Minnesota Milk Co. v. National Labor Relations Board

314 F.2d 761
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 1963
DocketNo. 16966
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 314 F.2d 761 (Minnesota Milk Co. v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnesota Milk Co. v. National Labor Relations Board, 314 F.2d 761 (8th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

VAN PELT, District Judge.

This case is before us upon a petition to review and modify an order of the National Labor Relations Hoard in a dispute involving the status of Lyle Hillyer, who distributed petitioner’s dairy products on specified routes in suburbs of Minneapolis in June, 1960. It also involves the 1960 labor agreement between the petitioner dairy and the intervenor union. The company’s complaint was dismissed in part by the Board. Minnesota Milk Co., 133 N.L.R.B. No. 123, 49 L.R.R.M. 1001.

The issues we must decide in order to completely dispose of this case are:

1) Was Hillyer an employee of the company or an independent contractor ?

[763]*7632) Did the union violate Section 8(e) •of the National Labor Relations Act by requiring the petitioner to terminate the relationship which existed between it and Hillyer from June 6th to June 8th?

3) Was the Board correct in its finding ■that Article 6, Section A of the 1960 labor .agreement between the dairy and the union is, as applied to the facts of this case, •unintelligible as an expression of the intention of the parties and too vague to be •susceptible of construction or interpretation under Section 8(e) of the Act? If the provision is not so unintelligible, what is the proper construction to be placed on it ?

4) Is the provision violative of Section 8(e) of the Act; and was the execution of the contract containing the clause an unfair labor practice?

The trial examiner found that Hillyer was an independent contractor. He found that the union’s conduct in forcing the dairy to terminate its arrangement with Hillyer was in violation of Section 8(e) of the Act. The examiner further found that Article 6, Section A and Article 15, Sections A and D of the labor agreement were within the purview and violative of Section 8(e) of the Act. There were other findings and conclusions with which we are not here concerned. No claim is made in this court that the findings as to Article 15 were erroneous.

The Board, speaking through Messrs. McCullough, Fanning, and Brown, with Messrs. Rodgers and Leedom dissenting, disagreed with the examiner as to Hill-yer’s status and found that he was an employee. Having so found, it stated:

“[W]e cannot sustain the Trial Examiner’s findings that Respondent’s conduct in forcing the Company to terminate its arrangement with Hill-yer was in violation of Section 8(e) of the Act.”

The Board further found with respect to Article 6, Section A:

“We find this section based on the language employed, too vague to be susceptible of construction or interpretation for the purposes of Section 8(e), * * *”

later stating:

“We have found Article 6, Section A, unintelligible as an expression of the intent of the parties and its implementation in the single instance before us not in violation of 8(e).”

The dairy for many years had recognized the union and entered into a series of collective bargaining agreements, including the one involved herein, which was effective from May 1, 1960 through April 30, 1962.

Article 6, Section A of the agreement provided:

“ARTICLE 6.
“SOLICITING — SALES PROMOTIONS
“Section A:
It is further agreed that all future retail sales promotions and soliciting of customers shall be done by regular employees of the company or members of Local No. 546. It is agreed that no product shall be sold for resale to peddlers or so-called independent milkmen, unless they have been working in the same capacity for two (2) years or over with the same Distributor; they to pay dues and work under the same conditions as all other employees.”

In May, 1960 Lyle Hillyer expressed to the secretary of the dairy a desire to start a milk route. He was then otherwise employed but planned to leave his job. After three or four meetings Hill-yer and the petitioner on Saturday, June 4, reached an oral agreement. The dairy was to sell Hillyer milk and other dairy products at specified prices. Hillyer was to sell the products both at wholesale and retail at prices to be determined by him in the agreed territory, and pay for his products at the end of each week. His compensation would be the difference between the purchase price and the sales price less expenses. In one of the two suburbs assigned to him, another driver, who was a regular employee of the company, had handled the accounts. Peti[764]*764tioner did not have a route in the other suburb prior to Hillyer’s beginning work.

Hillyer was to lease a truck from petitioner and pay 10 per unit for its use. A unit was any single item. This lease arrangement was to remain in existence until Hillyer could get his own truck. Petitioner was to supply the gas and oil and Hillyer in turn would be billed for it at the end of the month. Gasoline was obtained at petitioner’s garage in St. Paul. Petitioner was to take care of the repairs on the truck. This was included in the 10 per unit leasing cost. The truck was to bear the name of petitioner. It was to be covered under petitioner’s fleet insurance policy and Hillyer was to be billed for the insurance at the end of the month. He used the dairy company’s basket which he found in the truck. The dairy company supplied the equipment such as receipt books, sale books and order books and he was to be billed for them. According to Hillyer he was to wear a Minnesota Milk uniform. The secretary, with whom he made the agreement, stated that he told him “we would try to find something he could wear until he could provide something for himself.”

There was no agreement as to the number of hours or the number of days per week Hillyer was to work. There was no discussion regarding overtime, vacation pay, pension or health and welfare benefits. If Hillyer desired hospitalization insurance he would have to provide it himself. There was no agreement regarding deductions for Social Security or income tax withholding. It was Hillyer’s understanding that he was not to have any of the benefits of the labor agreement. He could return any product that he hadn’t sold during the day and he turned in all empties. He collected the unpaid accounts due the dairy from the customers on the one route he took over and was to remit the proceeds to the dairy.

Prior to commencing the sale of the dairy products Hillyer obtained a Minnesota wholesale dealers license and posted a bond. He paid these costs. He also obtained and paid for business cards bearing his name. He began his work on June 6. After making his deliveries lie-solicited new retail accounts in both suburbs; then returned his truck to the-petitioner’s plant and checked in his empties and made out a credit slip, leaving his truck at petitioner’s plant. In the-evening he solicited wholesale accounts. He operated the same on June 7th and. 8th.

On June 8th two officers of the union came to the office of petitioner’s president and demanded that Hillyer, to whom they referred as the “peddler”, must come off. The president refused and was told by the-union officers that the plant would be-picketed the following morning. He-asked as to alternatives and was told: that the “peddler” must be put on the-payroll. The president agreed and Hill-yer was placed on the dairy payroll beginning June 9th. He voluntarily ceased, to work as a driver the end of July.

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314 F.2d 761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-milk-co-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca8-1963.