125 Lab.Cas. P 10,797
MILLARD PROCESSING SERVICES, INC., Petitioner,
v.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Respondent,
Unitеd Food and Commercial Workers, International Union, Intervenor.
MILLARD PROCESSING SERVICES, INC., Respondent,
v.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Petitioner,
United Food and Commercial Workers, Union Local 271 AFL-CIO,
Intervenor.
Nos. 92-3474, 92-3631.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted April 14, 1993.
Decided July 30, 1993.
Patrick J. Barrett, Omaha, NE (Roger J. Miller, on the brief), for appellant.
Jill A. Griffin, NLRB, Washington, DC (Howard E. Perlstein, NLRB, on the brief), for appellee.
Before WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge, FLOYD R. GIBSON, Senior Circuit Judge, and MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.
Millard Processing Services ("Millard") petitions for review of a decision and order of the Natiоnal Labor Relations Board; the Board cross-applies for enforcement of its order. We affirm the Board's decision and enforce its order.
I.
Millard operates a bacon-processing facility in Omaha, Nebraska. Millard employs approximately 275 people, who are divided evenly between two shifts. The first shift ends at 4:30 p.m. and the second shift begins at 5:00 p.m.
Local 271 of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union (the "union") filed a petition to represent Millard's production and maintenance employees. In an attempt to obtain media coverage of the representation election, Patrick O'Neil, the head union coordinator, contacted four Omaha television stations, leaving messages concerning the union сampaign and the election. Additionally, O'Neil told Felipe Morales, a union representative, to inform Fernando Castillo about the campaign and election. Castillo, the assistant director of the Information and Service Network ("ISN"), a local production company that produces programming for a cable television station, had previously asked Morales to keep him apprised of any campaign events. Morales telephoned Castillo and informed him that the union was planning to hold a rally outside Millard's plant on June 28, 1990, the day before the election. Castillo told Morales that he would like to visit the Millard plant and interview employees about the election. Morales advised Castillo that the best time to contaсt employees would be during the shift change.
On June 28, Castillo went to the Millard facility with Morales, arriving at about 3:30 p.m. Castillo set his video camera on a tripod some twenty feet from where O'Neil and other union representatives were distributing leaflets in front of a union banner. Castillo's camera did not bear any identifying insignia, and he was not wearing anything that associated him with ISN. When Millard employees asked O'Neil about Castillo's identity, O'Neil explained that Castillo worked for a cable television station.
Castillo stayed at the Millard facility for about one and one-half hours. As background footage for his anticipated employee interviews, Castillo filmed the plant, employees entering and exiting the plant, and vehicles entering and exiting the plant parking lot. He also filmed employees as they accepted or declined the material being distributed by the union representatives. Castillo approached two or three employees, identified himself as being from ISN, and asked them what they thought about the union election. All employees that he approached declined to comment, however. Castillo also identified himself to those employees who asked why he was filming. Castillo did not distribute any union material or otherwise campaign for the union while he was at the Millard facility. He did, however, don one of the "Union, Yes" hats that union representatives were distributing.
The election was held the following day, June 29. Of the approximately 240 employees eligible to vote, 114 voted for union representation, and eighty-fоur voted against it, with ten challenged ballots.
Millard filed objections to the election, alleging, inter alia, that the union, through its representatives and agents, had created the impression of intimidating surveillance by using a video camera in front of employees. It contended that by videotaping employees and their automobiles as they declined union pamphlets, the union hаd intimidated employees, interfered with their free choice, and made a free and fair election impossible.
A Board hearing officer conducted a hearing to consider Millard's objections. Applying the doctrine of apparent authority, the hearing officer found that Castillo had acted as an agent of the union at the time that he videotaped emplоyees. The hearing officer further found that videotaping employees was intimidating and coercive and would reasonably tend to interfere with employee free choice in an election. Accordingly, the hearing officer recommended that Millard's objections concerning Castillo's videotaping be sustained and that the election be set aside.
The Board rеjected the hearing officer's findings and recommendations, finding that Castillo's videotaping of employees did not warrant setting aside the election. Millard Processing Services, Inc., 304 N.L.R.B. No. 99,
In order to challenge the Board's certification of the union, Millard refused to recognize and bargain with the union and to provide the union with information that it had requested. The Board found that by engaging in such conduct Millard had committed unfair labor practices in violation of sections 8(a)(1) and 8(a)(5) of the National Labor Relations Act (the "Act"). Millard Processing Services, Inc., 308 N.L.R.B. No. 138,
Millard petitions for review of the Board's order; the Board cross-applies for enforcement of its order. Additionally, the union intervenes in support of the Board's order.
II.
Representation elections are not to be set aside lightly. Beaird-Poulan Div. v. NLRB,
In some circumstances, the Board has set aside elections in which employees were videotaped or photographed during the election campaign; in other circumstances, however, the Board has refused to do so. For example, in Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co.,
In both Pepsi-Cola and Mike Yurosek, the individual who engaged in the misconduct was a uniоn representative or agent. When misconduct is directly attributable to the union, the Board will overturn the election when the "conduct reasonably tend[ed] to interfere with the employees' free and uncoerced choice in the election." Pepsi-Cola,
In rеjecting the hearing officer's findings, the Board found that the absence of any identification connecting Castillo to ISN, his wearing a hat promoting unions, and his relatively close proximity to the union organizers and the union banner were insufficient to establish that Castillo had apparent authority to act on behalf of the union. The Board concluded that Millard had failed to show that the union had acted in a manner to cause reasonable employees to believe that Castillo was its agent.
"We will enforce an order of the Board if the Board has correctly applied the law and its factual findings are supported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole, even though we might have reached a different decision hаd the matter been before us de novo." Wilson Trophy Co. v. NLRB,
In determining whether an individual was acting as an agent of a union for the purposes of the Act, we apply general common law principles of agency. NLRB v. International Bhd. of Boilermakers Local 83,
Apparent authority results from a manifestation by a principal to a third party that reasonably leads a third party to believe that another person is acting as the principal's agent. NLRB v. Donkin's Inn, Inc.,
In arguing that Castillo was the apparent agent of the union, Millard points out that the union informed Castillo about the rally, told him when he could film the most employees, and drove him to the Millard facility. As the Board found, however, these facts are irrelevant to establishing apparent authority because there is no record evidence that any employees were aware that the union had done these things.
Millard also points out that Castillo, who wore no identification connecting him to ISN, placed his camera near the union organizers and a union banner and wore a union hat while filming employees. Additionally, Millard stresses that the union did not affirmatively disavow Castillo's actions to all employees; rather, the union explained Castillo's identity only to those employees who asked about him. Millard argues that under these facts the union knew or should have known that when employees observed Castillo filming at the plant they would reasonably believe that he was acting on the union's behalf.
We affirm the Board's finding that Castillo's conduct in wearing a hat with a generalized prounion statement and in filming in close proximity to the union organizers and banner did not establish his apparent authority to act on the union's behalf. We have rеcognized that even engaging in union campaign activity (which Castillo did not do) is insufficient by itself to clothe a person with apparent authority to act on behalf of the union. See Beaird-Poulan,
We next consider whether Castillo's conduct was such that it requires that the election be set aside. As stated earlier, when alleged misconduct is attributable to a third party, the test is whether the conduct created " 'an atmosphere of fear and reprisal such as to render a free expression of choice impossible.' " Monark Boat,
In arguing that Castillo's videotaping created a coercive environment, Millard emphasizes that Castillo filmed employees as they declined union literature. Millard also stresses that the videotaping occurred on the eve of the election during the shift change when a large number of employees may have seen or been subjected to the filming. Citing Pepsi-Cola and Mike Yurosek, Millard argues that under these circumstances, a significant number of employees might have felt that their responses to the union campaign activity were being recorded for the purpose of future union retaliation.
This case is distinguishable from Pepsi-Cola and Mike Yurosek on several grounds. As we have already discussed, both of those cases involved the conduct of a union agent and not, as here, the conduct of a third party.
Moreover, in determining whether the filming of employees created a coercive atmosphere, the Board examines whether a legitimate explanation for the filming has been presented. In Pepsi-Cola, the Board emphasized that the union had not provided a legitimate explanation for the videotaping to the employees at the time of the filming or at the hearing.
In the present case the union offered a legitimate explanation for the videotaping. The hearing officer and the Board both found that O'Neil and Castillo had informed some twenty emрloyees that Castillo was filming for a cable television station. True, the union and Castillo did not explain Castillo's identity to all of the employees who either were filmed by Castillo or who observed him filming. Nevertheless, where the person videotaping was not a party to the election and where the record contains no evidence of violence or threats or any оther facts establishing a coercive atmosphere during the election campaign, we are unwilling to find that the absence of an employee-wide explanation requires overturning the election. Cf. Sunbelt Mfg., Inc., 308 N.L.R.B. No. 110,
Finally, conduct during an election campaign must be evaluated in the light of the closeness of the election's outcome. NLRB v. Van Gorp Corp.,
The petition for review is denied, and the Board's order is enforced.
FLOYD R. GIBSON, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent and would affirm the hearing officer's recommendation that the election results be set aside. Under the factual situation presented here, the videotaping was intimidating and coercive, and could reasonably interfere with an employees' free choice in the election. Castillo's appearance in a "Union, Yes" hat in close proximity to the union banner created the impression that he was a union rеpresentative. Castillo wore no identification that connected him to the ISN station; to an employee leaving the plant, Castillo appeared to be a union representative filming employees accepting or declining union literature. The union orchestrated the event by contacting Castillo and arranging for the filming during a shift change on the eve of the election; the filming of the employees and their vehicles, by an individual who appeared to be a union representative, created a coercive atmosphere that interfered with the employees' exercise of free choice.
If Millard had orchestrated the identical event on the eve of the election, the election would undoubtedly be thrown out and a new election properly ordered. Thus, I respectfully dissent, and would reverse the Board's decision and order a new election.
