The Labor Board found that Advertisers Manufacturing Company, a maker of advertising materials, had committed a raft of unfair labor practices — 25 to be exact— and the Board entered a remedial order which it asks us to enforce. (For a previous round of this litigation see
Advertisers Mfg. Co. v. NLRB,
1. The first involves the discharge of Carol Hahn, a supervisory employee. A bitterly fought representation campaign, in the course of which the company committed many unfair labor practices, ended on September 12 when a local of the Teamsters Union was elected by a wide margin. On October 2, Ronald Hahn, who is Carol Hahn’s son and is not a supervisory employee, was elected chief steward for the local union. Carol Hahn was fired six days later, though she had not engaged in any activities pro or con the union. The Board held that her discharge violated section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1), by interfering with her son’s right, protected by section 7 of the Act, to engage in concerted activities.
The company argues that Carol Hahn’s discharge was planned before the election and therefore before Ronald Hahn’s election as shop steward, and for this and other reasons was unrelated to his activities on behalf of the union. This raises a straightforward factual issue that the Board resolved against the company. The Board may have been right or wrong, but its finding that Carol Hahn was fired in retaliation for Ronald Hahn’s union activities was supported by substantial (though not abundant) evidence on the record considered as a whole, and is therefore beyond our power to correct.
The company’s more interesting argument is that firing a supervisor in retaliation for a relative’s union activities cannot violate the National Labor Relations Act. The Taft-Hartley amendments excluded supervisory employees from the protections of the NLRA; as a result, such employees have no statutory right to engage in concerted activities for mutual aid and protection, as nonsupervisory employees do. 29 U.S.C. §§ 152(3), 157, 158;
Wesley v. I.T.O. Corp.,
It reads too much into
Parker-Robb.
The Board was careful to add there that “the discharge of supervisors is unlawful when it interferes with the right of employees to exercise their rights under Section 7 of the Act, as when they give testimony adverse to their employers’ interest or when they refuse to commit unfair labor practices.”
Golub Bros. Concessions
so holds, as do
Consolidated Foods Corp.,
The Board’s remedy, however, may seem problematic: forcing the company to reinstate a supervisor. (But see
Howard Johnson Co. v. NLRB,
2. In the week after the election, the company significantly reduced the work week of employees in some of its sewing departments, and the reductions remained in effect for two months. The Board held that by doing this the company had violated section 8(a)(3) (discrimination in any term or condition of employment, calculated to discourage employees from belonging to a union), as well as section 8(a)(1), of the Act. In the same period the company committed many other acts of retaliation against its workers, not limited to the firing of Carol Hahn. The timing of the reduction in the work week, set against the background of the other retaliatory acts and the company’s obvious bitterness at the outcome of the election, persuaded the Board that the reduction was probably due to the company’s hostility to the union. The company had then to show if it could that it would have reduced the work week anyway, even if there had been no union in the picture. See
NLRB v. Industrial Erectors, Inc.,
The company points out that the trend of orders for the products of its sewing department turned down in the third quarter of 1980. So far as appears, however, there was still a backlog in October (although only a short one), when the work week was curtailed. The company argues that it would not have been rational for it to shoot itself in the foot by curtailing the work *1090 week in the sewing department while it had orders to fill. But the long-term benefits of getting rid of the union might compensate for a short-term loss in filling orders more slowly, just as the costs of losing a competent supervisor (Mrs. Hahn) might be offset by the benefits in intimidating the workers by this dramatic act. That is the logic of retaliation; a present cost is traded off against a future benefit from deterring behavior injurious to the retaliator.
We do not know how much flexibility the company had in filling orders. If the orders were not time-sensitive (and evidently not all were), the only cost the company would incur from curtailing the work week would be delay in finishing an order and getting paid for it. A loss in the time value of money is a real loss but not necessarily a bigger loss than the gain from intimidating workers. Furthermore, not every individual or firm is an effective maximizer of its self-interest, and those that are not may be disproportionately represented in litigation. Advertisers Manufacturing Company committed 25 unfair labor practices yet lost the election by a resounding margin and now has signed a collective bargaining agreement with the union. Its “hard ball” tactics may have gained it time or concessions in dealing with the union, but an alternative possibility is that they were dumb tactics which boomeranged.
3. After the union was certified as exclusive bargaining representative but before the company signed a collective bargaining agreement with it, the company laid off several workers without first negotiating the layoffs with the union. The Board found that this was an unfair labor practice, forbidden by section 8(a)(5) of the Act (refusal to bargain collectively), as well as section 8(a)(1). The company points out that the layoffs were not retaliatory but were motivated by the downward trend in its sales and that collective bargaining agreements invariably authorize the employer to make layoffs when economic conditions warrant. All this is at once true and irrelevant. The rule that requires an employer to negotiate with the union before changing the working conditions in the bargaining unit is intended to prevent the employer from undermining the union by taking steps which suggest to the workers that it is powerless to protect them. Of course, if the change is authorized by the collective bargaining agreement, it is not in derogation of the union and is not an unfair labor practice. But there was no agreement here. Laying off workers works a dramatic change in their working conditions (to say the least), and if the company lays them off without consulting with the union and without having agreed to procedures for layoffs in a collective bargaining agreement it sends a dramatic signal of the union’s impotence. See, e.g.,
Local 512, Warehouse & Office Workers’ Union v. NLRB,
It is not a good answer that the company did nothing different from what the collective bargaining agreement, if there had' been one, would have permitted it to do, or from what it did before there was a union. The collective bargaining agreement would have prescribed the order in which layoffs, if necessary, would be made, and almost certainly the order would have been the reverse order of seniority. Unions insist on a nondiscretionary order of layoffs so that the company can’t lay off the workers it thinks most favorably disposed to the union; and they insist on reverse order of seniority because unions draw their greatest support from older workers. We do not know on what basis the company laid off these seven employees, and specifically we do not know whether they are the seven who would have been laid off under the collective bargaining agreement that the company eventually signed with the union.
Layoffs are not a management prerogative. They are a mandatory subject of collective bargaining. Until the modalities of layoff are established in the agreement, a company that wants to lay off employees must bargain over the matter with the union. See
Local 512, Warehouse & Office Workers’ Union v. NLRB,
*1091
supra,
Enforced.
