Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge KAREN LeCRAFT HENDERSON.
BPH & Co. (Company)
1
petitions this court for review of a decision and order of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB or Board) holding that the Company violated section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA or Act), 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1), (5), when it withdrew its recognition of the Union de Trabajadores de la Industria Gastronómica de Puerto Rico, Local 610, HEREIU, AFL-CIO (Union) as the exclusive bargaining representative of its employees.
Wyndham Palmas del Mar Resort,
334 N.L.R.B. No. 70,
The Board maintains that the Company’s petition should be dismissed because the Company failed to raise its objections to the Board before seeking judicial review as required by section 10(e) of the Act. See 29 U.S.C. § 160(e). We disagree and hold that it properly raised its objections before the Board. On the merits, we conclude that the Board’s decision is not based on substantial evidence and, accordingly, grant the Company’s petition.
I.
A.
In 1996 the Company acquired property in Humacao, Puerto Rico where it operated a resort hotel and restaurant. Shortly thereafter, in February 1997, the Company recognized the Union as the exclusive bargaining representative of its employees and commenced collective bargaining. Approximately six weeks after it recognized the Union (on March 26), 2 the employees filed a petition to decertify the Union as their bargaining representative pursuant to sections 7 and 9 (a) and (c) of the NLRA, 29 U.S.C. §§ 157,159(a), (c).
The Union then filed charges against the Company, alleging that it had unlawfully refused to bargain with the Union and had unlawfully coerced the employees to sign the decertification petition. In early June, the Union withdrew its refusal to bargain charge and entered an informal settlement agreement (Agreement) 3 with the Company regarding the remaining unfair labor practice charges. Under the Agreement, the Company agreed not to assist or solicit employees in the promotion, presentation or circulation of a petition to decertify the Union and not to promise employees increased wages and/or benefits in exchange for their support of a decertification petition. It further agreed to post a 60-day notice of the Agreement. The employee *217 representative who filed the decertification petition also agreed to withdraw the petition. Significantly, the Agreement specifically includes a nonadmission clause as follows: “By entering into this settlement agreement the Employer [the Company] does not admit having violated the National Labor Relations Act.” Settlement Agreement of June 5,1997, Joint Appendix (JA) 18.
The parties recommenced bargaining until September 5, when employees filed a second decertification petition with the Board. The petition contained the signatures of the majority of employees (183 of 255) collected between July 10 and August 23. On September 15 the Company formally withdrew recognition of the Union. The Company’s withdrawal spurred the Union to refile charges and this time the Regional Director issued a complaint, charging that the Company had violated section 8(a)(1) and (5) of the Act by unlawfully withdrawing recognition of the Union. Order Consolidating Cases, Consolidated Complaint and Notice of Hearing, at ¶ ¶ 7, 9, JA 40. The matter was submitted to the Board on briefs and stipulated facts.
B.
Under well-settled precedent, an incumbent union enjoys a presumption that it represents a majority of employees.
Fall River Dyeing & Finishing Corp. v. NLRB,
The Company argued before the Board that, consistent with this long-held precedent, it lawfully withdrew recognition of the Union based on the September 5 de-certification petition signed- by a majority of its employees. It emphasized that the Stipulation of Facts contained no facts supporting any ULP and that the Agreement provided no basis for any ULP finding because it contained an express nonadmission clause.
See supra
at 217-218. The Board, however, concluded that the Company had violated the Act. Order at 5. Without finding that any ULP in fact tainted the petition, presumably because, as it acknowledged, “there has been no finding by the Board (or admission by the Respondent) that an unfair labor practice was committed,” the Board decided that an employer that enters into a settlement agreement under which it agrees to remedial notice posting cannot “lawfully challenge the Union’s majority status on the basis of [an] antiunion petition that was signed during the 60-day posting period.”
Id.
at 3, 5. Relying on its decision in
DouglasRandall,
II.
The Board first asserts that we lack jurisdiction to consider the Company’s petition because it did not raise before the Board, as required by section 10(e) of the Act, the issues it now presses before us. Section 10(e) of the Act mandates that “No objection that has not been urged before the Board, its member, agent, or agency, shall be considered by the court, unless the failure or neglect to urge such objection shall be excused because of extraordinary circumstances.” 29 U.S.C. § 160(e). The Board maintains that the Company’s failure to challenge the “rule” established in the Board’s decision ousts us of jurisdiction to review it. Objections to a new Board “rule” — here, the application of the
Master Slack
analysis to conduct that is simply charged — are preserved for judicial review, it emphasizes, only if they are first raised in a motion to reconsider before the Board.
See Int’l Ladies’ Garment Workers v. Quality Mfg. Co.,
The critical inquiry under section 10(e), however, is “whether the Board received adequate notice of the basis for the objection.”
Alwin Mfg. Co., Inc. v. NLRB,
Indeed, in the Company’s brief to the Board, it argued that it did not violate the Act because it properly relied on the second decertification petition to withdraw recognition of the Union. It asserted that the decertification petition was not tainted because neither the Stipulation of Facts nor the allegations set forth in the Agreement constituted sufficient evidence upon which the Board could find it had caused employee disaffection with the Union, declaring:
There is no evidence in the Stipulation of Facts of management coercion or of employer involvement in the gathering of signatures. And it cannot be argued that the March 1997 charges taint the *220 validity of [the petition]. The parties amicably settled those disputes, and the settlement expressly disavowed any wrongdoing by [the Company]. Neither the Settlement Agreement nor the posted notices call into question the objectivity or validity of the signatures in [the petition].
Brief of Respondent at 6-7, JA 108-09. The Company further emphasized:
A stipulated set of facts eliminates any fact dispute, and the stipulations firmly establish the requisite elements of a lawful withdrawal of recognition by [the Company]: (1) a written petition; (2) signed by a substantial majority of employees; (3) in the absence of any unfair labor practices; and (4) presented to [the Company’s] General Manager. [The Company] properly acted on its doubt about the Union’s majority status.
Id. at 7.
We believe the Company adequately apprised the Board of its insufficiency-of-evidence argument to comply with section 10(e). The Board in fact acknowledged the Company’s insufficiency argument: “The Respondent asserts that the petition was not tainted, because there is no evidence of management coercion or involvement in the collection of signatures.” Order at 2. Accordingly, we conclude that the Board was sufficiently apprised of the Company’s substantial evidence objection, notwithstanding its n.ot being addressed expressly to the conduct alleged in the Agreement, to allow us to review the Company’s petition.
If the Board orders an employer to bargain with a union notwithstanding the existence of a facially valid decertification petition, we have consistently required the Board to support with substantial evidence its finding that the employer’s ULP(s) “tended to undermine a union’s majority support.”
Quazite v. NLRB,
Although the Board does not dispute that in adjudicated cases it may not find that an employer unlawfully withdrew recognition based on a decertification petition without also finding — based on substantial evidence — that the employer’s ULP(s) caused disaffection with the union, 8 it nonetheless asserts that it may find that the employer violated section 8(a)(1) and (5) because “regardless whether [the Company] admitted or denied engaging in unlawful conduct, [it] agreed to a remedy.” Id. at 4.
The Board uses the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
Poole Foundry & Machine Co. v. NLRB,
An entire structure or course of future labor relationships may well be bottomed upon the binding effect of a status fixed by the terms of a settlement agreement.... Otherwise, settlement agreements might indeed have little practical effect as an amicable and judicious means to expeditious disposal of disputes arising under the terms of the Act.
Id.
The Board reads this language to empower it to fashion a rule that, even without a ULP finding, ensures that the remedy contained in a settlement agreement achieves its purpose. Just as the Board in
Poole
required that an employer that agreed to bargain with the union agreed to do so for a reasonable time, thereby furthering the purpose of that remedy, so too can the Board adopt a rule designed to ensure that the purpose of the notice-posting provision is accomplished, namely: “‘to provide sufficient time to dispel the harmful effects of the [allegedly unlawful] conduct’ and to ensure that employees are fully informed of their statutory rights.” Order at 4 (quoting
Chet Monez Ford,
We believe the Board missed the point of
Poole.
In approving the Board’s “reasonable time” requirement, the Fourth Circuit upheld the Board’s holding that an agreement to bargain with the union necessarily implies an agreement to bargain for a reasonable time — otherwise the agreement would be meaningless.
Poole,
*222
We well recognize that the Board bears the “primary responsibility for developing and applying national labor policy,”
Curtin Matheson,
The Board maintains that our rejection of its new rule will undercut Board-supervised settlement agreements because, for example, “an employer could commit serious 'unfair labor practices, sign a settlement agreement with a nonadmission clause, and then avoid its duty to bargain by relying on the union’s loss of majority support attributable to the employer’s own unremedied conduct.” Order at 4. The Board’s argument rests on two fallacious assumptions: first, that a settling party is necessarily guilty of the conduct with which it has been charged; and, second, that the Board will have no way of protecting against parties who seek to use a nonadmission clause in a settlement agreement to avoid sanctions for ULPs.
The Board’s first assumption is counter-factual; the second is specious. A charged party cannot compel the Board or its agents to enter into a settlement agreement.' If, in a case such as this one, the Regional Director is convinced that the employer is guilty of unfair labor practices, he can either decline to approve an informal settlement agreement and insist that the unfair labor practices be adjudicated or require ah admission of liability from the employer as a condition of settlement. In fact, current Board policy advises that “[n]onadmission clauses should not be routinely incorporated in settlement agreements,” NLRB CASEHANDLING MANUAL § 10130.8, so that Board agents have reason to understand they can reject such clauses in egregious cases. If, however, the Regional Director elects to approve a settlement in which the parties specifically agree that the charged party “does not admit having violated the National Labor Relations Act,” as here, then, plainly, the employer has not agreed to remedy unfair labor practices. Rather, the employer has agreed to take certain actions to secure a dismissal of the pending unfair labor practice charges — nothing more and nothing less. And in any event, if a party fails to comply fully with a settlement agreement, the Regional Director can revoke approval of the agreement and issue or reissue the complaint. NLRB Casehandling Manual § 10152. In short, the Board is in no way thwarted if it is bound by the terms of a *223 settlement agreement which includes a nonadmission clause.
For the foregoing reasons, we grant the Company’s petition for review, deny the Board’s cross-application for enforcemnnt and vacate the order of the Board.
So ordered.
Notes
. BPH & Co. is the successor to HEPC Pal-mas, Inc. which was the employer at all relevant times in this proceeding. For convenience, we refer to the employer as "the Company.”
. All events occurred in 1997 unless otherwise noted.
. The Board’s Casehandling Manual describes three kinds of settlements: (1) a "formal” settlement, which ordinarily requires a Board order followed by a court order of enforcement; (2) an "informal” settlement, which provides that the charged party will take certain action to remedy ULPs and requires the Regional Director's approval but not a Board order or court decree; and (3) a "non-board adjustment.” NLRB Casehandling Manual §§ 10140, 10146.1, 10164.1 (Nov.2002),
available at
http://www.nlrb.gov/manuals/chm/ chml-6.pdf.
See Mammoth of Cal., Inc. v. NLRB,
. Section 8(a)(1) and (5) make it an unfair labor practice (ULP):
(1) to interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in section 157 of this title [section 7 of the NLRA];
(5) to refuse to bargain collectively with the representatives of his employees, subject to the provisions of section 159(a) of this title [section 9(a) of the NLRA],
29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1), (5).
. In
Levitz Furniture Co.
the Board eliminated the good faith doubt alternative, requiring the employer to show "the Union has
actually
lost support of the majority of the bargaining unit employees."
Levitz Furniture Co.
333 N.L.R.B. No. 105,
. The presumption is irrebuttable, however, for one year following certification.
Curtin Matheson,
. The Master Slack test considers:
(1) [t]he length of time between the unfair labor practices and the withdrawal of recognition; (2) the nature of the illegal acts, including the possibility of their detrimental or lasting effect on employees; (3) any possible tendency to cause employee disaffection from the union; and (4) the effect of the unlawful conduct on employee morale, organizational activities, and membership in the union.
Master Slack Corp.,
271 N.L.R.B at 84;
see Vincent Indus.,
. The Board acknowledges as much: "[U]n-like Master Slack, the Union’s unfair labor practice charge was resolved by an informal Board settlement agreement; there has been no finding by the Board (or admission by the Respondent) that an unfair labor practice was committed.” Order at 3.
. The Board also relies on its decision in
Douglas-Randall,
in which it affirmed the Regional Director’s dismissal of a decertification petition after the employer settled section 8(a)(5) charges. The
Douglas-Randall
decision was not judicially reviewed and its rationale is expressly derived from
Poole. Douglas-Randall,
. We also note that Poole has been limited to cases in which section 8(a)(5) refusal-to-bargain charges are made and the employer agrees to bargain with the union. As the Seventh Circuit explained:
Underlying [the Poole] rationale are the competing interests of employee free choice versus stable bargaining relationships and industrial peace. The Board has implicitly made the determination that employee free choice may be temporarily sacrificed (in that an employer may be forced to bargain with a union that no longer has the support of a majority of the employees) for a "reasonable time” so as to give the bargaining relationship an opportunity to succeed and thereby promote industrial stability.... It appears to us, however, that the primary justification for this infringement on employee free choice is to restore with some force a bargaining relationship that was interrupted as a result of the employer’s refusal to bargain. That justification is absent here [because] [i]n the present case, unlike in any other case in which the Board has ordered the employer to bargain for a reasonable time on the basis of a settlement agreement, the employer was not even alleged to have refused to bargain prior to the settlement.
NLRB v. Key Motors Corp.,
Poole, then, does not support the Board's decision here for the additional reason that section 8(a)(5) charges were not the subject of the settlement agreement — • they were withdrawn — and the Company did not agree to bargain with the Union.
