § 6621) shall be com- puted in accordance with Florida Steel Corp, 231 NLRB 651 (1977) 41 The Board does not provide at the adjuchcatory stage of the pro- ceeding for the addition of Interest at a fixed rate on unlawfully withheld fund payments Kephart Plumbing, supra at fn 5 Any additional amount owed in order to satisfy this "make-whole" remedy shall be determined at the compliance stage Merryweather Optical Ca, 240 NLRB 1213 at fn 7 (1979) 42 Kraft Plumbing, 252 NLRB 891 (1980) 43 If no exceptions are filed as provided by Sec 102 46 of the Board s Rules and Regulations, the findings, conclusions, and recommended Order shall, as provided in Sec 102 48 of the Rules, be adopted by the Board and all objections to them shall be deemed waived for all pur- poses TWIN CITY GARAGE DOOR CO 131 (a) Failing and refusing to give effect to its "Independ- ent Agreement" with the District Council and pursuant to its terms, to comply with the existing commercial con- struction collective-bargaining agreement, effective until April 30, 1989, between the District Council and the As- sociated General Contractors of Minnesota (b) Failing and refusing to comply with and unilateral- ly changing the terms and conditions of employment of its installation employees, including not complying with the union-security provision and not paying the contrac- tual wages and fringe benefits to its installation employ- ees who are not members of the Carpenters Union, during the term of a valid collective-bargaining agree- ment without prior consultation with the District Coun- cil as the exclusive collective-bargaining representative of these employees (c) Discriminating against its installation employees who are not members of the Carpenters Union by not paying to them the contractually established wages and fringe benefits (d) In any like or related manner interfering with, re- straining, or coercing employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed to them by Section 7 of the Act 2 Take the following affirmative action necessary to effectuate the policies of the Act (a) For the term of the existing commercial construc- tion agreement between the District Council and the As- sociated General Contractors of Minnesota, effective until April 30, 1989, restore and place into effect all terms and conditions of employment as provided in the agreement which were unilaterally changed and aban- doned by Respondent, including enforcement of the union-security clause and payment to all bargaining unit employees the contractual wages and fringe benefits (b) Make whole all bargaining unit employees for any loss of wages or other benefits suffered by reason of Re- spondent's unlawful conduct, with interest (c) Make payments to the fringe benefit trust funds, in- cluding the welfare, pension, vacation, and apprentice funds, established pursuant to the terms of the existing, effective until April 30, 1989, collective-bargaining agreement between the District Council and the Associ- ated General Contractors of Minnesota, on behalf of those bargaining unit employees for whom contributions were not previously made and which payments would have continued to be made had not Respondent unlaw- fully refused to comply with and ultimately abandoned the "Independent Agreement" and reimburse those em- ployees for expenses incurred by them due to the failure to make such contributions (d) Preserve and, on request, make available to the Board or its agents for examination and copying, all pay- roll records, social security payment records, timecards, personnel records and reports, and all other records nec- essary to analyze the amount of backpay due under the terms of this Order (e) Post at its facility in Minneapolis, Minnesota copies of the attached notice marked "Appendix "" Copies of 44 If this Order is enforced by a judgment of a United States court of appeals, the words in the notice reading 'Posted by Order of the Nation- al Labor Relations Board" shall read "Posted Pursuant to a Judgment of the notice, on forms provided by the Regional Director for Region 18, after being signed by the Respondent's authorized representative, shall be posted by the Re- spondent immediatley upon receipt and maintained for 60 consecutive days in conspicuous places including all places where notices to employees are customarily posted Reasonable steps shall be taken by Respondent to ensure that the notices are not altered, defaced, or cov- ered by any other material Further, inasmuch as Re- spondent has, since October 1987, subcontracted out most, if not all, of its installation work, copies of said notice should be mailed by Respondent to all installation employees who have been employed by it since March 28, 1987 (f) Notify the Regional Director in writing within 20 days from the date of this Order what steps Respondent has taken to comply the United States Court of Appeals Enforcing an Order of the National Labor Relations Board" APPENDIX NOTICE To EMPLOYEES POSTED BY ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD An Agency of the United States Government The National Labor Relations Board has found that we violated the National Labor Relations Act and has or- dered us to post and abide by this notice WE WILL NOT repudiate or otherwise fail and refuse to give effect to our "Independent Agreement" with the Twin City Carpenters District Council, United Brother- hood of Carpenters and Joiners of America (the District Council) and, pursuant to the terms of that agreement, to comply with the existing commercial construction collec- tive-bargaining agreement, effective until April 30, 1989, between the District Council and the Associated General Contractors of Minnesota (AGC) The appropriate unit of employees covered by our "Independent Agreement" with the District Council is comprised of our installation employees and is formally set forth as follows All carpenters, millwrights and piledrivers, exclud- ing all other employees, office clerical employees, professional employees, guards, and supervisors as defined by the National Labor Relations Act WE WILL NOT fail and refuse to comply with or unilat- erally change the terms and conditions of employment of our installation employees, including not enforcing the union-security provision and not paying the contractual wages and fringe benefits to our installers who are not members of the Carpenters, during the term of the above commercial construction collective-bargaining agreement without prior consultation with the District Council as the exclusive collective-bargaining representative of these employees WE WILL NOT discriminate against our installation em- ployees who are not members of the Carpenters by not 132 DECISIONS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD paying to them the contractually established wages and fringe benefits WE WILL NOT in any like or related manner interfere with, restrain, or coerce our employees in the exercise of their rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act WE WILL, for the term of the existing commercial con- struction collective-bargaining agreement between the District Council and the AGC, effective until April 30, 1989, restore and place into effect all terms and condi- tions of employment, as provided in the agreement, which were unilaterally changed and abandoned by us, including the union-security, wages, and fringe benefits provisions WE WILL make whole all our installation employees for any loss of wages or other benefits suffered by reason of our unlawful conduct, with interest WE WILL make payments to the contractual fringe benefit trust funds on behalf of those installation employ- ees for whom contributions were not made and which payments we would have continued to make had we not unlawfully refused to comply with and, ultimately, aban- doned our "Independent Agreement" with the District Council and reimburse any installation employees for ex- penses incurred by them due to our failure to make such contributions NORDPAL CORPORATION D/B/A TWIN CITY GARAGE DOOR CO Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation