The National Labor Relations Board [NLRB or. Board] petitions ■ this court for enforcement of its order against Robert B. Gordon, I.W.G., Inc. [I.W.G.], Con-Bru, Inc. [Con-Bru], and Arlene, Inc. [Arlene]. Respondent, Mr. Gordon, cross-petitions this court for review of the Board’s decision. The case came before the Board on a complaint issued by the General Counsel, following an investigation of charges filed by Road Sprinkler Fitters Local Union No. 669, U.A., AFL-CIO [the Union]. After an administrative law judge [AL J] conducted a hearing on the charges set forth in the Board’s complaint, the Board adopted the ALJ’s decision with a slight modification. The Board essentially decided that Respondent “abandoned and subsequently created” several corporations, namely, I.W.G., Con-Bru, and Arlene, “primarily to avoid paying his employees pursuant to an extant collective-bargaining agreement and to evade a statutory obligation to bargain with the Union over the terms and conditions of employment.” I.W.G., Inc., 322 N.L.R.B. No. 12, 1997-98 NLRB Dec. (CCH) ¶ 16,108, at 33,441,
Respondent claims that there is a procedural impediment to the Board’s conclusion that Arlene was an alter ego of I.W.G. and Con-Bru.
After reviewing the record and the Board’s contentions, we hold that Respondent was not accorded his due process rights as to the Arlene alter ego claim. In its Decision and Order, the NLRB found that the Arlene alter ego claim had a sufficient connection to the complaint for Respondent to anticipate the Arlene alter ego issue. See I.W.G., Inc., 1997-
The Board’s second articulated basis for concluding Respondent had notice was the naming of Arlene in the complaint. The fact that Arlene was named in the complaint does not by itself provide a sufficiently close connection to the alter ego claim to warrant adequate notice of that unalleged claim against Arlene. Our review of the facts of this case convinces us that Respondent was unaware that the Arlene alter ego claim was raised in the proceeding. Even during the course of the evidentiary hearing, Respondent received no notice of the claim that Arlene was an alter ego. Although the General Counsel amended the complaint to dismiss Connie Gordon as a party, see Petitioner’s App., Vol. I at 196, he intentionally did not amend the complaint to add the Arlene alter ego claim. See Petitioner’s App., Vol. II at 687; NLRB v. Tamper, Inc.,
Clearly, the Arlene alter ego theory was not fully and fairly litigated. The NLRB asserted in its order that the Arlene claim was fully and fairly litigated because “considerable evidence” relevant to the Arlene alter ego claim was presented and challenged at the hearing. I.W.G., Inc., 1997-
The' Board contends that even if Respondent was denied due process, the remedy of another hearing is unnecessary because Respondent has not identified specific, unconsidered evidence that contravenes the Arlene alter ego theory. See NLRB Br. at 32. We disagree. In his brief, Respondent articulates unconsidered evidence, with sufficient specificity to merit a hearing that adequately comports with procedural due process. See Robert B. Gordon’s Opening Br. at 30-31. Under the facts of this ease,
The Board pierced the corporate veils of each of the three corporate respondents to find Respondent Mr. Gordon personally liable. Whether a corporate veil ought to be pierced is a question of law, and we give “great weight” to the Board’s determination that the situation justified piercing and uphold that determination if it is within “reasonable bounds.”- NLRB v. Greater Kansas City Roofing,
It is impossible for us to accurately review the Board’s veil-piercing analysis because it is based in substantial part on the unlitigated conclusion that Arlene is a single employer/alter ego of I.W.G. and Con-Bru. The two-prong analysis provided by Greater Kansas City Roofing for veil piercing was not applied to each corporate respondent individually; rather, evidence of the operations of I.W.G., Con-Bru, and Arlene was combined to support the Board’s conclusion that the situation justified piercing. See I.W.G., Inc., 1997-
In his petition for review, Respondent Mr. Gordon complains that there was no specific allegation in the complaint addressing the failure of Con-Bru and Arlene to apply the union contract terms to their non-union employees. In his Decision, the ALJ acknowledged that this issue was not specifically
We deny Respondent’s Motion to Strike the Union-Intervenor’s Brief. We also deny Respondent’s Motion to Supplement the Record with his Post-Hearing Brief to the ALJ because that brief was unnecessary to our determination of this case. We hold that, based on the record on appeal, the notice to Respondent and Arlene with respect to the Arlene alter ego claim was insufficient to satisfy due process standards and that this issue was not fairly and fully litigated.
Notes
. I.W.G., Con-Bru, and Arlene all failed to file exceptions with the Board to the ALJ's recommended decision and order against them. None of them filed an answer to the Board’s application for enforcement of its order. Since the Arlene alter ego issue was never pled, we will not enter a default judgment on that issue. In all other respects, we grant the Board’s Motion for Entiy of Default Judgment against those corporate respondents. See Fed. R.App. P. 15(b); NLRB v. Bell Co.,
. We recognize that NLRB v. Jordan Bus Co.,
. We are not persuaded by, and do not discuss at length, Respondent’s argument that the Board engaged in misconduct justifying an equity court in refusing relief because of bad faith or unclean hands. See Robert B. Gordon’s-Reply Br: at 19.
