BRENTWOOD AT HOBART, Petitioner/Cross-Respondent, v. NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Respondent/Cross-Petitioner.
Nos. 10-2141/2209
United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
Decided and Filed: April 2, 2012
12a0088p.06
Before: MOORE, SUTTON and DONALD, Circuit Judges.
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206. On Petition for Review and Cross-Petition for Enforcement of an Order of the National Labor Relations Board. No. 13-CA-46045.
COUNSEL
OPINION
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Employees of Brentwood at Hobart, an assisted-living facility in Hobart, Indiana, selected the Service Employees International Union as their collective-bargaining representative. Claiming that the union engaged in misconduct during the representation election, Brentwood challenges an order of the National Labor Relations Board requiring it to bargain with the union. After wrestling with an initial debate over venue, we deny Brentwood‘s petition and grant the Board‘s cross-petition to enforce the order.
I.
In August 2009, the union tried to organize the employees of Brentwood‘s Indiana facility. After it filed a representation petition, the Board scheduled an election at Brentwood for September 25, 2009. Brentwood employees voted in favor of the union by a wide margin—twenty-eight in favor and twelve against.
Brentwood objected to the election results a week later, claiming the union improperly distributed a flyer on September 18 that included photographs of twenty-six Brentwood employees without their consent. Using employees’ photographs in union election materials without consent, the Board has held, may taint an election by conveying the false impression that the employees support the union. See Allegheny Ludlum Corp., 333 NLRB 734, 738 (2001). After an initial investigation, the Board‘s regional director ordered a hearing on the objections.
At the hearing, Brentwood tried to introduce a second flyer that the union distributed on August 14 and that also purported to contain photographs of unconsenting employees. The union‘s attorney objected to the admission of the August 14 flyer on relevance grounds because Brentwood had not mentioned the flyer in its objection. The hearing officer excluded it. A few weeks later, the hearing officer issued a written decision rejecting all of Brentwood‘s objections. She found no problem with the September 18 flyer because “the employees whose photographs appeared in the flyer . . . were told what the picture[s were] for and gave their respective verbal and, in most cases, written consent.” App‘x 69. Appealing to the Board, Brentwood argued that the hearing officer erred by excluding the August 14 flyer. The Board disagreed, explaining that because Brentwood‘s written objection “expressly alleged that the September 18 flyer was objectionable, the August 14 flyer is not reasonably encompassed within the scope of that objection,” and therefore the hearing officer “lack[ed] authority” to consider it. App‘x 81. The Board certified the union as the exclusive collective-bargaining representative of Brentwood‘s employees.
Brentwood refused to recognize or bargain with the union, insisting its conduct had tainted the election. The union charged Brentwood with violating the National Labor Relations Act. See
II.
The reader may wonder why a dispute over a union election in Indiana belongs in the Sixth Circuit (covering Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee) as opposed to the Seventh (covering Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin). We wondered the same thing.
Under the National Labor Relations Act, a company “aggrieved” by an order of the Board may obtain review in any federal court of appeals where “the unfair labor practice in question” occurred (the Seventh Circuit), in any court of appeals where the company “resides or transacts business” (the Seventh Circuit and possibly the Sixth) or in the D.C. Circuit (not the Seventh or the Sixth).
Neither Brentwood nor the Board challenges our authority to review their petitions. That concession matters so long as the requirements of
Subject-matter jurisdiction defines a court‘s “power to adjudicate,” while venue specifies “where judicial authority may be exercised” based on “convenience” to the “litigants.” Neirbo Co. v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp., 308 U.S. 165, 167–68 (1939). The former asks “whether“—whether “the Legislature [has] empowered the court to hear cases of a certain genre?” The latter asks “where“—where should certain kinds of cases proceed? Wachovia Bank, 546 U.S. at 316.
The requirements of
In considering similar litigation-channeling provisions, the Supreme Court has uniformly treated them as venue, not jurisdictional, limitations. Most on point is Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co. v. Federal Power Commission, 324 U.S. 635 (1945), where the Court considered the judicial-review provision of the Natural Gas Act. Like the National Labor Relations Act, the Natural Gas Act allows a company “aggrieved by an order issued by the [Federal Power] Commission [to] obtain a review of such order in the circuit court of appeals . . .
The Court‘s recent effort to bring “discipline to the use of the term ‘jurisdictional,‘” Gonzalez v. Thaler, 565 U.S. ___, 132 S. Ct. 641, 648 (2012), reinforces this conclusion. Under the new regime, the Court will treat “threshold limitations on a statute‘s scope . . . as jurisdictional” only if Congress “clearly” says so. Arbaugh v. Y & H Corp., 546 U.S. 500, 515 (2006). Judged by this “readily administrable bright[-]line” rule, id., the geographic limitations in
Stern v. Marshall, 564 U.S. ___, 131 S. Ct. 2594 (2011), brings the point home. The Bankruptcy Code says that “personal injury tort and wrongful death claims shall be tried in the district court in which the bankruptcy case is pending, or in the district court in the district in which the claim arose.”
That
Nor is it unusual for Congress to answer the “where” and “whether” questions in agency-review provisions in a like manner, setting forth venue and jurisdictional requirements in the same subsection. See, e.g.,
Nearly thirty years ago, it is true, we briefly referred to the geographic limitations in
That leaves one other consideration. Even though the geographic limitations in
III.
Brentwood urges us to set aside the Board‘s order on one ground—that the hearing officer improperly excluded the August 14 flyer. This decision receives abuse-of-discretion review. Kentucky River Cmty. Care, Inc. v. NLRB, 193 F.3d 444, 452 (6th Cir. 1999). No such error occurred, as the order complied with the Board‘s hearing rules concerning objections to union representation elections.
A party challenging the results of an election must file written objections that “contain a short statement of the reasons therefor.”
Brentwood‘s written objection stated: “During the critical period, specifically on September 18, 2009, [the union] distributed a flyer [that] included the photographs of twenty-six unit employees. The use of the unit employees’ photographs was without their prior knowledge and/or consent.” App‘x 32. On this record, as the Board concluded, the hearing officer permissibly excluded the August 14 flyer because it was not “reasonably encompassed within the scope of [Brentwood‘s written] objection.” App‘x 81.
Brentwood counters that, although its objection mentions only the September 18 flyer, the first four words of the objection—“[d]uring the critical period“—reasonably encompass any other flyers that the union distributed leading up to the election. That may be a plausible reading of the objection, we suppose, but the Board‘s reading of it is surely the more natural one. The prefatory language explains why the September 18 flyer is objectionable. If the union had not distributed it “[d]uring the critical period“—during the lead-up to the election—it could not have improperly swayed the voting employees. The objection gives no hint that Brentwood had a problem with other flyers. If a plaintiff files a lawsuit claiming
Brentwood insists that the hearing officer failed to comply with other evidentiary rulings by the Board. In Fiber Industries, 267 NLRB 840 (1983), it points out, the union‘s written objections identified certain pieces of campaign literature, but the Board affirmed the hearing officer‘s consideration of other pieces of literature because they were “sufficiently related” to the union‘s objection. Id. at 840 n.2. And in Hollingsworth Management Service, 342 NLRB 556 (2004), the Board affirmed the hearing officer‘s consideration of electioneering by some third parties even though the union‘s written objection referred only to “electioneering by the union, its officers, agents and representatives.” Id. at 557 n.3.
Brentwood has a point. Today‘s evidentiary ruling is not entirely consistent with these earlier rulings by other hearing officers. But, as we explained in Conley v. NLRB, 520 F.3d 629, 639 (6th Cir. 2008), this kind of inconsistency by itself does not justify vacating the Board‘s order. In Conley, the employer tried to demonstrate that the Board‘s hearsay ruling was inconsistent with prior cases in which hearing officers had excluded similar evidence, but we found that effort to be “of little import.” Id. at 640. “[T]he more germane inquiry,” we explained, was whether the evidentiary ruling “was reasonable under the circumstances and limited . . . to the practicalities of the situation.” Id. at 640–41. It was, we held. Id. The same is true here. Had the Board admitted the flyer, that might well have blindsided the union, which had every reason to prepare to defend only the flyer identified in the objection. See Factor Sales, Inc., 347 NLRB 747, 747–48 (2006); FleetBoston Pavilion, 333 NLRB 655, 657 (2001).
Pressing the point, Brentwood claims that excluding the August 14 flyer was “akin to denying [it] an evidentiary hearing at all.” Br. at 26. This might come as a surprise to the Board‘s hearing officer, who heard from seventeen different witnesses during a hearing that spans 274 pages of transcript. And it might come as a surprise to Brentwood‘s attorney, who responded to this (allegedly) grievous decision by saying, “That‘s fine.” App‘x 399. Brentwood received a full hearing on the objections it submitted, and the hearing officer‘s exclusion of evidence that she reasonably viewed as beyond the scope of the written objections does not amount to a denial of a hearing altogether.
Brentwood also argues that the Board‘s rule prohibiting hearing officers from expanding hearings beyond matters that are reasonably encompassed by the written objections violates due process. But the Board, like all administrative agencies, has broad authority to fashion its own procedures for developing the evidence on which it bases its decisions. See Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. NRDC, 435 U.S. 519, 543–45 (1978). The Board‘s limitation on the authority of hearing officers fits comfortably within that broad authority. In the end, Brentwood overlooks a simple reality: All it had to do to allow inquiry into the August 14 flyer was to mention the flyer in its written objections. Brentwood‘s failure to do so does not create a due process claim in Brentwood‘s favor.
IV.
For these reasons, we deny Brentwood‘s petition for review, and we grant the Board‘s cross-petition to enforce its order.
