The National Labor Relations Board has petitioned for enforcement of an order, .
Enforcement is resisted on the grounds that the findings and order of the Board are not supported’by substantial evidence on a consideration of the record as a whole, and that in any event the affirmative requirements of the order are improperly made to. run against any “successors and assigns” of respondent.
Respondent was engaged in producing lumber products for interstate commerce at Clarksville, Arkansas, and.had at the time of the incidents here involved approximately 100 employees. The area was primarily rural in nature, and labor in it had been unorganized. In April 1949, an effort was begun to unionize respondent’s plant.
The Board found that respondent, in an attempt to thwart this unionization, had been guilty of unlawful efforts to interfere with and coerce its employees in their right of self-organization, and of discriminatory discharges for union activity and other proper concerted activities of mutual aid and protection, in violation of § 8(a) (1) and (3) of the Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 158(a) (1) and (3).
The improper discharges found Iby the Board to have been made totalled 28 in number, all of which had occurred on a single day, May d6, 1949, in a series of three events. Respondent’s contention was that none of these 28 separations had involved discharges, except one; that this single discharge had been made for incompetence; that two of the other separations were mere lay-offs, in proper reduction of respondent’s force because of business conditions ; and that the other 25 employees, whose separation had occurred in a group or mass, had not .been fired but had quit of their own accord, or, if there was room to view them as having been fired, the discharges were justified for violation of company rules.
The order issued was one to cease and desist, offer reinstatement, make whole for any loss of pay suffered, and post the usual notices. In form, it was made to run against respondent, “its officers, agents, successors, and assigns.”
A careful reading of the entire record, with a conscientious consideration of the evidence in its over-all perspective, does not enable us to say that the Board’s controlling findings are without substantial evidence to support them. Gontrary views and appraisals, of some of the incidents of the situation at least, might well have been reached, but that does not entitle us to overthrow the Board’s decision. Under the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C.A. § 1009(e), and the TaftHartley Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 160(e), we may not “displace the Board’s choice between two fairly conflicting views, even though the court would justifiably have made a different choice had the matter been before it de novo.” Universal Camera Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board,
As to respondent’s further contention, that in any event the words “successors and assigns” should be deleted from the Board’s order, we think Regal Knitwear Co. v. National Labor Relations Board,
Respondent has stated in its brief that, since the entry of the Board’s order, its plant has been sold in foreclosure proceedings. But this naked fact alone does not give its contention as to the words “successors and assigns” any more concreteness of appeal, for we do not know who the purchaser is, what operations the purchaser intends to carry on, or what the basis of relationship involved may be. Nor are these facts matters about which we need have any present concern.
An order of enforcement is entitled to issue, in accordance with the Board’s request.
