GLENDALE ASSOCIATES, LTD.; Glеndale II Associates Limited Partnership; Donahue Schriber, Petitioners,
v.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Respondent.
National Labor Relations Board, Petitioner,
v.
Glendale Associates, Ltd.; Glendale II Associates Limited Partnership; Donahue Schriber, Respondents.
No. 01-71566.
No. 01-71746.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted November 6, 2002 — Pasadena, California.
Filed October 30, 2003.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Thomas J. Leanse (argued) and Karen L. Stephenson (briefed), Katten, Muchin & Zavis, Los Angeles, California, for the petitioners-respondents.
Robert J. Englehart, National Labor Relations Board, Washington, D.C., for the respondent-petitioner.
On Petitions for Review of an Order of the National Labor Relations Board.
Before: Harry PREGERSON, John T. NOONAN, and A. Wallace TASHIMA, Circuit Judges.
OPINION
PREGERSON, Circuit Judge.
In the spring of 1997, Local 57 of the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians, the Broadcasting and Cable Television Workers Seсtor of the Communication Workers of America ("Union" or "Local 57") and the American Broadcasting Company, Inc. ("ABC") were engaged in a contract dispute. To pressure ABC to settle the dispute, union representatives from Local 57 distributed handbills to customers outside of the Disney Store in the Glendale Galleria ("Galleria"). The Union targeted the Disney Store because it is owned by Disney Enterprises, Inc. ("Disney Enterprises"), the same parent company that owns ABC. The handbills the Union distributed outside the Disney Store informed customers of ABC's and Disney Enterprises' anti-worker policies and encouraged customers to express their concerns about Disney Enterprises' corporate practices to Disney's corporate headquarters and to Congress.
Petitioners co-own and manage the Galleria. Shortly after the Union began handbilling at the Galleria, Petitioners requested that the Union comply with their rules regarding distributing written materials on their premises. Relevant to this appeal, Petitioners requested that the Union remove Disney's name from the handbill pursuant to the Galleria's policy prohibiting certain groups from distributing on its premises written materials that name a Galleria tenant, owner, or manager. The Union refused to remove Disney's name from its handbill. Petitioners then requested that the union representatives leave its premises for failure to comply with the rule prohibiting the distribution of written material that names a mall tenant. Petitioners informed the Union membеrs that if they did not leave the Galleria premises, the union representatives would be arrested for trespassing on private property.
The Union subsequently filed an unfair labor practice charge against Petitioners under § 8(a)(1), 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1), of the National Labor Relations Act ("NLRA"). An Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ") found that Petitioners violated § 8(a)(1) by promulgating, maintaining, and enforcing a rule prohibiting union representatives from distributing literature on Galleria premises that identifies by name a Galleria tenant, owner, or manager.
The National Labor Relations Board ("the Board") affirmed the ALJ's decision and ordered that Petitioners cease and desist from maintaining and enforcing a rule "prohibiting handbilling or other expressive activities protectеd by Section 7 of the NLRA which identify by name the center owner, manager, or any tenant in the center."
The Galleria petitions for review of the Board's order, and the Board cross-petitions for enforcement of the Board's order. We affirm the Board's decision, and hold that Petitioners violated § 8(a)(1) of the NLRA by prohibiting the union representatives from naming a Glendale tenant in the handbills they distributed on Petitioner's property. We, therefore, enforce the Board's order.
FACTS
Petitioners Glendale Associates, Ltd. and Glendale II Associates, both California partnerships, co-own a large retail shopping center known as the "Glendale Galleria" in Glendale, California.1 They employ petitioner Donahue Schriber, a management company based in Newport Beach, California to manage the operations of the Galleria. Petitioners are employers as defined by the NLRA. Glendale Associates, 335 NLRB at *6.
The Galleria consists of more than 1.3 million square feet. It contains five major department stores and 60 other stores and has thirteen entrances. At each entrance, a sign welcomes customers and announces a general ban on bicycles, radios, roller skates, and soliciting. The Galleria employs 40-45 security officers, with about ten to twelve officers working on the property at any time.
One of the tenants of the Galleria is the Disney Store, Inc. The Disney Store is a separately incorporated, wholly owned, subsidiary of Disney Enterprisеs. Disney Enterprises also owns ABC, formally known as Capitol Cities/ABC, Inc. Disney Enterprises, in turn, is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Walt Disney Company.
Local 57 represents a bargaining unit that includes tape editors who work for ABC. At the expiration of the parties' last collective bargaining agreement, on March 31, 1997, ABC and the Union failed to reach agreement on the terms of a new collective bargaining agreement. To pressure ABC to negotiate a new agreement, on May 10, 1997, the president of Local 57, Gina Stinett, and several Local 57 members (collectively "union representatives") distributed handbills inside the Galleria near the Disney Store. None of the union representatives distributing handbills was employed by the Disney Store. The hand-bills informed customers of ABC's demand for take-backs from workers during negotiations with the Union, including ABC's proposed elimination of company pension contributions. In addition, the handbill included information on Disney's sweatshop violations in Haiti, child labor practices in Los Angeles, and tax loophole practices. The handbill encouraged customers to express their concern about Disney's employment policies to the Disney corporate headquarters, the Disney Store manager, and Congress.2
After Local 57 began handbilling in front of the Disney Store, the Galleria's director of security, Michael Cross, approached the union representatives. Cross instructed the union representatives that they had to comply with the Galleria's rules regulating handbilling. Cross gave the Union an application and a full set of the Galleria's rules for distributing literature. On June 2, 1997, the Union submitted its application to the Galleria. The Galleria subsequently gave the Union permission to handbill on June 7, 1997, subject to curing certain deficiencies in the application. Specifically, the Galleria required the Union (1) to explicitly identify the names of those expected to participate in the handbilling effort, and (2) to remove the reference to the Disney Store from the handbills pursuant to a Galleria policy that bars certain groups from naming a Galleria owner, manager, or tenant on noncommercial materials that was distributed on its premises. Petitioners do not apрly their rule barring groups from naming a Galleria owner, manager, or tenant to persons or groups engaged in a primary dispute with a Galleria tenant. Nor do Petitioners apply the rule to persons or groups distributing commercial literature on its premises.
The Union completed the Galleria's application and returned it to Petitioners. The Union complied with the Galleria's request to name the handbillers. But the Union declined to remove the reference to the Disney Store from the handbills. On June 7, 1999, union representatives returned to the Galleria to distribute handbills in front of the Disney Store. Cross, upon noting that the Union had not removed the Disney Store's name from its handbills, ordered the Union to leave the Galleria premises. Cross informed the Union that if they did not leave, they would be subject to arrest for illegal trespass on private property. Undeterred, the union representatives continued distributing the handbills outside of the Disney Store. Petitioners did not contact police officials. The Union filed an unfair labor practice charge against Petitioners with the Board.
ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEEDINGS
On March 4, 1999, an ALJ held that Petitioners violated Section 8(a)(1) of the NLRA by promulgating, maintaining, and enforcing, by threats to call the police, a rule prohibiting the naming of a Galleria tenant on its premises. The ALJ found that Petitioners' rule was "a content-based restriction prohibited both by the First Amendment and by Section 7 of the Act." Glendale Associates, 335 NLRB at *16. The ALJ thus ordered Petitioners to cease and desist from maintaining and enforсing their rule prohibiting expressive activities which identify the name of the center owner, manager, or tenant of the mall. In addition, the ALJ held that Petitioners were not in violation of the NLRA by requiring the Union to supply the names of individuals who would be handbilling on its premises.
On appeal, the Board adopted the decision of the ALJ. The Board first observed that under Lechmere, Inc. v. NLRB,
The Galleria appealed from the Board's finding that it violated § 8(a)(1) of the NLRA and timely filed a Petition For Review with this Court. The Board filed a cross-petition for enforcement of its order.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The National Labor Relations Board "has the primary responsibility for developing and applying national labor policy." NLRB v. Calkins,
DISCUSSION
Petitioners contend that the Board misapplied Lechmere,
A.
In Lechmere, the Supreme Court examined the scope of Section 7 protections for nonemployee union organizers, i.e., union representatives and members who are not directly employed by the employer against whom the union representatives are directing their union activity. In Lechmere, the Cоurt considered the case of nonemployee union representatives who were engaged in a campaign to organize Lechmere employees. As part of the Union's campaign, union representatives distributed informational union literature to Lechmere employees in Lechmere's employee-used parking lot. Lechmere personnel confronted the union representatives and barred them from all solicitation efforts on its premises. The Union complied, but filed an unfair labor practice contending that Lechmere violated the NLRA by barring union representatives from its property. The ALJ found, and the Board agreed, that the nonemployee union representatives wеre engaged in protected Section 7 activities and that Lechmere committed an unfair labor practice under 8(a)(1) by excluding the union representatives from its property. The First Circuit enforced the Board's order.
The Supreme Court reversed. The Court acknowledged the rule under NLRB v. Babcock & Wilcox Co.,
Since Lechmere was decided, this Court, along with other Circuits and the Board, have found Lechmere to be inapplicable to cases where an employer excluded nonemployee union representatives in the absence of a state property right to do so. See, e.g., Calkins,
In Calkins, the owner of the Indio Grocery Outlet prohibited nonemployee union representatives from distributing on its parking lots and sidewalks handbills that encouraged customers to boycott the store because it was non-Union. The Union filed an unfair labor practice complaint with the Board. The Board first held that the Union had been engaging in protected Section 7 activity. Calkins d/b/a Indio Grocery Outlet,
We enforced the Board's order. Calkins,
To determine whether the Indio Grocery Outlet acted in violation of the NLRA by excluding the Union picketers we examined "first, whether the Union members engaged in Section 7 activity; and second whether [Indio Grocery Outlet] possessed a property interest under California law entitling it to exclude that activity." Id. We held that the Union's picketing activity in front of Indio Grocery Outlet was protected under the NLRA because "Section 7 [of the NLRA] protects nonemployees engaging in picketing or other publicity for the purpose of truthfully advising the public that an employer does not employ Union members or have a contract with a labor organization." Id. at 1089.
Turning to whether Indio Grocery Outlet had a state property right to exclude the Union, we looked to California state law. After examining California state court decisions, we concluded that Indio Grocery Outlet did not have a right to exclude the Union from its property under California free speech protections. Specifically, we held that Indio Grocery Outlet's policy was in violation of Article 1, section 2 of the California Constitution, which "prohibits owners of shopping malls and general access stores from excluding speech activity on their private adjacent sidewalks and parking lots." Id. at 1090. Thus, we affirmed the Board's order.
B.
We hold, and Petitioners do not contest, that the Union was engaged in protected Section 7 activity when they distributed handbills outside the Disney Store. Section 7 of the NLRA guarantees employees "the right to self-organization, to form, join, or assist labor organizations." 29 U.S.C. § 157. An employer violates the NLRA if it "interfere[s] with, restrain[s], or coerce[s] employees" in the exercise of their Section 7 rights. 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1). Section 7 protects the right of employees "to improve terms and conditions of employment ... through channеls outside the immediate employee-employer relationship." Eastex, Inc. v. NLRB,
C.
The heart of this appeal turns on whether Petitioners had the state property right to exclude union representatives from naming a Galleria tenant on handbills the union representatives distributed on the Galleria premises. Thus, we examine whether Petitioners' rule is consistent with California free speech protections under the California Constitution. Petitioners argue that their rule is consistent with California law because they have a substantial interest in ensuring that neither their, nor their tenants', normal business operations are disrupted. Alternatively, Petitioners argue that their rule is a valid time, place, and manner regulation. The Board contends that Petitioners' rule is an impermissible content-based restriction that violates Article 1, section 2 of the California Constitution. Thus, the Board argues that Petitioners had no lawful right to prevent the Union from distributing a handbill that contained protected speech. We agree with the Board, and hold that Petitioners did not have a sufficient property interest to exclude the union representatives from distributing handbills that name a Galleria tenant, manager, or owner. We hold that Petitioners' rule violates the Union's free speech protections guaranteed by Article 1, section 2 of the California Constitution.
In analyzing questions of state law, we are bound by the decisions of the state's highest court. Calkins,
1.
Article 1, section 2 of the California Constitution guarantees that "[e]very person may freely speak, write and publish his or her sentiments on all subjects." Cal. Const. art. I, § 2. The California Supreme Court has recognized that the California Constitution is "more protective, definitive and inclusive of rights to expression and speech" than the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. Robins v. Pruneyard Shopping Ctr.,
As part of California's broader free speech protections, privately-owned shopping centers are required to respect individual free speech rights on their premises to the same extent that government entities are bound to observe state and federal free speech rights. Pruneyard,
2.
To analyze whether Petitioners' rule prohibiting the distribution of literature that names a Galleria tenant, owner, or manager, is valid under the California Constitution, we must first determine whether the rule is content-neutral or content-based. Los Angeles Alliance for Survival v. City of Los Angeles,
A rule is content-neutral if it is "unconcerned with the literal content of the spoken or written words." Los Angeles Alliance for Survival,
In contrast, "[a]s a general rule, laws that by their terms distinguish favored from disfavored speech on the basis of the ideas or views expressed are content based." Crawford v. Lungren,
Petitioners' rule restricting certain groups from engaging in non-commercial speech that includes the name of a tenant, owner, or manager is similarly content-based. Like the regulation at issue in Gilleo, the Galleria must review the literature to determine if it includes a tenant, owner, or management's name before it will approve the literature for distribution. In addition, Petitioners except from its rule groups or persons distributing the literature who are in a primary labor dispute with a Galleria tenant. And, Petitioners except from its rule persons or groups who distribute commercial literature on its premises naming a Galleria tenant, owner, or manager. Petitioners' rule goes to the underpinnings of content-based free speech protections because it is prohibiting speech that is counter to their, and their tenants, interests.
3.
California courts also draw from First Amendment jurisprudence to determine whether a cоntent-based rule survives scrutiny under the California Constitution. City of Fresno v. Press Communications, Inc.,
Petitioners argue that their rule banning the naming of a tenant, owner, or manager in literature distributed on their premises protects the Galleria's valid interest of ensuring that its normal business operations are not disrupted. Petitioners contend that if they did not prohibit non-commercial literature that discloses a tenant's name, it would affect their tenant's investment in Petitioners' property because it would discourage the public from patronizing the named tenants. The Board argues that Petitioners' argument is misplaced because it relies on case law addressing content-neutral rules, which are subject to a lower standard of scrutiny. Moreover, the Board contends that Petitioners' exemption of primary labor disputants from their rule undermines their stated concern of disruption with business. Again, we agree with the Board and hold that Petitioners' rule violates the free speech rights guaranteed by the California Constitution.
The California Supreme Court has yet squarely to address whether such a rule promulgated for Petitioners' purpose — protection against disruption of businesses — can withstand strict scrutiny.5 But California and federal courts have invalidated content-based rules as unconstitutional when rules contain exceptions, and those exceptions implicate the same interests that motivates the restriction on the regulated content. Gilleo,
Petitioners' rationale for justifying their rule prohibiting certain groups from naming a Galleria tenant, owner, or manager — disruption of their tenants' business — is similarly undermined by the fact that Petitioners allow organizations to name a tenant in a primary labor dispute. Petitioners offer no reason why a secondary boycott, in which Union members boycott a company because of the company's affiliation with their employer, might be more disruptive to business than a primary boycott. In fact, naming a tenant in a primary labor dispute has the potential to cause more damage to a Galleria tenant's business because primary labor disputants directly attack the tenant's practices. Because the speech Petitioners exempt from their rule invokes the very concerns that Petitioners use to justify the restricted speech, their rationale cannot be considered compelling. See, e.g., Press Communications,
Furthermore, Petitioners' rule is untenable under California law because as they admit, Petitioners maintain and enforce the rule because they disfavor speech that may adversely affect their business. California courts and the Supreme Court have struck down similar restrictions that are "based on hostility — or favoritism — towards the underlying message expressed." R.A.V.,
Based on the above stated reasons, we hold that Petitioners acted without a state property interest in enforcing and promulgating a rule restricting certain groups from distributing literature that named a Galleria tenant, owner, or manager, on the Galleria premises. Petitioners' rule is an impermissible content-bаsed restriction on speech under the California Constitution. We thus hold that Petitioners violated the Union's Section 7 rights by ordering, under threats of calls to the police, the Union to leave its premises unless it removed Disney's name from its handbills.
CONCLUSION
In No. 01-71566, the petition for review is DENIED. In No. 01-71746, the Board's order is ENFORCED.
Notes:
Notes
Orbach Associates co-owns the Galleria with the petitioners. Orbach, however, is not a party to this suit because it is not an employer as defined by NLRA. NLRA § 2(2), (6), (7), 29 U.S.C. § 152(2), (6), (7)Glendale Assocs., Ltd., Nat'l Ass'n of Broad. Employees and Technicians, the Broad. and Cable Television Workers Sector of the Communication Workers of Am.,
The full text of the handbill stated:
Hey Mouseketeers!
Before you shop in the Disney store, you should know what Disney is doing with your money:
Disney heaps millions of taxpayer dollars on CEO Michael Eisner ...
Disney is taking advantage of a tax loophole to avoid paying $600 million in taxes owed on the sale of its newspaper holdings. Congress is trying to close the loophole, but Disney is working hard to complete the sale before Congress acts. That $600 million translates to $5 per taxpayer.
What will Disney do with its corporate welfare windfall? Disney awarded CEO Michael Eisner a ten-year employment contract with a projected value in excess of $900 million — the largest payout to a CEO in American corporate history.
... [W]hile exploiting workers in the U.S. and abroad.
•• In the past year, Disney manufacturing shops in the U.S. have been cited by the U.S. Labor Department for sweatshop violations.
•• A 12-year-old girl was found working in a Los Angeles factory that manufactures Disney products.
•• Wоrkers in Haiti earn only 28 cents an hour making Disney clothes. A Disney contractor in Thailand was found exploiting 13- and 14-year old children to sew Disney clothes.
•• In negotiations at its ABC subsidiary. Disney is demanding take-backs from workers, including the elimination of company pension contributions. Disney wants to diminish the number of Union jobs and transfer the work to non-union workers.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
Ask the Disney store manager to call Disney corporate offices at 818-553-7200 to register your concern about their employment policies
Sign the card to Members of Congress telling them that you want them to stop corporate welfare for Disney
Explain to your children that Disney does not live up to its family-friendly image and is not nice to children; that's why they should buy their toys elsewhere next time. Demand that Congress close the Disney-Eisner salary subsidy tax loophole
Glendale Associates,
The Eighth Circuit came to the same conclusion inO'Neil's Markets. O'Neil's Markets,
California's expansive free speech protections are grounded in the state's unique emphasis on direct popular democratic endeavorsSee, e.g., Pruneyard,
When the California Court of Appeal considered a similar issue of a mall requiring content-checked approval of Union signs, the court observed that the rule "raises intriguing constitutional issues" but found that the issue was not adequately preserved for appealUNITE v. Superior Court,
