Precision Window appeals an order of the National Labor Relations Board requiring the company to reinstate an employee fired for engaging in protected union activity. 1 This appeal addresses only whether the fired employee forfеited his right to reinstatement by threatening to kill his supervisor and by making false statements under oath about his union activity. 2 A divided panel of the Board upheld the findings of the administrative law judge and concluded that the terminated employee had not forfeited his right to reinstatemеnt. We reverse.
I.
The pertinent facts are rather straightforward and uncontested. In November of 1989, several employees at the Precision Window plant began organizing a union on behalf of the Aluminum, Brick & Glass Workers International Union, AFL-CIO. Employee Steve Sitzes pаrticipated in the organizing by setting out a notebook in which employees interested in the union could sign their names. Sitzes signed the notebook and turned it into the union on January 8, 1990. Sitzes also testified in the administrative hearing that he had passed out union cards prior to his termination. On cross-examination, however, Sitzes admitted that he had not passed out union cards prior to his termination.
Brian Brannick, the company’s vice president and head of manufacturing at the plant, fired Sitzes on January 9. The company asserts that it fired Sitzes for lying tо supervisor Rick Hixon about his reasons for not being able to volunteer for work on a Saturday. 3 The ALJ concluded that Sitzes was fired for union activity and the lying rationale was employed “for something to pin on Sitzes.” Precision Window Mfg., Inc., 303 N.L.R.B. No. 141 (1991). The Board, thereafter, affirmed the ALJ’s decision that Sitzes’ firing violated § 8(a)(3) of the National Labor Relations Act. 4 The company does not contest this finding on appeal, but argues that Sitzes forfeited his right to reinstatement by his actions following the termination.
II.
The Board has authority to order reinstatement of wrongfully dischаrged employees when it finds that reinstatement will effectuate policies of the Act. 29 U.S.C. § 160(c) (1988). While courts generally defer to the Board’s discretion in ordering reinstatement, situations exist which justify rejection of the reinstatement remedy.
Alumbaugh Coal Corp. v. NLRB,
*1108 A. The Threat to Kill
As Sitzes was leaving the plant after his firing, he cursed Hixon, called him obscene names, challenged him to а fight, and threatened to kill him. 5 The threat to kill evidently was supposed to be consummated at 4:30 p.m., when the plant shut down. True to his word, Sitzes returned to the plant shortly before closing. A company official phoned police, who arrived in short order. Sitzes left the plant under orders of the police.
The AU determined that Sitzes’ threat to kill his supervisor did not deprive him of his reinstatement rights.
The fact, however, that Sitzes did return to the plant at quitting time can be argued to make the earlier threat more real and intimidating. Sitzes testified that he “had to pick up [his] riders.” There is nо evidence in the record to contradict the claim that Sitzes had a car pool to which he owed an obligation, and the assertion is certainly not inherently unbelievable. But, whether or not his return to the plant evinced an intention to carry out his threat against Hixon, the fact is that he left without taking revenge (albeit under the watchful eye of the police) and has not since been shown to have made any attempt to harm Hix-on.
Precision Window Mfg., Inc., 303 N.L.R.B. No. 141 (emphasis and parentheticals in original). A divided three-member panel of the Bоard concluded that Sitzes’ “rambling, semicoherent mix of insult and threat” did not rise to the level of conduct so flagrant that it required the forfeiture of reinstatement and backpay. Member Raudabaugh dissented. While agreeing with the majority that an employer may not provoke a fired employee into conduct that would forfeit his remedies under the Act, Raudabaugh asserted that a fired employee “does not have an unlimited right to engage in misconduct without losing his remedial rights.” Precision Window Mfg., Inc., 303 N.L.R.B. No. 141.
An employer may not provoke an employеe and then rely on the employee’s intemperate response as a ground for not reinstating him.
Vought Corp.,
As always in cases such as this, the question is where tо draw the line as to the type of conduct that forfeits an employee’s right to reinstatement. We have no trouble concluding the line was crossed here. When an employee threatens to kill his supervisor and follows it up with action conforming to that threat, he has forfeited any rights he may have had under the Act. Courts may allow certain indiscretions by employees who are wrongfully terminated, but they cannot overlook blatant misconduct such as threats of violence and physical intimidation.
Trustees,
Courts universally reject rеinstatement when employees threaten to kill or harm supervisors after a firing, no matter how wrongful the discharge may have been and no matter how understandable the “animal exuberance” displayed.
NLRB v. Collier,
To be sure, each incident must be judged in the context of its own facts. We have no quarrel with the cases that on less extreme facts have awarded reinstatement when the fired employee challenged his supervisor to a fight,
NLRB v. Morrison Cafeteria Co. of Little Rock, Inc.,
We have difficulty understanding the Board’s holding in this case because it so clearly contravenes its own standard. The Board normally denies reinstatement in those flagrant cases “in which the misconduct is violent or of such character as to render the employees unfit for further service.”
C-Town,
Absent actual physical assault, there is no conduct more serious than a threat of physical violence.
R.C. Can Co.,
It is undisputed that Hixon considered the threat on his life as real. In fact, the Board majority concluded that Hixon fеlt threatened and that calling the police was a reasonable response under the circumstances. When an employee threatens to kill his supervisor and then shows up at the appointed hour, the wait for a more explicit act of intent could be a wait too long. While this court cannot deny that emotional outbursts following a tinder-box event like a job firing are inevitable, the extreme behavior of Sitzes cannot be tolerated under any circumstances.
B. False Statements
The company also asserts that Sitzes forfeited his right to reinstatement by lying under oath during the administrative hearing. Sitzes testified that he had passed out union cards prior to his dismissal. He later admitted on cross-examination that he had not passed out any union cards prior to his dismissal. 6 The ALT *1110 concluded that Sitzes was “initially dishonеst about his predischarge activity in handing out authorization cards, although in the end, he was hammered into telling the truth.” Precision Window Mfg., Inc., 303 N.L.R.B. No. 141. Nevertheless, the ALJ found that “Sitzes’ falsification of one aspect of his union activity was eventually recanted, and did not amount to a ‘malicious аbuse of the Board’s processes.’ ” Id.
This court refuses to take the Board’s processes as lightly as the Board apparently does. An employee may sacrifice his right to reinstatement by engaging in dishonest or fraudulent activity following his termination.
Alumbaugh Coal Corp. v. NLRB,
The Board argues that Sitzes should retain his reinstatement remedy because he was generally truthful and recanted his false testimony. The fact that Sitzes recanted—or more appropriately “was hammered into telling the truth”—is unavailing. The law has little tolerance for half-baked explanations of phony testimony. The general perjury statute does not contemplate recantation as a defense. 18 U.S.C. § 1621 (1988);
United States v. Norris,
III.
Sitzes forfeited his right to reinstatement by threatening to kill his supervisor and by lying under oath at the administrative proceeding. The decision of the National Labor Relations Board is reversed.
Notes
. The Board filed a cross-application for enforcement of its оrder.
. After holding a hearing, the administrative law judge found that Precision Window committed several unfair labor practices. The company filed exceptions with the Board pertaining only to the employee’s reinstatement. The Board affirmed the ALJ. Those pоrtions of the Board order that have not been appealed will be enforced summarily.
See
29 U.S.C. § 160(e) (1988);
Woelke & Romero Framing, Inc. v. NLRB,
. Because of an equipment failure, the plant was shut down for half a day during the week. Hixon sought volunteers from among the plant’s approximately 40 employees tо work on Saturday. Sitzes told Hixon he could not work Saturday because his wife was having a birthday party for him.
. Section 8(a)(3), 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3) (1988), forbids discrimination in employment in order to encourage or discourage membership in a labor organization.
. Sitzes denied threatening to kill Hixon, but admitted that he threatened to "kick [his] butt and beat [his] Mexican face in.” The AU credited the testimony of Hixon and two other witnesses that, in addition to the language above, Sitzes explicitly threatened to kill Hixon.
. Sitzes’ testimony proceeded as follows. He testified he рassed out union cards on January 5. After being shown a calendar, he corrected the date to January 8. He stated he got the cards at a union meeting and passed out about six cards before work and at lunch time on January 8. Tr. at 33-34. Reminded that the union meeting wаs at night after work on January 8, he stated he passed out the cards on January 4. Tr. at 35. After being refreshed *1110 again about the date of the union meeting, he testified that he passed out the cards on January 9. Tr. at 36. Sitzes was fired on January 9.
On cross-examination, Sitzes admitted giving аn affidavit to the Board claiming he did not pass out any cards prior to his discharge. Tr. at 56-58. He then stated he took one card home to a fellow employee. Tr. at 58. Asked on redirect if he had or had not passed out any cards prior to his discharge, he tеstified, "I might have passed out a couple.” He then stated: “I did not pass out no union cards because I—we didn't get them. AH I passed out was one.” He then stated he passed out only one card and that was after he was terminated. Tr. at 94.
. Section 1623 covers false declarations before a grand jury or court.
