Louisiana-Pacific Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board

52 F.3d 255
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 1995
DocketNos. 93-70829, 93-70887
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 F.3d 255 (Louisiana-Pacific Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisiana-Pacific Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board, 52 F.3d 255 (9th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

GOODWIN, Circuit Judge:

The National Labor Relations Board (“the Board”) charged Louisiana-Pacific Corporation, Western Division (“the Company”) with a number of unfair labor practices under the National Labor Relations Act (“Act”), 29 U.S.C. § 151, et seq. An Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) found the Company in violation of the Act. With modifications discussed below, the Board affirmed the ALJ’s “rulings, findings, and conclusions.”1 In a narrow petition for review, the Company challenges only a backpay order based on the Board’s finding that the Company violated [257]*257Section 8(a)(5)2 of the Act when it revoked a non-contractual agreement to “red-circle” the wages of seven employees. In its cross-petition, the Board seeks to have its order enforced in its entirety.

We enforce the uncontested aspects of the Board’s order. We cannot understand the basis for the contested backpay order. Accordingly, we remand the cause to the Board so that the backpay order may be clarified.

I. BACKGROUND

The Company operates a pulp mill and a sawmill in Samoa, California. In August 1991, the Company resolved to shut down the pulp mill’s power boiler, thereby eliminating the jobs of thirty-seven employees. During an August 14, 1991 Standing Committee meeting, the Company and the Union discussed the fate of the thirty-seven power boiler employees.

At issue was application of a so-called “red circle” provision contained in the parties’ collective bargaining agreement:

In the event Company permanently eliminates an established regular job classification, those employees with five (5) or more years of service in the mill who occupied that job classification at the time it was eliminated shall not have their straight-time hourly rate reduced below that of the eliminated classification at the time of discontinuance unless they refuse to accept a promotion or refuse to bid for available job openings....

This provision draws a protective “red circle” around the wage rate of an employee who, because his former job classification is eliminated, must transfer into an otherwise lower-paying job. Thirty of the thirty-seven employees who lost their power boiler jobs also had their job classifications eliminated; they were covered by a literal interpretation of the red-circle provision. The remaining seven employees lost their power boiler jobs but not their job classifications; they were not covered by a literal interpretation of the red-circle provision. At the August 14 Standing Committee meeting, the Company agreed to expand its interpretation of the red-circle provision so that all thirty-seven employees affected by the power boiler shutdown would receive red-circle benefits.

Shortly thereafter, two Caterpillar operators who had lost their jobs in the Company’s “chip dump” department requested that their wages be red-circled. Because the two Caterpillar operators had not had their job classifications eliminated, the Company declined the request. The Company explained to the Union that it was willing to continue providing expanded red-circle benefits to the seven former power boiler employees, but that it wanted to “build a fence” around them. All other employees, including the two Caterpillar operators, would be provided red-circle benefits only in the event their job classifications were eliminated.

At the September 20 Standing Committee meeting, the Union rejected the Company’s proposal to “build a fence” around the seven former power boiler employees. The Union understood the August 14 agreement quite differently, and saw no reason to change it. According to the Union, that agreement entitled all employees to the expanded red-circle treatment. The Union told the Company that it would not enter into any “new” agreement on the subject of red-circle rates.

By letter dated September 26, the Company notified the Union that it intended to put an end to expanded red-circle treatment altogether, and would bring all employees back under a literal interpretation of the collective bargaining agreement’s red-circle provision. Effective October 4, the seven former power boiler employees whose job classifications had not been eliminated would no longer receive red-circle benefits. The Union did not respond to this letter. The Company continued to pay the seven former power boiler employees red-circle rates through October 3. On October 4, the Company implemented the change it had announced.

[258]*258II. THE AGENCY DECISIONS

The ALJ found that the August 14 agreement to expand red-circle benefits beyond the literal terms of the collective bargaining agreement created a new term and condition of employment. The ALJ then agreed with the Union’s interpretation of the August 14 agreement: that the agreement had extended expanded red circle treatment to all employees, including the two Caterpillar operators.

What the ALJ found next exacerbated the present controversy:

To be sure, [the August 14] agreement was not necessarily unlimited in duration. Like any non-contractual term and condition of employment, qualifications for red-circle rate benefits could be changed through the process of negotiations. However, a party is not free to utilize already conferred benefits of a term or condition of employment as a lever to extract changes or limitations in that employment term’s prospective application. That is what occurred here. [The Company] conceded that [its] agreement with the Union allowed rates to be red-circled for all employees adversely affected by a reduction in force. Unhappy with that consequence of its agreement, [the Company] sought to negotiate a limitation on the term and condition of employment resulting from that agreement, by restoring all qualifications enunciated [in the collective bargaining agreement]. Unable to achieve agreement to that restoration, [the Company] simply rescinded its August agreement and all benefits already conferred by its terms on employees. As a consequence, the seven power boiler employees and two chip dump Cat operators had their red-circle employment terms erased, as if [the Company] had never agreed to confer that benefit. In so doing, [the Company] violated §§ 8(a)(5) and (1) of the Act.

(Emphasis added). In a later passage, the ALJ expanded upon, but regrettably did not much clarify, his findings and reasoning:

... [A] party is not free to hold hostage already conferred benefits as a device for compelling the other party to accept future changes in those benefits. That is, an employer cannot withhold employees’ wages for past work, for example, to extract their bargaining agent’s agreement to a wage reduction for future work. In the final analysis, that is what occurred here.
... [The Company] was free to [propose restoring all contractual conditions for red-circle rate benefits.] It was also free to implement that proposal in the future, once it had bargained in good faith to a legitimate impasse. But, the Act does not allow a party to rescind and withdraw benefits earned prior to agreement or impasse. Nor does it permit a party to utilize withdrawal of already earned benefits to lever concessions from the other party in negotiations.

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Bluebook (online)
52 F.3d 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-pacific-corp-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca9-1995.