Appeal of Sullivan County Nursing Home

578 A.2d 325, 133 N.H. 389, 1990 N.H. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 18, 1990
DocketNo. 89-132
StatusPublished

This text of 578 A.2d 325 (Appeal of Sullivan County Nursing Home) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Appeal of Sullivan County Nursing Home, 578 A.2d 325, 133 N.H. 389, 1990 N.H. LEXIS 77 (N.H. 1990).

Opinion

Per curiam.

The Sullivan County Nursing Home (Sullivan), a public employer, appeals from several rulings of the New Hampshire Public Employee Labor Relations Board (PELRB) made in anticipation of an election called in response to an employees’ petition to decertify the respondent American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Council 93 (AFSCME), the then-exclusive bargaining representative of Sullivan’s employees. Sullivan claims that the PELRB erred as a matter of law and abused its discretion in limiting Sullivan’s participation at two pre-election proceedings and in denying Sullivan’s request to station an observer at the election itself. We affirm.

On January 2, 1988, certain employees of Sullivan filed a petition with the PELRB to decertify AFSCME. N.H. Admin, Rules, Pub 301.04. AFSCME moved to dismiss the petition on the grounds, inter alia, that the employees had failed to submit a sufficient number [391]*391of signature cards to comply with PELRB decertification procedure, and that the petition had been prompted by illegal participation from management. Apparently in response, Sullivan filed a motion “to be made a party to the proceedings relating to and arising out of” the petition.

After a hearing on the petition, the PELRB ruled on March 24 with respect to Sullivan’s motion that “decertification is a matter between the employees and the Union [that] represents them,” but, because AFSCME had alleged illegal management involvement, allowed counsel for Sullivan “to appear as a witness [at the hearing] to protect the interests [of Sullivan] with the introduction of necessary testimony and evidence,” PELRB Decision No. 88-32. In his concurring opinion, labor representative Daniel Toomey noted that Sullivan’s counsel had “not only acted as a witness [at the hearing] . . . but [had] cross-examined the petitioning employees and [had] otherwise acted as an attorney....” Regarding AFSCME’s motion to dismiss, the PELRB found, inter alia, that the Sullivan employees had conformed to all decertification requirements and that AFSCME had presented no evidence at the hearing in support of its allegation of illegal management participation.

The PELRB also acted upon the decertification petition itself on March 24, and, apparently because AFSCME had failed to prove its charge of illegal management participation, denied Sullivan’s motion to participate as a “party” to subsequent decertification proceedings, including the employees’ election. The following day, representatives of the petitioning employees, AFSCME, and Sullivan attended a pre-election conference, at which the PELRB apparently limited Sullivan’s participation to its submission of an employee list. Consequently, Sullivan claims, it was unable to question that day’s PELRB rulings concerning the voting eligibility of several groups of Sullivan employees. In addition, the PELRB denied Sullivan’s request to station an employer observer at the election.

The decertification election was held on April 15, without Sullivan’s participation, and the petition to decertify was defeated by a vote of 95-45. The PELRB rejected Sullivan’s subsequent motion to set aside the election as well as its request for a new decertification proceedings, reiterating that

“the [decertification] process is a matter between the employees and their exclusive representative and the employer’s involvement in that process is limited to providing accurate lists of employees, and on-site facilities for the im[392]*392partial and fair secret ballot election free of prejudice and possible influence from any employer representative or observer during the process.”

On appeal, Sullivan argues that the PELRB rulings limiting its participation at the pre-election proceedings and rejecting its request for an employer election observer violated the PELRB’s own regulations, and that, because these limitations prevented Sullivan from raising, and, consequently, from preserving for appeal, issues of interest to it, they violated its State constitutional right to due process, N.H. CONST. pt. I, art. 15, and its statutory right to intervene, RSA 541-A:17 (Supp. 1989). Although we find that Sullivan has not shown prejudice by any of the PELRB rulings, and for this reason affirm them, we will address the merits of Sullivan’s claims in the interest of clarifying the boundaries of the PELRB’s authority to limit the participation of affected public employers at decertification proceedings.

We will consider first the PELRB ruling denying Sullivan status as an election observer. PELRB regulation Pub 303.07(b) states that

“[e]ach party to the [union] election may, if it chooses, be represented at the polling places by one (1) representative for the purpose of observing the conduct of the election and the count of the ballots. Employer representatives shall not be on the list of eligible voters and shall not be supervisors of the persons voting.”

Whether or not this provision obligated the PELRB to allow Sullivan an election observer depends on the answer to two questions of regulatory interpretation: first, does the term “election” refer to decertification elections, and second, is a public employer a “party to the election” within the meaning of Pub 303.07(b)?

The question of whether or not Pub 303.07(b) applies to decertification proceedings presents some difficulty. Pub 303.07(b) does not itself limit its application to certification elections, and thus appears on its face to apply to decertification elections as well. Unfortunately, however, related PELRB regulations cloud the issue by providing support for both broad and narrow applications of Pub 303.07(b). See, e.g., Pub 303.01, 301.04.

Nonetheless, as neither the parties to this appeal nor the PELRB has provided us an adequate basis upon which to distinguish between decertification and certification elections for the purpose of construing Pub 303.07(b), we will not read such a distinction into Pub [393]*393303.07(b). While we recognize that the PELRB generally has discretion to interpret and apply its own rules as it sees fit, cf. Appeal of University Systems of N.H, 131 N.H. 368, 370, 553 A.2d 770, 771 (1988) (PELRB has authority to define terms of its enabling legislation and to fill in gaps left by it), it must do so consistently; absent a clearly articulated rationale for doing so, it would be an abuse of discretion for the PELRB to treat public employers differently depending on the type of union election at issue. In ruling that Sullivan would not be permitted an observer at the election, the PELRB reasoned, without elaboration, that a decertification election is “a matter between the employees and the Union,” but did not explain why this statement is any less true of a certification election, and thus provided no reasonable basis for such a distinction.

AFSCME claims that the public employer’s interests are substantially more at stake in a certification election than in a decertification election, essentially because a union’s contract, according to the respondent, remains in force for its stated duration even after it is decertified. Thus, argues AFSCME, since a decertification election does not immediately change the status quo, the employer has little or no interest in participating in the decertification election, but does have a substantial interest with respect to certification proceedings, which potentially alter the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
578 A.2d 325, 133 N.H. 389, 1990 N.H. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appeal-of-sullivan-county-nursing-home-nh-1990.