Thе National Labor Relations Board petitions for enforcement of its order that Respondent bargain with the United Paperworkers International Union. Respondent seeks to deny enforcement on the grounds that the Union committed unfair labor practices during the representation election and that section 10(b) of the National Labor Relations Act and principles of res judicata require dismissal of the Union’s underlying charge.
On July 28, 1972, by a vote of 31 to 20 (out of 52 eligible voters), the Internatiоnal Brotherhood of Pulp, Sulphite and Paper Mill Workers (Sulphite Workers) won a consent election among certain of Respondent’s employees. Respondent promptly objected to the Union’s certification, asserting that a Union agent had given cash to an eligible voter near the *263 polling place on election day, that Union supporters had promised immediate financial gain to the employees if the Un-, ion won, and that an eligible voter had been threatened by Union adherents two weeks before the election. After an administrative investigation, during which Respondent submitted a single affidavit and some correspondence with counsel, the Board’s Regional Director recommended that the Sulphite Workers be certified as the employees’ bargaining representative. Submitting no additional evidence, Respondent requested a full hearing on its charges or the election’s invalidation. On January 18, 1973, the Board affirmed the Regional Director’s Report and certified the Sulphite Workers.
On February 22, 1973, the Sulphite Workers filed a charge alleging a section 8(a)(5) and (1) violation, based on Respondent’s refusal to bargain upon request. The Regional Director issued a complaint on March 13, and Respondent filed an answer asserting its objections to the Union’s conduct during the elеction. On July 26 the Regional Director permitted the charge to be withdrawn, at the Union’s request.
Although the record is unclear as to why the Union sought to have the charge withdrawn, it may have been prompted by the Union’s July 24 petition to amend its certification to substitute the United Paperworkers International Union (Paperworkers) for the Sulphite Workers, since the Sulphite Workers had recently merged into the Paperworkers. On August 23, the Acting Regional Director granted the amendment of certification, and on September 12 his action was affirmed by the Board.
The Union promptly requested that Respondent bargain but was refused on September 27. On October 25, the Union filed the section 8(a)(5) and (1) charge which underlies the Board’s order. Respondent answered by reiterating its election objections and asserting procedural reasons for dismissal of the charge. On April 29, 1974, the Board granted the Genеral Counsel’s summary judgment motion and issued its Decision and Order, which requires Respondent to bargain with the Union and to post appropriate notices.
Respondent refuses to bargain with the Union because it views the certification as defective. If the amended certification is proper, it follows that Respondent violated section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the National Labor Relations Act.
1
NLRB v. Wackenhut Corp.,
Respondent’s objections to the certifiсation center on alleged improper activities by Union supporters and agents preceding the representation election. Respondent argues that its objections to the certification show that the “laboratory conditions” 2 required . during representation elections did not exist or at least that a hearing is required on this allegation.
In reviewing the Board’s decision, we exercise a limited scope of review. Our tаsk is to ascertain whether the Board acted in abuse of the “wide degree of discretion” which Congress has given the Board to resolve disputes over employee representation. NLRB v. A. J. Tower Co.,
Respondent’s objections to the Union’s pre-election conduct involve three separate allegations.
The first is that Union adherents “created the impression of immediate financial gain by virtue of voting in favor of the Union,” thus inhibiting the employees’ free choice in deciding whether to choose union representation. The only evidence proffered by Respondent was an affidavit of its Vice President to the effect that “union people” told several employees “that it would pay to support the Union.” No specific misconduct is cited beyond this general assertion.
We agree with the Board’s finding that this general allegation, even if proven,
indicates that [the Union] engaged in nothing more than normal pre-election campaign promises of the type that employees may, on their own, evaluate, and accept or reject, as election propaganda. 3
If the alleged statements meant anything more than that the Union would work to increase thе employees’ salaries, Respondent was obligated to offer evidence to that effect. In the absence of a proffer of such evidence, the Board properly refused to invalidate the election or to hold a hearing on the allegations. As we said in NLRB v. Shawnee Plastics, Inc.,
[Respondent’s] statements are ambiguous based on hearsay and self serving declarations. They do not, in our judgment, allege facts which if рroven would be cause for setting aside the election.
See also
NLRB v. Custom Craft Mfg. Co.,
Respondent’s second objection is that the Union’s cash payment to an election observer inhibited its employees’ free choice. Specifically, Respondent’s Vice President alleged by affidavit that he observed a Union agent (Riley) “put money into [the] pocket” of an employee (Long), who served as the Union’s election observer. The affidavit asserted that the employee received normal compensation from Respondent (including overtime) for his work on election day, so that the Union’s payment did not compensate him for wages lost during the election.
We have previously embraced the Fourth Circuit’s holding in Collins & Aikman Corp. v. NLRB,
*265 This case presents a far different factual situation. As the Regional Director stated after conducting an administrative investigation intо Respondent’s allegations,
Riley admits that he paid Long $20.00 after the polls closed. He reports that he paid the money to Long to reimburse him for expenses incurred in attending pre-election day conferences with Riley at Chillicothe, Ohio, some 12 miles away from Long’s home in Bourneville, Ohio, and 50 minutes away from his place of employment. Riley submitted a receipt signed by Long showing receipt from Riley of $20.00 as reimbursement for expenses and lost time incurred as the result of serving as an election observer. Riley states that he purposely did not pay Long until after the results of the election were known and they had left the vicinity of the polling area in order to avoid giving the wrong impression to other persons.
The mere fact, there being nothing more, that a union’s election observer is paid after the polling period had closed and after the results of the election were known, for time spent in connection with election duties and/or for pre-election time and travel expenses, does not constitute conduct sufficient to warrant setting aside the election.
In the absence of evidence rebutting this account, Respondent was not entitled to an evidentiary hearing on this matter. Unlike in
Plastic Masters,
the payment here was not made until after the election, which the Union won by a sizeable margin (31 to 20). The mere “fact that he was paid in itself does not constitute ground for setting aside an election.”
Collins & Aikman Corp.,
Respondent’s general allegation that there was an excessive Union payment to one employee which influenced the election’s outcome was simply not supported by an offer of proof. “The Board is entitled to rely on the report of the Regional Director in the absence of specific assertions of error, substantiated by offers of proof.” NLRB v. Tennessee Packers, Inc.,
Respondent’s third objection to the Union’s certification is based on alleged “threats and coercion” which purportedly inhibited the employees’ free choice. Respondent’s allegation is that an eligible voter told its Vice President that two weeks before the election she was told she was “gonna be sorry” and would “regret it” if she did not vote for the Union, statements she perceived as threats.
The Regional Director declined to hold a hearing on this charge after an administrative investigation revealed that the voter in question wished to withhold her identity and that Respondent would not involve her in the proceedings. Furthermore, the Regional Director reported,
Although requested to do so repeatedly, the Employer failed to report specifically in regard tо its claim that the Petitioner made “material misrepresentations” during the campaign. Moreover, in its final reply to requests for such specificity, the Employer took the position that in view of the timing of such alleged conduct it had concluded that standards set forth by the Board would preclude the setting aside of an election and, accordingly, the matter need not be pursued further.
Respondent’s claim is thus a conclusory assertion that the election was affect
*266
ed by improper Union coercion. The picture painted by Respondent in no way approaches the “environment of tension of coercion ... so related to the election as to have had a probable effect upon the employees’ actions at the polls,” which led to the invalidation of an election in NLRB v. Zelrich Co.,
Finally, Respondent argues that the cumulative effect of the alleged preelection improprieties was sufficient to require a hearing on the election’s overall fairness. Both individually and collectively, Respondent’s assertions amount to a generalized claim that the election was unfair. Because Respondent failed to produce substantive evidénce to support its overall claim, no hearing was requirеd. Were we to mandate hearings every time a losing party cries “foul,” we would frustrate the policy of the Act that calls for prompt certification of a properly victorious bargaining representative.
4
“As to any conduct objected ,to as interference, the critical Board determination is whether the employees were permitted to register a free choice.” Home Town Foods, Inc. v. NLRB,
This would end our consideration were it not for Respondent’s claim that section 10(b) of the Act and principles of res judicata bar the Union’s charge which underlies the Board’s order.
The res judicata argument is based on the fact that a Union charge filed on February 22, 1973 was withdrawn at its request on July 26. 5 It is the Union’s second charge of refusal to bargain, filed on October 25, 1973, which is the basis of the Board’s order. Respondent argues that the dismissal of the first charge absolutely bars Board consideration of a second charge based on identical underlying facts. Respondent cites no precedent for such a prop-position. 6
We agree with the Board that the principles of
res judicata
do not bar Board adjudication of a refusal to bargain charge where a prior similar charge has been filed but withdrawn at the Union’s request. The first charge’s dismissal was in no sense an adjudication, and it was not оrdered with prejudice. The dismissal was at most “an administrative determination not to take action.” NLRB v. Baltimore Transit Co.,
Respondent also relies on section 10(b) of the Act, 7 which states in part,
[N]o complaint shall issue based upon any unfair labor practice occurring more than six months prior to the filing of the charge with the Board
Since the unfair labor practice asserted was Respondent’s refusal to bargain as expressed in a letter of February 9, 1973, Respondent contends, more than six months elapsed between then and October 25, 1973, when the Union filed the charge on which the Board’s order is based. Accordingly, section 10(b)’s six-month statute of limitations bars Board action, Respondent maintains.
The Board, on the other hand, argues that the unfair labor practice asserted in the Union’s October 25 complaint was Respondent’s September 27 refusal to bargain in response to the Union’s September 19 demand. Since Respondent was under a continuing obligation to bargain “for a ‘reasonable’ period, ordinarily ‘one year’ ” from the date of the Union’s certification (January 18), Brooks v. NLRB,
The analysis of whether section 10(b) bars reliance on the Union’s October 25-unfair labor charge must “focus on the purpose of Section 10(b) and on the needs of the defense.” NLRB v. McCready and Sons, Inc.,
This reasoning explains the distinction in treatment between charges based on an employer’s discriminatory refusal to hire, where the continuing obligation doctrine applies, and an employer’s refusal to rehire a discriminatorily discharged employee, where it does not apply.
See McCready,
*268
Unlike the situation in
McCready,
where we were without precedent on the interrelationship between section 10(b) and a charge of refusal to execute a contract, we have guidance on the applicability of the “continuing obligation” doctrine in the refusal to bargain context. In Brooks v. NLRB,
Respondent argues that Machinists Local 1424 v. NLRB,
The first is one where occurrences within the six-month limitations period in and .of themselves may constitutе, as a substantive matter, unfair labor practices. There, earlier events may be utilized to shed light on the true character of matters occurring within the limitations period; and for that purpose § 10(b) ordinarily does not bar such evidentiary use of anterior events [footnote omitted]. The second situation is that where conduct occurring within the limitations period can be charged to be an unfair labor practice only through reliance on an earlier unfair labor practice. There the use of the earlier unfair labor practice is not merely “evidentiary,” since it does not simply lay bare a putative current unfair labor practice. Rather, it serves to cloak with illegality that which was otherwise lawful. And where a complaint based upon that earlier event is time-barred, to permit the event itself to be so used in effect results in reviving a legally defunct unfair labor practice.362 U.S. at 416-17 ,80 S.Ct. at 826 .
In
Machinists
the situation fell within the second category, “for the entire foundation of the unfair labor practice charged was the Union’s time-barred lack of majority status when the original collective bargaining agreement was signed.”
The situation here is not within the second category. The Union’s certification was not, of course, an unfair labor practice which “serves to cloak with illegality” Respondent’s “otherwise lawful” refusal to bargain. Rather, the first category applies. The October 25 charge simply utilized “earlier events” (the certification) “to shed light on the true character of matters occurring within the limitations period” (the September 27 refusal to bargain). Respondent’s first refusal to bargain is completely irrelevant to the validity of the Union’s second charge. That charge rests entirely upon Respondent’s September 27 refusal to bargain. This refusal was an unfair labor practice if, as we have held above, the Union’s certification was valid. Accordingly, the Board’s order was not barred by section 10(b).
Enforcement of the Order of the Board is granted.
Notes
. 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(5) and (1) (1966).
.
See
General Shoe Corp.,
. Report on Election, Objections to Electiоn, and Recommendations to the Board, Regional Director for Region 9 (Sept. 21, 1972), aff’d by NLRB (Jan. 18, 1973).
. See generally Funke, Board Regulation of Pre-Election Conduct, 36 Tex.L.Rev. 893 (1958).
. The July 26, 1973 Order of the Acting Regional Director stated:
The Charging Party herein, having filed a request to withdraw the charge in the above-captioned case on July 24, 1973, and the undersigned having duly considered the matter,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the request to withdraw the charge be, and it hereby is, approved, and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Notice оf Hearing heretofore issued herein be, and it hereby is, withdrawn, that the Complaint heretofore issued herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed and that this case be, and it hereby is, closed.
. Respondent cites two cases which rely on section 10(b) of the Act as a bar to a second charge, but neither case mentions the doctrine of
res judicata.
NLRB v. Silver Bakery, Inc.,
. 29 U.S.C. § 160(b)(1966).
. The Board cites particular circumstances of this case which explain the reason for the January to Oсtober gap between certification and the charge which underlies the Board’s order. The first (February) charge was filed before the Sulphite Workers merged into the Paper-workers. It was withdrawn “to avoid the anomaly of alleging that the Company had unlawfully refused to bargain with a union not named in the certification,” the Board argues. Within five days of the certification’s amendment to reflect the name change, the Union requested that Respondent bargain. After refusal, the second charge was promptly filed.
In these circumstancés, contends the Board, the fact that Respondent refused to bargain in February should not bar action based on the September refusal.
In view of our holding, we need not consider whether the proceeding to amend the certification tolled the running of section 10(b)’s six-month period or whether for other reasons section 10(b) does not bar enforcement of the Board’s order.
