International Chemical Workers Union Local 483 v. National Labor Relations Board, Cabot Corporation, Intervenor

561 F.2d 253, 182 U.S. App. D.C. 255
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 19, 1977
Docket76-1491
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 561 F.2d 253 (International Chemical Workers Union Local 483 v. National Labor Relations Board, Cabot Corporation, Intervenor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Chemical Workers Union Local 483 v. National Labor Relations Board, Cabot Corporation, Intervenor, 561 F.2d 253, 182 U.S. App. D.C. 255 (D.C. Cir. 1977).

Opinion

MacKINNON, Circuit Judge:

The unfair labor practice charges on complaint of the union arose out of a strike situation. We affirm the two-to-one decision of the Board which held that the company did not violate the Act.

I

During a strike of Local 483 of the Chemical Workers at the carbon black plant of Cabot Corporation at Franklin, Louisiana, which began on July 1, 1974, the corporation hired Payne and Keller of Louisiana Inc. (P & K), to erect a security fence and to do “turn-around maintenance work” for which it customarily subcontracted. The existing contract between Cabot and Local 483 only ran until July 1, 1974. At that time the parties had been bargaining since May 30, 1974, and since the union members went on strike on July 1, 1974, it was self-evident that an impasse had been reached in the bargaining between the parties. Since the relations were at an impasse there was no obligation on July 22 and 24 for Cabot to bargain with Local 483 over the wages to be paid to “strike replacements.” Leveld Wholesale, Inc., 218 NLRB 1344 (1975); Imperial Outdoor Advertising, 192 NLRB 1248 (1971). Cabot never did contract for any employees of P & K, directly or indirectly, to engage in any production work at the plant.

P & K were generally engaged in building, construction and plant maintenance, having 12 other maintenance contracts, all of which were substantially the same as the contract it entered into with Cabot. Cabot and P & K had no business relations prior to the strike. However, when the strike occurred Cabot sought to protect its plant and to that end executed two contracts with P & K on July 22 and 24, 1974. One contract was for the construction of a security fence and one was for the maintenance work. Each contract provided that P & K would function as an independent contractor on a cost-plus basis.

On July 25,1974, Local 102 of the American Federation of Unions obtained signed authorization cards from a majority of the P & K employees working at the Cabot plant. P & K checked the authorization cards and the next day, July 26, 1974, on the basis of that check, recognized Local 102 as the bargaining representative for its employees at the Cabot plant. It is significant that P & K had collective bargaining contracts with Local 102 at 10 of the other 12 plants where it had employees and that the terms of P & K’s contract with Cabot coincided generally with the terms of the contracts P & K had with companies at the other plants where Local 102 represented its employees.

In addition to its contract with P & K, Cabot also on June 28, 1974, had contracted with Southwest Security Service (hereinafter “Security”) for guard service during the strike. These services also included supplying vehicles and equipment and furnishing guard service at the plant, on buses transporting P & K personnel to and from the plant, and at a motel where P & K employees were staying and where P & K had an office.

Local 483 filed unfair labor charges against P & K and Cabot claiming that they were responsible for the following acts of the security guards: (1) One Aucoin on July 12th, while drunk, fired a pistol at a truck owned by a striking Cabot employee which was parked in front of the employee’s house. The truck was struck by three bullets. Aucoin then went to the Cabot plant where the brother of the president of Security asked him to leave the premises because he was drunk. Before he left, Aucoin pistol-whipped a striking employee and pointed the pistol at another striker. Au-coin was arrested and convicted of damag *255 ing the truck and of the pistol whipping. Security later reinstated him but Cabot directed that he be removed from the property. (2) On July 13th a guard named Hunter accidentally discharged the shotgun he was loading by closing the breech too quickly. Hunter was fired two days later. (3) In mid-August, a guard named Harding, while driving his car through the picket line at the Cabot plant was told by a striking employee that he would be “in big trouble” if he hit any pickets. Harding said he was coming through and anyone obstructing the way would be hit. He got out of his car holding a pistol pointed at the ground, picked up some tacks on the road in front of the car and threw them in front of a striker’s car. Later when he exited the plant Hunter got out and picked up some more tacks from the road and threw them in front of the cars of striking employees. One of the Security guards then told Harding to leave. (4) Also, when Theriot, the president of Security, was driving a bus or truck into the plant he almost struck pickets at the entrance. The pickets had moved across the road at the entrance when they saw Theriot approaching. One of the pickets was arrested for obstructing traffic.

Out of the foregoing factual situation Local 483, inter alia, charged Cabot and P & K with violating section 8(a)(2) and (5) 1 of the National Labor Relations Act. This portion of the union’s complaint alleged that the employees at the Cabot plant on July 25th were not just employees of P & K but were joint employees of Cabot Corporation and hence were covered by Cabot’s contract with Local 483, and the recognition by P & K of Local 102 as the collective bargaining representative for the maintenance employees amounted to a refusal to bargain collectively with Local 483. The proper outcome of this dispute depends, as the brief of Local 483 postulates the issue: “Whether Cabot Corporation and Payne and Keller of Louisiana, Inc., constitute a joint employer of employees at the Cabot plant.” Petitioner’s Brief, p-. 1.

In a two-to-one decision the National Labor Relations Board held that the replacement maintenance workers were employees solely of P & K, i. e., that a joint employer situation did not exist between Cabot Corporation and P & K. This conclusion must be affirmed if supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole.

The operative facts upon which the ultimate decision depends are in many instances capable of two interpretations, but both the Administrative Law Judge and a majority of the Board delegated to decide the case interpreted the facts to support the conclusion that the workers were employed solely by P & K corporation.

The facts must be examined closely. Probably the four most influential circumstances are: First, P & K was regularly engaged in a substantial independent business in which it had contracts, similar to its Cabot contract, with 12 other companies in other localities. Second, P & K had collective bargaining contracts with Local 102 covering its employees at 10 of the 12 other operations. Third, the contract between Cabot and P & K when it was entered into was intended as a temporary contract to extend only for the duration of the strike. Fourth, the services being contracted for involved maintenance work, originally just turn-around maintenance.

Whether Cabot and P & K were joint employers depends upon the amount of actual and potential control that Cabot had over the replacement employees. This in turn, to a certain extent, is dependent upon the amount and nature of control that Cabot exercised and was authorized to exercise under the contract. The issue is essentially factual. Boire v. Greyhound Corp.,

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561 F.2d 253, 182 U.S. App. D.C. 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-chemical-workers-union-local-483-v-national-labor-relations-cadc-1977.