Hardesty v. Essex Group, Inc.

550 F. Supp. 752, 113 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2690, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16730
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedApril 8, 1982
DocketL 79-48
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 550 F. Supp. 752 (Hardesty v. Essex Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardesty v. Essex Group, Inc., 550 F. Supp. 752, 113 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2690, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16730 (N.D. Ind. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

SHARP, Chief Judge.

This entry shall be considered as complying with Rule 52 F.R.C.P.

A. June 21, 1978 Incident

At approximately 10:45 o’clock A.M. on June 21, 1978, John Hardesty was in the rubber room at the Essex plant in Lafayette, Indiana. He picked up a disposable lighter he found on the floor. When it did not work, he threw the lighter through an open door that leads to a ramp used by two motors and employees traveling to and from the rubber room. (Tr. 95-97).

Employees Bill Pence and Raymond Keller were walking up the ramp at this time on their way to lunch. (Tr. 56-58). The lighter thrown by Hardesty hit Keller in the right eye and knocked him to his knees. (Tr. 100-101). Hardesty joined Pence and Keller when Keller was still on his knees. He helped Keller to a washroom and apologized for hitting him in the eye. (Tr. 62, 102). Keller was then taken by foreman Bob Gram to a medical clinic which, in turn, sent him to the hospital. Keller spent five days in the hospital and after his release, missed an additional several weeks of work. (Tr. 63-64).

At the time of the incident, there was no dispute over the facts. Hardesty admitted to both Company and Union officials that he had hit Keller in the eye with the lighter. (Tr. 258, 332, 336). When he filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board protesting his discharge, he admitted to the investigating agent that he had hit Keller with the lighter. In his affidavit to the National Relations Board, he stated:

I didn’t see two guys coming up the walkway. They were Keller and Bill Pence. The lighter hit Keller in the eye. I helped Keller to the bathroom. Keller was taken to the hospital for 5 days. Keller was off work for thirty days. Keller told me he would not say who did it.

(Defendants’ Exhibit K, p. 5; Tr. 162).

In addition, it is obvious that Hardesty admitted hitting Keller with the lighter at his unemployment compensation hearing, as the referee found:

Claimant (Hardesty) threw a small cigarette lighter from one room through an open door at a trash container in another room. Claimant missed the container and struck another employee in the eye.

(Defendants’ Exhibit G).

At trial, plaintiff claimed that he threw the lighter only about ten feet and saw it disappear between two trash containers. (Tr. 98-99). Plaintiff further testified that after he threw it, approximately five minutes elapsed before he encountered Keller on his knees from the impact of being struck. (Tr. 100). Finally, plaintiff claimed that he later found the lighter he threw between the two containers, as much as 20 feet away from where Keller was standing when hit. (Tr. 150).

Plaintiff obviously believed, even by his own testimony, that he had hit Keller, for he admitted at trial that he told Keller: “If I hit you, I am sorry.” (Tr. 102).

*755 Therefore, there is no reason for him to have offered even the conditional apology that he admits.

B. June 21, 1978: Disciplinary Hearing

After admitting to foreman Forner that he threw the lighter, Hardesty was summoned to a disciplinary meeting specifically provided for by the collective bargaining agreement. Plaintiff’s Exhibit 20, Section 7. At the meeting were Larry Allen, the Company’s personnel manager, John Hardesty and Homer Phipps, a Union steward. (Tr. 109, 111-112, 173, 333, Defendants’ Exhibit K, p. 5).

At the meeting, Hardesty admitted throwing the lighter that hit Keller. (Tr. 332, Exhibit K, p. 5). He was suspended by Larry Allen and instructed to report to the plant on Friday. Homer Phipps wrote a grievance protesting the suspension; Hardesty signed it and left the plant. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 19A).

C. June 23, 1978: Discharge Hearing

On Friday, June 23, 1978, Hardesty returned to the plant for another meeting, at which Company officials were to announce their decision on the appropriate discipline to be imposed. At this meeting were Jerry Garrison, the plant manager and Larry Allen, the personnel manager, as well as Hardesty, Homer Phipps and Alice Delph, who at the time was the chairperson of the Union’s bargaining committee. (Tr. 116-117, 334-335).

The facts were reviewed again, and Larry Allen announced that Hardesty was to be terminated. Hardesty testified that both Phipps and Delph spoke on his behalf and urged the Company to give him a three day disciplinary layoff rather than discharge him. (Tr. 117). The Company officials refused. After the meeting, Hardesty, Delph and Phipps went upstairs and wrote another grievance, this one protesting the discharge. (Tr. 118, Plaintiff’s Exhibit 19B).

D. June 27, 1978: Third Step Of Grievance Procedure-First Meeting

The grievance written on June 23, 1978 was denied in writing by Larry Allen on Monday, June 26, 1978, without a meeting. (See Plaintiff’s Exhibit 19B). It was then moved to Step 3 of the grievance procedure where it was discussed at a meeting on Tuesday, June 27, 1978.

At the June 27 meeting, the Union was represented by Alice Delph, chairperson of the bargaining committee and Calvin Loveless, member of the bargaining committee. These individuals served on the Local Union’s bargaining committee during this period at the direct request of the International Union because no Local Union members had run for positions on the bargaining committee in the Local Union’s most recent election in April or May 1978. (Tr. 256-257, 294). This was the first meeting over Hardesty’s discharge that Calvin Loveless attended because he had been on vacation the week before when the incident occurred. (Tr. 257).

The meeting began with a review of the facts. There was no dispute as to what happened, as Hardesty had admitted the week before that he hit Keller in the eye with the lighter. (Tr. 259, 335-356). The remainder of the meeting was then devoted to a discussion of the penalty imposed by the Company, with Delph and Loveless arguing that discharge was too severe and Allen and Garrison refusing to change their decision. (Tr. 259-60, 336). At trial, Loveless explained the Union’s approach as follows:

We were trying our best to get as small a penalty as humanly possible. The man admitted his guilt. He had thrown the cigarette lighter that hit Mr. Keller. (Tr. 260).

In keeping with this approach, Delph and Loveless proposed other penalties, short of discharge, but Garrison and Allen refused to yield. (Tr. 260-62). Loveless’ testimony on the issue is corroborated by Larry Allen’s. With respect to the June 27 meeting, Allen testified as follows:

Q. What, if anything, happened there? What discussions took place?
A. Basically, the union was pursuing having him reinstated, and the company said no, we’re not going to.
*756 Q. What arguments was the union using?
A.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
550 F. Supp. 752, 113 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2690, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardesty-v-essex-group-inc-innd-1982.