The National Labor Relations Board found respondent to have violated § 8(a) (1) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 158(a) (1), by prohibiting employees from distributing union literature on their own time in nonworking areas of respondent’s plant. Respondent offered grounds for its rule: resultant littering, resultant unruly demonstrations in the plant cafeteria, and abusive language used by a distributor of the pamphlets. The Bоard found these to be questionable after-the-fact rationalizations and insufficient to explain the institution of the rule. The record sustains the Board’s finding.
Rules prohibiting solicitation by employees on their own time in nonworking areas can be upheld only on a showing that special circumstances make the rule necessary to maintain production or discipline. See Republic Aviation Corp. v. N. L. R. B.,
It argues, however, that the Board erred in failing to consider, in evaluating the no-solicitation rule, whеther the employees have alternative means of communication. Respondent is not without support in this position. See N. L. R. B. v. Rockwell Mfg. Co. (Du Bois Division). 3 Cir.,
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It is clear that in exercising its “special function of applying the general provisions of the Act to the complexities of industrial life” the Board is not required to consider and make findings on every contention raised in defense or evеry aspect of the problem presented. N. L. R. B. v. Erie Resistor Corp.,
The issue thus presеnted is whether consideration of available alternatives is necessary to make the presumption in question rational. In Republic Aviation Corp. v. N. L. R. B., supra,
Reason and the demands of sound administrative policy support the Court’s approval of the Peyton Packing Co. formulation. The chances are negligible that alternatives equivalent to solicitation in the plant itself would exist. In thе plant the entire work force may be contacted by a relatively small number of employees with little expense. The solicitors have the opportunity for personal confrontation, so that they can present their message with maximum persuasiveness. Ixx contrast, the predictable alternatives bear without exception the flaws of greater expense axxd effоx't, and a lower degree of effectiveness. Mailed material would be typically lost in the daily flood of printed matter which passes with little impact from mailbox to wastebasket. Televisioxx аnd radio appeals, where not precluded entirely by cost, would suffer from competitioxx with the faxnily’s favorite programs and at best would not compare with personal solicitation. Nеwspaper advertisements are subject to similar objections. Sidewalks and street corners are subject to the vicissitudes of climate and often force solicitation at awkward times, as when employees are hurrying to or from work.
It might be suggested that it would be harmless to require the Board to make findings in all no-solicitation cases. But in addition to being an appreciable increаse in the Board’s alx-eady unwieldy work load, this would simply be an incitement to litigation and casuistry.
Even apart from considerations involving the remoteness of the existence of realistic alternаtives, we feel that the Board’s position is sound. It summarized the basis for its view in Peyton Packing Co., supra,
The Board is manifestly correct. We have long passed the point where the bundle of property rights can be used arbitrarily or capriciously to restrict a worker’s freedom of association or expression. See N. L. R. B. v. United Steelworkers of America, CIO, supra,
The Third Circuit in N. L. R. B. v. Rockwell Mfg. Co. (Du Bois Division), supra, 3 Cir.,
Republic Aviation Corp. v. N. L. R. B., supra,
The order will accordingly be enforced, and a decree of enforcement will issue.
Notes
. As an additional justification for its no-solicitation rule, the respondent asserted that the leaflets vilified the company and its officials in false and scurrilous language. While there may conceivably be instances in -which union literature is sо defamatory that an employer would be justified in prohibiting- its distribution on company premises, we do not find that the leaflets disseminated in the three-month period preceding the ban in the present case fall into this category. No proof was offered which would indicate that any of the statements made were maliciously false; and a union engaged - in an intensive organizational campaign should not be expected to communicate in the most moderate of terms.
