Glendale Manufacturing Company v. Local No. 520, International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, Afl-Cio

283 F.2d 936, 47 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2152, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3347
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 10, 1960
Docket8089_1
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 283 F.2d 936 (Glendale Manufacturing Company v. Local No. 520, International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, Afl-Cio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glendale Manufacturing Company v. Local No. 520, International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, Afl-Cio, 283 F.2d 936, 47 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2152, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3347 (4th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

HAYNSWORTH, Circuit Judge.

An employer appeals from an order requiring it to bargain with a decertified, minority union. Its principal position was that the question about which the union wishes to negotiate became moot when an earlier contract between the employer and the union expired. We find no merit in the contention. Questioning the propriety of an order requiring an employer to bargain with a union which does not represent the employees, we requested additional briefs, which have been filed with us.

We cannot affirm the order.

On October 15, 1955, the employer and the union entered into a collective bargaining agreement for a term ending almost three years later, on September 30, 1958. Included in this agreement was a clause 1 permitting an annual reopening of wages in the event of a change of at least five per cent in the Consumer’s-Price Index of the Department of Labor-It provided that if the parties were unable to agree upon the reopened wage question, it should be treated as a dispute, subject to adjustment as such. By other clauses of the contract, disputes were made arbitrable.

On April 29, 1958, the union undertook to exercise its asserted right to reopen the wage question, the Consumer’s Price Index having risen 7.31% since the execution of the contract. The employer contended the provision for annual reopening of the wage question was referable to contract anniversary dates and that there was no right to reopen the question five months before the contract was to terminate. This dispute went to arbitration. The arbitrator, agreeing with the union, ruled that the word “annually” meant only that the question could not be reopened more frequently than once in any 12-month period and that the union had a right to reopen it in April.

In that proceeding the union sought to have the arbitrator fix the wages. The arbitrator refused to do that upon the ground that the contract made the reopened question one for negotiation, and it could become subject to arbitration! only if negotiation and the preliminary procedures for the adjustment of disputes failed to produce agreement. The *938 award, therefore, was a direction to the parties to negotiate the matter.

The arbitrator’s award was announced on September 24, 1958. Six days later, on September 30, 1958, the contract expired. On the next day, October 1, 1958, under the supervision of the National Labor Relations Board, a representation election was held among the employees of this employer. The election resulted in a rejection of the union and its decer-tification by the Board.

Over a month later, in November 1958, the union, which had lost its certified status and no longer represented a majority of the employees, requested the employer to negotiate with it on the question of wages for the 5-month period, May through September, 1958. When the employer declined, the union filed this action to enforce the arbitrator’s award directing such negotiation.

The District Court granted the union’s motion for summary judgment. 2

The employer’s principal contention on appeal is that the wage question became moot when the contract expired. We do not agree. If the union had not lost its certified status, the law would have required the employer to bargain in good faith with the union on the terms of a new contract and on the wages for the final five months of the old contract period. These bargainable issues would not be eliminated or restricted by expiration of the old contract. By force of the reopening of the wage question, the employees, during the 5-month period, had been working for indeterminate wages to be fixed by subsequent agreement. So long as the union was their bargaining representative, it had the exclusive right to negotiate that agreement for them and the employer was under a duty to deal with it.

In the District Court, the employer had advanced the union’s decertification as a reason for not enforcing the arbitrator’s direction to negotiate with it. Since the District Judge did not discuss the point in his opinion, it is possible it got lost in the multiple, futile defenses set up by the employer. Concerned that we were being asked to affirmatively order the commission of an unfair labor practice, we requested additional briefs addressed to the point. We have concluded we cannot order an employer to bargain on the subject of the employees’ wages with a union which does not represent the employees.

The basic policy of the National Labor Relations Act, 3 as amended, is incorporated in § 7 of that Act. 4

It is plain that employees have the right by virtue of § 7 to designate a union to represent them and it is equally plain that they have the right to decline to be represented by a union. By § 8 (a) (1) of the Act the employer is guilty of an unfair labor practice if he interferes with the employees’ right to join a union, or with their right not to join or be represented by a union. Similar interference by a union is an unfair labor practice under § 8(b) (1). There are many cases which hold that employers committed unfair labor practices when they entered into agreements, affecting the employees generally, with a favored or minority union. 5 These are not cases *939 of employer domination resulting in an order of disestablishment of the dominated union, but are cases where the union was truly independent, but, for some reason, was favored by the employer with the result that he deprived his employees of the right not to be represented by that union. The same principle has been applied where a company constructs a new plant and enters into a contract with the union, representing others of its employees elsewhere, with respect to the new plant before a representative number of new employees had been employed at the new plant and had exercised their right to choose. 6 Administratively, the general counsel of the Board ruled in 1956 7 that an extension of an existing contract to a new plant was not an unfair labor practice if the new plant was merely an accretion to an existing unit, but, if the new plant is really a separate unit, the employees at that plant, after their employment, have a right under § 7 to be represented by a union if they wish it, and a right not to be if they do not wish it.

There are some exceptions, of course, to the rule that the employer may not bargain with a minority union.

The courts and the Board are agreed that after a union has won an election and has been certified, the employer is under the duty to bargain with the certified union for a reasonable time even though the union loses its majority. We held in Poole Foundry & Machine Co. v. N. L. R. B„ 4 Cir., 192 F.2d 740 8 that an employer could not refuse to bargain with a certified union where only four months had elapsed after adoption of a settlement agreement.

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283 F.2d 936, 47 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2152, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glendale-manufacturing-company-v-local-no-520-international-ladies-ca4-1960.