These consolidated cases are here on the petition of the National Labor Relations Board to enforce its order against Aero Corporation (Company), and on the petition of the United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers (Union) to review a portion of the order.
The Board, in agreement with the Trial Examiner, found that the Company had violated Section 8(a) (1) of the National Labor Relations Act
The facts as established by these findings may be stated briefly. This labor controversy arose at the Company’s Lake City, Florida plant, where it engages in the repair, overhaul, and maintenance of aircraft. Early in 1962 some of its employees became interested in organizing for the purposes of collective bargaining, and contacted representatives of the Union. The first organizational meeting was held in February 1962; a member of the Union spoke and Union authorization cards were distributed. By April 9, the Board found, a majority of the employees then in the unit had signed the authorization cards. On that date, the Union formally requested the Company to bargain. The following day, the Union petitioned for a Board election. On April 16, the Company declined to bargain with the Union, stating that it would insist on an election before recognizing the Union.
On June 1, 1962, an election was held. The Union lost by a vote of 49 to 43.
I. Union Authorization
It is urged that the authorization card used by the Union is ambiguous and does not constitute an unequivocal designation of the Union as the representative of the signer for collective bargaining purposes. It is further contended that the Trial Examiner erred in not permitting the Company “to determine from all alleged card signers the purpose for which the card was executed.” We find these contentions without merit.
The card
The Company relies on NLRB v. Peterson Bros., Inc.,
expressly confers the requisite authority. The recital of alternate methods by which the card might be used to make the authority operative with respect to the employer in our opinion neither negates the grant nor beclouds it with ambiguity.
It was therefore proper to refuse to permit the employer to inquire into the subjective understanding of the employee who signed the card. At oral argument, counsel conceded that the Company had been permitted to inquire as to the representations made at the times the cards were distributed, i. e., to question whether there were misrepresentations. That is all that need be allowed. Joy Silk Mills, Inc. v. NLRB,
II. Limitation Period
The Company contends that the complaint of the refusal to bargain related to an “unfair labor practice occurring more than six months prior to” the service of a copy of the charge filed with the Board and is therefore barred by Section 10(b).
The Company’s letter of April 16, 1962, responded to a Union demand to bargain in the following terms:
Your recent letter requesting recognition as exclusive bargaining representative for our employees has been received. It is our opinion that our employees do not desire your union to represent them.
In any event, we must insist that our employees be given an opportunity to vote on this important matter in an NLRB election before we assume that you have captured them.
In finding that the refusal to bargain charge was not barred, the Examiner and the Board concluded that the refusal was a continuing one and that the Company had no doubt throughout the permissible period that the Union claimed a majority and was seeking recognition. In addition the Board referred to a statement made by Company counsel at an April 26 hearing on the Union’s first petition for an election to the effect that the Company “still decline [d] to recognize” in the absence of an election. An attorney’s reaffirmation of the Company’s position arising out of a past action should not ordinarily of itself be sufficient to constitute a re-occurrence for the purpose of a limitation provision. Nevertheless, there are other aspects of this case which lead us to conclude that the charge is not barred.
The Board was justified in construing the Union’s demand and the Company’s refusal as a continuing demand for recognition and bargaining, and a continuing refusal, when another “formal demand in light of the Company’s prior peremptory refusal would have been useless.” Local No. 152 v. NLRB,
The Company contends that the continuing offense theory is impermissible in light of Local Lodge No. 1424 International Assoc. of Machinists v. NLRB,
III. Use of Protected Statements
The Company insists that statements protected by Section 8(c)
In particular, the Company states that the Examiner used protected material to place “all management representatives in the ‘liar’ column,” and for the “mass discrediting of all company witnesses.” We find no support in the record for this exaggerated characterization of the Examiner’s method of decision. We have been shown nothing from which it could be inferred that the Examiner strayed from his role as an objective and impartial fact-finder. Moreover, the Board in its decision did not refer to the protected material, and its decision is supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole. See Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB,
IV. Supervisory Personnel
Two low-level supervisory personnel apparently passed out some of the authorization cards, and there is some evidence to show that one solicited signatures.
V.
The Board ordered the Company to reinstate four employees it found to have been discharged to discourage union membership. The Company disputes the findings as to each. The Union asserts that the Board should have found that an additional employee had been so discharged.
We have considered the Union’s assertion that the Company committed additional Section 8(a) (1) violations through the activity of a test pilot who officiously spied upon some organizational meetings. Since there is substantial evidence supporting the Board, its resolution of this question must stand.
We have also considered the other numerous objections of the Company and do not find them persuasive, separately or together.
The Union’s petition for review is denied. The Board’s petition for enforcement of its order is granted.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. 49 Stat. 449 (1935) and 61 Stat. 136 (1947), as amended, 29 U.S.C. §§ 151-168 (1964).
. Refusal to bargain with a union that possesses valid authorization cards of a majority of the employees in a unit, and insistence upon an election, when the ' action is motivated not by a good faith doubt as to the union’s majority status but rather by a desire to obtain time in which to undermine the union, is a violation of § 8(a) (5). Joy Silk Mills, Inc. v. NLRB,
. In addition there were four challenged ballots, two of which had been cast by employees discharged by the Company for reasons the Board found to have been in violation of § 8(a) (3).
. The following is a facsimile of the card:
. As we said in Joy Silk Mills, supra.
[A]n employee’s thoughts (or afterthoughts) as to why he signed a union card, and what he thought that card meant, cannot negative the overt action of having signed a card designating a union as bargaining agent. [87 U.S. App.D.C. at 371,
The card here is identical to that in Glasgow, and substantially similar to that in Peterson. It is plainly less objectionable than the card underlying the Board’s order which we enforced in International Union of Elec. Workers (S.N.C. Mfg. Co.) v. NLRB, supra note 2.
. 29 U.S.C. § 160(b) (1964).
. The Board also stated: “Moreover, even if the 10(b) period of limitations were fatal to an 8(a) (5) finding, an affirmative bargaining order would be appropriate to remedy the 8(a) (1) violations found herein, and to restore the status quo ante.”
. 29 U.S.C. § 158(c) (1964).
. Although the Board held that the worker was a supervisor, it noted that she had been told by her foreman that she was not a supervisor, that a letter circulated during the campaign by the Company’s supervisors did not contain her signature, and that she voted in one of the elections without challenge.
. The Company says that the record shows that four cards were obtained by the two supervisors. The Examiner found that the cards allegedly obtained by them had been lost in the mail. The Board, however, did not rely on this finding.
. The Examiner found that the employee’s discharge was based “primarily upon departmental seniority.” The Union seizes upon the word “primarily” and suggests that it implies the discharge was in part motivated by Company knowledge of the employee’s union activity. In our view of the record, the Examiner was referring to an additional reason for the discharge given by the employee’s supervisor, namely, that the employee had asked to be one of the first to be laid off under a contemplated reduction in force.
