The National Labor Relations Board petitions for enforcement of its order directing the Boston District Council of Carpenters (“Union”) to execute a collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) with the charging party Curry Woodworking, Inc. (“Curry”). As we conclude that there is substantial evidentiary support for the Board order, we grant the petition for enforcement.
I
BACKGROUND
The Union, a “labor organization” within the meaning of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”),
see
29 U.S.C. § 152(5) (1994), is the central governing body for nine local
Curry was formed in 1990 and, on August 23, 1990, became a “me too” signatory to its first MA with the Union, which covered Curry’s four unionized installers but not its thirteen nonunion architectural millworkers. The Union and the multiemployer associations subsequently executed a new MA for the period August 1, 1991 to May 31, 1993, which Curry joined on August 14, 1991. In order to foreclose any continuation of the 1991-93 MA beyond its term, in March 1993 the Union advised Curry that it intended to negotiate changes in the next MA. As the May 31, 1993, expiration date approached, the Union and the multiemployer associations again negotiated a successor MA — for the period June 1, 1993, through September 30,1997.
On May 28, 1993, the Union offered the new MA to approximately 135 “me too” employers, including Curry, and advised: “Unless this office receives a duly authorized Acceptance of Agreement by June J, 199S, your company ivill be considered not to have a collective bargaining agreement with the [Union].” (emphasis added). On June 22, Curry signed, dated, and mailed its Acceptance of Agreement to the Union. On June 23, a Union representative called Curry to inquire whether its acceptance form had been signed. Although the Union representative voiced no concern or objection upon learning that the acceptance had been mailed, the Union never executed a successor MA with Curry.
Curry continued to utilize its unionized installers to perform work throughout June and July 1993, before the wage and benefit increases under the new MA were to take effect. On August 2, however, one day after the wage and benefit increases under the new MA went into effect, the Union refused to sell Curry fringe benefit stamps, which employers include in the pay envelopes of their unionized employees as evidence that the employer has made the appropriate contributions to the Union’s collection agency. As a practical matter, without fringe benefit stamps Curry was unable to retain the services of its unionized installers. 2 Curry complained to Union officials but was advised that the Union believed it had no legal obligation to execute a new MA with Curry, and would not do so unless Curry’s architectural millworkers were unionized.
After Curry filed an unfair labor practice charge against the Union, the Board issued a complaint alleging that the Union had violated NLRA § 8(b)(3) by failing to execute and honor the terms of the new MA.
3
The Union denied the charge. An administrative law judge (“ALJ”) concluded that the May 28 letter did not constitute a binding offer by the Union, and, in the alternative, that it had
The Board rejected the finding that the Union offer expired on June 4, because (1) the Union had expected to receive many acceptances after June 4; (2) the Union did receive post-June 4 acceptances from almost half the “me too” employers with whom it later executed the new MA; (3) the Ünion made a systematic effort to contact employers, including Curry, from whom it had not received acceptances by June 4; and (4) the May 28 letter did not explicitly state that the offer to execute the new MA would
expire
on June 4.
Carpenters Local 33,
II
DISCUSSION
As the Board is primarily responsible for developing and applying a coherent national labor policy,
NLRB v. Curtin Matheson Scientific, Inc.,
With the analytic framework in place, we ■turn to the only issue in the case: whether the Board supportably determined that the May 28 Union offer to Curry did not expire on June 4. The Union mounts a plain language argument based on the express terms of the May 28 letter, whereas the Board emphasizes the broader context within which the offer was made.
The argument advanced by the Union— that it had the right to shape the terms of its offer to Curry,
see, e.g.,
1 Arthur L. Corbin,
Corbin On Contracts
§ 2.14 (Joseph M. Perillo ed., 1993), is not readily dismissed in the face of the language it used in the May 28 letter to Curry: “Unless this office receives a duly authorized Acceptance of Agreement by June 4, 1993, [Curry] will be considered not to have a collective bargaining agreement wdth the [Union].” Yet for all its literal force the plain language argument must contend with the' settled labor law principle that a CBA is not just another contract.
John Wiley & Sons v. Livingston,
The prevailing rule, in this and other circuits, provides that technical rules of contract interpretation are not necessarily binding on the Board in the collective bargaining context,
Auciello,
Although myriad cases involve rejections and counteroffers, there is a notable lack of appellate authority on what constitutes an express withdrawal of an offer in the collective bargaining context. For example, in
Auciello,
unlike the present case, the company placed no express time limit on its offer to the union, instead contending that the union had rejected the company offer simply by “storming out” of a bargaining session. This court found that the Board sensibly had concluded that “a mere uncommunicated, unilateral judgment by the Company that rejection had occurred would, by itself, be ineffective to remove its proposal from the table.”
Id.
at 809. The nature of the dispute in
Auciello,
and other cases,
see, e.g., Williamhouse-Regency of Del., Inc. v. NLRB,
Our research discloses that the Board consistently has acknowledged that an offeror may impose an explicit temporal limit on an offeree’s right to accept an offer to enter into a CBA. For example, in
J. Hofert Co. v. International Woodworkers of America, Local 3-38, AFL-CIO,
1. The Language of the Offer
The May 28 letter stated that unless the Union received an Acceptance of Agreement by June 4, the offeree would “not ... have a collective bargaining agreement” with the Union. The ALJ found this language sufficiently definite to terminate the right to accept on June 4. The Board disagreed, because the “letter
does not state specifically
that execution by June 4 was a condition of acceptance or that the offer would be withdrawn on that date.”
Carpenters Local 33,
As the Board supportably determined, there is a significant difference — particularly in the context of this case — between stating that the parties will not be cooperating under any CBA unless Curry accepts the Union offer by June 4 and stating that the offer to enter into a
new
CBA expires on June 4.
4
The Board reasonably construed the temporal reference in the Union offer to mean that the parties’ labor-management relations would be subject neither to the MA which expired on May 31, nor to the proposed new MA, unless the offer were accepted by Curry by June 4. The Union, on the other hand, interprets the May 28 letter as foreclosing any subsequent acceptance of the Union offer by Curry after June 4. Although the language itself might accommodate either interpretation, depending on the context in which used, it is the Union interpretation, not the Board’s, which goes somewhat beyond the literal purport of the offer. That is to say, in a nutshell, the literal language of the offer was ambiguous as to the
consequences
of an offeree’s failure to accept
2. The Course of Dealing
Accordingly, the Board examined relevant prior dealings among the parties with a view to informing the language of the offer, especially their prior practice regarding “late” acceptances. Their prior practice provided strong support for the Board finding that the May 28 offer is most faithfully interpreted as enabling its acceptance for a reasonable time after June 4 unless withdrawn by the Union before acceptance. For example, the 1991 Union offer, expressed in virtually identical terms, stated as follows: “Unless this office receives a duly authorized Acceptance of Agreement by July 31, 1991, your company will be considered to be a company which does not have a collective bargaining agreement with the [Union].” Significantly, Curry did not accept the 1991 offer until August 14, 1991. Given the parties’ prior practice of submitting and honoring “late” acceptances, we think the Board permissibly concluded that the Union had not unambiguously announced in its May 28 offer an intention to depart from its prior practice regarding “late” acceptances.
Other circumstantial evidence lends similar support to the Board decision. First, the Union anticipated that it would receive acceptances before and after June 4, and ultimately executed the new MA with every employer except Curry, some of whom accepted well after Curry. Second, the Union’s effoi’ts to contact Curry, and other companies that had not accepted by June 4, likewise indicates that the Union did not regard June 4 as a firm deadline for acceptance. Although the other evidence is not entirely inconsistent with the Union contention that the Curry acceptance was untimely, neither the evidence nor the language of the offer clearly indicated that the Union offer terminated on June 4. In such a case, we will not disturb the Board’s choice between permissible conflicting views,
C.E.K. Contractors,
Ill
CONCLUSION
In sum, the Board acted well within the bounds of its considerable discretion. Viewed in its entirety, the record contains substantial evidentiary support for the interpretation that the Union offer did not expire by its own terms on June 4. Moreover, viewed in light of the prior dealings among the parties, especially their prior practice of submitting and honoring “late” acceptances, as well as the strong public policy favoring collective bargaining, we conclude that the June 22 acceptance by Curry was not time-barred.
Accordingly, the petition for enforcement is GRANTED.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. 29 U.S.C. § 158(f) (1994). See
C.E.K. Indus. Mechanical Contractors
v.
NLRB,
. Although the new MA had not been executed with four other employers by August 1, those employers eventually worked out their differences with the Union. In the end, Curry was the only former signatory with which the Union did not enter into the 1993-97 MA.
. “It shah be an unfair labor practice for a labor organization or its agents ... to refuse to bargain collectively with an employer....” 29 U.S.C. § 158(b)(3) (1994). The duty to engage in collective bargaining includes the duty to execute a written contract, upon request, incorporating any agreement.
NLRB v. Auciello Iron Works, Inc.,
. At oral argument, the Board conceded that the Union would have had no obligation to enter into a new MA with Curry had its May 28 letter expressly stated that the offer expired on June 4. Its concession is consistent with the Board precedents discussed above. See supra p. 666.
