Affirming an administrative law judge, the National Labor Relations Board ruled that JCR Hotel, Inc. (JCR) violated § 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act when it discharged housekeeping inspector Patsy Wilson for encouraging or organizing an employee walkout.
JCR Hotel, Inc.,
I.
JCR hired Wilson in October 1997 as a catering manager at the Ramada Inn in Jefferson City, Missouri. Other employees soon complained about Wilson’s abrasive manner to the hotel’s general manager, Theresa Riley. In response, Riley transferred Wilson first to the position of night desk manager and then to the position of housekeeping inspector. After both transfers, co-workers continued to сomplain about Wilson’s behavior. Riley and housekeeping supervisor Teresa Atkisson told Wilson to improve her relationships with other employees.
On October 26, 1999, JCR told several housekeepers that thе free meal customarily provided would not be available that day. While on break, several employees, including Wilson, complained to each other about the situation. Housekeeper Jаmes Whittier said that JCR would only pay attention to complaints if they all walked out or sat down on the job. Wilson commented that a walkout should occur “on a full house day,” such as when the Elks organization bookеd the entire inn for a meeting. Two days later, supervisor At-kisson overheard employees discussing Wilson’s plan for a walkout. Atkisson met with general manager Riley and told her “that rumor had it that Patsy was trying to get some of the people to walk out on a full house day.” After obtaining the approval of JCR’s owners, Riley discharged Wilson when she came to work on November 2. Riley initially told Wilson she was being fired because she could not work with people. Pressed by Wilson, Riley added, “[w]ord is you are planning a walk out with the housekeeping department.”
The Board’s General Counsel issued a complaint charging that JCR violated § 8(a)(1) by discharging Wilson because of her protected concerted activity and by interrogating her about such activity. During the General Counsel’s case-in-chief, Wilson related the reasons Riley gave for the discharge. Wilson further explained that her comment in the break room about walking out when the hotel was full was merely a flippant remark, and she never *840 intended to organize a walkout. At the close of the case-in-сhief, the ALJ dismissed the interrogation charge but denied JCR a directed verdict on the protected concerted activity charge. Atkisson and Riley then testified during JCR’s case. Atkisson admitted she overheard other еmployees say Wilson was organizing a walkout and reported that to Riley. Riley admitted she told Wilson, “word is you are planning a walk out,” but only after Wilson “pushed [her] hot button.” Riley insisted that Wilson’s inability to get along with other employees was the reason for her termination. Other defense witnesses confirmed that Wilson had been an abrasive or unpopular co-worker.
The ALJ found that Wilson’s walkout remark to other employees was protected concerted activity, that Riley believed Wilson engaged in protected concerted activity in making that remark, that Wilson was discharged at least in part for this protectеd concerted activity, and that JCR had failed to prove Wilson would otherwise have been discharged. The Board agreed and ordered JCR to cease and desist the unlawful conduct and reinstate Wilson with back pay.
II.
It is an unfair labor practice for an employer to “interfere with, restrain, or coerce” employees in the exercise of their right to engage in protected concerted activities.
See
29 U.S.C. §§ 157, 158(a)(1). An employer violates § 8(a)(1) by discharging a non-union employee for organizing or implementing a collective walkout to protest working conditions.
See NLRB v. Wash. Aluminum Co.,
A. The Board concluded that JCR violated § 8(a)(1) because Atkisson and Riley took Wilson’s remark seriously and discharged her, in Riley’s words, for “planning a walk out with the housekeeping department.” JCR argues that this interpretation of the statute is unreasonable because it does away with the limitation that Section 7 only protects concerted employee activity. We disagree.
Though JCR attacks the Board’s decision as based only on dicta in the one case cited by the ALJ,
Daniel Construction Co.,
[Ajctions taken by an employer against an employee based on the employer’s belief the employee engaged in or intended to engage in protected concerted activity are unlawful even though the employee did not in fact engage in or intend to engage in such activity.
Monarch Water Sys., Inc.
In construing the National Labor Relations Act, we defer to the Board’s conclusions of law if they are based upon a reasonably defensible construction of the Act.
See NLRB v. Cornerstone Builders, Inc.,
B. JCR also argues that the ALJ erred in denying its motion for directed verdict because the General Counsel failed to сall Atkisson and Riley during his casein-chief and therefore failed to prove that Wilson was discharged for engaging in protected concerted activity. However, Wilson testified during the General Counsel’s case-in-chief that Riley noted Wilson was “planning a walkout” when pressed to explain why she was being terminated. If this testimony was found credible and went unrebutted by JCR, it would support a finding that Wilson was terminated, at least in part, for this rеason. As that would establish a violation of § 8(a)(1), the ALJ did not err in denying JCR’s motion for a directed verdict on this charge.
C. Alternatively, JCR challenges the Board’s ultimate finding that Wilson was discharged for engaging in protected concerted activity. To establish this type of violation, the General Counsel has the burden to prove that the fired employee’s protected concerted activity was a motivating factor in thе decision to discharge. If the General Counsel meets that burden, the burden shifts to the employer to prove it would have taken the same action absent the employee’s protected activity.
See St. Lukes Episcopal-Presbyterian Hosps., Inc. v. NLRB,
JCR first argues that the General Counsel failed to carry his burdеn of proving protected concerted activity. However, the premise for this contention is flawed. As we have explained, the critical issue is whether JCR fired Wilson because it believed she had engaged in protected concerted activity. Thus, it is irrelevant whether the evidence established that her conduct was not in fact concerted activity because Wilson admitted her walkout remark was flippant and she never intended to instigate concerted employee action.
JCR next argues that, if the General Counsel proved an unlawful motive, JCR then met its burden of proving
*842
that the discharge was for cause — Wilson’s inability to gеt along with her co-workers. Again, JCR misstates the legal issue. In a mixed motive situation, the issue is not whether the employer had good cause to fire. The issue is whether the employer would have made the same dеcision absent the employee’s protected activity. Here, there was ample evidence Wilson was an abrasive co-worker. But JCR tolerated that deficiency for a long time, twice transferring Wilson to a new position in an attempt to improve her performance. Then, when Wilson engaged in conduct JCR perceived as “planning a walk out,” she was fired in a matter of days, and Riley referred to that conduct in explaining the termination to Wilson. JCR argues it should not be punished for giving Wilson many chances to improve. But the question remains, would Wilson have been terminated had she not been perceived аs stimulating or organizing protected concerted activity? That is an issue of fact, and on this record, substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s finding “that in light of the statements made by Riley to Wilson as to the reason Wilson was being fired, [JCR] has failed to establish that she would have been discharged regardless of her protected concerted activity.” Where, as here, the evidence supports two reasonable inferеnces, “we may not preempt the Board’s choice between two fairly conflicting views of that evidence.”
MDI Commercial Servs.,
We grant the Board’s cross-application to enforce its order and deny JCR’s petition for review.
