Lake Odessa MacHine Products, Inc., a Wholly-Owned Subsidiary of Sparton Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board

512 F.2d 762
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 1975
Docket74-1491
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 512 F.2d 762 (Lake Odessa MacHine Products, Inc., a Wholly-Owned Subsidiary of Sparton Corporation 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
Lake Odessa MacHine Products, Inc., a Wholly-Owned Subsidiary of Sparton Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board, 512 F.2d 762 (6th Cir. 1975).

Opinion

McALLISTER, Senior Circuit Judge.

This case has its genesis in a representative election first conducted on November 1, 1972. The Union lost that election by a vote of 49 to 25. The Union filed objections to the election and, on December 1, 1972, a hearing was conducted before a Board Hearing Officer. On January 18, the Hearing Officer recommended that the election objections be sustained, and that a second election be ordered. The employer chose not to appeal the Hearing Officer’s report and, instead, agreed to another election. Accordingly, the November election was set aside and a second election was held on March 5, 1973.

The results of the second election were 52 votes for the Union; 22 votes against and 4 challenged ballots. It appears that the election was held on a Monday.

On the Friday and Saturday preceding the election, the Union distributed to the workers materials which invoked Board processes by quoting the NLRB as making statements which it did not make. Union agents made false statements regarding the employees’ profits. The Union distributed false and prejudicial handbills which contained cartoons calculated and intended to show that the employer mistreated the workers and that the Government had accused the employer of “Foul” tactics in order to prejudice the workers against the employer.

These handbills contained language, in quotation marks and attributed to the National Labor Relations Board, which had never been used by the Board in any *763 order pertaining to Lake Odessa. The language on the handbill recited:

“THE FACTS (as stated by N.L.R.B.) “THE ELECTION CONDUCTED ON NOV. 1, 1972 WAS SET ASIDE BECAUSE THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD FOUND THAT CERTAIN CONDUCT OF THE EMPLOYER INTERFERED WITH THE EMPLOYEES’ EXERCISE OF A FREE AND REASONED CHOICE. THEREFORE, A NEW ELECTION WILL BE HELD IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE TERMS OF THIS NOTICE OF ELECTION. ALL ELIGIBLE VOTERS SHOULD UNDERSTAND THAT THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS ACT, AS AMENDED, GIVES THEM THE RIGHT TO CAST BALLOTS AS THEY SEE FIT, AND PROTECTS THEM IN THE EXERCISE OF THIS RIGHT, FREE FROM INTERFERENCE BY ANY OF THE PARTIES.”

At the top of the handbill was printed a sketch, headed by the word, “FOUL! ” in large letters. The sketch showed two boxers in a ring, one labeled “COMPANY,” and the other labeled “EMPLOYEE.” It showed the boxer labeled “COMPANY” striking a devastating foul blow below the belt of the boxer labeled “EMPLOYEE.” At the moment, a figure dressed as Uncle Sam, standing between the fighters, called “FOUL! ” At the side of the sketch in large black-face print were the words: “When Uncle Sam is the referee, no fouls allowed. Uncle Sam says, ‘no decision,’ finds company guilty of striking foul blow, orders new election.” At the bottom of the sketch is pictured an arm with hand in boxing glove, on which there are the words: “VOTE YES” and in between these words the statement: “HERE’S YOUR KNOCKOUT PUNCH.” The sketch was signed at the bottom: “ALLIED INDUSTRIAL WORKERS OF AMERICA.”

On the second handbill was a sketch of an employer saying to an employee: “FOR YOUR LOYAL AND FAITHFUL SERVICE TO THE COMPANY, I AM PROUD TO PRESENT YOU WITH THIS 15 YEAR AWARD, . . . CONGRATULATIONS! ” The employee is pictured replying: “THANKS BOSS, I HOPE I WILL BE WITH THE COMPANY FOR ANOTHER 15 YEARS!” Alongside this sketch is another labeled, “LATER . . . ” showing the employee reading a notice taken from his mailbox stating: “Your services are no longer needed with the company. Your final payroll check is enclosed. Your Boss.” The caption under the sketch states: “WHAT HAPPENS IF YOU ARE FIRED?” followed by “BE WISE . . . ORGANIZE FOR JOB SECURITY. It DOESN’T COST . . IT PAYS TO BE A MEMBER OF THE A.I.W.” This second flyer distributed by the Union allegedly depicted the experience of a former employee named Curtis. Curtis had quit the employment of the Company of his own volition, without any complaint. When, later, he wished to be reemployed, his later attempt to withdraw his resignation was refused. There was no violation of any rights of Curtis by the Company; and the circulation of the flyer by the Union depicting him as, first, being thanked by the Company for his loyal service of 15 years, and receiving an award for such service, and his receiving, immediately after from his mailbox, a notice that he was fired and his final check was being enclosed was a misrepresentation calculated to show the Company’s bad faith, cruel treatment of an old and trusted employee, and deceit to the latter’s immense disadvantage. The flyer was false and intended to destroy all confidence of the employees in the honesty, fairness and business decency of the Company.

During the election, one of the employees stated that the Company’s profits for the previous year had amounted to three million, seven hundred thousand dollars. This was approximately twenty-five times the amount of profits that the Company had made that year.

The Regional Director who recommended that the employee’s objections *764 be overruled in their entirety, did not even talk with the Union Business Agent, who chaired the meeting, to ascertain whether the employee who made the statement that the employer’s profits were twenty-five times more than they actually were, was or was not an in-plant organizer.

In the election the members selected the Union as their representative. The Company, claiming that the certification of the Union as representative was predicated on an unlawful election, technically ref used, to bargain because of the conduct of the Union heretofore set forth. The Company charged the foregoing activities of the Union vitiated' the election, and filed objections to the validity of the election. The Board then, without holding a hearing, found the Company in violation of Sections 8(a)(1) and 8(a)(5) of the National Labor Relations Act. The Company filed a petition for review. The Regional Director overruled the Company’s objections to the conduct of the Union in their entirety, and the Board thereupon adopted the Regional Director’s decision, without affording the Company a hearing.

On April 19, 1974, the employer petitioned this Court for review of the Board’s order; and the Board, on June 7, 1974, filed its cross-application for enforcement of its order.

The contention of the employer is that the Union published and distributed materials which invoked Board processes, and contained such deliberate and contemptible misrepresentations that they prevented the holding of a free and fair election.

The Regional Director’s Report and the Recommendations on Objections (hereinafter referred to as “Report”), while admitting that the Union did attribute statements to the Board, which the Board did not in fact make, nevertheless, did not sustain the employer’s objection. The Regional Director found “special circumstances in this case which may mitigate such improper use.” The Regional Director found those special circumstances to be:

1. That the impression is not left through official documents or seals that the Board is favoring one side or another.
2. There was no sufficient impact on the electorate.
3. The entire document was reasonably accurate.
4.

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Bluebook (online)
512 F.2d 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-odessa-machine-products-inc-a-wholly-owned-subsidiary-of-sparton-ca6-1975.