Thе Labor Board asks us to enforce an order that requires an employer to bargain with a union and take other steps to remedy alleged misconduct committed by the employer many years ago. In 1980, Thill, a nonunion metal fabricator, announced that it was cutting the wages of all its employees by 15 percent because of business adversity. This announcement stimulated union organizing activity and in a representаtion election conducted in March of the following year the auto workers’ union was elected, by a two-thirds vote, the exclusive bargaining representative for a unit consisting of the company’s 70 to 80 production and maintenance employees. Bargaining ensued, but an agreement was never reached. The union filed unfair labor practices charges the same year (1981), and two years later an administrative law judge issued a remedial order to which the company promptly filed exceptions with (i.e., appealed to) the Board. In 1990, having had the case under advisement for seven years, the Board finally issued a brief opinion adopting (i.e., affirming) the administrative law judge’s decision without remarking on its delay in deciding the appeal. The company filed a motion for reconsideration, which the Board kept under advisement for another year before denying in a two-and-a-half-page (double-spaced) order. The order stated that employee turnover during the seven years in which the Board had had the matter under advisement was irrelevant to the appropriateness of the bargaining order.
The order that the Board asks us to enforce has three parts. The first, which is entirely conventional, directs the company to cease and desist from the type of unfair labor practices that the Board found had been committed during the election campaign and the ensuing, though abortive, bargaining. We think this part of
The company takes vigorous exception to the Board’s finding that it promised to restore the 15 percent wage cut, then broke its promise in order to punish the workers for voting in the union. Had the company merely said that the wage cut was temporary and would be reexamined in light of changes in the business environment, there would be no promise and therefore no basis for the Board’s finding. And that was all the company said — in writing. But there was a good deal of evidence, which the Board was permitted to credit, that Mr. Thill, the company’s president, orally promised to restore the wage cut. According to one witness, “He promised that as of July 1, 1981, w'e would either get our fifteen percent back or he would close the plant_ [SJomeone did ask the question could we have that in writing. And he said he was a man of his word. He didn’t need to.” •
What is more, when the company rescinded the cut and raised wages to their previous level, it delayed the effective date of the raise for the workers in the bargaining unit, i.e., the workers represented by the union. Its defense against what on its face seems unlawful discriminatiоn against workers for exercising their statutory right to bargain collectively, 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1);
NLRB v. Industrial Erectors, Inc.,
The company also takes vigorous exception to the finding that it was unreasonable in insisting, during the bargaining sessions, that the union agree not to solicit members or engage in other activities “on Company time, except as expressly permitted under subsequent provisions of this agreement.” The Board believed that the workers might misunderstand this to mean that they could not engage in any union activities on the company’s property, and therefore that the cqmpany was bargaining in bad faith in insisting on the provision.
Republic Aviation Corp. v. NLRB,
We cannot, however, uphold the Board’s finding that the company engaged in “coercive interrogation.” If a company’s foremen or other supervisory employees question workers in a manner calculat
The reference to “captive audience,” and particularly the contrast drawn between “ferret[ing] out” and “idle conversation,” make it seem that the Board will deem any attempt by an employer to discover its workers’ attitude toward a possible strike call by the union “coercive.” This position is difficult to understand if we are correct that interrogation of workers is not a per se violation of the National Labor Relations Act — as the Board itself affects to believe. See Hotel Employees & Restaurant Employees Union v. NLRB, supra. For the only relevant interrogation is that concerning labor relations. The subject matter of the interrogation, therefore, cannot condemn it. Only the manner. If the foreman asks loaded questions containing implicit threats of reprisal for the exercise of statutorily protected rights, or won’t accept the worker’s refusal to answer his questions, or badgers the worker with incessant questions that interfere with his work, then the interrogation is “coercive” in the sense of likely to interfere with the exercise of statutory rights. But merely to inquire into a worker’s attitude toward a strike call cannot be rеgarded in that light.
Of course the company is interested in possible differences between the rank and file and the union leadership concerning a strike; and if the Board had a rule that any attempt to “ferret out” those differences is unlawful because it weakens the union’s ability to present a united front to the employer, we would have a different case. But we do not understand the Board to have such a rule. Thе employer’s right to play divide and conquer is not unlimited; in particular it is forbidden to make side deals with individual employees that override the collective bargaining contract.
J.I. Case Co. v. NLRB,
The Board’s lawyer defends the finding of unlawful interrogation by reference to a coercive atmosphere created by the company’s other unfair labor practices. This defense is improper because it was not a ground of the Board’s decision, or of the administrative law judge’s deсision, which the Board’s decision in the main adopts and which refers to the “surrounding circumstances” as additional evidence of coercion but does not explain which circumstances it means. The defense thus violates the Chenery doctrine. It is an intrinsically weak ground, to boot, in a case such as this where the other unfair labor practices are not flagrant, but indeed are gossamer thin. A couple of reprimands, but no discharges; typographical errors that may have been deliberate; a broken promise; a minor change in a benefit plan; a semantic wrangle — unfair labor practices, yes, but not of a sort likely to create an atmosphere of fear and intimidation. The Board was wise not to mention “coercive atmosphere”; but wise or not, its counsel is not permitted to defend its decision on grоunds other than its own.
We would have a different case if testimony by the interrogated workers themselves had established that a course of interrogation which to the reader of a cold transcript might seem entirely innocuous was subtly but effectively coercive. On this all the administrative judge said (the Board said nothing) was that several of the workers questioned by the foreman “gave a vague answer or none at all” and that “other employees kept a record of the questions and submitted the list to the Union all of which showed that the employees felt restrained.” The second point would be telling if true, but it is not, since the administrative law judge had already found that the union steward had requested the employees to record the questions asked them. To treat this as evidence of coercion would empower the union to prеvent all. interrogation simply by asking questioned workers to write down the questions. As for the first point, we cannot see how giving a vague answer or none at all could be considered evidence of coercion. On the contrary, the more complete the employee’s response to questions, the stronger the inference of coercion. The administrative law judge’s point amounts to saying that if a suspect refuses to confess to the police, this shows that he must have been subject to coercive interrogation!
The second part of the Board’s order directs the company to reinstate the 15 percent wage cut for members of the bargaining unit retroactive to the date on which it was reinstated for the company’s other workers, with interest since 1981. Since we agree that the failure of the company to make the reinstated wage retroactive for the workers represented by the union was an unfair labor practice, those workers’ entitlement to backpay cannot be doubted. The question is interest — a potentially impressive sum after eleven years, though we have not been told how much. The company argues that the amount of interest is due largely to the Board’s inexplicablе delays in deciding the company’s appeal from the administrative law judge’s decision and the company’s motion to reconsider the Board’s decision in that appeal. That is true. The Board took eight years to decide those two matters; it should have taken far less time. But the company was not harmed, so far as the backpay order is concerned. The Board’s delays meant that the company had that much more time to enjoy the use of the money that it should have given its workers back in 1981. The interest component of the backpay order merely transfers the fund built up by the Board’s delays to its rightful owners.
NLRB v. J.H. Rutter-Rex Mfg. Co.,
In its order denying Thill’s motion for reconsideration the Bоard finally mentioned the delay but was content to pronounce the possibility of employee turnover irrelevant: “As the Respondent’s unfair labor practices began shortly after the Charging Party’s [i.e., the union’s] certification [as collective bargaining representative], the bargaining order restores the status quo ante and employee turnover raises no ‘unusual circumstances’ affecting that status.” It distinguished оur decision in
Montgomery Ward,
where we vacated a bargaining order in circumstances similar to those of this case, as a case in which the bargaining order had been issued in favor of a union that had lost the representation election. That made it, in one respect, indeed a more egregious case for a bargaining order; on the other hand the election had been close, the Board had had the cаse under advisement for a “mere” six years (not eight as here), and, most important, the company had been guilty of a “myriad of serious and far-reaching unfair labor practices in flagrant violation of the Act.”
The Board’s lawyer reminds us that his client has broad discretion in the formulation of remedial orders. Many cases say this. E.g.,
NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co.,
At argument the Board’s lawyer under questioning conceded that a remand for reconsideration of the bargaining order would be proper even if we upheld all the unfair labor practice findings, which we hаve not done. But a remand for reconsideration of the bargaining order would not be good enough. Suppose the Board reconsidered and reissued the order, and again sought enforcement (or the company petitioned for review). By the time the order was enforced — if it was enforced — and all further judicial remedies exhausted, it would be 1993 or 1994, assuming, as we have no right to do, no further extraordinary delаys in this proceeding. Here as in
NLRB v. Village IX, Inc.,
To summarize, the cease and desist order will be enforced if modified consistently with this opinion. The backpay order will be enforced in full. The bargaining order will not be enforced.
ENFORCEMENT GRANTED IN PART, DENIED IN Part.
