Proceeding under section 10(e) of the National Labor Relations Act (Act), as amended, 29 U.S.C. § 160(e), the Petitioner (Board) seeks a decree enforcing an order issued by it against the Respondent (Union). The Board’s order was based upon its finding that the Union had violated sections 8(b)(1)(A) and 8(b)(2) of the Act by causing an employing company to discharge an em
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ployee, Dominic Ciolino, for failure to pay union dues for a period antedating his employment with the discharging employer. 29 U.S.C. §§ 158(b)(1)(A), (b)(2). The Board’s “Decision and Order” is reported at
In April of 1962, Ciolino joined the San Pedro Independent Fishermen’s Union (Independent) because he was working for an employer which had a collective bargaining agreement with that union. Ciolino made his initial payments and was marked delinquent when he left that job in November, 1962. In June, 1962, the membership of the Independent voted to affiliate with the Union involved in this action and to accept a charter as Local 33A. In November, 1964, Local 33A voted to merge with Local 33 of the Union. Around October 1, 1968, Ciolino began working for S. G. Giuseppe Fishing, Incorporated (Company), which had a collective bargaining agreement with the Union. This agreement contained a union security clause which provided that within thirty days after a crew member is hired, the employee must become a member in good standing of the Union and that failure to be a member in good standing would render him liable to discharge. From November, 1962, until October, 1968, Cio-lino had not been employed by an employer with an agreement with the Union. The Union advised Ciolino in November, 1968, a month after he had begun working for the Company, that he was delinquent and needed to pay a $135 “reinstatement” fee. Ciolino declined to pay this amount because he “never belonged to Local 33.” The Union demanded Ciolino’s discharge. Ciolino testified that he had offered to pay $10, but the Union representative had demanded “the full amount of money, $135, back dues.” The Company then discharged Ciolino.
Section 8(b)(2) of the Act contains a narrow exception to the general rule that a labor organization cannot attempt to encourage membership by seeking the discharge of an employee. It permits a union to seek an employee’s discharge, under an appropriate union security contract, for “failure to tender the periodic dues and the initiation fees uniformly required” of union members.
1
29 U.S.C. § 158(b)(2). A union may not seek a discharge for nonpayment of dues and fees prior to the employee’s employment at his current job when his previous employment was not under a union security clause requiring such a payment. NLRB v. Spector Freight Sys., Inc.,
If Ciolino had not previously belonged to the Independent or the Union, he would have been required to pay only a $20 initiation fee and two months dues of $10. Instead, because he had been for several months a member in good standing of the Independent some six years earlier, it was insisted that he should pay $135. The Trial Examiner found that this sum was referred to interchangeably as a “reinstatement fee” and “back dues that had accrued during *257 the subsequent merger.” The Union’s constitution discloses that the reinstatement fee for former members is computed on the basis of back dues owed, up to a limit of $125, plus an additional reinstatement fee of $10. Thus, in reality, the effort to collect most of the sum represents an unlawful attempt to collect back dues or to penalize an old member for failing to maintain his membership.
A labor organization may seek an employee’s discharge for failure to pay a lawful reinstatement fee, and this fee may be larger than an initiation fee as long as it is reasonable and nondiscriminatory. NLRB v. International Union of Op. Eng’rs, Local No. 139,
Authority for the Board’s position is found in NLRB v. Spector Freight Sys., Inc.,
“We cannot sanction this procedure, because obviously it would permit a union to do indirectly what it recognizes it is prohibited from doing directly. As stated by the Board in Local 140, etc.,109 N.L.R.B. 326 , at p. 328, ‘In both instances, the employees are penalized for not paying dues at a time when they were legally privileged to refuse to do so without jeopardizing their jobs.’ ”
Id.
at 277.
See also
Local 545, Int’l Union of Op. Eng’rs,
Having reviewed the record as a whole, we conclude that the Board’s critical findings are supported by substantial evidence and that its Order should be
Enforced.
Notes
. Section 8(b) (1) permits a union to prescribe its own rules regarding the acquisition and retention of members, but fines and penalties for violations of internal rules may not be enforced by threat of loss of employment since they are not “periodic dues.”
See
NLRB v. Spector Freight Sys., Inc.,
. We obviously have rejected the Board’s claim that the Union’s failure properly to challenge the Trial Examiner’s earlier rejection of the reinstatement fee contention forced abandonment of this issue.
