Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
Macmillan Publishing, Inc. refused to bargain with, or furnish information to, a union that won the second of two representation elections. The company defended against the resulting unfair labor practice charges on the ground that the National Labor Relations Board had improperly certified the union as the employees’ bargaining representative. The Board ruled against the company and ordered, among other things, that the company bargain with the union. The company’s petition for judicial review followed. The Board then cross-petitioned for enforcement and the union — the Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees — intervened.
The company is engaged in the wholesale distribution and sale of books and reference materials. It operated two warehouses in Indianapolis, Indiana. The union filed a petition with the Board seeking to represent “all full and regular part-time warehouse and distribution center employees” at the two facilities. The company objected to an election as premature: in six months, it would be transferring its Indianapolis operations to a new “Customer Center” some 17 miles away; no formal offers of employment had yet been made to the current unit employees; additional employees would be hired to work at the new operation. The Regional Director overruled the objection and ordered an election, which the union lost by a vote of 78 to 75. The union filed eight objections. The Regional Director sustained the union’s Objection 2 and ordered a new election, without passing on the union’s other complaints. The union won the second election by a vote of 58 to 52.
The union’s Objection 2 centered on a campaign leaflet the company handed to its employees. The leaflet read: *167 The “$2,522.00” referred to an across-the-board wage increase the company had announced two days earlier. (One of the union’s objections dealt with the timing of the wage increase.)
*166 [[Image here]]
*167
We may quickly dispatch the company’s argument that the first election was premature because of the impending transfer to the Customer Center. As the union rightly points out, the second election (which the union won), not the first (which the union lost) led to the Board’s bargaining order. By the time of the second election, the company’s move to the new facility had already taken place. Of the employees eligible to vote in the second election, 86% had previously worked in the company’s two Indianapolis facilities. The Regional Director’s predictive judgment before the first election—that the work force at the old locations would be a substantial and representative complement of the work force at the new location—thus turned out to be accurate. Nothing more is needed to sustain the Board’s order insofar as it rested on the results of the second election.
See NLRB v. AAA Alternator Rebuilders, Inc.,
The remaining question is whether the Board, through its Regional Director, properly overturned the first election because of the company’s leaflet. For its part the company relies on its free speech right as recognized in § 8(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 158(c): “The expressing of any views, argument, or opinion, or the dissemination thereof, whether in written, printed, graphic, or visual form, shall not constitute or be evidence of an unfair labor practice ... if such expression contains no threat of reprisal or force or promise of benefit.” Section 8(c) does not exactly fit this case. The issue here arose in the context of a representation election and the consequence of the leaflet was not an unfair labor practice charge, but a new election. Nonetheless, the Board admitted at oral argument that its treatment of employer communications at the election stage is indistinguishable from how it decides if an employer’s “expression” is outside § 8(c)’s protection because it “contains [a] threat of reprisal or force or promise of benefit.”
As to the leaflet, the company insists that it was literally true, and as such did not constitute a threat to employees. We are not sure the last proposition follows from the first. The statement “If you vote for the union, the company will do everything it can to reduce your wages,” may be truthful, depending on the company’s intentions, but it is certainly a threat.
See NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co.,
The trouble is that the Regional Director, whose decision the Board refused *168 to review, cited none of the authorities the Board relies upon in its brief. Here is the sum and substance of his reasoning:
It is well settled that, during a union organizing campaign, an employer should decide the question of granting or withholding benefits as it would if a union were not in the picture. Stumpf Motor Company,208 NLRB 431 (1974); The Gates Rubber Company,182 NLRB 95 (1970); The May Department Stores Company d/b/a Famous-Barr Company,174 NLRB 770 (1969). Exhibit 1 herein violates this principle by leaving it in the minds of the employees that they will lose the previously announced raise, amounting to $2,522.00 projected over the next year, if the union is voted in. The Employer’s mention, later in the document, (in much smaller print) that all wages and benefits are subject to negotiation does not cure the clear implication that the employees will not get their promised raise if the union is voted in. Accordingly, I find that the issuance and distribution of Exhibit 1 by the Employer constitutes objectionable conduct and Petitioner’s Objection 2 is sustained.
The Regional Director’s first sentence is inscrutable. It deals with the timing of the wage increase. Each of the Board cases cited in support of that sentence dealt with the same subject.
See Stumpf Motor Co.,
Despite the Board’s discretion in regulating representation elections,
see Timsco Inc. v. NLRB,
The petition for judicial review is granted. The cross-petition for enforcement is denied. The case is remanded to the Board for further proceedings.
So ordered.
