This is a petition to enforce an order of the National Labor Relations Board, requiring the Respondent-Association to cease and desist from discouraging union membership, reinstate and compensate certain workers for back pay, and to notify all its workers of the order. The charge arises out of an alleged violation of the provisions of the Labor-Management Relations Act dealing with discrimination in regard to hire or tenure of employment. 29 U.S.C.A. § 158(a) (3) and (1). Three main questions are presented: (1) whether, as the Board found, the Association can be said to be engaged in activities affecting interstate commerce ; (2) whether the Board is barred from asserting its authority by the agricultural-worker exclusion, 29 U.S.C.A. § 203(f) and § 213; and (3) whether the record justifies the Board’s order.
In determining whether the Association’s activities come within the purview of the Act, as affecting commerce, the primary consideration is whether a work stoppage at the Association would tend to impede the free flow of interstate commerce. N. L. R. B. v. Conover Motor Co., 10 Cir.,
The argument that the agricultural-worker exclusion should apply presents a question closely analogous to Farmers Reservoir & Irrigation Co. v. McComb,
On the question of the sufficiency of the facts, it is of course the primary function of the Board to find facts, draw inferences, and construe the Act to effectuate its purposes. While we have the “ultimate responsibility for the rationality of the Board’s decision,” we should not decline to enforce it unless upon the whole record we are convinced the order is not justifiable in law and fact. N. L. R. B. v. International Union of United Brewery, etc., 10 Cir.,
It is further urged that certain of the procedural safeguards were abridged by the Trial Examiner. It appears that the respondent was served with an amended complaint less than the prescribed five days prior to the hearing. It is also plain, however, that the Trial Examiner took cognizance of this fact and notified the respondent that it could have a continuance any time the lack of notice inflicted any hardship, and at no time was it requested. There can be no cause for reversal on this ground in the absence of some proof of resulting prejudice. The Association also asserts error for the Trial Examiner’s refusal to subpoena the Field Examiner, and for failure to require the General Counsel to furnish copies of witnesses’ written statements prior to their testimony. On Board review of the Trial Examiner’s recommendations, it was conceded that the Field Examiner should have been subpoenaed on request, but it is also apparent that he could have testified only as to certain evidence which would not have disproved anything which was proven by other witnesses. Thus, even though refusal to issue the subpoena was erroneous, no prejudice resulted to the Association. The same holds true concerning the witnesses’ statements. The respondent failed to show in what manner the refusal to offer the statements prior to the witnesses being called materially prejudiced its cause. Moreover, the Board’s rules of procedure specify that a respondent is entitled to copies of statements only after the particular witness has testified. 29 U.S.C.A.App. § 102.118,
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and this rule has been upheld by the courts. Raser Tanning Co. v. N. L. R. B., 6 Cir.,
Error is also claimed for the Trial Examiner’s refusal to reopen the hearing on the grounds that new evidence had been discovered which would tend to show that the checks issued to the strikers were not intended to terminate the employment. However, the Board found, and we agree, that this evidence, taken alone, was not crucial to the Board’s findings of unfair labor practices. Its rebuttal could not have disproved the fact that the drivers were discriminatorily discharged.
The order will be enforced.
Notes
. Formerly Section 102.95.
