The National Labor Relations Board applies for enforcement of its order finding that the United Aircraft Corporation, Hamilton Standard Division (the Company) violated various provisions of the National Labor Relations Act: sections 8(a)(1) and (3) by withholding a
I
The relevant facts, as found by the administrative law judge and the Board, are as follows. Prior to March 1970, the Company’s employees at its plant in Broad Brook, Connecticut were unorganized. In that period, however, the Union represented employees at other Company plants, and about April 1969, the Company and the Union negotiated a three-year contract covering the Company’s plant at Windsor Locks, Connecticut. That agreement called for an eight per cent increase on April 21, 1969, followed by three per cent increases on the same date in 1970 and 1971. Shortly after the Windsor Locks agreement was executed, the Company posted a general notice at its Broad Brook plant announcing that all hourly paid employees would receive an eight per cent wage increase on April 21, 1969, and three per cent increases on April 20, 1970 and April 19, 1971.
The eight per cent increase at Broad Brook was put into effect, but the three per cent increase one year later was not. That failure of the Company to do what it had said it would is the principal subject of this proceeding. In the period before April 1970, the Union succeeded in organizing the employees at the Broad Brook plant. After an election, the Union was certified as their representative on April 16, 1970. The Company did not put the three per cent increase into effect four days later, as scheduled, and on May 13, the Union requested it to do so. About a week later, the Company replied, indicating its readiness to begin negotiations with the Union and asking it to submit its contract proposals. On May 27, the Company again wrote the Union, for the first time stating that the promised increase would not be put into effect immediately, but adding that it could be considered in the forthcoming negotiations. After a further exchange of letters, the Union, on July 6, filed a variety of unfair labor practice charges. Finally, on July 9, the Company sent a letter to the Union, putting the increase into effect retroactively, but accusing the Union of failing to bargain in good faith and of causing the delay in the implementation of the increase. This letter made clear the Company’s belief that the scheduled increase became subject to negotiation once the Union had been certified. The Company distributed the July 9 letter to the employees in the bargaining unit.
On the basis of these findings, the administrative law judge concluded
With minor exceptions not here relevant, a three member Board panel, one member dissenting, adopted the findings and conclusions of the administrative law judge. 199 N.L.R.B. No. 68 (Oct. 11, 1972). Additionally, the Board concluded that distribution of the July 9 letter to the unit employees independently violated section 8(a)(1).
II
Withholding of the Wage Increase
A threshold issue before the Board was whether the scheduled April 20, 1970 wage increase was part of the conditions of employment at the Broad Brook plant. The Board found that it was, and the Company on this appeal contends vigorously that it was not. We think that the Board’s finding is supported by substantial evidence.
It is clear that conditions of employment include not only what an employer has already granted but also what it has announced it intends to grant. E. g., Armstrong Cork Co. v. NLRB,
Once it is decided that the increase was one of the conditions of employment at Broad Brook, the conclusion that the withholding was unlawful readily follows. As we recently observed, few principles of labor law are more firmly established than that an employer violates sections 8(a)(1) and (5) where, as here, it alters conditions of employment without notifying or consulting with the union that represents its employees. Firch Baking Co. v. NLRB,
The Company maintains, however, that it was entitled to withhold the wage increase in order to improve its bargaining position in the anticipated negotiations with the Union. It argues that it was not required to grant the increase as a “down payment” to the Union but could lawfully make it part of the “entire economic package” to be offered. Essentially, the Company is claiming that it had a “legitimate and substantial” business justification for its conduct. Id. But where, as here, the Board has reasonably concluded that employer conduct is “ ‘inherently destructive’ of important employee rights,” the Board may find that the conduct is unlawful even if the employer produces evidence of such a business justification. Id.; Local 155, Molders Union v. NLRB,
On this phase of the case, one further point deserves discussion. Citing NLRB v. Dorn’s Transportation Co.,
Accordingly, we enforce that portion of the Board’s order finding that withholding the increase violated sections 8(a)(1), (3) and (5) of the Act.
Ill
Distribution of the July 9 Letter
Here, too, we are confronted with a threshold issue of consequence. The complaint issued by the General Counsel did not specify either the July 9 letter or its distribution as an independent violation of section 8(a)(1). The Company argues that, as a result, it was deprived of adequate notice of, and opportunity to litigate, this supposed violation. The Board takes a contrary position. We agree with the Company and, accordingly, deny enforcement of that portion of the Board’s order.
In considering this issue, we are guided by the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) and the Board’s own regulations. NLRB v. Majestic Weaving Co.,
The Company appears to have a substantial claim that the July 9 letter constitutes communication protected under section 8(c).
We enforce the Board’s order insofar as it is based on the conclusions that the Company violated sections 8(a)(1) and (5) by withholding the April 20, 1970 wage increase without notifying the Union and that the Company violated sections 8(a)(1) and (3) by withholding that increase because its employees had obtained union representation. We deny enforcement of the order insofar as it is based on the conclusion that the Company violated section 8(a)(1) by distributing the July 9 letter to its employees.
Notes
. The administrative law judge dismissed several unfair labor practice charges which are not involved in this appeal.
. In making this determination, the Board stated without further elaboration that it agreed with the administrative law judge’s implicit conclusion that the letter was not protected communication under section 8(e).
. On this view of the case, we need not discuss the administrative law judge’s alternative finding that the withholding was unlawfully motivated.
. In Chevron, there was no alteration of an announced condition of employment. Rather the employer there modified,' with respect to one recently-organized plant, its ordinary practice of offering as bargaining proposals at those organized plants not covered by an industry-wide collective bargaining agreement the wage increases it had just negotiated in the most recent industry-wide contract.
. See the Board’s opinion in Crosby,
. During a representation campaign, as in Dorn’s and Newberry, an employer has no one to consult to escape the alleged dilemma. The union is not yet the bargaining representative, and the employees are the very persons whom the employer may be accused of bribing or coercing. Even after a union becomes bargaining representative, of course, its response to an employer’s efforts to consult may be uncooperative or ambiguous. But we do not think an employer can justifiably claim that it is faced with a legal dilemma unless it first seeks union guidance.
. While paragraph 15 of the complaint alleges that the acts mentioned in paragraph 12b violated § 8(a)(1), this paragraph obviously alleges only a violation of § 8(a)(1) that is derivative of the § 8(a)(5) violation.
. Member Kennedy dissented from the Board’s decision on this ground, 199 N.L.R.B. No. 68 at 5-6, and the Company’s arguments that the letter would be recognized by the employees as just another in a series of polemical exchanges between the Company and the Union and that the Union was quite capable of defending itself by distributing its own version of the facts have some force.
. The Board argues that the Company was not prejudiced by the lack of specificity in the complaint, claiming that statements in the briefs to the administrative law judge and to the Board put the Company on notice that distribution of the letter could be regarded as an independent violation of § 8(a)(1). But since the Company may well have been able to introduce persuasive evidence in support of its claim of protected communication, the time to provide notice was before the hearing, not after. Cf. Majestic Weaving, ’supra,
. We choose to deny enforcement rather than remand because over three years have elapsed since the letter was distributed to the employees and because we see no good reason to allow the Board to reopen the proceedings at this point. Of. Majestic Weaving, supra,
