This is a petition to enforce an order of the National Labor Relations Board, entered September 21, 1948 and based on unfair labor practices which occurred in 1946. The order directed, among other things, the reinstatement with back pay to 23 employees who were found to have been discharged in violation of the provisions of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq. Among those whose reinstatement was ordered were five persons who had been found by a Maryland Circuit Judge to have been guilty of acts of violence in connection with a strike and who had been enjoined by him from further acts of violence. The respondent admitted at the bar of the court that, except as to that portion of the order directing the reinstatement of these five men, the action of the Board was based on substantial evidence and should be obeyed, but it contends that, within a week after thе entry of the order, it notified the Board that it would comply with all of the provisions of the order except those requiring the reinstatement of the five men and that, with this exception, the order has been fully complied with. Petition for enforcement of the order was not filed until September 30, 1949, more than a yеar after its entry, and there is no suggestion in the petition or elsewhere that the notice of respondent was not given in good faith or that, with the exception of the reinstatement of the five men, there has not been full compliance with the provisions of the order.
With respect to the reinstatement of the five men, it is alleged that, after their discharge and while they were picketing respondent’s plant, they engaged in acts of violence of a serious character. Respondent offered evidence, which the trial examiner refused to receive, to the effect that they assaulted one of respondent’s workers who was a non-striker and chased him home and that they knocked down in the street another non-striker and beat him after he was down. The offer of proof with respect to these matters by respondent’s counsel *580 was as follows: “I proffer to show by these witnesses, and if nеcessary by others, that on or about November 1, 1946, Mr. Popiolek, Mr. MacMillan, Mr. Franckowski and Mr. Kolb assaulted and pursued Mr. Monacelli, one of the Kelco employees at that time, chased him to his home and carried the chase up to his very gate: I proffer to show by this witness and others that on or аbout November 5, 1946, Mr. Ruth, Mr. MacMillan, Mr. Franckowski and Mr. Kolb assaulted and beat and knocked down on the street and beat him after he was down, Mr. Hergenhahn, also at that time one of the employees of the Kelco Corporation.”
The trial examiner refused to receive this evidence on the ground thаt there had been no conviction in a criminal case of the persons guilty of these acts of violence. Following this offer of proof, he admitted in evidence the injunction order against these five persons restraining them from further acts of violence and the findings of the state judge made in connection therewith, from which we quote the following:
“Now, of course, the striking employees of this plant have a right to put out a picket line, but I do not think a group or a combination of persons should leave the picket line and follow another employee and attempt to intimidate him by forсe to join their line. It is perfectly proper for them to use persuasion in a peaceful manner in trying to get him to join their cause. But here we have a situation where one man, Monacelli, went through the picket line and is followed. Of course, he walked fast and these men following him walked fast tо keep up with him, and they came up with him at his back gate. I do not feel that is something that should be tolerated in this country. It is my belief that if a man desires to work down there and does not want to join the union, he has that right. I do not think he should be subjected to that kind of action on the part of a group of striking employеes who have left the picket line. At the same time, I feel that the men on strike have an absolute right to picket the plant in a peaceful and lawful manner. By peaceful means they can try to persuade employees to quit and join their cause, and they can also attempt to рersuade present and prospective employees from going into the plant of the Kelco Corporation. They should not have the right to use violence.
“There is no question in my mind but that Hergenhahn was assaulted by the men he testified he was assaulted by. I do not see how he could be mistaken about it. These are people with whom he has worked in the plant over a period of time, and I do not see how he could be mistaken as to the identity of the people who assaulted him.”
One member of the Board thought that the findings of the state judge should be accepted as conclusive evidеnce of misconduct sufficiently serious to deny reinstatement to the five employees. The majority, however, took the view that even if the Board were to accept respondent’s offer of proof, the conduct of these five employees was not of so serious a charaсter as to show them unfit for further employment by respondent. The citation of the case of Republic Steel Co., v. N. L. R. B., 3 Cir.,
In Southern Steamship Company v. N. L. R. B.,
The rule seems well settled that serious acts of violencе on the part of striking employees should bar them of reinstatement, whether they have been prosecuted therefor or not. In Standard Lime & Stone Co. v. N. L. R. B.,
In N. L. R. B. v. Clinchfield Coal Corp., 4 Cir.,
The case here, if the facts which respondent proposed to prove be accepted, was not one where the employees had exceeded the bounds of lawful conduct “in a moment of animal exuberance” or where they were not activated by improper motives, but one whеre, if the proffer of proof is believed, they were engaging in brutal violence and intimidation of serious character, ganging up on a non-striking employee and chasing him to his home in one case, knocking down an employee and beating him publicly in the other. The Maryland judge before whom the matter was brought did not think it trivial but on the basis thereof granted an injunction against these employees forbidding further acts of violence on their part.
We do not attempt to make findings of fact or to decide on the present state of the record whether the five men should or should not be reinstated. It is for the Board after hearing the evidente to find the facts and make the decision in accordance with the rules of law that the courts have laid down. What we hold is that acts of violence may not be ignored because they have not resulted in criminal convictions, and that the evidence as to the аcts of violence 'by the five employees was rej ected upon an erroneous view of the law. We cannot hold the rejection to be harmless error on the theory that if admitted it would not have affected the result, since we cannot assume that serious acts of violence, such аs respondent offered to prove, would not be held by the Board to be sufficient ground for refusing reinstatement once the necessity of criminal convictions is out of the way. The case will be remanded to the Board, therefore, to hear evidence and make further findings with respect to these fivе men and to make such changes in its order as it may think proper.
It is suggested that, even though we remand the case with respect to that portion of the order relating to the five employees, we should enter an order enforcing its other provisions. We see no reason, however, for any undue hаste in entering such a partial enforcement decree. There is no suggestion that the respondent is not complying faithfully with the other provisions of the order; and the Board was quite content to wait for more than a year to ask for enforcement. It seems more than probable that enforcement would never been asked at all had respondent accepted the entire order as it did all except that part of it relating to the reinstatement of the five employees. We think that, under such circumstances, the court will be acting well within the limits of its discretion in withholding the use of its injunctive pоwer until the Board’s order has been put in final form. See Hecht Co. v. Bowles,
Case remanded.
Notes
. It should he noted that in the Reрublic Steel ease reinstatement was ordered of employees who had been convicted of min- or offenses and it is a reasonable inference that the offenses of those who had not been convicted of anything were of very minor character indeed. We do not regard this holding as authority for the position that serious acts of violence should not bar reinstatement unless followed by criminal conviction.
