LA CROSSE TELEPHONE CORP. v. WISCONSIN EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS BOARD ET AL.
NO. 38.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Argued November 18-19, 1948. Decided January 17, 1949.
336 U.S. 18
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER join in this opinion.
Thomas H. Skemp argued the cause for appellant in No. 38. With him on the brief was Quincy H. Hale.
Louis Sherman argued the cause for appellant in No. 39. With him on the brief was Philip R. Collins.
Beatrice Lampert, Assistant Attorney General of Wis-
Solicitor General Perlman, David P. Findling, Ruth Weyand and Mozart G. Ratner filed a brief for the United States, as amicus curiae, supporting appellants.
T. McKeen Chidsey, Attorney General, M. Louise Rutherford, Deputy Attorney General, and George L. Reed, Solicitor, Labor Relations Board, filed a brief for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, as amicus curiae, in No. 39, urging affirmance.
Donald J. Martin filed a brief for the Communication Workers of America, Division 23, supporting appellees.
These cases, here on appeal from the Wisconsin Supreme Court,
Prior to 1945 the appellant company recognized the appellant union as the collective bargaining representative of its plant and traffic department employees. The company and the union entered into a collective bargaining agreement which by its terms was to continue from year to year unless terminated by either party on a specified notice. At a time when certain provisions of that agreement were being renegotiated a rival union, the Telephone Guild, filed a petition with the National Board asking that it certify the collective bargaining representative of these employees. Before the National Board acted, the Guild withdrew its petition and filed a petition with the Wisconsin Board seeking the same relief.
The Wisconsin Board held a hearing and directed that separate elections be held among the employees in the plant, traffic, and office departments of the company to determine whether they desired to be grouped in a single unit or in departmental units and what representative, if any, they desired to elect. After the election the Wisconsin Board certified that the employees in the plant and traffic departments had elected to combine in a single bargaining unit and had chosen the Guild as their collective bargaining representative, and that the employees in the office department had elected to constitute themselves as a separate unit and had chosen not to have any collective bargaining representative.
First. We are met at the outset with a contention that the certification of the Wisconsin Board which has been sustained by the Wisconsin Supreme Court is not a “final judgment” within the meaning of
But it has not been shown that the Wisconsin law gives such slight force to the certification. The statute provides that the representative chosen by the employees shall be the exclusive one for purposes of collective bargaining.
On this phase of the case we are, indeed, referred to only one Wisconsin authority and that is United R. & W. D. S. E. v. Wisconsin Board, 245 Wis. 636, 15 N. W. 2d 844. But that case merely held that an order of the Wisconsin Board that a referendum of employees by secret ballot be held to determine whether an “all union” agreement was desired was not reviewable. It did not
While the Wisconsin Employment Relations Board seems readier than some to reexamine the status of a bargaining representative on the ground that it has lost the support of a majority,4 it nevertheless appears to be Wisconsin law that a certification is binding upon an employer so long as it stands.5
We assumed in Allegheny Ludlum Steel Corp. v. Kelley, 330 U. S. 767, that the certification of a collective bargaining representative, sustained by the highest court of the state, was a final judgment, although it did not of itself command action but like the certification here was enforcible in law only by another proceeding.6
We think that is the correct view. The fact that Wisconsin‘s certification was not in the form of a command
Second. The Wisconsin Supreme Court concluded that the Wisconsin Board could exercise jurisdiction here until and unless the National Board undertook to determine the appropriate bargaining representative or unit of representation of these employees. That view was urged on us in the like cases coming here under a New York statute. In Bethlehem Steel Co. v. New York Labor Relations Board, supra, at 776, we rejected that argument, saying:
“The State argues for a rule that would enable it to act until the federal board had acted in the same case. But we do not think that a case by case test of federal supremacy is permissible here.”
the state labor board from determining a representative of plaintiff‘s supervisory employees to bargain collectively with the plaintiff. Under New York law the labor board had authority to hold elections to determine employee representation and to certify the results. 30 McKinney‘s Cons. Laws § 705. Certification in itself, as in the instant case, did not impose a legal penalty. Suit had to be brought in an unfair labor practice proceeding to accomplish such result. 30 Ibid. § 706. Refusal to bargain with the representative of the employees was an unfair labor practice. 30 Ibid. § 704 (6). Even though the New York law did not state, as does the Wisconsin law, that certification by the board was conclusive, we considered a decision of the New York court approving the jurisdiction of the state board to conduct a representative proceeding a final judgment ripe for our consideration.
Those considerations control the present cases. This employer is concededly engaged in interstate commerce; and the industry is one over which the National Board has consistently exercised jurisdiction.7 The Wisconsin Act provides that a majority of employees in a single craft, division, department or plant of an employer may elect to constitute that group a separate bargaining unit.
The result we have reached is not changed by the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947, 61 Stat. 136, 29
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE, having joined in the dissent in Bethlehem Steel Co. v. New York Labor Relations Board, 330 U. S. 767, see p. 777, acquiesces in the Court‘s opinion and judgment in this case.
