Belcher Towing operates 15 tugboats and 19 barges in the transportation of petroleum products along the coasts of Florida. It also provides docking and bunkering services to commercial vessels in the Port of Miami. It employs approximately 100 seamen.
*90 In considering Belcher’s conduct during an organizational campaign by two unions, the Board found numerous violations of the National Labor Relations Act. The Board found that Belcher had:
(1) Violated § 8(a)(1) by promulgating a no-solicitation rule that denied non-employee union organizers access to its vessels;
(2) Violated § 8(a)(3) by discharging seamen John George and John Hill for their union activities;
(3) Violated § 8(a)(1) by interrogating and threatening employees, instructing supervisors to maintain logs of union activity and to report such activity to the company, promising redress of employee grievances if employees did not seek union representation, and requesting, under coercive circumstances, that employees report any contacts they had with the unions;
(4) Violated § 8(a)(1) by discharging supervisor Frank Mosso for his refusal to commit unfair labor practices.
Belcher petitions for review and the Board cross-petitions for enforcement.
I. The no-solicitation rule
In 1972 the company promulgated a no-solicitation rule stating that the only visitors permitted on board its tugs would be persons with bona fide business on board or those authorized by the tug’s captain. In 1975 this rule was reiterated, with special instructions to the captains not to allow any union organizers on board and to report all union attempts to board. The Board found both that the union organizers did not have reasonable alternative means of access to the employees and that the no-solicitation rule was discriminatorily applied to unions. Thus it found a violation of § 8(a)(1) and ordered Belcher to discontinue the rule.
The validity of an employer’s no-solicitation rule turns on the balance of interests between the property rights of the employer and the organizational rights of the employees. A rule that prohibits solicitation, on company premises, by non-employee union organizers is ordinarily presumed valid and will be overturned only on a showing either that the rule discriminates against unions by allowing other solicitation or that no reasonable alternative means of access to the employees exist.
NLRB v. Babcock & Wilcox Co.,
The Board erred in its interpretation of what constitutes a discriminatory no-solicitation rule. The ALJ, whose findings and conclusions were adopted by the Board, found that because the company had allowed individuals other than union organizers
access
to the tugboats, the rule was discriminatory. However, a no-solicitation rule is discriminatory only if the employer allows non-union
solicitation
(for example, solicitation by charitable organizations).
See Central Hardware Co. v. NLRB,
The second ground for invalidating a no-solicitation rule is that the union lacks alternative means of access to the employees. Lack of alternative means has been found in such situations as a remote lumber camp,
NLRB v. Lake Superior Lumber Corp.,
II. Other § 8(a)(1) & § 8(a)(3) violations
The Board’s finding that John George and John Hill were discharged for their union activity is supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole, and this part of the Board’s ruling must therefore be enforced.
Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB,
The discharge of Captain Mosso requires a more detailed discussion. The Board, adopting the findings and conclusions of the ALJ, found that Mosso was discharged for his refusal to enforce that part of the company’s no-solicitation rule requiring him to report all union activity on board his boat. This finding is supported by substantial evidence. Although supervisory personnel are not directly protected under the Act, the discharge of a supervisor may constitute a violation of the Act under either of two circumstances: if the discharge is motivated by the supervisor’s refusal to commit an unfair labor practice or if the discharge interferes with the rank- and-file employees’ exercise of their organizational rights.
See Florida Power & Light Co. v. Int’l Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
The petition for review is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Enforcement is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Thé case is REMANDED to the Board for reconsideration of the no-solicitation rule.
Notes
. The Board has consistently found lack of alternative means of access in tugboat cases.
See, e. g., Sabine Towing & Transportation Co.,
. While the Board did not explicitly allocate the burden of proof, it followed its earlier decision in
Sabine Towing & Transportation Co.,
. We need not decide whether the Board’s finding that allowing access to non-employee union organizers would not unreasonably interfere with the employer’s business operations rests on substantial evidence. The question of interference is a rebuttal point and arises only after an adequate finding of lack of alternative means. It would be premature for us to reach an issue that might be pretermitted by a different result on the alternative means question on remand.
. Surveillance need not be known to the employees to constitute an unfair labor practice.
NLRB v. Southwire Co.,
