National Labor Relations Board, Petitioner/cross-Respondent v. Great Scot, Inc., Respondent/cross-Petitioner

39 F.3d 678, 147 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2769, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 31724
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 14, 1994
Docket93-5142, 93-5179
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 39 F.3d 678 (National Labor Relations Board, Petitioner/cross-Respondent v. Great Scot, Inc., Respondent/cross-Petitioner) 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
National Labor Relations Board, Petitioner/cross-Respondent v. Great Scot, Inc., Respondent/cross-Petitioner, 39 F.3d 678, 147 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2769, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 31724 (6th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge.

This case comes to us on petition by the National Labor Relations Board for enforcement of its order finding that the respondent, Great Scot, Inc., committed unfair labor practices in three respects and ordering the company to cease and desist. Great Scot has filed a cross-petition for review of the order. We conclude that the cross-petition has merit, and we therefore decline to issue an order of enforcement.

Central to an understanding of this appeal is the fact that the union activity at issue apparently involved “area standards” picketing and handbilling only, and not organizational or recognitional picketing. Because this activity was carried on by non-employees, the case falls under the general rubric of the Supreme Court’s decision in NLRB v. Babcock & Wilcox Co., 351 U.S. 105, 76 S.Ct. 679, 100 L.Ed. 975 (1956), as that case was most recently construed in Lechmere, Inc. v. NLRB, 502 U.S. 527, 112 S.Ct. 841, 117 L.Ed.2d 79 (1992). For the reasons given below, we conclude that the record fails to establish that the picketing in this case was protected activity under § 7 of the National Labor Relations Act and, therefore, we do not reach the question of whether the company violated § 8(a)(1) of the Act by engaging in one or more unfair labor practices against *680 the union in an attempt to suppress that picketing.

I.

Great Scot, Inc. operates three supermarkets in northern Ohio. At two of the stores (located in Findlay and Fremont), the employees are represented by Local 954 of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union. The employees at the third store, in Port Clinton, are not represented by any labor organization. The Port Clinton store competes with three other supermarkets in a town of approximately 7,000 people. Local 954 represents the employees at two of the three competitor stores.

The Great Scot store in Port Clinton is located in a small shopping center shared by Great Scot and the Goodyear Tire Company. There is one designated entrance to an unfenced 100-car parking lot in front of the store and a single entrance into the store itself. On Friday, October 28, 1988, two representatives from Local 954 began picketing at the entrance to the parking lot, on the public easement. Two others distributed handbills near the entrance to the store. The picket signs, the handbills, and the aprons worn by the union agents all conveyed a “Don’t Shop Here” message. The signs, for example, read: “Notice to the Public — Don’t Shop [at Great Scot]. The store pays its employees wages and fringe benefits which are far below those paid to Unionized Grocery Store Employees in the area. This Company is attempting to destroy our higher Union Standards.” The wording of the handbills was similar and directed shoppers to Port Clinton’s two unionized supermarkets, Kroger and Foodtown.

The union agents picketed all afternoon on Friday, October 28, and returned to the Great Scot store the next day. That day, Saturday, October 29, the store manager asked the agents distributing handbills at the entrance to the store to leave the premises and, when they refused, he called the police and asked the officers who responded to his call to order union agents to leave Great Scot’s property. The officers conveyed the message to the handbillers as requested, but they also told the manager that Great Scot would have to obtain a court order to have the picketers removed.

As a result, Great Scot filed a civil trespass action against the union in state court on November 2, 1988. The state court issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting Local 954 from trespassing on Great Scot’s property, limiting the number of demonstrators to four, and restricting union activity to the public easement bordering the premises (where picketers did, in fact, continue to demonstrate on several successive weekends in November 1988 and sporadically thereafter). The union moved to dismiss the temporary restraining order on ’ preemption grounds, and when the state court rejected the preemption argument, they filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board, contending that Great Scot had illegally interfered with the union’s efforts to picket and distribute handbills. The Board’s General Counsel issued a complaint and notice of hearing charging that Great Scot had committed three unfair labor practices: (1) by requesting the union agents to refrain from distributing handbills on its property; (2) by summoning police to request union agents to leave the premises; and (3) by filing a trespass action in state court seeking injunctive relief against the union.

At the ensuing hearing before an administrative law judge, there was little dispute concerning the facts surrounding the union’s activity. There was, however, a minor controversy about the purpose of that activity. A union representative testified that its picketing was designed merely to inform the public of Great Scot’s substandard wages and benefits and to dissuade the public from shopping there. The company argued that this claim was a pretext for some secondary objective, without specifying what that objective might be. Regardless of the union’s motive, 1 what was not clearly established at *681 the hearing was the actual disparity, if one existed, between Great Scot’s wages and benefits and those of the other three supermarkets in the area, specifically the two unionized stores in Port Clinton.

David Sadowski, the staff organizer for Local 954, testified about the procedure usually followed by the union to determine what wages and benefits were being offered by a non-unionized employer being targeted for area-standards picketing, as follows:

We have a standard policy and procedure in that prior to going on any site, we use several methods to ascertain this. The methods that were used in this case involved a telephone interview and an application for employment with discussion of wages and benefits, et cetera.

Sadowski himself had not gathered any information directly from Great Scot, however, but was relying on information supplied to him at some unspecified point in the past by his predecessor in office, a man named Jack Sylvester. Sadowski stated repeatedly that he was unaware of what wages and benefits Great Scot was offering at the time the decision was made to initiate picketing against Great Scot and that in making that decision, he relied on the conclusion of others that Great Scot’s pay scale was “sub-standard.” The following exchange is typical of the responses given by Sadowski when questioned about the union’s basis for picketing Great Scot:

Q: At the time you began that activity in late October of 1988, did you know the wages, benefits, and working conditions of the Great Scot Port Clinton store?
A: Only as related to me by Mr. Sylvester [who said] that they did not meet the other wage and area standards in the area.

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39 F.3d 678, 147 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2769, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 31724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-petitionercross-respondent-v-great-scot-ca6-1994.