This matter is before us on a petition of Sullair P.T.O., Inc. pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 160(f) to review and set aside a final order of the National Labor Relations Board issued against Sullair on July 15, 1980, and reported at
I
Sullair, the wholly owned subsidiary of a larger corporate enterprise, is engaged in the manufacture, sale and distribution of air compressors installed as power-take-off units. Sullair’s home office is in Michigan City, Indiana, and it does business in Indiana and elsewhere. The events giving rise to this dispute occurred at its plant in New Buffalo, Michigan, which employs approximately 12 production and maintenance workers. These employees are not represented by a union.
Among the fringe benefits Sullair provided its New Buffalo employees from 1975 to 1979 was the opportunity to buy unlimited quantities of gasoline at 35<p per gallon. On May 31, 1979, Sullair posted on the New Buffalo plant bulletin board a notice that because of increasing cost and a shortage with its suppliers, starting June 1 employees would be able to buy only 10 or 15 gallons of gasoline per week, depending on whether they lived in New Buffalo or out of town, at a cost of 50<p per gallon “until the shortage lessens with our suppliers.”
Later that day, 1 General Manager William A. Jones was stopped on the shop floor near some employees who had questions and complaints about the changed gasoline policy. One of these employees was Terry Lee Boyle, who had been employed by Sullair as a mechanic at the plant since November 1977. Boyle told Jones that Sullair was “f_____g” the employees by the new policy and asked how he, Boyle, was going to be able to afford the price increase “on his f_____g salary.” Jones suggested that Boyle could get another job if he thought he could do better. Jones then told the employees he would try to find out whether the change was temporary or permanent and that Sullair’s Controller and Human Relations Committee would investigate the matter.
The next day, June 1,1979, at the request of another employee, Plant Controller Douglas Sommers, who was subordinate to Jones, met in the shop lunchroom with seven or eight of the 12 employees to discuss the gasoline policy. During this meeting, Boyle became the primary employee speaking out against the change. When he asked Sommers “what the f__k” could be done about the change, Sommers replied that it was a policy change by the parent corporation. Thereupon Boyle said Sullair was attempting “to f._k the employees” and then asked if those “rotten m____r f-----g c_________s” at the main plant would ration gas there if there had been a gas shortage at the New Buffalo plant. Sommers told Boyle that he would be glad to *502 stand there to talk about the gas program but not with Boyle’s using such profanity. Sommers added that if Boyle were unhappy he could get a job somewhere else. Boyle said that if that was Sommers’ answer, he was a “f_____g poor manager.”
Sommers immediately went to Jones’ office and told him what had occurred. Ten to 20 minutes after the meeting had ended, Jones fired Boyle for “insubordination,” reminding him of a previous incident in December 1978 when Boyle had been orally reprimanded for insubordination after complaining that he was being “f____d again” by the company and calling Jones a liar. On that occasion Jones warned Boyle that he would be terminated if such insubordination happened again and that he must not direct vulgar shop language toward management. 2
Three days after Boyle’s discharge, Jones and Sommers prepared two memoranda for Boyle’s personnel file reciting complaints about Boyle and his work. These memoranda indicate that Boyle was warned orally on January 11, 1979, to refrain from his continual complaining because it was having a detrimental effect on working conditions 3 and that on February 13 and May 9 other employees complained to management that it was difficult to work with Boyle because of his negative attitude.
On June 26, Boyle filed with the Board an unfair labor practice charge against Sullair asserting that he was wrongly fired for insubordination to Sommers. After a hearing, the Administrative Law Judge concluded that Boyle was engaged in activity protected under Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act (29 U.S.C.- § 157) when he voiced his June 1st complaint about the changed gasoline policy, that his obscene language in the course of the protest was not so serious as to deny him the Act’s protection, and that Sullair had violated Section 8(a)(1) of the Act (29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1)) by discharging Boyle for engaging in protected activity.
The Board affirmed these findings and ordered Sullair to offer to reinstate Boyle, to expunge from its records any reference to the discharge, to make Boyle whole for any loss of pay and benefits suffered, and to post an appropriate notice. The order also required Sullair to cease and desist from the unfair labor practice found and from interfering in any like or related manner with employee rights under Section 7. This petition for review followed.
II
It is undisputed that Boyle was engaged in a concerted activity protected under Section 7 when he used the obscene language. In
Dreis & Krump Manufacturing Co., Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board,
The Administrative Law Judge found that the June 1st obscenities interspersed with Boyle’s complaints about the gasoline policy were not so serious as to exceed the Act’s protection because they were (1) not beyond the pattern of vulgar “shop talk” prevalent in the plant and (2) not directed at Sommers personally (App. 21-22). The record shows that employees at the plant *503 were in fact given great latitude in lodging complaints and that the usage of vulgar or obscene words of sexual connotation was relatively common and tolerated. However, the record also shows that Boyle was an easily excitable person who used vulgar “shop talk” more than other employees and that in spite of warnings he did direct his obscenities at management. Finally, the record shows that the vulgar expressions used by Boyle at the June 1 meeting were directed at management and that he called Sommers a “f_____g poor manager.”
We cannot condone Boyle’s use of such vulgarities directed at management and Sommers in front of other employees, causing three of them to leave the meeting. It is clear that Boyle was fired shortly afterwards for insubordination in accordance with his December 7th warning and not because he protested the new gasoline policy. The record is devoid of anything to the contrary. Other employees who questioned the gas policy on May 31 and June 1 were not disciplined, and Sommers was willing to continue the dialogue with them until Boyle’s disruptive behavior ended the June 1 meeting. Indeed, Boyle admitted in his charge lodged with the Labor Board that he was fired for his insubordination to Controller Sommers. More important, the Administrative Law Judge (whose decision was adopted with an immaterial exception by the Labor Board) twice found that Boyle’s June 1st conduct was the overriding reason for his discharge (App. 21). We conclude therefore that the record as a whole fails to support the Board’s determination that the overriding reason for Sullair’s discharge of Boyle following the June 1st meeting was his vigorous protest of the changed gasoline policy rather than his outrageous behavior punctuated by shouted obscenities.
Ill
Our holding here is consistent with our recent decision in
National Labor Relations Board v. Truck Drivers, Oil Drivers, Etc.,
“The National Labor Relations Act is directed toward recognition of the legitimate rights of both employer and employees, 29 U.S.C. § 141(a). There must be room in the law for a right of an employer somewhere, some time, at some stage, to free itself of continuing, unproductive, internal, and improper harassment.”
Teamsters Local 705
was based on sound precedent. As the Fifth Circuit stated in
Florida Steel Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board,
“Section 7 rights are a shield against employer retaliation, not a sword with which one may threaten or curse supervisors. Corriveau & Routhier Cement Block, Inc. v. NLRB,410 F.2d 347 , 350 (1st Cir. 1969). Neither threats of violence nor insubordination constitute protected activities.”
Thus in
Chemvet Laboratories, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board,
Similarly, in
National Labor Relations Board v. Prescott Industrial Products Company,
Finally, in
Boaz Spinning Company v. National Labor Relations Board,
In our view, the above-cited authorities control the disposition of this case, where Boyle’s complaint about Sullair’s new gas policy was not even “a motivating factor” in his discharge. See Mt.
Healthy City Board of Education v. Doyle,
Notes
. It is immaterial whether this incident occurred on May 31 as the parties’ briefs state, or on June 1st as the Administrative Law Judge found (App. 14, 15). The record is unclear on the matter.
. It makes no difference whether warnings are oral or written.
Coors Container Co. v. National Labor Relations Board,
. At this meeting in Jones’ office, Boyle was at least cautioned, if not formally warned, about his future behavior.
. Our own decisions hold a discharge to be illegal if a “bad” motive contributes in a significant way to the discharge.
E. g., National Labor Relations Board v. Pfizer, Inc.,
