Naperville Ready Mix, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board

242 F.3d 744
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 2001
Docket99-3634, 99-3994
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 242 F.3d 744 (Naperville Ready Mix, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Naperville Ready Mix, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board, 242 F.3d 744 (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

*748 DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge.

Richard Wehrli owned several companies in Naperville, Illinois, which were involved in the concrete and trucking businesses. This case arose when one of the companies, Naperville Ready Mix, Inc. (NRM), decided to change the way that it would deliver concrete. The National Labor Relations Board (the Board) concluded that NRM and several other of Wehrli’s companies were a single employer for purposes of the labor laws, and it further found that the company had violated various sections of the National Labor Relations Act (the Act) through its efforts to transfer bargaining unit delivery work from employees to alleged independent owner-drivers. NRM and its affiliates, T & W Trucking, Inc. (T & W), and Wehrli Equipment Co. (WEC), have asked us to set aside the Board’s order requiring reinstatement of certain drivers and restoration of the bargaining unit work; the Board requests enforcement of its order. We conclude that the Board’s order is supported by substantial evidence and the law, and we thus conclude that it is entitled to enforcement.

I

Wehrli incorporated NRM in 1960, with himself and his wife Judith Wehrli as the only stockholders. Wehrli served as NRM’s president, and as of 1992 the company’s board consisted of Richard and Judith Wehrli, Richard’s brother-in-law Jerome Doll and the Wehrlis’ son Robert. In 1978, Wehrli incorporated WEC to provide repair services for NRM dump trucks and other trucks at NRM’s facility on High Grove Street in Naperville. Wehrli is the sole shareholder of WEC; he served on its board of directors through 1992, when he was replaced by his son Scott. In 1987, Wehrli and a supervisor at NRM, Robert Tilly, added T & W trucking to the family of companies. Through 1992, they were T & W’s sole directors and shareholders. At the time of the events relevant to this case, T & W was providing hauling services for only two companies: NRM and one other.

Ready-mix track drivers at NRM were covered by a collective bargaining agreement that Wehrli had originally negotiated with Teamsters Local 673 (the Union) in 1986. On April 21, 1992, NRM and the Union began negotiating a successor agreement for the one that was due to expire nine days later, on April 30. The Union’s principal representative was its Secretary-Treasurer, Tom Custer, while Wehrli spoke for NRM. At the initial meeting, the Union presented a comprehensive written proposal seeking increased wages and pension benefits as well as improved job protection standards for the drivers. NRM rejected the proposal and countered with a one-year roll-over offer, with a few revisions to the health and pension plan provisions. Wehrli argued that concessions from the Union were necessary because of increased competition and declining profit margins in the ready-mix business. In the absence of concessions, he warned, he would either have to suspend trucking operations until the market improved or get out of the hauling business altogether.

When the parties met again on May 7, the Union tried to take the contract items one-by-one. NRM was not receptive to this tactic; Wehrli saw it as a ploy by the Union to win benefits comparable to those it had secured with the Northern Illinois Ready Mix Association (NIRMA), a local multi-employer bargaining group. Wehrli claimed that NRM was losing money on the delivery portion of its business, and he announced that he wanted to sell NRM’s trucks and operate with owner-op'erator subcontractors. Custer responded by saying that if NRM were to make such a move it would have to become a party to the NIRMA agreement (as other similarly situated companies had done), which gave owner-operators the protections of union membership. Custer also commented that the Union was there to negotiate a contract, not to help NRM sell its trucks.

*749 On May 12, Wehrli sent Custer the following letter:

I have, decided to go out of the trucking business and am offering to sell my trucks to my present drivers first, and then any leftover trucks will be offered to outsiders. I intend to use individual contractors for all my trucking needs. If you want any discussion with me in this regard feel free to call.

Custer saw this letter as a part of the overall bargaming give-and-take, as it reflected the position Wehrli had taken at the two previous bargaining sessions. He therefore saw no need to, and did not, specifically reply to the letter.

The parties held another bargaining meeting on May 14, at which they made some progress. The Union agreed to remove certain demands, and NRM agreed to modify the language in several contract clauses. Wehrli continued to assert that he intended to sell the trucks. To this end, he introduced a proposal to delete Article 24 from the contract. Article 24 provided that certain owner-operator subcontractors would be treated like bargaining unit employees for purposes of wages, union security, and benefits. Wehrli wanted it deleted because it would have defeated much of the point of his plan to sell NRM’s ready-mix trucks and to rely on subcontract haulers. He made it clear that under his proposal, the new subcontract haulers would not be members of the NRM employee bargaining unit. On May 15, he reduced his proposal to writing.

Without waiting for the Union’s response, Wehrli proceeded to hold meetings with NRM’s drivers on May 20 and May 27. The Union had no notice of these meetings and did not approve them. At the meetings, Wehrli discussed the financial difficulties he faced and informed the drivers of his intention to sell the trucks. He promised that he would make the trucks available for purchase by current drivers and that he would assist them with the logistics of becoming owner operators and with financing the purchase of the trucks. Wehrli also stated as a fait ac-compli that if the drivers became subcontractors they would no longer be covered under the Union’s contract with NRM. Finally, he informed the drivers that as trucks were sold to current NRM and outside drivers, current drivers who had not purchased trucks would be laid off in reverse order of seniority.

After Wehrli’s May 20 meeting, Custer met with the drivers to discuss the status of the negotiations. The union members voted to reject NRM’s May 15 proposal, and they authorized the Union to call a strike. Custer explained that a strike was premature, because the parties were still negotiating.

In the meantime, Wehrli was proceeding unilaterally with his sales plans. By June 1, 1992, he had found two buyers for the trucks-his son Robert and a current driver, Richard Downs. He also placed advertise-, ments in local trade papers, which yielded the names of ten prospective outside buyers. By the last week in June, Wehrli had handshake agreements with five individuals to sell nine trucks. Between June 28 and 30, he transferred title in those trucks to the new owners.

The financial terms that Wehrli set for the truck sales were favorable for the purchasers, but in return they gave up almost all control over the use of the trucks. No down payment was necessary, and Wehrli supplied the necessary financing. Each new owner-operator was to be paid $14 per cubic yard hauled, out of which $1 would go to pay principal on the debt.

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242 F.3d 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/naperville-ready-mix-inc-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca7-2001.