The National Labor Relations Board asks this Court to enforce its order that Monark *356 Boat Company of Monticello, Arkansas, bargain with the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, AFL-CIO (UBC) 1 . Monark urges us to revoke the union’s certification and order a new election, or order a post-election hearing to resolve issues raised by Monark’s objections. We agree with Monark that a hearing is necessary on the issue of alleged coercion. Enforcement of the Board’s order is therefore denied at this time, and the cause is remanded with directions that the Board conduct an evidentiary hearing and allow direct and cross-examination of all testimony upon which it intends to rely. 2
I.
On November 6, 1980, the UBC won a Board-conducted election by a vote of 77 to 57. Thirty-three eligible voters abstained. Monark filed approximately 50 objections, alleging, in general, that (a) UBC officials and employee supporters created an atmosphere of coercion which tainted the election; (b) UBC officials and employee supporters made material misrepresentations about significant campaign issues; and (c) UBC officials engaged in improper electioneering in or near the voting areas, immediately before and during the election. The Board’s Acting Regional Director (ARD) conducted an administrative investigation and afforded the parties an opportunity to submit evidence. 3 He overruled all of Mo-nark’s objections without a hearing and certified the UBC as the exclusive bargaining representative.
Monark appealed to the Board. The Board did not ask the ARD to send it the information that he obtained through the administrative investigation and denied Mo-nark’s request for review. The UBC requested that Monark bargain with it, but Monark refused. The UBC then filed an unfair-labor-practice charge, and the Board issued a complaint charging the company with violations of Sections 8(a)(1) and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 158(a)(1), (5) (1976). In its response Mo-nark alleged that it need not bargain with the UBC because it had been denied an evidentiary hearing on its objections to the election. 4 The General Counsel moved for summary judgment on the ground that Mo-nark had already litigated these issues and lost. The Board granted summary judgment and ordered Monark to bargain with the UBC. The Board then asked us to enforce its order.
II.
The trier of fact must conduct a hearing to determine the validity of a certification election when there are substantial and material issues of fact.
NLRB v. Griffith Oldsmobile, Inc.,
* * * [i]t is incumbent upon the party seeking a hearing to clearly demonstrate that factual issues exist which can only be resolved by an evidentiary hearing.
*357 The exceptions must state the specific findings that are controverted and must show what evidence will be presented to support a contrary finding or conclusion.
* * *
Mere disagreement with the Regional Director’s reasoning and conclusions does not raise ‘substantial and material factual issues.’ This is not to say that a party cannot except to the inferences and conclusions drawn by the Regional Director, but that such disagreement, in itself, cannot be the basis for demanding a hearing. To request a hearing a party must, in its exceptions, define its disagreements and make an offer of proof to support findings contrary to those of the Regional Director.
Id.
at 868-69 (quoting
NLRB v. Tennessee Packers, Inc., Frosty Morn Division,
A.
During a representation election the Board must provide “a laboratory in which an experiment may be conducted, under conditions as nearly ideal as possible, to determine the uninhibited desires of the employees.”
General Shoe Corp.,
77 N.L. R.B. 124, 127 (1948). The Board must set aside an election if an atmosphere of coercion and fear rendered free choice impossible. Such a determination is difficult to make, and each case must turn on its facts. See
Zeiglers Refuse Collectors, Inc. v. NLRB,
Monark’s objections and supporting affidavits at least suggest that the elections were held in a coercive environment. We note the following alleged incidents: 6
1) During the first week of September, about two months before the November 6th election, an employee described as “a known union supporter” told some workers not to work overtime and that their cars would be damaged if they crossed a picket line (Obj. 15b, App. 132, 230).
2) Irma Holdcraft, an employee, told a group of employees around the middle of September that even if the union came in and called for a strike, she would work. Another employee, a “strong union supporter,” responded, “I’m not saying this will happen here, but it has been known to happen where someone crossing a picket line got bricks and clubs up side their heads” (Obj. 15c, App. 231). Ms. Holdcraft then “stopped talking.” Ibid.
3) Ms. Holdcraft also stated that on another occasion another employee, also a strong union supporter, said that “no one would cross her picket line because she would be prepared” (Obj. 15d, App. 132, 231).
4) Irma Gean Harrison also said she would come to work in the event of a strike. Another employee said that “people can get killed or hurt crossing picket lines” (Obj. 15e, App. 132, 232). Ms. Harrison took this to mean that she could get killed crossing a picket line (App. 232).
5) On November 6, the morning of the election, an employee said, “After the union comes in, people that don’t join the union won’t be here very long” (Obj. 15f, App. 133, 232).
6) As the employees were lining up to vote, Robert White indicated he would not vote. An employee wearing a union T-shirt said, “Just do what I told you, Robert.” White joined the line waiting to vote (Obj. 15g, App. 133, 191).
7) Harry Densmore, an employee who supported the union, had on three separate occasions damaged company property (Obj. 23a, App. 74-75). Monark presented its production manager, E.G. Dendy, who swore that pro-union sentiments motivated these actions and that Densmore intended *358 to scare others into supporting the union (App. 234-35).
8) On October 23, three pro-union employees refused to complete a project (Obj. 23b, App. 138, 239-40) and left Ms. Hold-craft, an anti-union employee, to complete it. This evidently was not how they had divided the work in the past, and Ms. Hold-craft “felt that the reason that the three employees walked off the project was because of her expressed anti-union sentiments as opposed to their pro-union sentiments” (App. 240).
9) On July 30, 1980, a union supporter approached Supervisor Gale Mac Harrison at his home and asked him to help the union organize. Harrison is Ms. Holdcraft’s son-in-law and Irma Gean Harrison’s husband. Harrison refused, stating that as a supervisor he could not properly become involved. The same union supporter, Mark Huff, also went to Ms. Holdcraft’s house and discussed the possibility of Harrison’s helping the union. On September 12,1980, Harrison’s dog became ill. The dog died that night of rat poisoning — according to a veterinarian, either a massive dose recently administered or minor doses over the preceding two weeks. On October 6 another union adherent came to the Harrison home and asked him to support the union and become an “informant” (App. 199) for it. Harrison had owned the dog for 2V2 years. It was kept chained at all times. No neighbors had complained about it. There had been no other dog poisonings in the neighborhood. In fact, a neighbor of the Harrisons had ten dogs, none of them poisoned (see generally Obj. 11, App. 193-201).
These claimed incidents, considered in isolation, would probably be insufficient to raise an inference of coercion and intimidation sufficient to make an evidentiary hearing necessary. But taken together, we think, they do reach that level.
We find the poisoning of the dog especially disturbing. Harrison stated that he had “no facts that anyone from the union organizing effort poisoned my dog. I just believe they did it” (App. 194). In context, it is clear that Harrison’s statement that he had “no facts” meant only that he had no eyewitness or other direct evidence. There was, however, a good deal of circumstantial evidence, if the Harrison affidavits are to be believed, as they must be at this procedural stage of the case. The state of the record on this question would be sufficient to preclude the granting of a motion for summary judgment, if this were a civil action in a federal district court.
The poisoning occurred within a month of what were either acts of sabotage or unusual work disruptions. The company suffered at least several hundred dollars in damages on account of mishaps involving Densmore and could have lost over $1,000 because of the failure of other pro-union employees to complete a project in a routine manner. Acts of sabotage and vandalism may undermine free elections. See
NLRB v. Belcor, Inc.,
We are also concerned with Robert White’s apparent decision to vote only after a union sympathizer said “Just do what I told you, Robert.” This statement may have been innocuous. It does, however, at least suggest that White was pressured into voting.
The first five incidents we have listed relate to threats or comments which were made during the election campaign but which were not directly related to the election. Pro-union employees suggested that strike breakers could suffer bodily harm and damage to their property and that opponents to the union could lose their jobs once the union came in. Because these kinds of threats are remote from the election proceeding itself, they would be insufficient, considered alone, to invalidate the election, but here they must be considered in the broader context of all of the incidents alleged by the company. The threats made during the election campaign against Ms.
*359
Holdcraft, Ms. Harrison, other potential strikebreakers, and anti-union employees, in the context of all the facts of this case, at least suggest that the laboratory conditions necessary for elections may not have been provided. See
Loose Leaf Hardware, Inc. v. NLRB,
It is true that some employees told the ARD that they did not feel intimidated by the union. A hearing, however, is necessary to determine whether the work force as a whole, or a significant portion of it, was intimidated.
7
It is also necessary to decide whether those threatened were engaging in bravura when denying their fear or whether the threats were innocuous and did not spawn any fear. The fact that 33 out of approximately 185 eligible voters did not vote — more than enough to affect the outcome — at least suggests the possibility that many workers were afraid to vote. See
Eliason v. NLRB,
We have recently stated that “even where an incident of misconduct, not insubstantial in nature, is insufficient by itself to show that an election was not an expression of free choice, two or more such incidents, when considered together in the totality of the circumstances, may be deemed sufficient to support such a conclusion.”
Bauer Welding and Metal Fabricators,
The history of
Beaird-Poulan Division, Emerson Electric Co. v. NLRB,
On remand, an administrative law judge held a hearing, afforded the parties full rights of cross-examination, and made credibility determinations. Of the more than twenty specific allegations of misconduct claimed by the company, all but five were discredited, and each of the five remaining incidents was attributed to union supporters, as opposed to union representatives or agents. In addition, none of the five credited incidents actually resulted in any physical harm or violence to employees or their property. The ALJ concluded that the credited incidents, even when taken together, were not sufficiently serious to warrant setting aside the election. On petition for review, this Court affirmed. We noted that each of the coercive allegations listed in our previous opinion had been disbelieved by the ALJ, and we declined to disturb, as an *360 abuse of discretion, the ALJ’s conclusion that the credited incidents were not sufficiently serious to justify disregarding the results of the election. In short, the Board’s order was ultimately enforced, but only after procedures fair to the objecting party had been properly conducted.
In reaching our decision we are mindful of the fact that the parties seem to agree that union supporters and not union agents committed the alleged coercive acts. Employees may not be so intimidated by threats or comments made by a fellow employee as they would be by an ominous statement made by a union agent. Moreover, a union cannot always maintain control over all employees who support it. The focus of our inquiry is not solely on who made the threats. The question is whether threats, by whomever made, created a coercive environment. A threat made by a company or a union agent is a weightier piece of evidence, but threats by adherents of either side may still be probative in a given case. “[Rjepresentation elections will be set aside where nonparty misconduct has taken place and such conduct is shown to have created ‘an atmosphere of fear and reprisal such as to render a free expression of choice impossible.’ ”
NLRB v. Griffith Oldsmobile, Inc., supra,
B.
Monark makes approximately twenty-five objections based on allegedly false promises and misrepresentations made by the union during the election campaign. They are without merit.
The NLRB has vacillated on the issue of when misleading campaign statements should invalidate an election. In
Hollywood Ceramics Co.,
an election should be set aside only where there has been a misrepresentation or other similar campaign trickery, which involves a substantial departure from the truth, at a time which prevents the other party or parties from making an effective reply, so that the misrepresentation, whether deliberate or not, may reasonably be expected to have a significant impact on the election.
Id.
at 224 (footnote omitted). In
Shopping Kart Food Market, Inc.,
The Board enjoys wide discretion when it comes to establishing the procedures necessary to insure fair and free elections,
e.g., NLRB v. A.J. Tower Co.,
Monark would have us apply Shopping Kart prospectively only and analyze its objections in light of Hollywood Ceramics. This we decline to do.
Appellate courts usually apply the law in effect at the time of the appellate decision.
Bradley v. School Board of Richmond,
C.
By objections 8, 9, and 10, the company contends that the union engaged in prohibited last-minute electioneering. Approximately ten minutes before the election Wanda Phillips, a union representative, spoke to several employees. Monark produced no evidence of what she said. Edward Fortson, another union representative, spoke to employees during the election but 50 feet away from the building where the election was being held. The polling place was 40 feet inside the buildings. Again Monark produced no evidence of what was said. These objections do not warrant a hearing.
The Board has held that
“[djuring the voting period
.... sustained conversation with prospective voters
waiting to cast their ballots,
regardless of the content of the remarks exchanged, constitutes conduct which, in itself, necessitates a second election.”
Milchem, Inc.,
The Board held in
Peerless Plywood Co.,
Monark also objects to the election proceedings because the union solicited supervisory support. This argument is wholly without merit. First of all, it is actual supervisory support, not mere solicitation of supervisory support, that may invalidate an election. Moreover,
[supervisory support for a union will invalidate the union’s majority only when the supervisor’s activities (1) cause the employees to believe that the supervisors are acting on behalf of the employer and that the employer favors the union, or (2) lead the employees to support the union because they fear future retaliation by the supervisors.
NLRB v. Wehrenberg Theatres, Inc.,
III.
In sum, we reject the company’s claims of misrepresentation and electioneering, but we agree that its allegations of coercion deserve an evidentiary hearing. On remand the Board must hold an evidentiary hearing to resolve issues of fact raised by objections 15b, c, d, e, f, g, 23a and b, and the last assertion in objection 11. Moreover, if the trier of fact wants to rely on material gathered through an administrative investigation, this information must be available to both parties. In a very similar setting we have held that “the company must be afforded the opportunity to produce evidence that might rebut testimony of union witnesses or at least subject those witnesses to the ‘cleansing rigors of cross-examination.’
NLRB v. Commercial Letter, Inc.,
Enforcement of the Board’s order is denied. The case is remanded for an eviden *363 tiary hearing in accordance with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The Board order is reported at 260 N.L.R.B. No. 74,
. There is no merit to Monark’s argument that the union should be decertified.
. This procedure is in accordance with Board Regulations, 29 C.F.R. § 102.69(c) & (d) (1981 & 1982). On September 15, 1981, after the Board certified the UBC as the exclusive bargaining representative, but before it found that Monark had unlawfully refused to bargain, 29 C.F.R. § 102.69 was amended. The Board assumed that the amended regulations are applicable to this case (App. 284), and we have no reason to disagree.
. The company raised other affirmative defenses but has evidently abandoned them on appeal.
. The amended Board regulations make it absolutely clear that this is the procedure it will follow. 29 C.F.R. § 102.69(d) (1982) says that: “Such hearing shall be conducted with respect to those objections or challenges which the regional director concludes raise substantial and material factual issues.” The ARD cannot rely on the fruits of an administrative investigation to resolve such issues. Erie Coke & Chemical Co., 261 N.L.R.B. No. 8, at 2-3, 109 L.R. R.M. (BNA) 1373, 1374 (1982).
. We recite these allegations only in order to describe Monark’s factual claims. Whether the incidents actually occurred, and whether, if they did, an atmosphere of coercion and fear resulted that materially affected the outcome of the election, are questions of fact to be decided by the Board in the first instance.
. We recognize that in some settings the objected-to comments may be mere banter and not serious threats. See
Abbott Laboratories, Ross Laboratories Div. v. NLRB,
. By holding as we do, we are not necessarily stating our own preference for the Shopping Kart rule, but only acknowledging that the Board acted within its discretion when it readopted it.
. Several of Monark’s objections may be read to contend that the union made misrepresentations involving the Board and its processes. A close reading of the record shows, however, that these objections are also wholly without merit and fail to raise a material issue of fact.
. Even if the union representatives had electioneered, we have doubts whether Peerless Plywood would have been applicable. Fortson and Phillips do not seem to have made a “speech” in front of a “massed assembly.”
. Both sides have briefed the issue of whether the Board erred in reviewing the ARD’s initial rejection of the company’s objections without having before it any ex parte material upon which the ARD relied. The recent trend has been to require that the entire record be before the Board, whether or not there exists a material issue of fact.
NLRB v. Allis-Chalmers Corp.,
