Case Information
*1 In the
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Nos. 00-1626, 00-2032
Duffy Tool & Stamping, L.L.C., Petitioner/Cross-Respondent, v.
National Labor Relations Board, Respondent/Cross-Petitioner, and
International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace, and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, Intervenor.
Petition to Review and Cross-Petition to Enforce Order of the
National Labor Relations Board.
Argued October 23, 2000--Decided December 1, 2000 Before Posner, Diane P. Wood, and Williams, Circuit Judges.
Posner, Circuit Judge. When a union wins an
election to be the exclusive bargaining
representative of a group of workers, the
employer becomes duty-bound to bargain in good
faith with the union. 29 U.S.C. sec. 158(a)(5).
The aim of the bargaining process is to negotiate
a collective bargaining agreement that will
define the terms and conditions of employment of
the represented workers during the term of the
agreement. There is no duty to agree, however,
and if the parties deadlock (reach "impasse," in
the jargon of labor law), the employer is free to
operate his business as he did before bargaining
began, and therefore he may alter the terms and
conditions of the workers’ employment. E.g.,
Litton Financial Printing Div. v. NLRB, 501 U.S.
190, 198 (1991); Lapham-Hickey Steel Corp., 904
F.2d 1180, 1185 (7th Cir. 1990). He can also do
this if the union takes steps to delay or avoid
bargaining or if the alteration is necessary to
avoid serious hardship to the employer. E.g.,
Vincent Industrial Plastics, Inc. v. NLRB, 209
F.3d 727, 734 (D.C. Cir. 2000); Visiting Nurse
Services of Western Mass., Inc. v. NLRB, 177 F.3d
52, 57-58 (1st Cir. 1999). But if there is no
*2
deadlock, no foot-dragging by the union, and no
exigency requiring an immediate change in the
terms or conditions of employment to stave off
disaster, the employer may not make such a change
unilaterally. Litton Financial Printing Div. v.
NLRB, supra,
It is against this policy background that we consider the employer’s argument in this case, which is that it is free to make unilateral changes in the terms and conditions of its workers’ employment as soon as the parties reach deadlock on any issue in the negotiation. The union won an election back in October of 1996. During the course of the ensuing negotiations, the company put forward a proposal to institute a "no fault" attendance policy under which a tardy worker would get a certain number of points for every incident of tardiness, regardless of whether he was at fault, and if he accumulated a specified number of points could be fired. The company’s existing attendance policy was more lenient. The union opposed the proposal. The employer declared an impasse and on January 1, 1998, put the new policy into effect and later fired some workers who might not have been fired under the old policy. The Board found that while the parties may have been deadlocked over the "no fault" policy by the beginning of 1998, they were not yet deadlocked on all the mandatory issues for collective bargaining; they had not reached an "overall impasse." The employer disagrees that it had not yet reached an overall impasse with the union, but there is enough evidence to support the Board’s conclusion, leaving the employer to argue that piecemeal impasse, the deadlock over the proposed new attendance policy, was enough to free Duffy to implement the proposal.
Decisions of the Fifth Circuit support this
position. NLRB v. Pinkston-Hollar Construction
Services, Inc.,
The employer’s position would empty the duty to bargain of meaning, and this in two respects: (1) by removing issues from the bargaining agenda early in the bargaining process, it would make it less likely for the parties to find common ground; (2) by enabling the employer to paint the union as impotent, it would embolden him to hold out for a deal so unfavorable to the union as to preclude agreement.
(1) A negotiation is more likely to be successful when there are several issues to be resolved ("integrative bargaining") rather than just one, because it is easier in the former case to strike a deal that will make both parties feel they are getting more from peace than from war. Howard Raiffa, The Art and Science of Negotiation 97-103, 131-32 (1982). If the only thing at issue in a labor negotiation is wages, that is, money, the parties are playing a zero-sum game: a dollar more in wages is a dollar gained by the union but a dollar lost by the employer. But suppose a dues checkoff is also at issue. Since it probably is worth more to the union not to have to dun the workers for their union dues than it costs the employer to deduct the dues from the worker’s paycheck and remit them to the union, the union may be willing to give a little in bargaining over wages in order to get the dues checkoff. Similarly, the employer may be willing to "pay" for a no-strike clause by agreeing to a grievance *4 procedure jointly administered by the union and the employer, and that may be a concession that the union very much wants in order to give the workers a sense that the union is protecting them from arbitrary discipline by the employer. With both parties eager for this trade, it may be easier for them to compromise on other issues. The particular trade creates value that can be used to fund, as it were, other concessions by both sides, bringing the parties nearer to the state in which both feel better off with an agreement than with a strike.
The employer points out that the implementation of a proposal need not remove it from the negotiation, since it can always be rescinded. The point is literally but not practically correct. The employer may be able to make implementation irrevocable as a practical matter by sinking heavy costs in the implementation and thus committing himself to stay the course, for example by laying off a number of workers pursuant to the adopted proposal and hiring permanent replacements under contracts providing for generous severance benefits. In addition, the employer will be reluctant to lose face with the workers by abandoning a measure that it put into effect during the negotiation to show (see next paragraph) that the union could do nothing for them, and he may also fear that if he renegotiates after declaring a deadlock it will strengthen the union’s contention in the ensuing proceedings before the Labor Board that the parties had not in fact deadlocked.
(2) If by deadlocking on a particular issue the
employer is free to implement his proposal with
regard to that issue, he signals to the workers
that the union is a paper tiger. Vincent
Industrial Plastics, Inc. v. NLRB, supra, 209
F.3d at 735; Visiting Nurses Services of Western
Mass., Inc. v. NLRB, supra,
That is doubtless the case here as well. It is
inconceivable that the employer is so wedded to a
"no fault" attendance policy--an idea that first
occurred to it during the negotiation--that it
would not abandon the policy in exchange for a
suitable concession in some other term of the
collective bargaining agreement. Not that an
employer has no legitimate concern with
absenteeism; of course it does; but until the
union came on the scene the employer had not
thought a "no fault" policy the right way to deal
with the problem. Suppose the workers care above
all about their job security and are therefore
desperate to have any discharges for absenteeism
governed by a "for cause" rather than a "no
fault" standard. Then the employer might be able
to extract generous concessions in exchange for
backing down from his demand. An unreasonable
refusal to even consider backing down from a
demand plainly not central to the employer’s
business or labor relations would itself be a
sign of bad faith. See NLRB v. Wright Motors,
Inc.,
The petition for review is denied, and the cross-petition to enforce the Board’s order is granted.
