Petitioner P.S.C. Resources refines waste oil. During the period relevant to this case, at the Watertown, Massachusetts facility, five drivers under the direction of the manager, John Lee, were responsible for soliciting, purchasing and collecting waste oil that was thereafter shipped to petitioner’s refineries. The drivers were paid a weekly salary, regardless of the amount of oil they collected, but they also received incentive bonuses depending on their weekly collection record. Following a meeting in late February/early March, 1976 with petitioner’s general manager, William White, at which grievances were aired, the drivers began to discuss joining a union. On May 6, 1976, four drivers, including Thomas Carleton, signed union authorization cards. On May 13,1976, Carleton was dismissed by Lee.
In this petition for review and cross-application for enforcement of a decision and order of the National Labor Relations Board, we are called upon to review the Board’s findings that petitioner committed several unfair labor practices. In specific, the Board adopted, without discussion or alteration, the substantive findings of the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) that petitioner coercively interrogated its employees and created an impression of surveillance in violation of § 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act (“Act”), 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1) (1970), and that petitioner discharged Thomas Carleton because of his union activities in violation of § 8(a)(1) and (3) of the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1), (3).
Our review is limited to “whether on the record as a whole there is substantial evidence to support the Board’s findings.”
NLRB v. Pearl Bookbinding Co.,
I. Coercive Interrogation and the Impression of Surveillance
The ALJ’s findings that petitioner’s manager, John Lee, coercively interrogated employees and gave them an impression of surveillance is based on both Lee’s testimony and the testimony of employees. Lee testified that he began asking employees if they knew anything about the union in the fall of 1975. His inquiries were at the behest of the president of petitioner who was “concerned” about the rumor Lee reported that the men at the Watertown facility were organizing a union. Lee was informed in late 1975 or early 1976 that a concentrated effort to unionize had been launched. Lee gave no indication in his testimony that his inquiries ever ceased. In light of his boss’ directive and the information Lee received of increased union activity, the ALJ correctly inferred that Lee’s questioning continued well into 1976. To all his questions with one exception, Lee testified that the employees indicated their ignorance of any union activity.
Employees testified that Lee asked them individually if they knew anything about the union on several occasions, including in May, only a few days after they signed union cards and several days prior to Carleton’s discharge. In response to the May questioning, Mr. Giordano testified that he told Lee the men had signed union cards. Mr. Anderson stated that Lee asked him if he, Anderson, started the union and that Lee said he knew Anderson held a union card. Anderson replied that he did not start the union, that the company knew when it hired him that he held a card and that he had also signed a union authorization card. In response to Lee’s further question about who gave him the authorization card, he answered that he did not remember. Mr.. Purcell reported that Lee twice asked him if he knew anything about the union and twice stated that Lee knew that Purcell did indeed know something. Both times, Purcell lied and denied any *383 knowledge because he was afraid he “might be out the door” if Lee thought he was involved in the union.
The ALJ found that Lee’s conversations with Purcell, whose testimony he credited, had created an impression of surveillance. We agree that Lee’s expressions of knowledge of Purcell’s union activities were intended to and did in fact give Purcell an impression of surveillance in violation of § 8(a)(1).
See, e. g., NLRB v. Prince Macaroni Manufacturing Co.,
Several factors persuasively support the ALJ’s finding that Lee coercively interrogated the employees.
See generally Bourne v. NLRB,
II. Discharge of Carleton
Whether the “dominant” reason for the discharge of Carleton was his union activities rather than his work performance is a more difficult question. To find a violation of § 8(a)(1) and (3), “[w]here there are both proper and allegedly improper grounds for discharge, the Board’s burden is to find affirmatively that the discharge would not have occurred but for the improper reason.”
Coletti’s Furniture, Inc. v. NLRB,
The fact that Lee did not fire all four drivers but only Carleton bears on the ultimate question of whether Carleton’s union activities were the “dominant” reason for the discharge. Petitioner argues that if union activities were the motive, Lee should have fired all the men; that the only factor that distinguished Carleton from the other three was not his union participation but rather his poor job performance and misconduct which allegedly formed the basis for the discharge. Only one incident supports circumstantially respondent’s position that Lee believed Carleton to be the instigator. In late April, Lee passed through the group of drivers who had been discussing the union. While one driver motioned for silence, Carleton said that he did not care if Lee heard, since the men had already signed union cards. Carleton testified that he spoke loud enough for Lee to hear but that he did not know if Lee actually heard. The ALJ found only that it was “quite possible” that Lee had heard this remark and consequently had singled Carleton out as the leader. 1 In addition to this incident, Lee testified that based on past encounters, he perceived Carleton to be quite outspoken about his grievances. Lee may have inferred from this characteristic that Carleton was the union instigator.
Standing alone, this evidence would not persuade us that Carleton’s union activities were the basis for the discharge.
See NLRB v. Pioneer Plastics Corp., supra,
Although this catalogue of employment problems is substantial, several factors persuasively indicate that these reasons were not the dominant reason for the discharge. Most significantly, even Lee admitted that Carleton had a good record for quality and quantity oil and that he could not recall any alterations for the worse following Carleton’s April expression of unwillingness to make an extra effort. The most important job qualification — the ability to collect large quantities of oil — Carleton more than adequately satisfied. In addition, at the time of the discharge, the company was particularly short-handed. A persistent record of low oil collection consistently motivated Lee’s decision to discharge in the past; it was not his general practice to discharge for occasional bad days such as Carleton had. Water mixed with oil to varying degrees was a daily occurrence that never occasioned even a warning. Admittedly, both the first and last incidents involved unusually large quantities of water, however, on neither occasion was Anderson, Carleton’s partner, so much as warned. 4
Lee’s reaction after each incident further belies petitioner’s position. No disciplinary action was even threatened after any of the incidents. Even after the last
*386
incident, Lee gave no indication of his intentions, allegedly formulated the night before, simply because, he explained, he “did not feel like it.” In fact, Lee’s actions the day of dismissal facilitated Carleton’s return to a normal routine. Most telling is the fact that Lee discharged Carleton within an hour or two of the NLRB telephone call. In contrast to Lee’s delayed reaction following the last incident, Lee immediately called Carleton to task after the New Hampshire episode. However, even after that more serious confrontation, Lee continued to have faith in Carleton’s ability to work hard for the company. At trial, Lee’s testimony that he might have fired Carleton then if he had known Carleton had lied to him about his stops necessarily implies that Lee was convinced at the time by Carleton’s explanation that Carleton had in fact made the stops. Thus, Lee may not have even actually considered seriously the charge of falsifying records, the most grievous charge presently against Carleton.
See Trustees of Boston University v. NLRB, supra,
III. Procedural Errors
Petitioner has also raised various procedural errors, none of which require reversal. Petitioner first claims that it was denied procedural due process because, pursuant to Board Regulation 29 C.F.R. §§ 102.118(a), (b)(1), 7 both general counsel and the ALJ denied access to pretrial statements of general counsel’s witnesses, all employees of the company, until after the witnesses had testified at trial.
Board proceedings must conform to the due process requirements of the fifth amendment and “so far as practicable, be conducted in accordance with the rules of evidence . . ..” Section 10(b) of the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 160(b). However, neither of these restrictions requires the Board to grant the full panoply of pretrial discovery weapons available to litigants in federal court.
NLRB
v.
Interboro Contractors, Inc.,
The specific regulation at issue in the instant appeal permits access to a Board witness’ pretrial statement taken by the Board staff only after the witness has testified and only for the purpose of cross-examination. The Board regulation is similar to the Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3500, which makes available in a criminal trial, a pretrial statement of a government witness after direct examination. Since criminal defendants are only entitled to pretrial statements after the witness has testified, a fortiori, a defendant in an unfair labor practice proceeding before an administrative agency is not constitutionally entitled to more. Not only is the defendant’s interest less in a labor dispute, but the need to protect witnesses from reprisal is even more compelling, as a general rule, since the defendant is the witness’ employer. The danger of reprisal is not vitiated simply because the identity of the employee will eventually be revealed when he testifies. If the employer had access to the statement before trial, the employer could effectively discourage the employee from testifying and thus frustrate enforcement of the Act.
The regulation, on its face at least, is totally consistent with a full and fair adjudication process. The Board’s judgment in this sensitive area of employee protection is particularly entitled to respect,
see Good-friend Western Corp. v. Fuchs,
Although application of the rule to a particular unusual situation might result in gross injustice and call for some modification, the instant case is surely not such a situation.
See NLRB v. Vapor Blast Manufacturing Co., supra,
Petitioner’s second procedural objection addresses the ALJ’s ruling that adverse inferences must be drawn from petitioner’s failure to comply with a subpoena after its motion to quash was found untimely.
10
See United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers v. NLRB,
All petitioner’s other procedural and evidentiary objections have been considered and rejected.
The Order of the Board will be enforced.
Notes
. Although both Giordano and Anderson testified that Lee and petitioner’s general manager, William White, said that the troublemaker, Carleton, was fired because of his union activity, the ALJ did not consider this testimony because of the witnesses’ apparent confusion, Lee’s and White’s denials and the unlikelihood that White would be so foolish as to make such an admission. In deference to the ALJ’s credibility determinations, we too will not consider this direct evidence of motive.
. The ALJ, after careful scrutiny of the company’s stated reasons for discharge, concluded that the reasons were “so baseless and pretextual” that the inference of an improper motive could be drawn. Compare with NLRB v. South Shore Hospital, supra (neither trial examiner nor the Board considered alleged proper grounds for discharge).
. Although petitioner suffered no out-of-pocket loss, petitioner claims that it lost the daily intake of oil of the driver, Purcell, who had to return the water. The return took over five hours to accomplish because of a peculiar feature of Purcell’s truck which Lee was aware of. Since both Purcell and Lee indicated that Lee may have not known of Purcell’s unexpected delay until after Carleton was discharged, the delay probably did not play a part in the decision to dismiss.
. Petitioner contends that the failure to fire Anderson, a known union card-holder, argues in favor of its position. Petitioner points out that Carleton’s truck returned on May 12 with considerably less oil than Anderson’s and that Carleton was in the position to monitor his truck’s intake of water. Even if Carleton was at fault for his truck’s waterload, Lee testified that he did not know what position each man held. Although as an afterthought, Lee said the discrepancy between Anderson’s and Carleton’s loads may have “contributed” to the discharge, he primarily relied on the fact that this pick-up was Carleton’s idea, not Anderson’s, to support his decision to dismiss. As to selection of the source, Carleton at worst made a good faith mistake; in truth, the selection, approved by Lee, was probably sound but the manner of pumping was faulty.
As to the first incident, Lee distinguished Carleton’s role from Anderson’s based on alleged statements by Anderson and another driver that Carleton was in charge of the operation. Not only were these statements denied, but also Carleton was an unlikely supervisor since the other drivers had many more months of experience than Carleton, who had been on the job only two months at the time.
. The portion of the pretrial statement that the ALJ relied upon for this inference was read into the record but never formally marked for identification nor admitted into evidence. The Board refused to reopen the record to admit the full statement. In response to petitioner’s appeal, we find no prejudicial error in the Board’s refusal.
. The testimony of both Carleton and Anderson, that after giving only one reason, Lee refused to state any reasons at all also gives rise to an inference of discriminatory discharge. See A. J. Krajewski Manufacturing v. NLRB, supra, 413 F.2d at n. 2.
. Section 102.118(b)(1) provides:
Notwithstanding the prohibitions of paragraph (a) of this section, after a witness called by the general counsel or by the charging party has testified in a hearing upon a complaint under section 10(c) of the act, the trial examiner shall, upon motion of the respondent, order the production of any statement (as hereinafter defined) of such witness in the possession of the general counsel which relates to the subject matter as to which the witness has testified. If the entire contents of any such statement relate to the subject matter of the testimony of the witness, the administrative law judge shall order it to be delivered directly to the respondent for his examination and use for the purpose of cross-examination.
.
Goodfriend
and
Title Guarantee
both rejected attempts to gain access to employees’ pretrial statements through the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552.
Accord Harvey’s Wagon Wheel, Inc. v. NLRB,
. The
Schill Steel
decision permitted pretrial discovery of statements of future witnesses, provided the usual discovery requirements of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Rules 26-34, were satisfied, in civil contempt proceedings brought by the Board in federal district court. This Circuit has limited
Schill Steel
to the contempt context and refused to apply the Fifth Circuit’s standard to unfair labor practice proceedings before the Board.
NLRB v. Diamond Standard Fule Corp.,
. The Board, upon review, subsequently held that the ALJ should have considered the general counsel’s motion to exclude documents and Lee’s testimony for failure to comply with the subpoena, but in light of the ALJ’s ultimate conclusion, the Board also found that the error was not prejudicial.
, Petitioner’s counsel asserted in oral argument before this court that his legitimate attempts to protect his due process rights unfairly poisoned the atmosphere of the trial. Review of the transcript, however, unmistakably reveals that petitioner’s unnecessary conduct, often rude and insolent to witnesses, opposition counsel and to the judge himself, was primarily responsible for the unpleasant atmosphere in the courtroom. Petitioner’s counsel cannot now be heard to complain of the treatment he received from the ALJ, whose only fault was perhaps too much patience rather than too little.
