This сase comes before us on a motion by the National Labor Relations Board under § 10(e) of the Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 160(e), for an order enforcing its own order made in a proceeding under § 10(c). The оrder directed the respondent, the Blackstone Company, to bargain with a lodge of the International Association of Machinists, “certified” by the Board as bargaining representativе of its employees; and also enjoined the respondent from telling its employees that their union activities might close down the plant. The respondent’s objections to the motion аre (1) that there was no adequate evidence to support the Board’s findings on which its order was based; (2) that the form of the order was irregular so far as it enjoined, not only the respondent and its officers and agents, but also “its successors and assigns”; and (3) that the controversy has become moot because the respondent has sold all its property to its parent, the Jаmestown Metal Equipment Company, and has dismantled its plant and stopped all business.
The first question is whether the union which the Board ordered the respondent to recognize, was in fact the lawful bargaining representative of its employees; and that depends upon the propriety of a “certificate” issued by the Board at the conclusion of a proceeding instituted under § 9 in March, 1938. The union had begun to organize the plant in the autumn of 1937 and by the next spring felt strong enough to petition the Board for a “certificate”. At hearings before an examiner apрointed in this proceeding the union appeared and offered in evidence 121 cards, each authorizing it to represent the signer; all the signers were or had been, employeеs, though a number were not members of the union. These cards had all been signed between April 26, and May 10, and all but two of them had been witnessed by the union’s-president, Chapman, or by a former president, Johnson. Chapman was called, authenticated those cards he had witnessed,, and swore that when the union had petitioned for a “certificate” — on March 23,. 1938 — the respondent had had 150 employees other than “supervisory and clerical”, and that on May 11 it had had 111.. (Obviously, therefore, some of the cards, bore the names of employees not on the-payroll at the later date. Nevertheless, the cards were evidence of a clear majority of all those still employed in May, even if all; those who had left the company’s employmеnt were among the signers.) Upon this; showing the union offered the cards in evidence, “with the condition attached that they are being introduced in evidence solely-for examination by the Trial Exаminer or the Board;” the excuse for this limitation, being that the respondent might use the-cards to discriminate against the signers.. The examiner admitted the cards with this, reservation over the respondent’s protest,, and the union, after calling Johnson to authenticate the signatures upon those cards which he had witnessed, closed its case. The respondent thereupon asked the examiner for subpoenas for all signers of the cards, and the examiner said he would consider the request. When the hearing went forward on the next day the union withdrew “the reservation and the cards” were-“offered in evidence” unconditionally; but the respondent repeated its request for subpoenas. This was not granted, and the-hearing was adjourned for six days more,, after which it proceeded before another examiner, who closed the hearings without, passing on the respondent’s request. On his; report the Board “certified” the union, finding as a reason for not issuing the subрoenas that the demand for them had been-made “merely to obstruct the proceeding.”'
In National Labor Relations Board v. Dahlstrom Metallic Door Company, 2 Cir.,
Since there was also evidence to 'support the finding that the respondent had stated to its employees that the union activities “would result in the сlosing of the Blackstone plant”, there remain for discussion only the form of the order and the •question whether the whole controversy has "become moot. We take up first the form of 'thе order. In National Labor Relations Board v. Hopwood Retinning Co., 2 Cir.,
The last question is whether the controversy has become moot. This hinges upon what took place after the Board’s order passed on November 17, 1939. The original complaint had included, not only the Blackstone Company, but its parent, the Jamestown Company; as to which, however, the Board dismissed the proceeding. On May 15, 1940, the union filed a motion with the Board, praying that it should take further evidence and direct the Jamestown Company to bargain with the union. The union alleged, though not under oath, that the Jamestown Company had “liquidated” the assets of the Blackstone Company and “discontinued its business”, and that the old employees of the Blackstone Company “are now employed by the Jamestown Metal Equipment Co. Inc. which has assumed the operations formerly performed” by the Blackstone Company. The Board denied the motion, reciting in its order that “these *636 facts” — those recited in the motion— “if true, constitute no ground for granting the motion”. We do not say that, if fhe respondent had proved before us that the facts stated by the uniоn were true, we ought not to hold that the whole controversy had become moot; but it has not done so; it merely asks us to accept the union’s unsworn statement as to facts which are рeculiarly within its own knowledge, but as to which it remains silent. We have no way on this record of knowing what are its present activities, or that there can be no chance of its resuming those which the Board has found unlawful.
The usual enforcement order will pass.
