NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Petitioner, v. HENRY HEIDE, Inc., Respondent.
No. 66, Docket 23078
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit
Argued Oct. 5, 1954. Decided Jan. 19, 1955.
219 F.2d 46
Schmidt, Egan, Kenny, Smith & Murray, New York City (Godfrey P. Schmidt, of counsel), for respondent Henry Heide, Inc.
Arnold Cohen, New York City (Herbert A. Simon, Washington, D. C., of counsel), for respondent Local 452.
Before CLARK, Chief Judge, and L. HAND and FRANK, Circuit Judges.
FRANK, Circuit Judge.
In November, 1945, Local 50 was certified by the Board as the exclusive bargaining representative of respondent‘s employees in an appropriate unit. Thereafter, respondent and that Union entered into a series of collective bargaining agreements, the last of which was executed in July 1950, and by its terms expired on May 15, 1951. In February 1951, the Union suggested that the parties enter into negotiations toward a new
On February 15, Local 452 notified the Respondent that it claimed to represent a majority of the employees in the unit and intended to file a petition. The Respondent notified Local 50 of this claim, and stated that it doubted Local 50‘s majority. Representatives of the Respondent and Local 50 then consulted the Regional Office of the Board as to their rights and duties, and were advised by a Board agent that the Respondent should continue to bargain with Local 50, as the “certification year” had not expired.
On February 19, both the Respondent and Local 452 filed petitions with the Board. On March 6, the Regional Director dismissed the petitions as prematurely filed in relation to the certification year, and on April 2 the Board, on appeal, sustained the Regional Director‘s rulings. On April 4, Local 452 filed a decertification petition. On April 17, the Regional Director dismissed this petition also as untimely, and on May 14, the Board sustained his ruling. During the pendency of these petitions before the Regional Director and the Board, the Respondent admittedly refused to bargain with Local 50.
On these facts, the Board concluded that the respondent-employer had violated
1. We think the Board‘s finding of these facts was supported by the “record as a whole“; and we hold that, on those findings, the Board reached the correct legal conclusion.
Respondent points to a doctrine originating with the Board that although an employer must bargain with a certified unit for a reasonable period, normally one year, he is relieved from that obligation if “unusual circumstances” are present.1 All of the Board‘s “unusual circumstances” cases antedated the Taft-Hartley Act. The language of that Act3, the failure of the Board to find “unusual circumstances” in any case
2. The Board also held that the following facts, as found by the Board—these findings being sufficiently supported by the record as a whole—constituted a violation of
3. We think the Board correctly held that the respondent violated
4. The Board made the following findings of facts8 which are supported by the record as a whole: “On May 28, 1952, after the Board had sustained the Regional Director‘s dismissal of Local 452‘s decertification petition, the parties again met. At this time, the Respondent expressed doubt of Local 50‘s majority and its belief that the employees had joined Local 452, and announced that, under these circumstances, it would not execute any agreement for a term beyond October 9, 1952, the end of Local 50‘s certification year. When Local 50, which had proposed a 2-year term, refused to accept this limitation, the Respondent declared that a stalemate had been reached. On the following day, Local 50 requested another meeting. The Respondent refused, saying that a deadlock had been created by Local 50‘s ‘manifestly unalterable decision to insist upon a two-year contract and (the Respondent‘s) equally firm decision to reject a contract which goes beyond October 9, 1952,’ and that, while that deadlock lasted, it saw ‘no useful purpose that could be served by further meetings.’ Local 50 replied that it had made no ‘unalterable decision to insist upon a two year contract,’ that its proposal was ‘subject to discussion, alteration and modification,’ and that the matter was ‘subject to negotiation and contingent upon agreement on more important matters of collective bargaining.’ The Respondent replied that it would resume negotiations only if Local 50 was willing, among other things, to negotiate a contract ending on October 9, 1952.”
The Board concluded that, in this respect, respondent further violated
Enforcement granted.
L. HAND, Circuit Judge (concurring).
The Board‘s order directed Heide to stop (a) refusing to bargain with Local 50; (b) recognizing Local 452; (c) performing its agreement of January 1953 with Local 452, until the Board had certified it; (d) and (e) assisting or encouraging Local 452 or discouraging Local 50; and (f) interfering with its employees in their right to bargain collectively. The “Grounds” for these three directions were, (a) that Heide had refused to bargain with Local 50 during a period in 1952 when Local 452 and itself had filed petitions to disestablish Local 50; (b) that after these petitions had been dismissed as premature, in its dealings with Local 50 Heide in bad faith had refused to make any contract beyond the end of the certified year (Oct. 9, 1952); and (c) that it had refused to recognize Local 50 after that time. I am not satisfied with the reasons given by the Board for finding that Heide‘s refusal was in bad faith. The first reason is that it had refused to bargain with Local 50 during the pendency of its petition and Local 452‘s to revoke Local 50‘s certification. I can see no connection between that and its good faith in supposing that after Oct. 9, 1952, Local 50‘s right to bargain might have ended. Besides, it was a natural enough mistake to think that the pendency of the petitions tolled Local 50‘s authority. The second reason is even less plausible: i. e. that Heide conditioned “any further bargaining on Local 50‘s acceptance of that provision.” It was no evidence of Heide‘s belief that Local 50 might have already ceased to represent the employees that it “adamantly” refused to make a contract which would go beyond the year. It is not bad faith to be inflexible in asserting your doubts. “Grounds” (a) and (c) of the Board‘s decision support all the provisions of its order; and I would enforce it in toto because of them, but of them alone.
