National Labor Relations Board v. Downslope Industries, Inc., and Greenbrier Industries, Inc.

676 F.2d 1114
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 29, 1982
Docket80-1237
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 676 F.2d 1114 (National Labor Relations Board v. Downslope Industries, Inc., and Greenbrier Industries, Inc.) 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 v. Downslope Industries, Inc., and Greenbrier Industries, Inc., 676 F.2d 1114 (6th Cir. 1982).

Opinions

ANNA DIGGS TAYLOR, District Judge.

The National Labor Relations Board seeks enforcement, pursuant to Section 10(e) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 151 et seq., of the order which it entered against Respondents on December 14, 1979, and which is reported at 246 NLRB No. 132,103 LRRM 1041 (1979). For the reasons discussed below, the Board’s petition for enforcement is granted in part.

We find at the outset that the factual findings of the Board, which adopted those of the Administrative Law Judge, are supported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole, taking into account those matters of record which fairly detract therefrom. Those findings are, accordingly, affirmed here pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 160(e). Universal Camera Corporation v. NLRB, 340 U.S. 474, 71 S.Ct. 456, 95 L.Ed. 456 (1951). The record includes conflicts in testimony. On such occasions we note that the trier of fact has the burden of deciding whom to believe; need not give equal weight to conflicting histories; and need not treat the testimony of each witness as indivisible, for acceptance or rejection only as a unit. It is, in short, the function of the ALJ to resolve credibility problems. NLRB v. Rawac Plating Co., 422 F.2d 1259 (6th Cir. 1970). In this case, the AU has specifically based his credibility findings against Respondents’ two management witnesses on his demeanor observations. Moreover, an independent analysis of the evidentiary record confirms the inferences which the ALJ has drawn against Respondents, from the evidence of record.

The Respondents, two corporations with offices headquartered in the same building in New Jersey, were engaged together in September of 1976 in the production of garments for interstate commerce, in a two-story building in Knoxville, Tennessee. Robert Lane, the brother of a Greenbrier principal, directed the activities of both corporations (as plant manager for Downslope and “consulting” plant manager for Green-brier) from a first-floor office in which the Downslope bookkeeper also prepared payrolls for both corporations. Greenbrier’s operations were conducted on the second floor, Downslope’s on the first, and the basement loading and storage facility was shared.

The testimony credited by the ALJ reveals that on September 13, 1976, David Jamison began work as Greenbrier’s new plant manager to help with the production of chemical warfare suits under a contract with the federal government. Downslope plant manager Robert Lane had promoted Helen Scarlett from machine operator to supervisor of that contract in April, 1976, and she had hired the twenty employees who were there engaged. Both Jamison and Scarlett directed the work of the seamstresses, and both reported directly to Robert Lane.

By Monday, September 20, 1976, Jamison had requested the sexual favors of six female employees, two of whom he had harassed through the weekend at their homes with requests that they visit his motel room to discuss their work; and one of whom he had laid off “until the situation between us is straight.” Inasmuch as most of those persons hired by Scarlett shared some relationship, whether of friendship, blood, or [1117]*1117marriage, Jamison s conduct had become the subject of wide and indignant discussion in the plant by Monday and had been reported to Scarlett not only by every victim, but by each of the victims’ concerned coworkers. Moreover, by Monday, Supervisor Scarlett herself had been subjected to considerable sexual harassment by Jamison, including two outright threats of rape and a Sunday evening foot-in-door home visit.

On both Monday, September 20, and Tuesday, September 21, Supervisor Scarlett went to Plant Manager Lane, told him of Jamison’s conduct and the consequent upheaval and concerns which had been raised among the women, and described her own concern as being “not for myself, but for the girls.” Lane refused to consider the subject on both occasions, telling Scarlett that Jamison was a “womanchaser,” and “only human.” After the Tuesday meeting, Scarlett reported to her staff that they would have to talk with Lane themselves, as he did not appear to believe anything she had said.

On Wednesday morning, September 22, all twenty of Scarlett’s supervisees (and persons from other departments as well) were gathered around her desk, drinking coffee as usual, prior to the 7:00 a. m. starting bell. On this occasion, however, the subject of discussion was Jamison, and their indignation at being subjected to his intrusions. The young woman whom Jami-son had laid off pending a better relationship had returned to ask for her check, and to discuss her status. By seven o’clock, a groundswell of determination had developed (initiated by Ms. Hensley), that the employees would not start work until Lane had listened to their protest against the working condition of Jamison’s sexual harassment.

The seven o’clock bell then rang, Jamison came upstairs and demanded to know why no work had started, and Scarlett told him that the women were refusing to work until they could discuss his sexual harassment with Lane. He demanded to know which women, whereupon she recited the list, each victim shouted her confirmation, and he denied one: the only black woman in the group. Finally, Scarlett named herself, struck Jamison, and was promptly hustled by several of her supervisees to the machine shop at the rear of the building, to regain her composure. Jamison ran down the stairs and soon thereafter departed the premises — and the city — without waiting for a paycheck.

Mr. Lane arrived at the building and heard a commotion on the second floor. He went up to the Greenbrier operation and found all of Scarlett’s supervisees still grouped at the desk, although Scarlett and Jamison had made their respective exits. He asked why no work had started, and each of the complainants attempted to describe her experience with Jamison. After rebuffing the initial complainants by replying that they were “no baby,” or “a big girl,” he asked everyone who did not want to work for Jamison to raise their hands. Eight did so. He then told them to work for Jamison or “hit the clock.” As they were leaving, in some confusion, Supervisor Scarlett and the two women who had accompanied her to the machine shop emerged therefrom. Lane fired them each on sight without explanation, and herded them down the stairs and off the premises with the others.

When the hand-raising had occurred, eight of Scarlett’s supervisees had returned to their sewing machines and started work. One of those testified that she had to do so because she had eight children. The machine operators working on another Green-brier contract, for military ballistics vests, had been present throughout these events on the same workfloor.

The group of eleven Greenbrier dischargees returned to the plant to request their jobs or their discharge slips that afternoon and twice the next day, before the Down-slope payroll clerk prepared their termination notices and distributed them.

It is clear on the facts that the Respondents do constitute a single employer, within the meaning of the Act, as was found by the Board.

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Bluebook (online)
676 F.2d 1114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-downslope-industries-inc-and-ca6-1982.