This proceeding was begun on May 6, 1949, by a petition of the Board for adjudication in contempt of respondent, Cor-sicana Cotton Mills, for failure to comply with an enforcement order that was entered in this cause on April 1, 1948. The prayer of the petition seeks among оther things to require the respondent to purge itself of contempt by resuming bargaining negotiatiоns upon request of the union.
On August 16, 1949, this court rendered an opinion,
On December 9, 1949, this court rendered an opinion,
The freedom to negotiate is no less a basic right of an employer than of employees. The National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq., requires good-faith bargaining, with the purpose of reaching an agreement, but it does not require that any particular form of agreement be reached. The law does not authorize the National Labor Relations Board or the courts to make collective bargaining contracts or to prescribe what shall be written into them. Neither the courts nor the Board may interfere in negotiations as long as they are being carried on in good faith. National Labor Relations Board v. Whittier Mills Company, 5 Cir.,
The procеedings in this case show a patient and painstaking effort on the part of the respondent to reach a satisfactory agreement. The real reason such an agreement was not reached sooner was because the union would not agree to certаin things that the respondent in good faith deemed necessary to the agreement, and the rеspondent would not agree to certain other things that the union in good faith likewise deemеd necessary thereto. There is no showing that the respondent ever refused to negotiate when called upon to do so by the union. On the other hand, there is a definite showing that the рarties have been in constant negotiation with each other in one way or another. Bargaining has continued by both parties throughout these contempt proceedings despite the differences between them.
In such a situation we may not that the respondent has contumaciously refused to bargain. Various communications from the respondent indicate that it has been bargaining in good faith. Full and ready compliance by it with specific provisions of this court’s order also evidences the same good faith. It has agreed that the Presidеnt of Texas Wesleyan College may be designated as the person empowered to appoint an arbitrator. This concession and various proposals made by the rеspondent on other matters show an earnest desire on its part to reach an agrеement. In these circumstances, we think it would be a grave injustice, and would deal a severe blow to the bargaining relations between the parties, to hold the respondent in contempt. Accordingly, we find the respondent not guilty.
So ordered.
