Gatliff Coal Company v. National Labor Relations Board

953 F.2d 247, 139 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2242, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 164
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1992
Docket91-5309, 91-5482
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 953 F.2d 247 (Gatliff Coal Company v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gatliff Coal Company v. National Labor Relations Board, 953 F.2d 247, 139 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2242, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 164 (6th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

BOYCE F. MARTIN, Jr., Circuit Judge.

Gatliff Coal Company appeals the National Labor Relations Board’s finding that Gatliff. violated § 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act by discharging two employees for engaging in protected concerted activities. The Board has ordered Gatliff to offer the two employees, Rebecca Carpenter and Diane Taylor, immediate and full reinstatement, to make them whole for any loss of earnings or benefits suffered as a result of their discharge, and to expunge from Gatliff files any reference to the discharges. Gatliff argues that it discharged Carpenter and Taylor for lawful reasons rather than unlawful reasons. Because we find the Board’s conclusions are reasonable under the appropriate standard of review, we affirm.

I. FACTS

The facts are set forth in exacting detail in the administrative law judge’s decision and are incorporated in the Board’s order. We summarize the essential facts as follows.

Rebecca Carpenter began her employment with Gatliff in August, 1987, as a receptionist and switchboard operator. Diane Taylor began her employment in June, 1979, and was a payroll clerk for the three years immediately preceding her termination. Both women were given excellent ratings on job understanding, performance, productivity, dependability, and cooperation on their annual evaluations from September, 1988. These evaluations were signed by William Stark and Clark Taylor, the two women’s supervisors.

In the Spring of 1989, rumors about Carpenter and Diane Taylor engaging in extramarital sexual conduct with Larry Strunk, another Gatliff employee, began to surface. The rumor was started by two women, Vickie Croley and Karen Hamblin. Strunk had recently ended a personal relationship with Croley, who was pregnant and claimed that Strunk was the father. William Stark, who had also dated Vickie Croley, resented Strunk’s treatment of Croley, and gossiped to others about Strunk. Ms. Taylor and *249 Ms. Carpenter apparently sided with Strunk in his decision to end his relationship with Croley.

Ms. Carpenter eventually approached Hamblin and requested an end to the rumor-mongering. She later advised Clark Taylor of this action and he told Carpenter to ignore the rumor. Ms. Taylor similarly approached Croley and Hamblin and requested they stop circulating the false rumor regarding Strunk and herself. On August 13, 1989, Ms. Taylor told Stark what she had done and he told her not to worry about the rumor and that it would eventually die down.

On August 15, Stark advised Carpenter and Diane Taylor that the rumor was not dying down and that Clark Taylor had said they should be fired as an example. However, because the two women had done good work in the past, Stark claimed that he was able to talk Clark Taylor out of firing them. Stark then advised the two women to simply stay in their offices, refrain from using the phones for non-business use, and to report to himself, Clark Taylor, or Deborah Huddleston, if they had to leave the accounting department.

The two women decided to talk to Clark Taylor because they feared losing their jobs but Taylor was unavailable. The two women were able, however to meet with Jim Shackleford, the President of Gatliff, the next morning. They told Shackleford of their concerns that they might be fired to stop a rumor and Shackleford assured them they could not be fired to set an example. He declined to talk to Croley or Hamblin, however, and said the rumor would die out by itself. On August 18, Clark Taylor met with the two women and denied telling Stark he wanted to fire them. All three then met with Stark and it was again stated that the rumor should blow over and the two women should simply stay in their work areas to avoid trouble.

On September 26, the two women were fired in separate meetings with Clark Taylor, Jim Faulkner, and Jim Shackleford. According to Gatliff, Ms. Taylor was fired for insubordination to Stark and for being away from her work area. Other reasons for her firing were raised at the meeting and included: 1) that she misused the phone; 2) that she was uncooperative; 3) that she had failed to order checks six months earlier; and 4) that she was hindering Larry Strunk’s work performance by calling him and visiting his office. Ms. Carpenter was fired for being away from her work area, for a decline in her productivity, and for allegedly incorrectly typing a letter the week before. Larry Strunk was fired the same day.

II. THE BOARD’S FINDINGS

The Board made several findings regarding the specific criticisms of the women’s job performance. First, the Board found that Ms. Taylor’s failure to order the checks was a serious error and did result in a reprimand. This written reprimand indicated, however, that Stark felt Ms. Taylor might not be ultimately responsible for the mistake because of the system in place. Next, the Board disbelieved Gatliff’s contention that it took Carpenter two and one-half hours to type a letter. The Board found that it took Ms. Carpenter one-half hour to do the assignment, that she then went to the dentist, and that while she was gone someone else re-typed the letter based on the original draft and not the draft given to Ms. Carpenter. Regarding the two women’s allegedly excessive absences from the work-place, the Board noted that several of the parties who supposedly complained about the absences did not testify. Further, even those parties who did testify, testified in a general manner and did not clearly indicate just where the women went when they left their department or how often they did so. In most instances, these witnesses had never complained to Gatliff at the time the alleged absences occurred but only did so much later. Strunk testified that the women who had started the rumor about Taylor and Carpenter visited his office more than anyone. This testimony was uncontroverted and, in the Board’s view, further weakened the credibility of the evidence concerning Taylor and Carpenter’s allegedly excessive absenteeism. The Board also found that the allegations of *250 phone misuse and insubordination were unsupported. Taylor only received two or three personal calls from mid-August till September 26 while, ironically, Croley received as many as seven personal calls a day and yet was not chastised for such. Finally, the Board found the insubordination claim was vague and not adequately explained by Stark. Strunk’s discharge the same day as the two women suggested to the Board that the discharges were a device designed to stifle the rumor with which the women had expressed concern.

The Board found that the preparation of the last performance review was particularly suggestive. Stark originally stated on both women’s review that they have “the capabilities of being” good or excellent employees. When Taylor received these reviews he asked Stark to be more specific and to explain why the women were not good or excellent employees at the present time. Stark then wrote out on separate pages specific criticisms about the present status of the women’s work. When the women were discharged, Taylor told them that it was based on Stark’s reports. The Board found Taylor’s behavior in this regard suspicious because it was Taylor who insisted Stark issue the adverse evaluations and, ironically, Stark’s evaluations did not recommend the two women be dismissed.

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953 F.2d 247, 139 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2242, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gatliff-coal-company-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca6-1992.