On September 13, 1989 the National Labor Relations Board affirmed an Administrative Law Judge’s finding that the respondent Lee Hotel Corporation violated §§ 8(a)(1) and (3) of the National Labor Relations Act by discharging four of its employees for their involvement in union activity. Thе employees worked as cocktail waitresses and bartenders in the hotel’s bar and lounge. The Board affirmed the ALJ’s Order that the Hotel reinstate the employees and awarded them backpay to make them whole for the loss of earnings and othеr benefits they suffered as a result of the illegal discharges.
The ALJ subsequently held a backpay hearing and, on March 25, 1992, the Board issued a Supplemental Decision and Order adopting the ALJ’s backpay award with slight modifications. The Board now seeks enforcement of that Order.
The Hotel contends, that, because the employees reported less tip income to the Internal Revenue Service than they reported to the Regional Director of the NLRB, the ALJ, in his backpay award, should not have awarded a greater amount of tip income than the employees reported on their income tax returns. To support its assertions, the Hotel argues that the ALJ’s findings were not supported by a preponderance of the evidence and that the ALJ erred by relying on
Hacienda Hotel & Casino,
A. Decision of the ALJ
At the hearing held before the ALJ, the employees testified that they received average tip amounts greater than the amount they reported on their income tax returns. The ALJ found the employees’ testimony credible because, in part, it was consistent with the bar revenues for the relevant time period and with the calendar of events at the Great Western Forum and the Hollywood Racetrack, both of which are located in close proximity to the Hotel. Aso, the ALJ noted that the employеes adhered to their testimony even though they were aware that they could be prosecuted and penalized for failing to report their full income to the IRS. Crediting the employees’ testimony, the ALJ calculated the backpay award using an amount of tip income greater than what the employees reported to the IRS.
The ALJ’s decision adopted the Board’s rationale from Hacienda Hotel and Oyster House, that “failure to accurately report tip income was a matter best left to the IRS. To do otherwise would ‘frustrate the purpose of the [NLRA] by allowing the Respondent as wrongdoer to benefit from [the discrimina-tee’s] failure to accurately report [their] income to the IRS.’ ”
On March 25, 1992, the Board affirmed the ALJ’s findings and backpay computation with slight modifications.
B. Hacienda Hotel and Oyster House
Respondent Hotel argues that the Board erred in affirming the ALJ’s backpay аward because the ALJ relied on
Hacienda Hotel & Casino,
In
Hacienda Hotel,
the Board affirmed an ALJ’s backpay award to an employee who was discriminatorily discharged. The award was partly based on an amount of tip income that was greater than what the employee previously rеported to the IRS. In affirming the award, the Board stated that it was not condoning the employee’s behavior or ignor
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ing other and equally important Congressional objectives. The Board reasoned that, because the issue of the employee’s accuracy in completing her income tax returns was now a matter of public record, it was best left to the IRS which would be given a copy of the Board’s decision. The Ninth Circuit enforced the Board’s Order without a published opinion.
Hacienda Hotel & Casino v. N.L.R.B.,
In Original Oyster House, the ALJ based backpay awаrds, in part, on tip amounts that were greater than what the employees reported to the IRS. The Board affirmed the ALJ’s Order citing Hacienda Hotel. The Board noted that it whs mindful of the “considerations pertaining to the claimants’ contrary income tax disclosures to the Internal Rеvenue Service” and, therefore, it furnished a copy of its decision to the IRS.
The Third Circuit enforced the Board’s Order in
N.L.R.B. v. Louton, Inc.,
1.
The Hotel contends that the ALJ erred in relying on Hacienda Hotel and Oyster House because they were decided by three-member panels of the Board. 29 U.S.C. § 153(b) states that the “Board is authorized to delegate to any group of three or more members any or all of the powers which it may itself exercise.” Also, “three members of the Board shall, at all times, constitute a quorum of the Board, except that* two members shаll constitute a quorum” when a case is decided by a three-member panel. The statute establishes no limits on when the Board may delegate its authority to a- three-member panel. Therefore, the Board had the authority to delegate the Hacienda Hotel and Oyster House cases tо three-member panels of the Board. The ALJ did not err by relying on these cases.
2.
The Hotel also contends that the ALJ and the Board should have rejected
Hacienda Hotel
and
Oyster House
because reliance on these cases' results in a failure of the Board to reconcile the two federal statutes applicable in this case — the NLRA and the Internal Revenue Code. The Hotel relies on
Southern Steamship Co. v. N.L.R.B.,
In Southern Steamship, the Board ordered elections for employees on board the petitioner’s vessels. The Union objected to the presence of the company’s representative at the election and therefore none was admitted by the Board. The Union won the election but the company refused to bargain with the Union arguing that the election was void because its representative was prohibited from being present at the election. As a result of the refusal to bargain, several crew members went on strike and five of these were discharged.
The Board ultimately found that the strike was caused by petitioner’s unfair labor practices and ordered reinstatement of the discharged crew members. Thе Third Circuit enforced the order.
The Supreme Court held that the Board abused its discretion in ordering reinstatement of the crew members because the strike violated criminal laws prohibiting mutiny and the incitement of revolt on shipboard and the Board should have considered
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these statutes in fashioning a remedy under the NLRA.
In
Sure-Tan v. N.L.R.B.,
The ALJ found that Sure-Tan’s actions constituted an unfair labor practice. The Board adopted the ALJ’s recommendation that the company be ordered to cеase and desist from various unfair labor practices.
The Board rejected the ALJ’s backpay recommendation. The ALJ recommended that, since backpay is normally tolled during periods in which employees, such as these, were not availablе for employment, an ordinary backpay award could not be ordered. Therefore, the ALJ suggested that the Board consider awarding four weeks of backpay in order to compensate the illegally discharged employees and also to deter such violations in the future.
The Board' modified the ALJ’s backpay award finding that the record contained no evidence that the employees had not already returned to the United States. Thus, the Board ordered the conventional remedy of reinstatеment with backpay.
The Seventh Circuit enforced the Board’s Order' with modifications. The court held that, to satisfy the NLRA, some minimum backpay award should be ordered. The court noted that the discriminatees may not be lawfully available for employment in the United Statеs before the date of the offers of reinstatement and therefore would receive no backpay. To effectuate the policies of the NLRA, the court suggested that the Board award a flat amount of six months backpay.
NLRB v. Sure-Tan,
The Supreme Court thеreafter held that the court of appeals erred by not conditioning its backpay award on the employee’s availability for employment in the United States under the Immigration and Nationality Act. It held that, in fashioning its award, the Board is required to consider other equally important Congressional objectives. “By conditioning ... reinstatement on the employees’ legal reentry, a potential conflict with the INA is thus avoided. Similarly, in computing backpay, the employees must be deemed ‘unavailable’ for work ... during any period when they were not lawfully entitled to be present and employed in the United States.”
United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners v. N.L.R.B.,
The Court distinguished
Southern Steamship
because, in that case, the Board’s order directly weakened the effectiveness of a statutory prohibition against mutiny by crew members. According to the Court,
Southern Steamship
did not require the Board to “mechanically accept standards elaborated by another agency under a different stаtute for wholly different purposes.”
These cases taken together require that, when the Board fashions a remedy under the NLRA without any consideration for the conflicting terms of another statute, i.e. if thе Board wholly ignores equally important Congressional objectives, the courts should refuse to enforce that Order. The Board is not required, however, to mechanically accept standards elaborated by a different agency under another statutе.
In this case, the ALJ and the Board factored into their decisions the employees’ alleged violations of the IRC. The ALJ decided to credit the employees’ testimony concerning their average tip income, noting that their testimony could subject them tо criminal prosecution and penalties imposed by the IRS. The Board also explained that it planned to send a copy of its decision to the IRS to take any action it deemed appropriate. Furthermore, the Board ordered that the employees receive the appropriate amount of backpay “minus income tax with-holdings required by Federal and state laws.”
Thus, neither the ALJ nor the Board ignored the conflicting provisions of another statute as in Southern Steamship and Sure-Tan. The orders reconciled the twо statutes in a reasonable way. Thus, we reject the Hotel’s argument that the ALJ’s reliance on Hacienda Hotel and Oyster House resulted in a failure to reconcile the NLRA and the IRC.
C. ALJ’s Findings of Fact
Finally, the Hotel argues that the Board erred in affirming the ALJ’s findings regarding the amount of the .employees’ tip income. We disagree. The ALJ determined that the employeеs were testifying truthfully despite the fact that they were exposing themselves to possible criminal prosecution and penalties for failing to report their full income to the IRS. The ALJ also found that the overall bar revenues and the schedule of events at the Forum supported the employees’ testimony.
The ALJ’s credibility determinations should not be reversed unless inherently incredible or patently unreasonable.
N.L.R.B. v. Don Burgess Constrs. Corp.,
