The National Labor Relations Board petitions for enforcement of its order directing Globe Security Services, Inc., to bargain with the Union of Security Officers as the exclusive bargaining representative of all Globe employees employed by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board’s State Stores located in Philadelphia. Globe asks us to deny enforcement of the order, contending that the bargaining unit delineated in the order is inappropriate. Because we dismiss the petition as moot, however, we need not decide the propriety of the bargaining unit.
I.
Globe is a large firm that provides security guards for stores, plants, and institutions throughout the nation. It has regional headquarters in Philadelphia and supplies guards to about 150 clients at 250 locations in the Delaware Valley. On August 18, 1974, Globe entered a two-year contract, subject to cancellation by either side upon 60 days’ notice, to provide guards for the 55 State Liquor Stores in Philadelphia.
On November 4, 1974, the Union of Security Officers petitioned the Board to certify it as the bargaining representative for a unit consisting of all of Globe’s guards working at the State Stores — about eighty employees. The Regional Director certified the union’s proposed unit as appropriate. Globe petitioned the full Board for review, arguing that the only appropriate unit was one comprising all 1100 Globe guards working in the Philadelphia area. In February, 1975, the Board summarily upheld the Regional Director. The union won the ensuing election, and in March, 1975, the Regional Director certified the union as bargaining representative for the unit involved.
Globe refused to bargain, insisting that the unit was inappropriate. The union filed an unfair labor practice charge, and in June, 1975, the General Counsel moved for summary judgment.
While that motion was pending, Globe cancelled its contract with the State Stores, effective January 1, 1976. This action was, on the record before us, unrelated to the Board proceedings. Instead, it was the result of a new Pennsylvania statute requiring special training for all security guards carrying lethal weapons, which the Globe personnel at the State Stores carried. When the Liquor Control Board refused to reimburse Globe for the additional training required by the statute but not covered under the Globe-Liquor Control Board contract, Globe exercised its contractual right to cancel.
In November, 1975, the Labor Board granted summary judgment against Globe and ordered it to bargain with the unit previously certified. Because Globe stopped providing guards for the State Stores as of January 1, 1976, the certified unit no longer existed; nevertheless, the Labor Board on June 8, 1976, petitioned for enforcement of its bargaining order. Globe
II.
Although the parties vehemently deny that this case is moot, we conclude that it is.
See DeFunis v. Odegaard,
The parties offer two possible bases for finding the case not moot. First, they point to
Southport Petroleum Co. v. NLRB,
Southport Petroleum, Colonial Knitting,
and
Kostilnik
are part of a long line of cases holding that a Labor Board order may properly be enforced even though the party to whom it is directed claims to have gone out of business. Every case in that line, however, involved one or more factors— none of which is present here — that led the courts involved to conclude that the case had not been mooted. In some, the record simply did not demonstrate that the party in question had in fact gone out of business.
See, e. g., Southport Petroleum, supra,
The second reason the parties suggest for finding the case not moot is of even less moment: there is presently pending before the Board an additional unfair labor practice complaint involving the same unit determination before us in this case. Suffice it to say that this additional case and the questions therein are not yet ripe for review.
See
29 U.S.C. § 160(e), (f) (only final orders of the Board enforceable or reviewable).
See generally
3 K. Davis,
Administrative Law Treatise
§ 21.04 (1958). We are without power to render an advisory opinion on a question simply because we may have to face the same question in the future.
See SEC v. Medical Committee for Human Rights,
For the foregoing reasons, the petition for enforcement will be dismissed as moot.
Notes
. In effect, the parties are asking us to render an advisory opinion concerning the propriety of a client-specific bargaining unit carved out of the total personnel roster of a security agency supplying guards to hundreds of regional clients. We are without jurisdiction to deliver such advisory opinions.
North Carolina v. Rice,
. It is true that some of the cases noted in the text contain broad
dicta
that could be read to mean that possibility of performance is a matter solely for the Labor Board, and therefore, that all orders would be enforced, whether the court could determine that compliance was impossible or not.
See, e. g., NLRB v. Haspel,
