PRINTING SPECIALTIES & PAPER PRODUCTS UNION NO. 447,
INTERNATIONAL PRINTING PRESSMEN AND ASSISTANTS
UNION OF N.A., AFL-CIO, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
PRIDE PAPERS AARONSON BROS. PAPER CORPORATION et al.,
Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 743, 744, Dockets 35504, 35505.
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Argued April 26, 1971.
Decided June 15, 1971.
David Scribner, New York City (Frank Scheiner, Joel C. Glanstein, scribner,
Under U.S.Ct. of App. 5th Cir., the brief), for plaintiff-appellant.
Noel Arnold Levin, New York City (Jerome M. Schwartz, Levin, Rosmаrin
Before HAYS and FEINBERG, Circuit Judges, and BLUMENFELD, District judge.*
HAYS, Circuit Judge:
This action was instituted in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York to obtain declaratory, injunctive and monetаry relief under Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (29 U.S.C. 185 (1964)) for alleged breaches by the defendants of a collective bargaining agreеment between appellant union and defendants Roitman Paper Co., Inc., and its wholly owned subsidiary, Terminal Paper Converting, Ind. After trial without a jury, Judge Tyler dismissed the complaint and later denied plaintiff's motion for a new trial. We affirm.
Roitman Paper Co., Inc. and Terminal Paper Converting, Inc. were members of The Paрer Merchants Association of New York which executed a multi-employer collective bargaining agreement with plaintiff Plinting Specialties & Papеr Products Union No. 447, International Printing Pressmen and Assistants Union of N.A., AFL-CIO in 1961. This agreement was subsequently modified and extended to August 31, 1967.
On December 23, 1964, Roitman-Terminal entered into a сonsolidation agreement with defendant Aaronson Bros. Paper Corporation which was engaged in a similar line of work. The new firm was to operate at the Brooklyn plant of Aaronson under the name Pride Paper-Aaronson Bros. Paper Corporation, and Max Roitman, the sole owner of Roitmаn-Terminal, became the executive vice-president and secretary of the new corporation, with a 50% Stock interest.
At the time of the consоlidation, Aaronson Bros. had 26 employees who remained with the new company. These employees were represented by Local 210, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, which had a collective bargaining agreement with Aaronson Bros. covering their work.
Negotiations with regard to the new firm's hiring thе seven employees of the old Roitman firm failed and these employees were sent the following notice on December 24, 1964:
'This is to inform you that this cоmpany will cease its production operations effective December 24, 1964. Your services will no longer be needed after January 8, 1965.
This is to be deеmed notice in accordance with collective bargaining agreement between this company and your union.'
The consolidation was effectuated, and Roitman-Terminal closed down its Manhattan plant. All obligations owing to the former Roitman employees and to the plaintiff union for the various funds provided in the collective agreement were paid.
Plaintiff union filed suit for an alleged breach of the Local 447 Industry Association collective bаrgaining agreement. The complaint sought a declaratory judgment that the contract was still in effect at the new consolidated plant, damages оn behalf of Local 447 and the affected employees, and injunctive relief to insure the continued enforcement of the agreement at the Pride-Paper Aaronson Bors. plant.
Plaintiff refers us to a provision in the consolidation agreement which states that 'all obligations, present and future under a contract or contracts, between Roitman Terminal and the labor union representing the employees of Roitman and Terminal' were to be аssumed by the consolidated operation. This provision cannot properly be interpreted to mean that the old Roitman-Terminal employeеs could not be terminated, or that if they were terminated, the new operation was required to continue paying their wages. It is extremely significant that the сonsolidation agreement contained no provision with respect to the employees of what was formerly Aaronson Bros. Paper Corp. Thе provision of the consolidation agreement clearly refers to those contractual obligations of Roitman-Terminal, such as payment to the various union funds, which would be due upon termination of the collective agreement. These obligations were met by Pride Papers.
The plaintiff union does not expressly claim that the seven former Roitman employees had to be re-employed by the consolidated company. Such a contention, based on the supposition that contractual obligations somehow survived termination of the contract, would be unavailing in the light of our opinion in Local 1251 Int. U. of U.A., A. & A.I.W. v. Robertshaw Controls Co.,
Plaintiff union's principal contention is that the 26 Aaronson employees who were retained by the new company must now be paid the wages and receive the benefits provided by the Local 447 Industry Association agreement. None of these employees were ever represented by Local 447. On the contrary they were represented under a valid existing collective agreement by another union. Plaintiff argues, however, that the new cоmpany is a 'successor employer' to Roitman-Terminal and that as such a 'successor employer' the new company was required to assume thе employer's obligations under the old collective agreement. We reject this argument.
'Continuity in the business operation' is the essential test for succеssorship. N.L.R.B. v. Zayre Corp.,
Moreover, plaintiff's position would not be sustainable even if in some sense Pride Papers could be said to be a 'successor' to Roitman-Terminal. The only obligations that have been imposed by thе courts on successor employers are the obligations to arbitrate (see, e.g., John Wiley & Sons v. Livingston,
The union is in effect asking this court to impose the terms of the collective bargaining agreement negotiated with the now defunct Roitman-Terminal operation on the new consolidated company. In our recent decision in The William J. Burns International Detective Agency v. N.L.R.B.,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
Of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, sitting by designation
In Monroe Sander Corp. v. Livingston,
