GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:
This clash between the Boeing Company (Boeing) and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAMAW) over Boeing’s obligations to some 1100 installation support services employees at John F. Kennedy Space Center, Florida, has spread far beyond the launch pad and into the exec[309]*309utive bureaucracy, the halls of Congress, and several federal courtrooms. In other forums, the great issues of national labor policy and government contracting policy have been debated and determined in their ways. Ours is the more mundane, but nonetheless complex, task of defining the obligations of a successor employer to arbitrate claims submitted by a union on behalf of incumbent employees of a predecessor employer.
I
FACTS
From March, 1964, until April 1, 1971, Ti’ans Woi’ld Airlines, Inc. (TWA) performed “installation support services” 1 at Kennedy Space Center under contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The approximately 1100 nonsupervisory personnel employed by TWA were represented in collective bargaining by IA-MAW. A collective bargaining agreement between TWA and IAMAW,2 entered into on January 28, 1970, was in force at the time TWA’s contract with NASA expired, and was to “remain in full force and effect to and including December 31, 1971.” Two subordinate IAMAW units, District Lodge 142 and Local Lodge 773, helped administer the TWA-IAMAW agreement.
In June, 1970, NASA invited bids for performance of the Kennedy Space Center installation support services duties for a one-year period commencing February 1, 1971 (performance to begin April 1, 1971), with option for NASA to extend the contract for four successive one-year periods. TWA, Boeing, and five other companies submitted proposals. Four of the offerors, including TWA, based their computations of labor costs on the wage rates and fringe benefits established by the existing TWA-IAMAW collective bargaining contract. Boeing based its computation of labor costs on the wage rates and fringe benefits provided under its own existing collective bargaining agreement with IAMAW, which covered some 287 Kennedy Space Center employees performing mission support services known as “hardware contracts” on the Saturn V launch vehicle. The wages and benefits fixed by the Boeing-IAMAW agreement were substantially below those specified in the TWA-IAMAW agreement,3 and the Boeing-IAMAW agreement was administered through different local subordinates, District Lodge 166 and Local Lodge 2061.
In November, 1970, NASA announced that Boeing had been selected to perform the installation support services at Kennedy Space Center. Although both TWA and IAMAW vigorously protested NASA’s decision,4 Boeing began per[310]*310formance of the contract on April 1, 1971, with a work force of 981,5 of whom 380 were TWA incumbents. On this appeal the parties have debated at length the reasons why a greater percentage of incumbents were not hired by Boeing. The district court’s opinion provides a partial summary:
When Boeing first learned that it would get the contract for support services commencing April 1, 1971, it delivered over 1,000 job application forms to TWA’s Industrial Relations office for dissemination to TWA employees. Boeing offered evidence that I AM [AW] officials — International and local — had discouraged TWA support service employees from seeking employment with Boeing and for that reason by April, 1971, of the approximately 1,000 Boeing employees hired to perform under the support .services contract less than 400 were formerly TWA employees. At first in the course of this suit the defendants contested that position . . . and contended there was discrimination by Boeing in its hiring. However, in its brief filed July 3, 1972, IAM[AW] withdrew for the purposes of this case that contention.
Boeing Co. v. International Association of Machinists & Aerospace Workers, M.D.Fla.1972, 351 F.Supp. 813, 815. IA-MAW emphasizes here, however, that the TWA employees were dissatisfied with the wages and benefits offered under the Boeing contract and that the environment surrounding Boeing’s takeover was highly unsettled. In particular the union argues that Boeing and NASA had not yet entered into a contract, and a TWA protest to the contract award was still pending, as of early February, 1971, so that it would have been premature for the incumbent work force to commit itself to a contractor whose selection was still in doubt. In any case, by February 19, 1971, when an IAMAW spokesman told Boeing representatives that the union would cooperate in distributing Boeing employment applications to TWA incumbents and in transmitting completed applications to Boeing, Boeing had extended offers to and received acceptances from 521 non-incumbents, more than half its workforce.
When Boeing took over performance of the installation support services work on April 1, 1971, the TWA incumbents hired by Boeing reported for work as new employees with no seniority and at reduced wages. Boeing gave each of the IAMAW-represented employees a copy of the Boeing-IAMAW agreement and a notice stating that IAMAW was its employees’ representative and that terms of employment were governed by the Boeing-IAMAW agreement.
On April 26, 1971, IAMAW advised Boeing that
[i]n accordance with Article XI (b)(5) of the [TWA-IAMAW] collective bargaining agreement [it was] submitting the following grievance relating to matters general in character:
1. The Boeing action failed to retain in employment as of April 1, 1971, at least 602 members of the incumbent work force performing installation support services work at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, and this failure constitutes a reduction in force out of seniority order, and/or a dismissal without just cause and without compliance with the procedures requisite to that action, in violation of the IAMAW/TWA agreement.
[311]*3112. The Boeing Company failed and fails to accord to the members of the incumbent work force whom it did retain in employment on April 1, 1971, the seniority that each employee had as of April 1, 1971, but instead treats them as new hires with zero seniority.
3. The Boeing Company failed as of April 1, 1971 and fails, to observe the wages, other benefits, and other employment terms of the TWA/IAMAW agreement as it applies to the performance of installation support service work at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, and which governs for its duration the wages, hours and other employment terms at the Kennedy Space Center.
Boeing declined to consider the merits of the grievances, stating in part:
As of April 1, 1971, the date on which Boeing assumed its responsibilities under the Installation Support Services contract, a substantial majority of the bargaining unit employees were from sources other than Trans World Airlines. Therefore, Boeing is of the opinion that it is not a successor to the TWA/IAM[AW] agreement. Furthermore, even if the majority of the Boeing work force was made up of former TWA employees, it is the position of the Boeing Company that a finding of successorship would be precluded because of the substantial change in the employing industry.
Consistent with our position that the contract on which,the purported grievances are based has no application to the Boeing Company or any of its operations or activities, we cannot and do not recognize your letter of April 26, 1971, as a grievance and decline to respond to it as such.
During the pendency of this dispute IAMAW informed Boeing that, while it would continue to press for adoption of the TWA-IAMAW agreement, it would utilize the dues deduction authorization cards of Local Lodge 2061 (the IAMAW local affiliated with Boeing) until the issue was resolved. Boeing deducted union dues in accordance with the individual authorizations; instead of transmitting the checked-off dues to Local 2061 pursuant to the authorization, however, Boeing deposited the collected dues in an escrow fund on the ground that IAMAW had refused to-recognize the Boeing-IA-MAW collective bargaining agreement.'
On May 10, 1971, Boeing filed this suit under § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, against IAMAW in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, seeking a declaratory judgment that Boeing “is not a successor to and is not bound by the collective bargaining agreement executed by the defendant and Trans World Airlines.” IAMAW filed a counter-claim seeking a declaration that Boeing is bound by the terms of the TWA-IAMAW agreement and an order compelling Boeing to arbitrate the grievances submitted by IAMAW, and an order requiring Boeing to remit the dues which the employees had authorized the company to check-off from their wages.
Upon cross-motions for summary judgment, the District Court declared that “Boeing is not a successor and is not bound” by the TWA-IAMAW collective bargaining agreement, and declined to order Boeing to arbitrate the grievances submitted under that agreement. The District Court did, however, require Boeing to remit the dues previously withheld and escrowed. IAMAW appeals the declaration that Boeing is not a successor; Boeing cross-appeals the order that it turn over the checked-off dues. We affirm.
II
SUCCESSORSHIP
Had 41 U.S.C. § 353(c) been in effect at the time when the events giving rise to this controversy occurred, this matter would have been much simpler of resolution. That section provides in effect that a government service contractor, such as Boeing, which succeeds to a contract under which it furnishes substan[312]*312tially the same services as its predecessor, shall not pay its employees less than its predecessor paid under its collective bargaining agreement, unless such terms are found by the Secretary of Labor to be substantially at variance with the going rate in the locality.6 Section 353(c) was not in effect at the time of the events which gave rise to this controversy, however; it was added to the Service Contract Act of 1965, 41 U.S.C. § 351 et seq., by amendment in 1972, 86 Stat. 789.7 Nor does § 353(c) apply retroactively. We are thus left to the guidance and direction of the developing case law regarding successorship controversies.8
Before approaching these cases we note that we cannot rest upon the formal concepts of merger, successorship, or alter egoism developed in fields alien to labor law. In the sprawling workaday world of employer-employee relationships we go to the plant to find human continuity and pragmatic identity of enterprise; we are not pinned by the precisions and precedents fixed and formulated in the law of taxation, securities, or real property.
A
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
The district court reasoned in this case, 351 F.Supp. 813, 816, that NLRB v. Burns Int’l Security Servs. Inc., 1972, 406 U.S. 272, 92 S.Ct. 1571, 32 L.Ed.2d 61, had established that an employer will not be bound as a successor to arbitrate under its predecessor’s labor contract unless it has employed a majority of its predecessor’s personnel; since Boeing did not meet that standard, the district court determined that Boeing was not bound to arbitrate. While we ultimately conclude as well that IAMAW had made out an insufficient case on the law here, we are concerned that the district court has misapprehended Burns. Thus, with the. additional benefit of the Supreme Court’s opinion in Howard Johnson Co. v. Detroit Local Joint Exec. Bd., 1974, 417 U.S. 249, 94 S.Ct. 2236, 41 L.Ed.2d 46, which was undecided at the time of the district court’s opinion, we proceed at some length to elaborate our understanding of the relevant case law.
The course through the cases on which the parties dispatch us leads over ground both dense and largely uncharted. This case requires the resolution of difficult issues regarding the contractual freedom and expectations of employers and the expectations and reliance of employees. We determine our conclusions by reference to landmarks set by the Supreme Court; but its positions have been too few to survey the entire landscape, and we explore here a largely shadowed spot.
The reference points which the Supreme Court has established lie chiefly in three cases: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Livingston, 1964, 376 U.S. 543, 84 S.Ct. 909, 11 L.Ed.2d 898; Burns, supra; [313]*313and Howard Johnson, supra. These three cases not only offer three different perspectives on the successorship problem, but at times they seem to illuminate a different background. Thus, it is necessary to consider them individually and chronologically in order to determine the coordinates of established principles. Indeed, as the Supreme Court has coun-selled, “In our development of the federal common law [in this area] we must necessarily proceed cautiously, in the traditional ease-by-ease approach of the common law.” Howard Johnson, 417 U.S. at 256, 94 S.Ct. at 2240, 41 L.Ed. 2d at 53.
The primary case on which IAMAW relies, and which Boeing seeks to distinguish, is Wiley, supra, in which the Supreme Court held that “the disappearance by merger of a corporate employer which has entered into a collective bargaining agreement with a union does not automatically terminate all rights of the employees covered by the agreement, and that, in appropriate circumstances, . the successor employer may be required to arbitrate with the union under the agreement.” 376 U.S. at 548, 84 S.Ct. at 914, 11 L.Ed.2d at 904.
In Wiley a small publishing house, In-terscience, with 80 employees, 40 of whom were union-represented, merged into Wiley, a firm with larger assets and commitments and a premerger total of about 300 employees. Interscience ceased to exist in its own right after the merger, and almost all 9 the 40 union-represented employees of Interscience stayed on with Wiley and were mingled with the existing work force at Wiley’s plant, where they pursued the same kind of work as before. The employees’ union and Wiley were unable to agree on the effect of the merger on the existing collective bargaining agreement between Interscience and the union. The union asserted grievances concerning “conditions of employment typically covered by collective bargaining agreements and submitted to arbitration if other grievance procedures fail. Specific provision for each of them [was] made in the In-terscience agreement.” 376 U.S. at 554, 84 S.Ct. at 916, 11 L.Ed.2d at 907. Wiley refused to arbitrate, however, protesting its freedom from a contract which it had not joined. Ultimately the union sued under § 301 to compel arbitration.
The Supreme Court recognized that ordinary contract law would not bind Wiley to the Interscience agreement. Under § 301, however, the controlling principles were held to be a matter of federal law, to be developed from the policies embedded in the “national labor laws.” See Textile Workers Union v. Lincoln Mills, 1957, 353 U.S. 448, 77 S. Ct. 912, 1 L.Ed.2d 972. The Court rested its conclusions regarding the requirement of arbitration on two such policies. First:
[e]mployees, and the union which represents them, ordinarily do not take part in negotiations leading to a change in corporate ownership. The negotiations will ordinarily not concern the well-being of the employees, whose advantage or disadvantage, potentially great, will inevitably be incidental to the main considerations. The objectives of national labor policy, reflected in established principles of federal law, require that the rightful prerogátive of owners independently [314]*314to rearrange their business and even eliminate themselves as employers be balanced by some protection to the employees from a sudden change in the employment relationship.
376 U.S. at 549, 84 S.Ct. at 914, 11 L.Ed.2d at 904. Second:
The transition from one corporate organization to another will in most cases be eased and industrial strife avoided if employees’ claims continue to be resolved by arbitration rather than by “the relative strength of the contending forces,” [United Steelworkers v.] Warrior & Gulf [Navigation Co., 1960], 363 U.S. [574,] at 580, 80 S.Ct. 1347, at 1352, 4 L.Ed.2d [1409,] 1416.
The preference of national labor policy for arbitration as a substitute for tests of strength between contending forces could be overcome only if other considerations compellingly so demanded.
Furthermore, the Court considered that
a collective bargaining agreement is not an ordinary contract. “. [I]t is a generalized code to govern a myriad of cases which the draftsmen cannot wholly anticipate The collective agreement covers the whole employment relationship. It calls into being a new common law— the common law of a particular industry or of a particular plant.” Warrior & Gulf, supra, 363 U.S. at 578-579, 80 S.Ct. at 1351, 4 L.Ed.2d [at 1415]. Central to the peculiar status and function of a collective bargaining agreement is the fact, dictated both by circumstance and by the requirements of the National Labor Relations Act, that it is not in any real sense the simple product of a consensual relationship.
376 U.S. at 550, 84 S.Ct. at 914, 11 L.Ed.2d at 905. “Therefore,” the Court concluded,
although the duty to arbitrate . must be founded on a contract, the impressive policy considerations favoring arbitration are not wholly overborne by the fact that Wiley did not sign the contract being construed. This case cannot readily be assimilated to the category of those in which there is no contract whatever, or none which is reasonably related to the party sought to be obligated. There was a contract, and Interscience, Wiley’s predecessor, was party to it. We thus find Wiley’s obligation to arbitrate this dispute in the Inter-science contract construed in the context of a national labor policy.
376 U.S. at 550-551, 84 S.Ct. at 915, 11 L.Ed.2d at 905 (footnote omitted).
Consonant with its reasoning, the Court limited application of its holding to cases in which there was “substantial continuity of identity in the business enterprise before and after a change,” so that the duty to arbitrate was not “something imposed from without, not reasonably to be found in the particular bargaining agreement and the acts of the parties involved.” 376 U.S. at 551, 84 S.Ct. at 915, 11 L.Ed.2d at 905.
The broad principle of employee protection against sudden changes in the employment relationship which the Court first sketched in Wiley is not, however, the complete picture. Most significantly, the Supreme Court has somewhat shifted its view of the policy framework on which the Wiley result hung, as evidenced by its opinion in NLRB v. Burns Int’l Security Servs., Inc., supra, on which Boeing relies here.
Burns involved an NLRB action to enforce an order requiring a successor employer (1) to recognize and bargain with the union representing its predecessor employer’s employees, and (2) to adhere to the collective bargaining agreement which had bound the predecessor employer. The predecessor-successor relationship was of the service contract type involved in the case at bar: on submitting the best bid in an annual rebidding, Burns was chosen to replace its predecessor, Wackenhut, as the supplier of plant protection services for the Lockheed Aircraft Service Co. at a California [315]*315airport. When Burns took over the security operation, employing 42 workers, 27 of whom had been with Wackenhut in identical jobs, Burns refused to recognize the United Plant Guard Workers of America (UPG), which had been certified four months earlier as the exclusive bargaining representative of Wacken-hut’s employees.
The Court’s opinion, which turned “to a great extent on the precise facts involved here,” 406 U.S. at 274, 92 S.Ct. at 1575, 32 L.Ed.2d at 65 was in two parts.
First, the Court held, 5 to 4, that, assuming the appropriateness of the bargaining unit,
it was not unreasonable for the Board to conclude that the union certified to represent all employees in the unit still represented a majority of the employees and that Burns could not reasonably have entertained a good-faith doubt about that fact.
406 U.S. at 278, 92 S.Ct. at 1577, 32 L. Ed.2d at 68. Four Justices dissented to this holding on the grounds that a continuing union majority had not been shown with mathematical certainty and that notions of suceessorship such as underlay Wiley ought not apply even to require the union recognition here, given the nature of the predecessor-successor relationship.
Second, the Court held unanimously that Burns was not bound to observe the substantive terms of the Wackenhut-UPG agreement. Stressing the fundamentally of the freedom of contract principle in the national labor laws, see generally Howard K. Porter Co. v. NLRB, 1970, 397 U.S. 99, 90 S.Ct. 821, 25 L.Ed.2d 146, the Court emphasized that the existence of a duty to bargain did not enable the Board to bind either side to agree to any particular term of contract. The Board argued that the interests in the “peaceful settlement of industrial conflicts and ‘protection [of] the employees [against] a sudden change in the employment relationship’ ” 406 U.S. at 285, 92 S.Ct. at 1581, 32 L.Ed.2d at 72, recognized in Wiley “require that Burns be treated under the collective-bargaining contract exactly as Wackenhut would have been if it had continued protecting the Lockheed plant.” Id. The Court found the Wiley case distinguishable, however, on two grounds.10
First, Wiley held only that the agreement to arbitrate survived the merger there, and left for the arbitrator to decide, subject to judicial review, the extent to which the successor employer was bound by the remaining provisions of the predecessor’s collective bargaining agreement. In Burns, however, arbitration was not in issue, and the interest in labor stability was insufficiently substantial to outweigh the policy against governmental imposition of specific contract terms. Second, the Burns Court distinguished the predecessor-successor relationship in the Burns annual rebidding situation from that in Wiley, which involved
a merger occurring against a background of state law that embodied the general rule that in merger situations the surviving corporation is liable for the obligations of the disappearing corporation. . . . Here there was no merger or sale of assets, and there were no dealings whatsoever between Wackenhut and Burns. On the contrary, they were competitors for the same work, each bidding for the service contract at Lockheed. Burns purchased nothing from Wackenhut and became liable for none of its fi[316]*316nancial obligations. Burns merely hired enough of Wackenhut’s employees to require it to bargain with the union .... But this consideration is a wholly insufficient basis for implying either in fact or in law that Burns had agreed or must be held to have agreed to honor Wacken-hut’s collective-bargaining contract.
406 U.S. at 286-287, 92 S.Ct. at 1581, 32 L.Ed.2d at 72.
Whatever the possibility of distinguishing the precise holdings of the two cases, however, there remains a fundamental difficulty in reconciling their approaches, as we have remarked elsewhere, United Steelworkers v. United States Gypsum Co., 5 Cir. 1974, 492 F.2d 713, 725 n. 20, and as the Supreme Court has itself subsequently observed, Howard Johnson, 417 U.S. at 253-259, 94 S.Ct. at 2239-2241, 41 L.Ed.2d at 52-53. Wiley’s expansive approach to the reach of a collective bargaining agreement remains in stark contrast to the Burns Court’s emphasis on traditional principles of consent to be bound by contract, which emphasis culminated in the statement that “[s]trife is bound to occur if the concessions that must be honored do not correspond to the relative economic strength of the parties.” 406 U.S. at 288, 92 S.Ct. at 1582, 32 L.Ed.2d at 73.
The Supreme Court has not yet found it necessary to resolve these differences in approach. We are confident, however, that even at the most Burns has not overruled the principles of Wiley. See e. g., Golden State Bottling Co. v. NLRB, 1973, 414 U.S. 168, 94 S.Ct. 414, 38 L.Ed.2d 388 (a post-Burns case applying principles of Wiley in enforcing an NLRB unfair labor practice remedy against successor employer, where it had notice of predecessor’s unfair labor practice litigation); see United Steelworkers v. United States Gypsum Co., 5 Cir. 1974, 492 F.2d at 725-726.
The matter at bar resembles both Wiley (in that the remedy sought is an arbitration order under § 301) and Burns (in that the link between the predecessor and successor is the tenuous one of replacement under a periodic rebidding service contract arrangement). While we need not determine the precise remaining vitality of Wiley’s reach, we are required to measure its application to the matter at hand, in light of the approach more recently adopted by the Supreme Court. In this effort we extract some guidance from the Court’s most recent discussion of these issues in Howard Johnson, supra. There Howard Johnson leased the real property and purchased the remaining assets of a restaurant and motor lodge of one of its franchisees, and proceeded to operate the unit itself. Determining to establish its own work force, Howard Johnson hired 45 employees, only 9 of whom had been its former franchisee’s personnel. The union which had represented the former franchisee’s work force and entered into a collective bargaining agreement with the former franchisee brought a § 301 action to compel arbitration under the predecessor’s bargaining agreement; its principal grievance was that Howard Johnson was obligated under that contract to continue the employment of all of the franchisee’s employees because they had not been discharged in accordance with the terms of the union-franchisee contract.
While the Howard Johnson Court explicitly declined to resolve the differences between Wiley and Burns, it did make three points significant here. First, it established that Wiley should be read restrictively, as a “guarded, almost tentative statement,” 417 U.S. at 256, 94 S.Ct. at 2240, 41 L.Ed.2d at 53. Second, it held that even under Wiley the arbitration .sought could not be ordered because of the lack of “substantial continuity of identity in the business enterprise,” which requirement it read to include a showing of a “substantial continuity in the identity of the work force across the change in ownership.” 417 U.S. at 259, 94 S.Ct. at 2241, 41 L.Ed.2d at 57. Third, the Court articulated the balance which must be struck in determining whether an employer is obliged [317]*317to fulfill any given obligation of “sue-cessorship”;
The answer to this inquiry requires analysis of the interests of the new employer and the employees and of the policies of the labor laws in light of the facts of each case and the particular legal obligation which is at issue, whether it be the duty to recognize and bargain with the union, the duty to remedy unfair labor practices, the duty to arbitrate, etc. There is, and can be, no single definition of “successor” which is applicable in every legal context. A new employer, in other words, may be a successor for some purposes and not for others.
417 U.S. at 262 n. 9, 94 S.Ct. at 2243, 41 L.Ed.2d at 56-57.11
B
SUBSTANTIAL CONTINUITY IN THE IDENTITY OF THE BUSINESS ENTERPRISE
The Supreme Court opinions are consistent on the one proposition that there is no simple checklist for decision; none could exhaust the factors relevant to determining whether a successor employer is bound to arbitrate under its predecessor’s contract. We are in essence called upon to pragmatize the corporate and labor relationships to determine whether the past is part of the present, or the present the beginning of tomorrow. In a given case it may be clear that some one indicator of continuity is so weak as to allow a simple conclusion of no duty to arbitrate; but in more closely balanced cases, ownership, contracts terminated and germinated, purity and impurity of motives, and an encyclopedia of other variables must be equiponderated. We conclude here that despite the fact that there is no doubt on this record that Boeing has pursued its business in a manner substantially congruent to TWA’s patterns,12 Boeing cannot be ordered in this § 301 action to arbitrate IAMAW’s grievances under the TWA-IAMAW contract, given (1) the extent of the continuity in the identity of the work force across the change in employers, and (2) the relation between Boeing and TWA themselves.
Continuity in the Identity of the Work Force
Howard Johnson establishes that “continuity of identity in the business enterprise necessarily includes . a substantial continuity of identity of the work force across the change in ownership.” 417 U.S. at 263, 94 S.Ct. at 2244, 41 L.Ed.2d at 46.13 We do not [318]*318think that any precise definition of “substantiality” in work force continuity can be distilled from the particular language of Howard Johnson, however. The Court found support for its “substantial” standard in the “wholesale transfer” of employees from predecessor to successor in Wiley 14 and from “the emphasis most of the lower courts have placed on whether the successor employer hires a majority of the predecessor’s employees in determining the legal obligations of the successor in § 301 suits under Wiley” 417 U.S. at 263, 94 S.Ct. at 2244, 41 L.Ed.2d at 46. We believe that these statements in Howard Johnson are descriptive rather than prescriptive and do not, in themselves, establish any “majority” criterion, such as Boeing argues in favor of here.15 IAMAW argues in the other direction that the Supreme Court’s enunciation of a “substantiality” test when it might have adopted a “majority” standard establishes that a “majority” employee continuity cannot be prerequisite to a duty to arbitrate. We find this argument as unimpressive as its rejected converse. Rather, we regard the Supreme Court’s emphasis in Howard Johnson of the necessity for pursuing a “traditional case-by-case approach” in this area, 417 U.S. at 256, 94 S.Ct. at 2240, 41 L.Ed.2d at 53, as an assurance that it intended to establish no precise benchmark at this stage in the law’s development, even assuming that a strict standard would ever be appropriate.
Computation of Continuity in the Identity of the Work Force
Boeing argues, and IAMAW denies, that even if the Supreme Court has not committed itself to any precise definition of “substantiality,” case law from the lower courts establishes “majority status” as the test of substantial continuity in the identity of the work force. Before addressing the appropriateness of a “majority” standard, we consider what group it is that this “majority” is to be computed from: that is, whether the more significant factor in determining the continuity in the identity of the work force for the purpose of determining whether a successor employer must arbitrate under its predecessor’s contract is the percentage of the predecessor’s employees who have continued to work for the successor, or whether it is the percentage of the successor’s employees who had earlier worked for the predecessor.16
The parties here have debated the substantiality of the continuity in the identity of the work force largely in terms of the 39% of Boeing’s employees who had worked for TWA. We conclude, however, that the percentage of TWA employees who became Boeing employees, which we determine to be about [319]*31935%, is the more significant figure in considering whether Boeing is obliged to arbitrate under the TWA-IAMAW contract.
To begin with, the showing of employee continuity is relevant in establishing “the continuity of identity in the business enterprise.” As a matter of principle, since the duty to arbitrate arises from an application of the contract between the predecessor employer and his organized employees, the entity whose identity is to be the reference point for judging continuity ought to be the predecessor enterprise. Accordingly, in judging the continuity in the identity of the work force, the incumbent component of the successor’s work force ought to be compared against the predecessor’s staff, not the successor’s.17
This method of computation is consistent with the Supreme Court’s opinions. In Wiley the Court required arbitration where the predecessor’s employees comprised a much smaller percentage of the successor’s employees after the merger (40 of 340 = 12%) than the corresponding ratio in Howard Johnson (9 of 45 = 20%), in which no arbitration was required. Rather, the Howard Johnson Court found it most significant that “in Wiley the surviving corporation hired all of the employees of the disappearing corporation,” 417 U.S. at 258, 94 S.Ct. at 2241, 41 L.Ed.2d at 54 (emphasis altered). Moreover, it found support for its conclusion in what it perceived to be “the emphasis most of the lower courts have placed in determining the legal obligations of the successor in § 301 suits under Wiley” on the percentage of the predecessor’s employees hired by the successor employer, 417 U.S. at 263, 94 S.Ct. at 2244, 41 L.Ed.2d at 57.
Thus, while the figure most significant in determining the successor’s duty under Burns to bargain with the union representing the predecessor’s organized employees may be18 the percentage of the successor’s employees who are incumbents from the predecessor, see e. g., Burns, 406 U.S. at 279, 92 S.Ct. at 1577, 32 L.Ed.2d at 68; Emerald Maintenance, Inc., 5 Cir. 1972, 464 F.2d 698, 701; Goldberg, The Labor Law Obligations of a Successor Employer, 63 Nw.U.L.Rev. 735, 793-794 (1969), we find those cases — where the basic question to be resolved by examination of employee continuity is simply whether the union represents a majority of the successor’s employees, see Burns, 406 U.S. at 278-281, 92 S.Ct. at 1577-1579, 32 L.Ed.2d at 68-69; NLRB v. Auto Ventshade, Inc., 5 Cir. 1960, 276 F.2d 303, [320]*320307 — unpersuasive examples in this context.19
Regarding “Majority” Work Force Continuity
Having established the reference point from which to compute the ratio of substantial continuity in identity of the work force, we turn to the substance of the question: whether the fact that Boeing hired only about 35% of the incumbent TWA work force determines that Boeing is not obligated to arbitrate under its predecessor’s contract.
We are not prepared at this point in the development of the law of successor employers’ obligations to arbitrate either to accept or to reject Boeing’s argument that “majority status” is prerequisite to the obligation to bargain. In the first place, as we have already expressed, we do not find that the Supreme Court has established any benchmark. Furthermore, we are convinced that reliance on bargaining cases, such as Burns, is misplaced. There is much, though not unanimous, authority for the proposition that a successor employer will be required to bargain with the union representing his predecessor’s employees only when predecessor’s personnel comprise a majority of the successor’s work force.20 But the federal labor law policies underlying such conclusions are analytically distinct from those involved in succes-
sorship arbitration suits under § 301. The majority requirement in duty to bargain cases is premised upon notions of majority selection of organized employees’ collective bargaining agents. In the duty to arbitrate cases under § 301, however, the incumbent employees fulfill no such representative function in the filing of their grievances.21 Thus, in Wiley the Supreme Court noted that its finding of Wiley’s duty to arbitrate did “not suggest any view on the questions surrounding a certified union’s claim to continued representative status. This union . . . seeks to arbitrate claims based on [its contract with the predecessor employer], not to negotiate a new agreement,” and stated that “[t]he fact that the Union does not represent a majority of an appropriate bargaining unit in Wiley does not prevent it from representing those employees who are covered by the agreement which is in dispute and out of which Wiley’s duty to arbitrate arises.” 376 U.S. at 551 and n. 5, 84 S.Ct. at 915, 11 L.Ed.2d at 905. To the same effect, we have upheld a successor employer’s duty to arbitrate with a union which had once represented the predecessor’s employees, but lost its certification. United States Gypsum Co. v. United Steelworkers, 5 Cir. 1967, 384 F.2d 38, 47.
For the purpose of resolving this case, however, we need not decide whether the [321]*321principles underlying the Howard Johnson requirement of a substantial continuity in the identity of the work force is to be read as a generally applied “majority” standard.22 We conclude only that the continuity in the identity of the work force must be considered together with other indicia of enterprise continuity, and turn to a consideration of those factors.
Nature of the TWA — Boeing Relationship
It is well established that the principle of Wiley applies to corporate succes-sorships accomplished through purchase and sale rather than merger.23 We consider here the extent to which the Wiley test of continuity in the identity of the business enterprise can be satisfied in a periodic rebidding service contract context — “hardly ... a typical suc-cessorship situation.” 24
We begin by distinguishing the cases finding sufficient continuity in the “employing industry” 25 to support a duty to recognize and bargain with the predecessor employees’ union in such a context.26 The focus in these duty to bargain cases being whether “the unit still representes] a majority of the employees,” Burns, 406 U.S. at 278, 92 S.Ct. at 1577, 32 L.Ed.2d at 68, the primary consideration is naturally the work force continuity. See generally Goldberg, supra note 20, at 793-799. As a secondary matter, attention is given to whether the successor’s “operational structure and practices differed from those of [the predecessor, so that the successor’s] bargaining unit was no longer an appropriate one.” Burns, 406 U.S. at 280, 92 S.Ct. at 1578, 32 L.Ed.2d at 68. See Emerald Maintenance Inc. v. NLRB, 5 Cir. 1972, 464 F.2d 698, 701-702. See, e. g., NLRB v. Alamo White Truck Service, 5 Cir. 1959, 273 F.2d 238. See generally Goldberg, supra note 20, at 799-806. Thus, the nature of the predecessor-successor relationship is of relatively minor significance.
[322]*322In the duty to arbitrate context, however, it is the continuity in identity of the enterprise which makes the duty to arbitrate under the predecessor’s collective bargaining agreement “reasonably related to the party sought to be obligated,” and not “something imposed from without,” Wiley, 376 U.S. at 550-551, 84 S.Ct. at 915, 11 L.Ed.2d at 905; and the “continuity in the identity of the work force across the change in ownership” constitutes only a necessary but insufficient part of the enterprise continuity. Howard Johnson. Thus we think the relationship between the predecessor and successor employers far more critical here than in the duty to bargain cases.
While we recognize that the Supreme Court spoke in Howard Johnson of substantial continuity in the identity of the work force across the change in ownership, we do not regard that oblique reference as a conclusion that a successor’s duty to arbitrate under § 301 depends on a merger or purchase and sale connection between the predecessor and successor. Nor do we think that the Burns majority’s “studious” avoidance of the term “successor,”27 while a significant gesture, should be taken to conclude the Supreme Court’s thinking on the matter. More important, however, is the Burns Court’s emphasis of the tenuous quality of the enterprise continuity in denying the application of substantive contract terms in Burns:
Wiley[’s] . . . [narrow] holding dealt with a merger occurring against a background of state law that embodied the general rule that in merger situations the surviving corporation is liable for the obligations of the disappearing corporation. . . . Here there was no merger or sale of assets, and there were no dealings whatsoever between Wackenhut and Burns. On the contrary, they were competitors for the same work, each bidding for the service contract at Lockheed. Burns purchased nothing from Wack-enhut and became liable for none of its financial obligations. Burns merely hired enough of Wackenhut’s employees to require it to bargain with the union . . .. But this consideration is a wholly insufficient basis for implying either in fact or in law that Burns had agreed or must be held to have agreed to honor Wacken-hut’s collective bargaining contract.
406 U.S. at 286, 92 S.Ct. at 1581, 32 L. Ed.2d at 72.28 This factor was not, however, the critical basis of Burns conclusion that the service contract there was not bound to the terms of its predecessor’s contract. Indeed, commentators have stressed that the most significant consideration in the Supreme Court’s conclusion was the inflexibility of the nonarbitrated enforcement of the precise and entire substance of the predecessor’s contract through the NLRB’s mechanisms.29 Nevertheless, we recognize that continuity in the identity of the business enterprise is more strongly shown where the predecessor employer-successor employer relationship is one of purchase and sale, or merger, than in this replaeement-under-periodic-rebid-ding situation.
We are not prepared at this stage in the development of successor-ship principles, however, to say — when we need not do so to resolve this case— that there cannot be “any substantial continuity of identity in the business enterprise” in the absence of a transfer of ownership of tangible assets between [323]*323employers, even when the most substantial assets involved in both the predecessor and successor enterprises may be the relationship to the primary employer and the collection of the work force, both of which have passed from the predecessor to the successor employer.30 Rather, in keeping with the case-by-case approach the Supreme Court has advised, we conclude at this time only that where the relationship betwen the predecessor and successor employers is one of replacement in the periodic rebidding context, so that demonstration of continuity in the identity of the enterprise depends completely upon the continuity of the employee complement, the continuity in the identity of the work force must be more substantially established than would be required were the relationship between the predecessor and. successor employers one of merger, or purchase and sale.
This conclusion is consistent with the Howard Johnson Court’s injunction that Wiley ought to be expanded only with caution, and with the Wiley Court’s balancing of employee interests in protection from “a sudden change in the employment relationship” (which exists regardless of the form of employer substitution), against the “rightful prerogative of owners independently to rearrange their businesses.” 376 U.S. at 549, 84 S.Ct. at 914, 11 L.Ed.2d at 904.31 We regard the substantiality of continuity from neither the employers’ nor the employees’ standpoint alone.32
Conclusion
We hold, then, that given the nature of the relation between TWA and Boeing, the extent of the continuity in the identity of the work force established here is not sufficiently substantial to oblige Boeing under § 301 to arbitrate under its predecessor’s contract. Howard Johnson, 417 U.S. at 263-264, 94 S.Ct. at 2244, 41 L.Ed.2d at 58. Cf. Hoisting, Eng’rs Local, 701 v. Pioneer Constr. Co., D.Or.1970, 313 F.Supp. 753.33 In this conclusion we do [324]*324not pretend to have harmonized the law; such would be beyond the range of any single opinion, given the variety of relevant factors. We have simply improvised a tune with which to develop the established themes, and followed past scores to avoid discord.
Ill
CHECK-OFF PROVISION
The district court ordered Boeing to turn over to IAMAW (with interest) the union dues of its IAMAW-member employees which Boeing had checked-off and escrowed.34 Boeing cross-appeals this part of the district court’s order, arguing that where there is no collective bargaining agreement applicable to Boeing (1) that.it is not obligated to deduct dues for the benefit of IAMAW; and (2) that to remit any such checked-off dues to IAMAW violates § 302(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 186(a).35
We need not consider the correctness of Boeing’s legal conclusions here, however, for we determine that its premise is unsupported; we find that there is a labor contract applicable to Boeing. “Boeing contends that the Boeing-IAMAW agreement is controlling.” Reply Brief for Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross Appellant at 4. IAMAW contends that if the TWA-IAMAW contract does not control here, then the BoeingIAMAW contract does. The district court correctly observed that “there is no evidence that anyone has challenged IAM[AW] as the collective bargaining agent for the Boeing support services employees — the whole dispute has centered around which contract was applicable.” 351 F.Supp. at 816. With our holding here that Boeing is obliged neither to adhere to nor to arbitrate under the TWA-IAMAW collective bargaining agreement, that dispute is resolved, and [325]*325Boeing’s argument is left without any foundation.
The judgment and order entered below are
Affirmed.