Intermountain Rural Electric Association, Petitioner/cross-Respondent v. National Labor Relations Board, Respondent/cross-Petitioner

83 F.3d 432, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 32048
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 22, 1996
Docket95-9529
StatusPublished

This text of 83 F.3d 432 (Intermountain Rural Electric Association, Petitioner/cross-Respondent v. National Labor Relations Board, Respondent/cross-Petitioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Intermountain Rural Electric Association, Petitioner/cross-Respondent v. National Labor Relations Board, Respondent/cross-Petitioner, 83 F.3d 432, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 32048 (10th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

83 F.3d 432

152 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2320, 131 Lab.Cas. P 11,557

NOTICE: Although citation of unpublished opinions remains unfavored, unpublished opinions may now be cited if the opinion has persuasive value on a material issue, and a copy is attached to the citing document or, if cited in oral argument, copies are furnished to the Court and all parties. See General Order of November 29, 1993, suspending 10th Cir. Rule 36.3 until December 31, 1995, or further order.

INTERMOUNTAIN RURAL ELECTRIC ASSOCIATION, Petitioner/Cross-Respondent,
v.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Respondent/Cross-Petitioner.

No. 95-9529.

United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.

April 22, 1996.

Before PORFILIO, BARRETT, and LUCERO, Circuit Judges.

ORDER AND JUDGMENT*

PORFILIO, Circuit Judges.

These cross appeals raise issues relating to an award of approximately $3,000 in backpay to two linemen who work for Intermountain Rural Electric Association (the Company). The remedy was generated after the National Labor Relations Board found the Company violated section 8(a)(5) and (1) of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(5) and (1), by unilaterally changing the procedure for selecting employees for overtime. Intermountain Rural Elec. Ass'n, 305 N.L.R.B. 783 (1991)(IREA I), review denied, enforcement granted, Intermountain Rural Elec. Ass'n v. NLRB, 984 F.2d 1562 (10th Cir.1993 (IREA II). On its cross appeal, we enforce the Board's order.

The Company is a rural electric cooperative providing electrical services to customers in the area surrounding its facility in Sedalia, Colorado. The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 111, AFL-CIO (the Union), represents the linemen, employees who construct, maintain and service the electrical lines. The Company and the Union have a longstanding collective bargaining agreement. Under that agreement, the Company called linemen for overtime work in inverse order of the total amount of overtime the employee had worked the prior year so that linemen who had worked the least hours would be called first by dispatchers. For the purpose of this case, linemen may be called for two types of overtime: callout overtime--employees are called to return to work during weekday evenings and nights in response to unforeseen emergencies such as power outages; and, standby overtime--linemen assigned to be "on call" during weekends and holidays earn two hours each day for being on call; and, in case emergency work has to be performed and they are called, they earn additional standby overtime. Callout overtime is not mandatory, and a lineman called may refuse the overtime assignment without penalty.

In practice, an overtime committee made up of employees oversaw the allocation of overtime. Until the change in late 1988, the committee assigned callout and standby overtime at the beginning of each calendar year on the basis of seniority. More senior employees could select the holidays and weekends they wanted to work and then swap schedules if they were later unable to work.

On December 14, 1988, however, during negotiations over a new collective bargaining agreement, the Company announced it would instruct its dispatchers to use an alphabetical rotation procedure exclusively to schedule callout and standby overtime. Then, when an emergency arose during the evening or on weekends, the dispatcher would call the next name alphabetically on the list. Linemen could still refuse callout time, but the alphabet, not seniority, controlled standby overtime.

This unilateral change during the collective bargaining process was deemed an unfair bargaining practice in IREA I, and enforced in IREA II. That finding carried with it a remedial order to restore the overtime procedures previously bargained for and for backpay to be awarded to specific employees who suffered as a consequence of the unilateral change. The Company did not challenge either order. However, after the General Counsel submitted a Compliance Specification alleging the Company owed approximately $13,724 plus interest in backpay to four employees, the Company objected, contending it owed no money to any employee because of its change in overtime call procedures.

The issue was brought to trial before an administrative law judge upon the General Counsel's amended Compliance Specification which reduced the amount of backpay allegedly owed to $10,225.84. At the hearing, the General Counsel called Robert Cervone, an NLRB field examiner, who explained how he arrived at a "representative period" by including as potential backpay claimants all linemen who had been employed consistently for the three years prior to 1988 and at least into the first calendar quarter of 1991. Only overtime actually worked by those linemen was included in the backpay computations. The formula then compared the average percentage of total overtime hours each such lineman worked during that three-year period. It also compared the percentage of overtime worked before and after 1988. Mr. Cervone calculated the difference between the representative percentage and each quarterly percentage after the change, converting the difference into hours and multiplying by the overtime pay rate to determine the backpay owed. Given that the total number of overtime hours had not changed--the Company still called linemen to approximately the same number of calls--Mr. Cervone could then determine how the new system impacted an employee's total number of overtime hours while also taking into consideration employees' refusing callout overtime.

After the hearing, however, the General Counsel submitted a brief to which he appended an amended calculation reducing the total amount of overtime he claimed was owed to $3,993.30. Unfortunately, the brief itself is not in the record before us; therefore, we cannot be certain of its contents. About those contents, however, the Board stated in its order:

[T]he General Counsel took account of the Respondent's evidence concerning the similarly situated unit employees and, deleting the hours for employees Kogan and Keefe, recomputed the representative percentages and submitted these revised backpay figures to the judge.

Although the ALJ granted the General Counsel's request the record remain open to permit submission of rebuttal to the Company's expert, the General Counsel did not add any more evidence. He then moved to close the record. The Company filed no objection to the General Counsel's appended brief, nor did it attempt to otherwise object before the ALJ to its contents.

The ALJ dismissed the amended backpay specification, finding the General Counsel's posthearing attachments should be stricken from the record because they were not properly introduced; that this unfair labor practice did not warrant the usual presumption that backpay was owed; and the General Counsel's formula to calculate backpay was not "reasonably designed to produce approximate awards due." The General Counsel took exception, and after briefing, the Board reversed the ALJ's decision.

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