This is аn unfair labor practice case involving a “pre-hire” agreement between a construction industry employer and a painters’ union. The case, which has been herе before, began a decade ago, after the employer repudiated the agreement. The National Labor Relations Board found the repudiation improper and ordered the employer to pay wages lost between the date of the repudiation and the date the employer either reached a new agreеment with the union or bargained to impasse. This court granted enforcement of the Board’s order.
Several years later, before the amount of backpay that was due had been settled, the Board issued a decision changing the law with respect to pre-hire agreements. Should that decision be deemed applicable to this case, the employer’s backpay liability would be cut off as of the scheduled expiration date of the pre-hire agreement. The Board, however, declined to give the new dеcision retroactive effect in situations where, as here, a court of appeals had already granted enforcement of an order entered under the priоr dispensation. The employer has filed a petition for review challenging the Board’s position on retroac- *55 tivity. The Board has filed a cross-application for enforcement. Because we find that the Board acted within the scope of its delegated authority and did not abuse its discretion in determining the extent to which the new decision is to be given retroactive effect, we shall deny the employer’s petition and grant the cross-application of the Board.
I
A
In 1982 the Board determined that Fox Painting Company had violated §§ 8(a)(5) and (1) of the National Labor Relations Act, codified at 29 U.S.C. §§ 151
et seq.,
by unilaterally abrogating a pre-hire agreement negotiated on its behalf by the Painting and Decоrating Contractors of America with the International Brotherhood of Painters and Allied Trades of the United States and Canada, Local 768. For a recitation of the pertinent facts, we refer the reader to the decision and order of the Board, reported at
The Board’s order directed Fox Painting to reimburse all employees in the relеvant bargaining unit for wages lost between May 7, 1980 (the date of repudiation) and such time as the company and the union “reach[ed] an agreement or [a good-faith] impassе.”
B
Deklewa
marked a significant change in the Board’s trеatment of labor agreements in the building and construction industry. Section 8(f) of the National Labor Relations Act allows employers and unions in the construction industry to enter into labоr agreements without any determination that a majority of the workers potentially affected by the agreements desire representation. Prior to
Deklewa,
these “pre-hire” or “8(f)” agreements were deemed terminable at will; accordingly, an employer that was in breach of such an agreement would not be liable for backpay, nor would the execution of the agreement put the employer under any continuing duty to recognize or bargain with the union. See
Deklewa,
Deklewa also held that pre-hire agreements would no longer be deemed terminable at will. An employer who repudiated an 8(f) agrеement could therefore be held liable for backpay up to the contract’s expiration date. Beyond that point the old § 8(f) rules would govern, the employer cоuld not be held liable for post-expiration wages, and there would be no duty to bargain. Id. at 1384-1387.
Addressing the issue of retroactivity, the Board said in Deklewa that it would follow its “usual practice of retroactive applica *56 tion.” This meant that the new holding would apply to “all pending cases in whatever stage.” Id. at 1389 (citations omitted).
C
The petitioners argue, in effect, that because the compliance proceeding agаinst them was pending when Deiclewa was decided, this is one of the "pending cases" to which Deklewa, by its own terms, applies. The Board rejected this contention, citing its decision in Dependable Tile, 292 N.L.R.B. No. 116 (1989). Dependable Tile held that in a bifurcated unfair labor practice case-where proceedings to determine liability are held first, with proceedings to calculate backpay following if liability is established-Deklewa would not be applied retroactively in those situations where a finding of liability had already been approved by an appellate court. Id., slip op. at 2.
Applying pre-Deklewa law, the Board calculated that the petitioners owed $162,-754.74 in backpay, plus interest. Shortly after the issuance of a decision and order directing them to pay this amount, the petitioners filed their petition for review. The Board then filed its cross-appliсation for enforcement.
II
When the Board announces a new rule of law, it has wide discretion to determine whether and to what extent the new rule will be applied retroаctively. As we stated in
Hickman Harbor Service v. NLRB,
In the typical case, we are asked to determine whether “manifest injustice” is caused by a Board decision
requiring
re-troactivity. Our usual course in such a situation is to weigh the following three factors: (1) the reliance of the parties on preexisting law; (2) thе effect of retroactivity on accomplishing the purpose of the law; and (3) any injustice arising from retroactive application.
Adair Standish Corp. v. NLRB,
The instant case is atypical in that here the Board has
declined
to apply a new rule rеtroactively. Nevertheless, we must still try to balance the reasoning behind the Board’s decision “against the mischief of producing a result which is contrary to a statutory design or to legal and equitable principles.”
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Chenery Corp.,
Having weighed the relevant factors, we cannot say that the Board's decision results in manifest injustice. The Board's rationale is simple but strong: the rule set forth in Dependable Tile prevents the wasteful reiltigation of issues already settled by an appellate court. We see nothing in the Dependable Tile rule that is contrary to the purposes of the National Labor Relations Act or to "legal and equitable principles" in general. The Board does not seem to be acting arbitrarily; thе petitioners have pointed to no case-nor has our own research disclosed any-in which the Board has applied Dekiewa in a manner inconsistent with Dependable Tile. (There are cases in which Dekiewa was applied retroactively, to be sure, but these involved disputes that were pending before the Board either for the first time or on remand after an appellate court had declined to enforce a Board order.)
It is important, finally, to understand the context in which the phrase “all pending cases in whatever stage” was used in the decision from which
Deklewa
borrowed it. The phrase comes from
Deluxe Metal Furniture Co.,
“not only ... the case in which such revisions are first announced and applied, but also ... any other case which has not yet been decided, because it has *57 not reached the Board’s level or is at one of the othеr stages of the administrative process such as the hearing.” Id. at 1006. (Emphasis supplied.)
Given its context, the Board’s use of the phrase in question does not obligate the Board to apply Deklewa to cases in the posture of this one.
Accordingly, the petition for review is DENIED, and the Board’s cross-application for enforcement is GRANTED.
