National Labor Relations Board v. Color Art, Inc.--Office Interiors Division

932 F.2d 723
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 5, 1991
Docket90-2063
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 932 F.2d 723 (National Labor Relations Board v. Color Art, Inc.--Office Interiors Division) 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
National Labor Relations Board v. Color Art, Inc.--Office Interiors Division, 932 F.2d 723 (8th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

The National Labor Relations Board seeks enforcement of its order requiring Color Art to bargain with Local 610 of the Miscellaneous Drivers, Helpers, Health Care, and Public Employees Union. Behind Color Art’s refusal to negotiate is a contested representation election. Over Color Art’s objections, the Board certified a bargaining unit of the union after a very close election — the union’s margin of victory was two votes. The wellspring of Color Art’s objections was the pro-union activities of one Elmo Davis, a shipping supervisor. Color Art has maintained since soon after the election that Davis improperly influenced the outcome. His freely expressed union sympathies, when combined with what the company characterizes as his sub *724 stantial authority as a supervisor, allegedly created the reasonable possibility of coerced voting. Because our review convinces us that the Board’s decision is supported by substantial evidence in light of the whole record, we grant the Board’s petition to enforce its order to bargain.

I.

Color Art sells office furniture. It also offers interior-design services. The company is based in St. Louis and operates in that metropolitan area. The disputed election at the hub of this case involves the twenty-two Color Art employees who work in the company’s warehouse and delivery operations. Those employees assemble, deliver, install, and service the products sold by Color Art. Elmo Davis supervises ten of these twenty-two workers. Those ten employees staff the company’s delivery trucks in two-person teams. Under Davis’s direction they load the trucks, make their assigned deliveries, and then return to the warehouse to help prepare the next day’s deliveries. If less than five trucks are needed to carry that day's load, some of the drivers and their helpers remain in the warehouse, doing whatever Davis decides needs to be done in preparation for later deliveries.

Davis is part of Color Art's managerial team. At least three people are parallel to Davis in the managerial structure: the office manager, the warehouse manager, and the service manager. Davis and these three other first-level supervisors report to Color Art’s operations manager. Terry Baum, who was operations manager until just before the disputed election, testified that (in addition to informal contacts) he tracked Color Art’s operations through weekly meetings with each supervisor. T. 464. Color Art’s President and its Executive Vice President supervise the operations manager.

The leading case in our Court regarding a supervisor’s effect on a union election is Wright Memorial Hospital v. NLRB, 771 F.2d 400 (8th Cir.1985). In Wright, the pro-union activities of a group of charge nurses — nurses who directed care on individual hospital wings — were the basis for a challenge to the Board’s certification of a union for the non-supervisor nurses. The charge nurses handed out authorization cards, spoke in the union’s favor, and wore pro-union buttons. In granting the Board’s petition to enforce, we applied the legal standard for this kind of dispute. An election cannot stand if there is a reasonable possibility that the coercive potential of the supervisor’s union support could have affected the outcome of the election. Wright, 771 F.2d at 404. Our reasoning in that case demonstrates that a number of considerations are relevant in coming to a legal conclusion about the atmosphere surrounding the election: the duration and intensity of the supervisor’s activities; the degree of independent power possessed by the supervisor, as a practical matter, over those he supervised; and the employee's perceptions of the supervisor’s power, and of his willingness to use that power against them if they opposed the union.

The extent of Davis’s pro-union activities is not in dispute. The parties agree, and the Hearing Officer found, that supervisor Davis demonstrated his sympathies early and often. He attended two organizational meetings for the union. Indeed, he encouraged other employees to attend those meetings too. After the second of those meetings, Davis told an employee he supervised, David Dalton, to compile a list of promises the company had made to various employees and broken. In several conversations with different groups of employees (some of whom worked for Davis, some of whom did not), Davis promoted the union cause with stories about his own poor treatment by Color Art. On the day of the election, and in view of several eligible voters, Davis bet another supervisor that the union would win. When the election went his way, Davis invited several employees to go celebrate. Though Color Art was not wise to Davis’s sentiments until the eve of the election, Davis made his views known to the eligible voters in this variety of ways. Thus, as in Wright, this Court is faced with extensive supervisor support of the union. That fact marks the beginning rather than the end of our inquiry into the potential *725 that this election was less than free. Wright, 771 F.2d at 404.

IL

The extent of Davis's authority was the focus of the administrative hearing in this case, and of the Hearing Officer's recommendation to the Board. This consideration is also at the center of Color Art's defense in our Court to enforcement. The Hearing Officer held that "Davis possessed little power to independently institute meaningful changes in the terms or conditions of employment of employees." Case 14-RC-10412, Hearing Officer's Report and Recommendation 16 (March 9, 1989). Citing Davis's need to confer with his superiors, and the presence of written company policies, the Hearing Officer concluded that Davis's power over every important employment decision-hiring and firing, discipline, job assignments, and rewards-was too limited to ground a reasonable employee expectation of retaliation or reward based upon one's vote in the election. Col- or Art argues forcefully that this holding (and the findings beneath it) blink the reality of this workplace. In each of these decisional areas, the company urges, Davis enjoyed substantial authority. Since his men knew that authority, indeed felt it every day, and since they knew Davis's pro-union position, Color Art contends there is a good chance votes were influenced.

Though it is a close case, we are not convinced the Board erred in certifying the union in spite of supervisor Davis's conduct. The proper focus is, as Color Art urges, the realities of the workplace. By definition, every supervisor has a measure of control over employees' working conditions. Likewise, every front-line supervisor will himself be subject to some supervision. Our inquiry here, then, is how much authority, without meaningful review, did Davis possess (according to company policy) and wield (according to company practice). The Hearing Officer minimizes-perhaps too much-Davis's independent power. It is clear nonetheless that Davis was hemmed in by Color Art's policies and by its practice of management consultation that permeates this record.

Consider, for example, supervisor Davis's role in hiring and firing. While only Color Art's President or Executive Vice President could hire or fire employees, both the operations manager and the first-level supervisor-especially the supervisor-played a critical role in recommending action.

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932 F.2d 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-color-art-inc-office-interiors-ca8-1991.