Thе predecessor, Chicago Lamb Packers, employed seven butchers who were represented by Local Union No. 87, Amalgamated Meat Cutters & Butcher Workmen.
I
On July 29, 1970, the Union filed charges of various unfair labor practices against Good Foods. The company responded to the complaint аnd participated in the hearing before the administrative law judge. He found that Good Foods was a successor to Chicago Lamb Packers, and that Good Foods was guilty of the following violations of the National Labor Relations Act:
1. Section 8(a)(3), by discharging six butchers for their union activities;
2. Section 8(a)(5), by refusing to bargain with the Union;
3. Section 8(a) (1), by the above conduct, by coercively interrogating its еmployees and by threatening to close its plant.
Good Foods did not file exceptions to the administrative law judge’s findings and conclusions; it did not file a brief with the Board. The Board found the same violations plus an additional violation of sections 8(a)(1) and (5) in making unilateral changes in wages and other terms and conditions of employment without prior consultation with thе Union.
The Board’s original order, reported at
Section 10(e) (29 U.S.C. § 160(e)), which gоverns enforcement proceedings in the courts of appeals, states in part:
No objection that has not been urged before the Board, its member, agent, or agency, shall be considered by the court, unless the failure or neglect to urge such objection shall be excused because of extraordinary circumstances.
Good Foods urges us to excuse its failure to file exceptions because its attorney was busy appealing his own criminal conviction, defending himself in disbarment proceedings and handling cases for other clients. This is exactly the sort of circumstances courts have refused to call extraordinary under section 10(e). NLRB v. Local 74, Marble, Slate & Stone Polishers,
There are only two categories of cases where courts have found extraordinary circumstances. Filing exceptions one or two days late has been excused when the delay was caused by eаrly mail pickup, snow storm or strike. NLRB v. Marshall Maintenance Corp.,
Failure to file exceptions to the administrative law judge’s findings sometimes is excused where those findings were favorable to the petitioner, were subsequently reversed by the Board, and petitioner had no reason to file exceptions to a decision in its favor. NLRB v. Teamsters Local 282,
Good Foods attempts to bring itself into this category by stating that the administrative law judge’s decision “was acceptable to Good Foods as a compromise.”
Good Foods also offers the announcement of the Burns decision as an “extraordinary circumstance” which excused it from petitioning the Board for
We find no reason to excuse Good Foods’ failure to urge its objections beforе the Board; therefore we are precluded from considering Good Foods’ petition for review.
II
The Union charges that the remedies ordered by the Board
1. Provide a list of names and addresses of all employees since Good Foods began operation;
2. Mail notices to all these employees ;
3. Reimburse discharged employees without deducting their interim earnings ; and
4. Pay the Union lost dues and initiation fees.
The issues of the Board’s power to grant extraordinary remedies and the role of the courts of appeals in supervising that power have become the subject of much litigation and debate in the last few years. See Int’l Union of Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers v. NLRB (Tiidee Products, Inc.),
Remedies of the sort claimed by the Union are never granted absent a history of unlawful antiunion conduct (e. g., J. P. Stevens & Co. v. NLRB,
1. List of names and addresses. The Union already has or is entitled under the Board’s order to names and addresses of its members who were discharged. As bargaining representative for the present employees, the Union may request a list of their names and addresses. United Aircraft Corp., v. NLRB,
2. Mailing notices. The Union cites two cases where the Board ordered mailings, one to counteract a company mailing of its own notice (J. P. Stevens & Co. v. NLRB,
3. Gross back pay. The Union has no precedent for requesting computation of back pay without deduction of earnings from other еmployment. The District of Columbia Circuit, faced with an identical claim, said such a remedy would be punitive and was unnecessary to assure compliance with the Board’s order. Oil, Chemiсal & Atomic Workers Int’l Union v. NLRB,
4. Union dues and initiation fees. This remedy must be deniеd because, with no contract in force, the Board cannot compel the company to accept a security clause. Any loss of dues is speculative. Foоd Store Employees Union v. NLRB,
The Board’s order, as modified November 30,1972, is hereby enforced.
Petitions for review denied and order enforced.
Notes
. The Union was certified as bargaining representative in May 1965. The last contract covered the period from October 1, 1968 until October 1,1971.
. Good Foods’ first brief, p. 6.
. The stock of Good Foods is owned by a corporation whose stock is held by a religious corporation, “Muhammad’s Temple Nо. 2 of the Holy Temple of Islam,” a Muslim organization headed by Elijah Muhammad. The administrative law judge summarized Good Foods’ ultimate defense as an argument that the company’s conduсt must be excused because of its officers’ religious beliefs.
. The Board’s order requires Good Foods to cease and desist from continuing unfair labor practices, and to takе these affirmative steps: offer reinstatement to the six butchers and reimburse them for loss of pay or other benefits, bargain collectively with the Union, make whole all employees for loss of benefits through unilateral changes made by Good Foods, pay the Union health, welfare and pension payments earned by the employees and post the usual notices.
