MAJESTIC MOLDED PRODUCTS, INC. and Lucky Wish Products,
Inc., Petitioners,
v.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Respondent.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Petitioner,
v.
METAL, PLASTICS, MISCELLANEOUS SALES, NOVELTY AND PRODUCTION
WORKERS LOCAL 222, INTERNATIONAL PRODUCTION,
SERVICE AND SALES EMPLOYEES UNION, Respondent.
Nos. 286, 287, Dockets 28408, 28439.
United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.
Argued Feb. 14, 1964.
Decided April 2, 1964.
Samuel Becker, New York City, for petitioners, Majestic Molded Products, Inc., and Lucky Wish Products, Inc. (Murray Frank, Brooklyn, N.Y., for respondent Local 222, on brief) (Josef P. Sirefman, New York City, of counsel).
Anthony J. Obadal, Washington, D.C. (Arnold Ordman, Gen. Counsel, Dominick L. Manoli, Associate Gen. Counsel, Marcel Mallet-Prevost, Asst. Gen. Counsel, Elliott Moore, Washington, D.C., Atty.), for National Labor Relations Board.
Before LUMBARD, Chief Judge, and WATERMAN and FRIENDLY, Circuit judges.
FRIENDLY, Circuit Judge.
This petition to review an order of the National Labor Relations Board,
Henry Wish is president and treasurer of both companies; he and his wife own all the stock of Majestic and, along with their son Richard, 85% Of the stock of Lucky Wish. Majestic manufactures plastic parts and related products which it sells to other manufacturers, including Lucky Wish, a smaller enterprise acquired from third parties, which assembles and jobs plastic consumer items. The operations of the two companies are conducted in the same plant, separated by a wire screen but sharing certain common facilities. Each had a collective bargaining agreement with Local 222, Majestic's expiring on August 1, and Lucky Wish's on September 1, 1962.
On June 7, 1962, Local 107 filed a petition seeking an election to designate a bargaining unit for the whole plant. This, as the Regional Director subsequently held, was too late with respect to Majestic under the rule establishing 'a 60-day insulated period' formulated in DeLuxe Metal Furniture Co.,
The employer contends the lay-offs were due to a decline in the business of Lucky Wish, which had led Wish, his son and his plant manager as early as April or May to decide on a prospective curtailment. It cites figures showing that after peak sales in May and June, 1962, these decreased from July through November (although sales for the later month were somewhat greater than in the corresponding months of 1961 when more than twice as many people were employed), and stresses that the lay-offs and recalls were in order of seniority, regardless of any union preference known to the employer. It challenges particularly the weight given by the Trial Examiner to the increase in Majestic's work force from 92 in the week ended July 7 to 129 in the following week and more thereafter, and Majestic's failure to hire the employees laid off by Lucky Wish; it claims there was no evidence that Majestic undertook work theretofore performed by Lucky Wish and there was evidence that Majestic's work required greater skills. We doubt that these last criticisms are sustainable. The synchronization was sufficiently suggestive to cast on the employer a burden of explanation which the Board could permissibly conclude was not sustained by oral testimony alone, and the Board was not required to accept Wish's testimony, unsupported by job specifications, that all of Majestic's rather low-paid work required skills not possessed by the workers of Lucky Wish. In any event, the evidence as to what was said on July 9, see particularly fn. 1, what was done on July 10 and 12, and what was said and done in mid-August, was ample to support an inference that Wish ordered the large lay-offs not for the business reason now alleged but to punish the employees of Lucky Wish for the flirtation some of them were having with Local 107 and to make them 'good little girls,' as Ladmer urged them to be on August 14.
The employer says this is not enough to warrant a holding of violations of 8(a)(3) and (b)(2) in the absence of evidence that the lay-offs were directed against those employees known to be engaged in the flirtation with Local 107. It presses upon us statements that 'Knowledge by an employer of the discharged employees' union activities is a vital element in the proof of a violation of Section 8(a)(3).' N.L.R.B. v. Atlanta Coca-Cola Bottling Co.,
The objection to the portion of the order requiring the grant of electioneering rights to Local 107 rests primarily on the ground, alleged to be supported by Gem International, Inc. v. NLRB,
The final point requiring discussion is the objection to the order's running against Majestic as well as Lucky Wish. This has practical importance since if only Lucky Wish were involved, the back pay to be awarded in compliance proceedings could not exceed what the employees would have earned if Lucky Wish had pursued its business in a normal fashion, NLRB v. New York Merchandise Co.,
The petition for review is denied and the cross-petition for enforcement is granted.
Notes
Another employee described Wish as having said 'That he had a few items that were in the making, but he would do nothing about it until this was resolved, because the shop wouldn't run with two unions.'
