National Labor Relations Board v. Custom Excavating, Inc.

575 F.2d 1340
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 9, 1978
Docket77-1495
StatusUnpublished

This text of 575 F.2d 1340 (National Labor Relations Board v. Custom Excavating, Inc.) 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
National Labor Relations Board v. Custom Excavating, Inc., 575 F.2d 1340 (7th Cir. 1978).

Opinion

575 F.2d 1340

83 Lab.Cas. P 10,585

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Seventh Circuit Rule 53(b)(2) states unpublished orders shall not be cited or used as precedent except to support a claim of res judicata, collateral estoppel or law of the case in any federal court within the circuit.
National Labor Relations Board, Petitioner
v.
Custom Excavating, Inc., Respondent

No. 77-1495.

United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.

March 9, 1978.*

Before CUMMINGS, SPRECHER and WOOD, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM

In February 1977, the National Labor Relations Board ordered respondent Custom Excavating Company to cease and desist from refusing to bargain with Local 139 of the International Union of Operating Engineers, AFL-CIO, by "refusing to furnish or make available to the Union the names and addresses of its customers during 1975 for whom work was performed with construction equipment, and the dates such work was performed for said customers."1 The Board's decision and order are reported at 228 NLRB No. 38. The Board has applied to us for enforcement of this order. With a minor modification, the application is granted.

An Administrative Law Judge heard this case in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in late July and early August 1976 upon a regional director's complaint based upon a charge filed by the Union. The complaint alleged that since January 14, 1976, the Union has unsuccessfully requested the Company "to furnish it with documentary evidence containing the names and addresses of Respondent's customers during 1975, for whom work was done by Respondent's unit employees (operating engineers), and the dates such work was performed by Respondent for said customers." According to the complaint, the Union needed that information to process grievances filed against the Company, including one filed on January 8, 1976, which asserted that the Company had not paid appropriate amounts to its operating engineers for wages and fringe benefits under the then collective bargaining agreement. In its answer the Company admitted that the Union was the bargaining representative for its operating engineers and alleged that it was willing to supply the information requested "under circumstances which would assure that the Union would not contact [its] customers nor have an opportunity to harass them." The Company also claimed that the remedy sought by the Union would enable it to harass the Company's customers. The Administrative Law Judge found that the Company was engaged in the construction industry and conducts grading and excavating operations from its Glendale, Wisconsin, location. He noted that the Company recognized the Union as the exclusive representative of its operating engineer employees in an appropriate unit under the collective bargaining agreement. His pertinent findings may be summarized as follows:

On Saturday, September 13, 1975, Robert Retzack, the Union's business representative, was visiting jobsites to check whether employer members of the Wisconsin Excavators and Graders Association were violating the collective bargaining agreement with the Union. He noticed that union member Gerald Thimke, a Company employee, was excavating blacktop from a driveway and parking area at 11:30 that morning and that the work was still in process at 12:30 p.m. but had been completed before 3:00 p.m. Consequently, a month later, Retzack telephoned company president Ronald Grimm and told Grimm that Retzack had reason to believe that the Company was not compensating its operating engineers properly under the collective bargaining contract. Therefore, he asked to inspect the payroll records for that month, but Grimm said he was too busy to comply with the request and that he was not sure the Union had the right to obtain the information. This prompted Retzack to write Grimm that in the absence of a satisfactory response by November 15, 1975, the Union would seriously consider filing a charge with the Labor Board.

When Retzack telephoned Grimm about this same matter on January 6, 1976, Grimm agreed to let Retzack look at September 1975 records on the following day. At that time, he showed Retzack the records for two of its operating engineers, Thimke and Thomas Wegner, apparently the only persons then in the bargaining unit (Company Br. 4, 5). No hours worked were shown for Thimke on September 13. After inspecting those records, Retzack told Grimm that they were "a patent fraud"2 and demanded that the operating engineers be paid in accordance with the labor agreement. At this same meeting, Retzack asked Grimm for a complete record of all payroll dates with respect to the Company's operating engineers for 1975, including a complete list of the customers for whom the Company had done work which involved the operation of construction equipment in 1975. Retzack said otherwise the Union would file a grievance with respect to the allegedly fraudulent nature of the Company's time records. Grimm replied that he had no such detailed information.

Retzack spoke to former Company employee Donald Shrader on January 9 and with another former employee, Dan Hill, on February 4. They said the Company had not paid them overtime and that they were required to submit two time cards to the Company, one in detail and the other blank, so that Company could use the blank time card "to reconstruct the hours so as to comply with the contract and the [minimum wage or 'fair hour'] law."

Because Retzack had not received the requested information by February 25, he wrote Company counsel stating that the Union would file an unfair labor practice charge with the Labor Board unless the information were conveyed to the Union in timely fashion. Company counsel replied, expressing surprise that the Union would be seeking information to support its January 8, 1976, grievance and stating that he would write the Company about Retzack's February 25 request. Since no satisfaction was received, the Union filed its charge on March 19, soon thereafter arbitration of the grievance was postponed indefinitely, and the Labor Board's regional director filed this complaint on May 10.

At the ensuing hearing before the Administrative Law Judge, Retzack testified that the Union considered the requested information essential to prove "the patently fraudulent nature of the payroll records that are a product of a collusive relationship with two employees; namely, Thomas Wegner and Gerald Thimke, and * * * [company president] Ronald Grimm." After receiving such information, Retzack said the Union would contact the Company's customers in order to compare the dates, times, and places where the Company's unit employees worked with data obtained from the Company's payroll records.

The Administrative Law Judge rejected the Company's initial defense that its customers do not have the appropriate records, deciding that the Union should be permitted to ascertain this matter with the customers. Although the Company argued that if it submitted the information sought the Union would subject the Company's customers to harassment and thus cause the Company to lose business, the Administrative Law Judge rejected this argument as speculative and unsubstantiated. He stated that if the Company could show any such harassment, it would have adequate remedies in the courts.

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575 F.2d 1340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-custom-excavating-ca7-1978.