105 Lab.Cas. P 12,059
INTERNATIONAL UNION, UNITED AUTOMOBILE, AEROSPACE AND
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT WORKERS OF AMERICA, and its
Local 449, Petitioners,
v.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Respondent.
National Lock Corporation, et al., Intervening Respondents.
No. 85-2857.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued May 14, 1986.
Decided Oct. 3, 1986.
Ann C. Hodges, Katz, Friedman, Schur & Eagle, Chicago, Ill., for petitioners.
Lаwrence Blatnik, N.L.R.B., Washington, D.C., Ray J. Schoonhoven, Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather & Geraldson, Chicago, Ill., for respondent.
Before POSNER and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges, and CAMPBELL, Senior District Judge.*
POSNER, Circuit Judge.
The United Automobile Workers ask us to vacate a decision by the National Labor Relations Board dismissing the union's charge that National Lock Corporation refused to bargain in good faith over the movement of operations at one of its plants to another state, in violation of sections 8(a)(1) and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. Secs. 158(a)(1) and (5). The Board held that the union had waived any statutory right it might have had to bargain over the move. National Metalcrafters, Inc., 276 N.L.R.B. No. 14 (Aug. 27, 1985).
Workers represented by the union made locks and other hardware at the company's plant in Rockford, Illinois. Section 1.1(b) of the collective bаrgaining agreement provided that "in the event the Company contemplates the relocation of any of its operations conducted at its present divisions in Rockford, Illinois, the Company agrees to discuss such relocation in advance and to negotiate with the Union concerning the effect of such relocation on employees." Faced with high production (including labor) costs in Rockford, and unable to obtain wage concessions from the union, the company decided to move some of its manufacturing to Mauldin, South Carolina, with the result that hundreds of workers lost their jobs. The company told the union about the impending move but did not bargain over it; hence the unfair labor practice charge. The company did bargain over the effects of the move on the workers, for it concedes that the word "negotiate" in the last part of section 1.1(b) means bargain. But it would not bargain over whether to relocate.
At the hearing before the administrative law judge on the union's unfair labor practice charge, oral testimony was taken on the background and purpose of section 1.1(b). The union's witnesses testifiеd that it had been included in order to make sure that the union would have first crack at organizing the workers at the new plant; in a previous relocation by the company, the union had lost out to a rival union in the race to organize them. The union's witnesses denied there had been any discussion of waiving the union's statutory right to bargain over plant relocations. In contrast, Carter, who hаd negotiated the contract for the company and had drafted section 1.1(b), testified that in the negotiations he had told the union that the company would not agree to any restriction on its right to relocate work, and that the word "discuss" had been used advisedly, and meant "notify" rather than "negotiate" or "bargain." The company also pointed out that in previous cases of relocation the union had not asserted any right to bargain. But the union countered that those relocations had not resulted in a loss of jobs at the Rockford plant; the workers made surplus by the move had been given other jobs there.
The administrative law judge, saying he disbelieved Carter's testimony and believed that of the union's witnesses, concluded that the word "discuss" had not been intended as a waiver of the union's statutory right to bargain over a relocation motivated by wage concerns; hence the company had committed an unfair labor practice. The Board reversed. While upholding all of the findings on credibility that the administrative law judge had made, the Board held that the bargaining history (presumably the union's failure to have requested bargaining over the prеvious relocations), in conjunction with the "plain meaning" of the word "discuss" when juxtaposed with "negotiate" in section 1.1(b), demonstrated that the union had waived the right to bargain.
The administrative law judge's opinion contains a number of errors and omissions, and his credibility findings are suspect because based in part on the union's having produced several witnesses to the negotiation of seсtion 1.1(b) and the company only one, Carter; no other significance can be attached to the administrative law judge's disparaging reference to the lack of "corroboration" for Carter's testimony. So this is not a case where a strong initial decision opposite to the Board's decision requires us to consider the evidentiary and analytical basis of the Boаrd's decision with special care. See, e.g., Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB,
The Board's opinion, hоwever, is perfunctory, incomplete, and inconsistent. The Board has the unfortunate habit of writing opinions in the form of commentaries (usually in footnotes, though here there was text as well) on the administrative law judge's always much longer and more comprehensive opinion. Maybe the Board's workload is too heavy to allow anything better but that will not permit us to uphold a decision for which the Board has failed to provide a coherent rationale. See, e.g., Phelps Dodge Corp. v. NLRB,
The basic flaws in the Board's analysis are three:
1. Its opinion leaps illogically from the proposition that the "plain meaning" of "discuss" is not "bargain" to the conclusion that the union waived its statutory right to bargain over plant relocatiоns. Overlooked is the possibility that the "discuss" clause has a different domain from the statutory right and can coexist with it. The Supreme Court has not yet decided whether and in what circumstances a company must bargain with a union over the decision to relocate operations. See First Nat'l Maintenance Corp. v. NLRB,
In exchange for this right of notice the union may or may not have given up its statutory right to bargain--a stronger right, but applicable to fewer relocations, and perhaps therefore on balance less valuable to the union. But one cannot just assume, as the Board did, that because seсtion 1.1(b) is about relocations and does not create a duty to bargain (except over the effects of the relocation--and the difference between "decision" bargaining and "effects" bargaining is well recognized, see, e.g., First Nat'l Maintenance Corp. v. NLRB, supra,
The Board itself said in its opinion, "It is undisputed that the clause was designed solely to accommodate the Union's desire to have the first opportunity to organize new employees at any new facilities created by National." 276 N.L.R.B. No. 14, at 6 (emphasis added; footnote omitted). If so, the statutory right to bargain was not affected; for to conclude that the clause also waived that right would be to assign a dual, not a single, purpose to the clause.
2. The Board's opinion omits mention of the traditionally stringent test for whether a party to a collective bargaining contract has waived a statutory right. The courts and the Board have held over and over again that evidence that the parties intended to waive a statutory right must, to be credited, be clear and unmistakable. See, e.g., Metropolitan Edison Co. v. NLRB,
We grant that despite the strong judicial endorsement of the rule, the Board--which knows more about the dynamics of collective bargaining than the courts--might be able to dilute or abandon it, since the rule is a nonobvious gloss on the statute. Cf. 5 Davis, Administrative Law Treatise Sec. 29 (2d ed. 1984). And there are two bits of evidence that a desire to abandon or dilute, rather than mere oversight, does indeed lie behind the Board's failure to mention the rule. The first is that the administrative law judge had relied heavily on the presumption against inferring the waiver of a statutory right and that the union had argued the presumption vigorously throughout the case. So the Board could not just have forgotten about the rule; and if it didn't mention the rule just because it did not want to weaken the force of its opinion, this would be the equivalent of wanting to dilute or abandon the rule. Second, in support of the conclusion that the union had waived its statutory right the Board cited only Consolidated Foods Corp., supra, one of the few decisions that does not say that the waiver of a statutory right must be clear and unmistakable--though whether the omission to sаy this in Consolidated was deliberate or not is unclear.
All this is rather bootless conjecture, though. For it makes no difference what the Board may have had in mind but failed to express; an administrative agency is not allowed to change direction without some explanation of what it is doing and why. This general principle of administrative law, see, e.g., Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mutual Automоbile Ins. Co.,
Forcing an administrative agency to 'fess up to its changes of position may seem productive merely of paper shuffling, and also inconsistent with the genius of the common law, which allows new doctrines tо be created implicitly and even surreptitiously by judges who deny all the while that they are changing the law. See Rockford League of Women Voters v. NRC,
3. The Board disregarded evidence that in the negotiations over section 1.1(b) the words "discuss" and "negotiate" were not distinguished. The union's witnesses so testified, the administrative law judge believed them, and the Board accepted the administrative lаw judge's view of their believability. The union and the company agree that the word "negotiate" as used in the same sentence of section 1.1(b) is synonymous with the statutory term "bargain"; so if "discuss" equals "negotiate," then "discuss" must also equal "bargain." Taking this view, and construing section 1.1(b) against its draftsman, one might conclude that the company had (perhaps inadvertently) reaffirmed the union's statutory right to bаrgain and may even have amplified it to take in bargaining over relocations not within the scope of the right because not motivated by disputes over terms or conditions of work. Against this conclusion it can be argued that no one reading "the Company agrees to discuss such relocation in advance and to negotiate with the Union concerning the effect of such rеlocation on employees" would think that "discuss" and "negotiate" meant the same thing; it would have been so much simpler to use one word rather than two. In addition, the Board might have invoked some version of the parol evidence rule and refused to consider testimony about the meaning of section 1.1(b). The courts have applied the rule to collective bargaining cоntracts in cases brought under section 301 of the Taft-Hartley Act, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 185, see Mohr v. Metro East Mfg. Co.,
The Board even omitted to consider a bit of evidence that favored its interpretation. The union had not demanded that the company bargain with it till six months after the union first learned of the possibility of relocation. Even if the union did not waive in the contract its statutory right to bargain, it may have waived its contractual right to invoke its statutory right by delay in invoking the contractual right. See, e.g., International Ladies' Garment Workers Union v. NLRB,
The decision reversing the administrative law judge does not contain a reasoned analysis of the law and the evidence, and we therefore set aside the decision and return the case to the Board.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
Hon. William J. Campbell, of the Northern District of Illinois, sitting by designation
