The National Labor Relations Board found the Respondent, Newspapers, Inc., guilty of a violation of § 8(a)(5) and (1) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 151 et seq., when it refused to bargain with a representative of its pressroom employees. The Board issued a bargaining order and now seeks enforcement. We grant enforcement.
The facts of this case are essentially undisputed. The Respondent is the publisher of two newspapers in Austin, Texas. For over 70 years it voluntarily recognized Austin Printing Pressmen and Assistants Union No. 143 (Austin Local 143). On September 30, 1971 the Employer and Austin Local 143 executed a collective bargaining agreement effective for one year, thereafter automatically renewable unless either party gave written notice 60 days prior to the expiration of the contract that it intended to renegotiate. This collective bargaining agreement was in effect throughout this dispute.
Austin Local 143 was found by the Board 1 to be composed of two separate divisions, the Web Division composed of the printing pressmen and assistants of the Respondent’s two newspapers, and the Commercial Division composed of all commercial pressmen and their assistants in Austin. These two divisions conducted their affairs entirely separately: they held separate meetings, and elected separate officers. 2 A bargaining committee of the Web Division negotiated with the Respondent on behalf of Austin Local 143. Of the employer’s 20 pressroom employees in 1971, 19 belonged to the Web Division of Austin Local 143 (one employee not being a member of any union.) These 19 employees of the Respondent comprised the entire membership of the Web Division of Austin Local 143.
On September 11, 1971 notice was sent to these 19 members of the Web Division, as well as to the one non-union employee of Newspapers, Inc., notifying them that a meeting was to be held on October 5, 1971 at which time a vote would be conducted as to whether the Web Division should merge with Houston Newspaper Printing Pressmen’s Union No. 43 (hereinafter Houston Local 43.) 3 The members of the Web Division met as scheduled on October 5. All 19 of its members attended. These 19 employees of the Respondent voted unanimously to merge with Houston Local 43. 4
Austin Local 143 notified the International Union that this vote had been taken, and requested formal permission for the merger. Houston Local 43 shortly thereafter also notified the International that it agreed to the merger, and also requested approval. The International Union on December 10, 1971 notified the two locals that the Board of Directors of the International had “approved the re *337 quest of the Web members of your local union transferring to Houston Newspaper Local No. 43.”
The Respondent was notified of the imminent merger in separate letters from Houston Local 43 on January 7, 1972 and from Austin Local 143 on January 27, 1972. Both letters advised the employer that the merger would occur on February 1, 1972. 5 In preparation for the February 1, 1972 merger Austin Local 143 divided its assets, and on February 1 Houston Local 43 acquired the Web Division’s assets, and assumed all its liabilities. All 19 members of the Web Division transferred to Houston Local 43 on that date, and thereafter paid their dues to the Houston Local.
Following the merger Houston Local 43 was found by the administrative law judge to have permitted its new Web Division to function essentially as it had in the past when it constituted a separate Web Division of Austin Local 143. Despite its change of affiliation from one local to another, the Web Division continued to be composed solely of the employees of the Respondent — and it continued to function as a separate organization. The former President of Austin Local 143 became the Chairman or (as he was also called) the “Area Representative” of the Austin Web Division of Houston Local 43; while none of the former officers of Austin Local 143’s Web Division served as constitutional officers of Houston Local 43, most retained their positions as officers of the Austin Web Division of Houston Local 43. The bargaining committee for the Web Division members remained unchanged.
On July 10, 1972 the Austin Web Division of Houston Local 43 gave notice to the Respondent of its intent to renegotiate a collective bargaining agreement on behalf of its pressroom employees; this letter was sent by one L. B. Dyer, signed as Secretary of the “Austin Division” of Houston Local 43. 6 This July 10, 1972 letter also notified the Employer that a bargaining committee would represent the Web Division members in collective bargaining negotiations. 7
On July 13, 1972 the Employer responded that it refused to bargain with Houston Local 43, as “Local 143 is the certified representative of our pressroom employees.” 8
Thereafter on August 8, 1972 the bargaining committee for the Web Division requested a meeting to discuss a new contract; when the Employer learned that they intended to negotiate as members of Houston Local 43, it refused to bargain.
In response to this refusal Houston Local 43 secured new authorization cards from the pressroom employees of the Respondent; the record shows at this time that the Respondent had 44 employees in its pressroom, and that either 42 or 44 of them signed cards evidencing their wish that they be represented by *338 Houston Local 43. 9 The employer refused to look at these cards and thereafter refused to bargain with any of the members of the Web Division of Houston Local 43.
Based on these facts the Board found that the Web Division of Houston Local 43 was the successor to the Web Division of Austin Local 143, and that accordingly the Employer’s duty to bargain with Austin Local 143' carried over to the Houston Local. The Board held that the Employer violated § 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act when it refused to bargain with the Web Division of Houston Local 43.
I. WAS HOUSTON LOCAL 43 THE SUCCESSOR OF AUSTIN LOCAL 143?
Whether the Houston Local 43 was the successor to the Web Division of Austin Local 143 normally “depends on a factual determination — is it a continuation of the old union under a new name or is it a substantially different organization?” NLRB v. Commercial Letter, Inc.,
“The test of survival bargaining obligation in each case is whether the successor organization continues to constitute, in the words of the statute, the ‘representative^] of [the employees’] own choosing.’ (§ 7 of the Act.) The industrial stability sought by the Act would unnecessarily be disrupted if every union organizational adjustment were to result in displacement of the employer-bargaining representative relationship.”
Canton Sign Co.,
supra,
*339 A refusal to apply the süccessorship doctrine in many cases could easily result in a denial of the employees’ rights to be represented by a union of their choice: here, for example, were Austin Local 143 to be held to be the only authorized representative of the Respondent’s press-room employees, as Respondent contends, the Employer would be obliged to bargain with the union to which none of its employees belonged — indeed, a union which its employees unanimously voted to leave.
While the Board has not adopted any rigid requirements as to the method of the merger election, it has held that the election must be conducted under democratic procedures, with fair notice to all concerned employees; the election procedures must not be so “lax” or “substantially irregular” as to “negate the validity of the election,” NLRB v. Commercial Letter, Inc.,
supra,
This argument essentially overlaps with the Respondent’s principal claim that the Board’s süccessorship doctrine cannot apply to cases such as this one where only a section of a union merges with another, rather than the entire union. The Respondent relies principally on Harbor Carriers of the Port of New York v. NLRB,
Thus while we recognize that this case involves the novel legal question as to whether different divisions of a single combination local may elect individually to merge with other locals, given the undisputed findings that the “representative character of the bargaining agent,” Canton Sign,
supra,
II. DID THE SUCCESSOR UNION REPRESENT A MAJORITY OF THE RESPONDENT’S PRESS-ROOM EMPLOYEES?
§ 9(a) of the NLRA provides that
“Representatives designated or selected for the purposes of collective bargaining by the majority of the employees in a unit appropriate for such purposes, shall be the exclusive [bargaining] representatives of all the employees . . . ”
§ 8(a)(5) makes it an unfair labor practice for an employer “to refuse to bargain collectively with the representatives of his employees, subject to the provisions of § 9(a).”
Normally a Board supervised election is the preferred route by which a union acquires the status of exclusive bargaining representative. NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co.,
. “Since § 9(a) . . . refers to the representative as the one ‘designated or selected’ by a majority of the employees without specifying precisely how that representative is to be chosen, it was early recognized that an employer had a duty to bargain whenever the representative presented ‘convincing evidence of majority support.’ ”
In our view, it is now clearly established that “án election [is] not the only predicate for a union claim to majority status,” Truck Driver’s Union Local No. 413 v. NLRB,
The Respondent has made no effort to prove that Houston Local 43 in fact lacked the majority status it is presumed to have had when it demanded to bargain. Rather it relies solely on the fact that its work force had doubled from February 1, 1972 when the merger took place to July 10, 1972 when Houston Local 43 made its bargaining demand, to prove its good faith in refusing to bargain. 14
Whether in fact an expansion in work force alone — absent other independent evidence supporting a good faith doubt of a union’s majority status — establishes an employer’s right to refuse to bargain with an incumbent union is a question we do not confront. Here there was convincing evidence rebutting any such inference of good faith which might be drawn from such work force expansion. Although Houston Local 43 obtained new authorization cards from the employees hired after the time of the merger on February 1, 1972, the Employer categorically refused to even look at the cards. Such a refusal has been held to show bad faith, Terrell Machine Co. v. NLRB,
The Respondent failed either to prove that Houston Local 143 lacked majority status, or that it refused to bargain because in good faith it had a reasonable doubt of the Houston Local’s majority status — accordingly the Board’s order should be enforced.
Similarly, we reject the Employer’s claim that because its work force had expanded once again during the pendency of this litigation, it ought
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to be absolved of the Board’s bargaining order. In any number of similar cases employers have made the claim that delay in completing the Board’s unfair labor practices proceedings should prevent a Board bargaining order from being enforced due to turnover and change in the employer’s work force. Invariably an employer making such an argument does so in terms of its concern for its employee’s rights of free choice.
See e. g.,
NLRB v. Schill Steel Products, Inc.,
“[i]nordinate delay in any case is regrettable, but Congress has introduced no time limitation into the Act except that in § 10(b) . . . .”
and as the Court emphasized in Franks Bros. v. NLRB,
Accordingly we grant enforcement of the Board’s bargaining order.
Notes
. The Board accepted the factual findings of the administrative law judge, but differed as to the legal question of the applicability of the Board’s union successorship doctrine.
. Article III of Austin Local 143’s Constitution provided that the elective officers should consist of a president, a first vice president, a second vice president, a secretary-treasurer, two recording secretaries, two sergeant-at-arms, and four committeemen. While the Constitution provides the president should be elected from the membership at large, it specifically provided that one vice president, together with two other members, should be elected by the Commercial Division and constitute the executive committee for the Commercial Division, while the other vice president, together with two other members, should be elected by the Web Division and should constitute the executive committee for the Web Division.
. The September 11 notice specifically stated that: “Be further advised that the foregoing vote will not affect the present charter of Austin Printing Pressmen and Assistants Union and/or the commercial members thereof in any manner.”
. The Respondent’s one non-union pressroom employee did not attend the meeting.
. The Respondent has contended that it was not properly informed of'this merger. The January 27, 1972 letter to the Employer from Austin Local 143 was signed by the secretary of that union, an employee in the Respondent’s pressroom, and stated specifically:
“This is to advise your office that as of February 1, 1972 the Web Division of Local 143 will merge with Houston Newspaper pressmen No. 43.”
. Dyer was the former secretary-treasurer of Austin Local 143, and was a pressroom employee of the Respondent.
. This bargaining committee was composed of Kenneth Hurst, M. Hepburn and Charles Joyce. All were pressroom employees of the Respondent. Hurst was the former President of Austin Local 143, and after the merger served as Chairman of the Web Division of Houston Local 43; Joyce was a former Vice President and Chairman of the Web Division of Austin Local 143, and after the merger served as Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Austin Web Division of Houston Local 43.
. In fact Austin Local 143 had never been certified by the NLRB, but had been voluntarily recognized by the employer. The Respondent gave no other reason for its refusal to bargain.
. The cards themselves do not appear in the. record; one witness at the hearing before the administrative law judge testified he thought two employees might have refused to accept a card — but all who took a card apparently authorized Houston Local 43 to serve as their bargaining representative.
At oral argument in response to a question from the Court, Counsel for the Respondent conceded the record fails to disclose any conflict among the pressroom employees as to which union they wished to represent them. Austin Local 143 after the February 1, 1972 merger did not contain a single pressroom employee of the Respondent, and it has never attempted to bargain on behalf of the Respondent’s employees.
. For applications of the employer successor-ship doctrine, see, e.
g.,
NLRB v. Burns International Security Services, Inc.,
“The acquiring employer is the successor to the obligations of his predecessor if there is continuity in the business operation.”
. We note that although in NLRB v. Canton Sign Co.,
.
See also
NLRB v. San Clemente Publishing Corp.,
. The presumption of majority status afforded an incumbent union is essentially the same as that of a certified union following its certification year, and can be rebutted in the same manner.
See
Brooks v. NLRB,
. Although some 22 of the Respondent’s employees had never voted for Houston Local 43 as they were hired after the merger vote was taken, this fact alone does not prove that they did not wish to be represented by the Houston Local in July, 1972 when the demand to bargain was made. The record is silent as to the actual preferences of the new employees — save for the fact no petition for a Board supervised election was filed until 1974.
. The Respondent argues the authorization cards would not be sufficient under NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co.,
. For example, bargaining orders have been upheld where all union adherents have been replaced by an employer. See, e.
g.,
NLRB v. Andrew Jergens Co.,
