Baumritter Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board

386 F.2d 117, 67 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2027, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 4234
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 1967
Docket6916_1
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 386 F.2d 117 (Baumritter Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baumritter Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board, 386 F.2d 117, 67 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2027, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 4234 (1st Cir. 1967).

Opinion

McENTEE, Circuit Judge.

This petition to review and set aside an order of the Labor Board stems from a representation election in which petitioners’ employees chose the union 1 as their collective bargaining representative. Shortly thereafter, petitioners (hereinafter “the company”) 2 filed objections to the election on the ground that certain pre-election conduct on the part of the union and a Board agent rendered the election and subsequent union certification invalid. 3 The company also requested that the Board grant a hearing on its objections. 4

The Board overruled the company’s objections, denied its request for a hearing and certified the union as bargaining representative. 5 The company refused to bargain with the union. Thereafter, upon complaint filed, the Board found that this refusal violated sections 8(a) (5) and (1) of the Act and entered its order against the company. 6 This petition followed. The Board countered with a request that its order be enforced in full. No jurisdictional issue is presented. 7

The company admits its refusal to bargain but seeks to justify it by challenging *119 the validity of the election and subsequent union certification. As its first ground of attack the company points to a union leaflet allegedly containing material false statements mailed to the company employees at a time so close to the election that it claims the true facts could not be brought to their attention. 8 Specifically it objects to the following four representations which it contends interfered with the employees’ freedom of choice: (1) that since the present management of the company came in, “incentive rates were slashed when you made money, more work was piled on, forcing some of your fellow employees to quit, working conditions deteriorated”; (2) the company does not pay for jury duty; (3) the employees pay for their own insurance and (4) the company' also objected to the side-by-side comparison of union wages and benefits with those of the company because the source of the union items listed was unidentified.

In reply, the company promptly posted notices on the bulletin boards at all three plants 9 which r'ead as follows: “Another Union Lie! This Co. Does Pay For Jury Duty! * * * And Another Union Lie! Your Co. Pays 66% of Your Insurance.” The company objects that on the afternoon before the election one Hirsch, a field examiner for the Board, ordered these notices removed and personally removed one of them. It contends that this conduct violated the legal rights of both employer and employees 10 and warranted setting aside the election.

The union leaflet was prepared from information obtained at union organization meetings and from a company booklet distributed to new employees. In accordance with the administrative investigation the Board found that the statements that incentive pay was slashed and that the company did not pay for jury duty were untrue and that the assertion that the employees pay for their insurance was ambiguous, but that this did not interfere with the employees’ freedom of choice. 11 The Board also adopted the Regional Director’s findings that the union’s comparison of benefits was factual in character, relevant, accurately represented contracts that the union had with other employers in the area and did not constitute a misrepresentation.

We note that the company does not challenge this factual finding. Rather, it objects to the union’s “last minute” comparison of wages and benefits as “ambiguous and misleading.” We think this is a somewhat technical objection. Reading the comparison from the standpoint of a company employee in the midst of an election campaign, we cannot say that it was misleading either in form or substance. It merely recited in graphic form what benefits this union claims it had gained for its members in other plants in the area and asked these employees to compare them with the nonunion benefits they had. The union did *120 not state that in any single contract it had achieved all of the benefits listed. We cannot say that this campaign propaganda was unfair or improper.

We turn now to the other representations in the leaflet. To be sure, the statements with reference to incentive and jury duty pay were untrue and the representation that the employees paid for their own insurance, to say the least, was ambiguous, but in and of themselves these statements are not enough to set aside the election. It is too well established to require citation that representation elections will not be lightly set aside. A certain degree of inaccuracy and ambiguity is recognized as indigenous to campaign propaganda. N.L.R.B. v. Trancoa Chemical Corp., 303 F.2d 456, 458, 3 A.L.R.2d 879 (1st Cir. 1962). Also, as we said in that case at 461 the burden is on the objector to the election to show it was “sufficiently likely” that the employees were misled so “that it cannot be told whether they were or were not.” From our examination of the record, we do not think the company met its burden here. The matter of whether the company slashed the incentive pay rates or paid for jury duty or insurance certainly was for the most part within the special knowledge of the employees themselves and they were in a position to recognize and evaluate these statements as election propaganda. Moreover, the company took advantage of its opportunity to correct two of the misstatements by posting specific replies at all three plants almost immediately after the leaflets were distributed. These notices remained posted up to the morning of the election.

In support of its position that the union leaflet impaired the employees’ freedom of choice, the company relies on Trancoa, supra, but that ease is clearly distinguishable on its facts. There, among other things, the union made false claims as to specific contracts it had and as to certain dangers to employees from radioactive materials used in the plant. These claims could not be properly evaluated by the employees. In addition, the company was not able to reply to the union’s claims until about ten minutes before the election. This is a far cry from the situation here.

Nor do we think it was at all likely that the agent’s conduct just prior to the election violated the rights of either employer or employees, interfered with the employees freedom of choice or had any substantial effect on the outcome of the election. The administrative investigation showed that three days before the election this field examiner replaced a defaced election notice and ripped down three newspaper cartoons from a company bulletin board without protest from company officials who were present.

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Related

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649 F.2d 906 (Second Circuit, 1981)
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451 F.2d 873 (Second Circuit, 1971)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
386 F.2d 117, 67 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2027, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 4234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baumritter-corporation-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca1-1967.