Enforcement granted by published per curiam opinion.
OPINION
Petitioners Delores Vance d/b/a D & J Trucking (“D & J”) and Don Vance appeal a decision of the National Labor Relations Board (the “Board”). In its decision, the Board held that D & J is a single employer with Denart Coal Co., Inc. (“Denart”), and V Coal Co., Inc. (“V Coal”), and that D & J and its owners, Don and Delores Vance, are therefore jointly and severally liable to remedy the unfair labor practices committed by Denart and V Coal. Finding that the Board’s decision is supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole, we affirm.
I.
On August 14, 1989, the Board issued an order adopting the finding of Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) Wallace H. Nations that Denart and V Coal violated §§ 8(a)(5) and (1) of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 158(a)(5) and (1), by failing to abide by the terms of their collective bargaining agreement with the United Mine Workers of America, District 17 (the “Union”), and by refusing to provide information to the Union.
On June 4, 1990, the Board’s Regional Director issued a compliance specification, alleging, inter alia, that in addition to De-nart/ V Coal, D & J Trucking, a sole proprietorship owned by Delores Vance, was liable for the backpay due under the conditions of the Board’s order. The specification also claimed that Don and Delores Vance were personally, jointly, and severally liable for the backpay amounts.
In his initial supplemental decision dated October 14, 1992, ALJ Hubert E. Lott found that the General Counsel did not present sufficient evidence to establish that D & J is a single employer with Denart/V Coal, and the judge dismissed the compliance specification with regard to Petitioners. In its remand order issued March 26,1993, the Board directed the judge to explain his finding that the documentary evidence did not contradict Delores Vance’s testimony that she was the sole owner of D & J.
In his second supplemental decision dated March 25, 1994, Judge Lott reaffirmed his finding that D & J is not a single employer with Denarl/V Coal. On December 16,1994, the Board reversed the ALJ’s judgment and found that D & J and Denart/V Coal constitute a single employer. Denart Coal Co.,
II.
Petitioners’ appeal presents the single issue of whether substantial evidence supports the Board’s finding that D & J and Denart/V Coal constitute a single employer such that D & J and its owners, Don and Delores Vance, are jointly and severally ha-ble to remedy the unfair labor practices committed by Denart/V Coal. The Board’s finding that two entities constitute a single employer is essentially a factual determination and, as such, should not be disturbed when supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole. NLRB v. Emsing’s Supermarket, Inc.,
The law is well settled that the controlling criteria in determining whether two or more employing entities constitute a single employer are (1) common ownership, (2) interrelation of operations, (3) common management, and (4) centralized control of labor relations. Radio & Television Broadcast Technicians Local Union 1264 v. Broadcast Serv. of Mobile, Inc.,
Petitioners present two arguments to contend that the Board should have addressed considerations beyond these single employer factors in determining their liability in this case.
Second, Petitioners argue that, because they have offered evidence that they had legitimate nondiseriminatory reasons for engaging in the transactions on which the Board relied to find single employer status, the Board should have required the General Counsel to show that Petitioners would not have conducted the particular transactions but for the purpose of circumventing the NLRA. In advocating this burden-shifting scheme, Petitioners rely on Wright Line, A Div. of Wright Line, Inc.,
Finding that Petitioners’ arguments lack merit, we conclude that the factors of common ownership, interrelation of operations, common management, and centralized control of labor relations govern our inquiry in this case; and we address the evidence of each criterion in turn. Petitioners correctly recognize that, in assessing this evidence under substantial evidence review, we are obliged to analyze the whole record, including the evidence that fairly detracts from the evidence relied upon by the Board. Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB,
A. Common Ownership
In his first supplemental decision, the ALJ found “uncontradicted” Delores Vance’s testimony that she was the sole owner of D & J and that Don Vance was not involved in D & J operations. In remanding the case to the ALJ, the Board directed the judge to “explain or reconsider his credibility findings in light of the documentary evidence, which he did not discuss in his supplemental decision.” Denart,
In its decision below, the Board found that the ALJ’s reasoning was “seriously flawed.” Id. First, the Board determined that the judge committed plain error by not performing the task that the Board’s remand order directed him to complete. Second, the Board reasoned that the fact that the compliance specification did not contain a specific allegation that Don Vance owned D & J was immaterial because the specification sufficiently raised the issue of whether Don Vance was a principal of D & J and because the issue was fully litigated. Concluding that “the judge failed to perform his role as fact finder on two occasions,” id., the Board proceeded to assess the documentary evidence in the record.
On appeal, Petitioners concede that Board precedent establishes that common ownership exists where the owner of one company or a member of the owner’s family maintains a substantial ownership interest in another company. Petitioners, however, complain that the Board improperly disregarded its own precedent by reviewing de novo the credibility determinations resolved by the ALJ. Petitioners argue that to reach the conclusion that certain documents were inconsistent with Delores’s testimony, the Board improperly judged her credibility. In contrast, the Board concluded in its decision that the ALJ did not actually make a credibility determination regarding the testimony of Delores Vance.
We hold that the Board reasonably reviewed de novo the documentary evidence in light of Delores Vance’s testimony. Initially, we note that Board precedent does not establish that the Board may never review the credibility determinations of an ALJ. Rather, the Board’s policy of reviewing an ALJ’s credibility findings hinges on the ALJ’s “advantage of observing the witnesses while they testified.” Standard Dry Wall Products, Inc.,
In his initial supplemental decision, the ALJ considered Delores’s testimony in light of other evidence indicating that Don Vance would see that D & J drivers paid their union dues. The ALJ, however, simply stated that Delores’s testimony was “uncontradicted”; he did not make an explicit finding that her testimony was credible, and he did not assess her testimonial demeanor. The ALJ also did not discuss the credibility of Delores’s testimony in his second supplemental decision. As the Board concluded, “instead of crediting and relying upon Delores Vance’s testimony, it appears that the judge viewed the testi mony as having no bearing on the outcome of this case.” Denart,
From our examination of the documentary evidence and Delores’s testimony, we find substantial evidence to support the Board’s conclusion that DenarVV Coal and D & J share common ownership because D & J is commonly owned by Don and Delores Vance. For instance, Don endorsed several cheeks totaling approximately $135,000 made payable to D & J by signing them “D & J Trucking/ Don Vance/Owner.” He signed a personal financial statement listing D & J’s trucks as his own asset. On a credit application with a bank for a personal loan for $10,000, Don Vance identified himself as “owner” of D & J and listed D & J’s bank account as his own.
In challenging the documentary evidence, Petitioners argue that the Board erred in relying on the documents stating that Don Vance owned D & J because those documents were not properly authenticated and because Delores Vance, an admitted owner of D & J, did not ratify the documents. This contention lacks merit. Petitioners provided these documents to the General Counsel pursuant to a subpoena seeking business records of Delores Vance d/b/a D & J Trucking, and Delores Vance’s attorney specifically stated that he had no objection to the admission of the documents at the proceeding before the ALJ. Petitioners also contend that the Board improperly considered the fact that Don Vance personally guaranteed loans for Delores Vance d/b/a D & J Trucking because Delores Vance testified that the banks required someone to co-sign or guarantee her loans. Regardless of whether the banks required the signatures of both spouses, the
B. Interrelation of Operations
Second, we find that substantial evidence in the record supports the Board’s conclusion that D & J and Denart/V Coal were interrelated in their operations. The evidence demonstrates that the companies interacted regularly in their normal business dealings. Denart and V Coal conducted the business of mining coal. D & J hauled coal for Denart and V Coal as well as for other coal mines. D & J also leased mining equipment to Denart and V Coal and to other companies after Denart and V Coal ceased operations.
In addition to this routine business interaction, the record shows that a significant financial interrelationship existed between the companies. This interrelationship is important to the single employer determination because the Board has previously held that actions indicating that companies are operated “in such a manner that the exigencies of one would be met by the other” demonstrate an interrelation of operations and “less than an ‘arm’s length relationship’ between the companies.” Emsing’s Supermarket, Inc.,
Considering this legal standard and the evidence as a whole, we find that the record indicates several examples when D & J and Denarfc/V Coal conducted transactions with one another such that the financial needs of one company were met by another. For example, Don and Delores Vance obtained a personal bank loan to pay V Coal’s payroll of $20,000.
C. Common Management
Third, we find that substantial evidence in record supports the Board’s finding
Additionally, Don Vance, Delores Vance, and their son Don E. Vance discussed the business of all the companies at weekly meetings. Petitioners question the relevance of these meetings because they contend that the conversations occurred over the dinner table and simply consisted of family discussions about each family member’s activities, which naturally included work activities. This characterization, however, is contradicted by the testimony of Millard Ellis, the accountant for the Vance family businesses. Ellis testified before the ALJ that he met weekly with Don, Delores, Don E., and occasionally Michael, for the purpose of discussing the Vance family businesses. Ellis testified that, although the meetings were informal, they were “strictly business” and were not family functions. Even considering the informality of these discussions, we find that these “meetings” support the finding of common management between D & J and De-nart/V Coal, especially given that Denart/V Coal had no formal meetings of the board of directors. As the Board concluded, these family meetings, in the absence of formal meetings, confirm the companies’ common management.
D. Centralized Control of Labor Relations
Regarding this fourth and final factor, the Board held that the evidence of Don Vance’s involvement in D & J’s labor relations is “limited but significant.” Denart,
As Petitioners contend, this evidence does not decisively demonstrate that Don Vance had any direct control over the labor relations of D & J employees. Throughout the arrangement in which Denart paid the dues, Don maintained that he did not want to be responsible for D & J employees, and the Union acknowledged in writing that the employees were not Denart employees and were not on Denart’s payroll. Furthermore, the record is inconsistent as to whom Don Vance was representing in attending the agency hearing. Although the Union representative testified that Don represented D & J at the hearing and that D & J was fined for the accident, Delores Vance testified that D & J was not cited or fined for the accident and that she was not summoned to appear at the hearing.
Despite the shortcomings in the evidence on centralized control of labor relations, as stated above, the Board need not find extensive evidence that all four criteria are present. Fowler Indus.,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that substantial evidence on the record as a whole supports the Board’s decision and that the Board is therefore entitled to enforcement of its order.
ENFORCED.
Notes
. We grant the Board’s motion to file a supplemental appendix containing AU Nations' decision and the Board’s order adopting the decision. We note that the factual findings and legal con-
. The General Counsel also claimed that Vance Trucking, Laing Enterprises, and Don E. and Michael Vance, as individuals, were liable. In its order on December 16, 1994, the Board, in agreement with the ALJ, dismissed these allegations.
. In addition to these arguments, Petitioners assert that the Board should have considered other factors in analyzing whether D & J and Denart/V Coal constitute a single employer. Their alleged factors, however, are not part of the four-factor test for establishing whether two entities constitute a single employer, and we therefore need not consider them.
. Although Petitioners emphasize that Delores Vance testified that she did not complete the credit application because her middle initial was incorrect on the form, Delores's testimony does not indicate that the application's listing Don Vance as ''owner” of D & J is not entitled to some weight in assessing common ownership.
. Contrary to Petitioners’ suggestion, the Board reasonably relied on transactions occurring after Denart and V Coal ceased operations. As the Board noted, Denart and V Coal engaged in significant transactions after they ceased operations which demonstrate the interrelatedness of D & J, Denart, and V Coal.
. Although Petitioners wage singular attacks on each of these alleged rationales, the companies’ interrelation of operations is also supported by the facts that Don Vance agreed with the Union that Denart would pay Union dues on behalf of D & J employees, that Petitioners all share the same accountant (Don Vance’s cousin, Millard Ellis), and that D & J’s facility is located on property leased by Denart. See Don Burgess Constr.,
. Petitioners object to the relevance of this purchase because they assert that Delores Vance still made the decision to purchase the truck. However, they point to no record evidence demonstrating who actually made the decision to purchase the truck.
