National Labor Relations Board v. Erie Brush and Manufacturing Corporation

406 F.3d 795, 177 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2129, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 7529
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 2, 2005
Docket17-1626
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 406 F.3d 795 (National Labor Relations Board v. Erie Brush and Manufacturing Corporation) 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. Erie Brush and Manufacturing Corporation, 406 F.3d 795, 177 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2129, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 7529 (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge.

The employees of Erie Brush and Manufacturing Corporation (“Erie Brush”) voted to accept the Service Employees International Union, Local 1, AFL-CIO (the “Union”) as their exclusive collective-bargaining representative. Erie Brush filed three objections to the election. The NLRB held a hearing on the objections and the Hearing Officer recommended that each objection be overruled. A three-member panel of the NLRB agreed with the Hearing Officer’s assessment and certified the Union as the exclusive collective-bargaining representative of an appropriate bargaining unit of Erie Brush’s Fletcher Street plant in Chicago. 1 Subsequently, Erie Brush refused (and continues to refuse) to bargain with the Union, claiming the NLRB’s certification of the Union was improper. The Union filed an unfair labor practice charge with the NLRB, and a three-member panel -granted judgment in favor of the Union. The case is now before us on an application of the NLRB to enforce its December 31, 2003 Decision and Order. Because the NLRB properly certified the Union and correctly overruled the employer’s objections to the election, we enforce the December 31, 2003 Decision and Order.

I.

On December 3, 2002, the Union petitioned the NLRB (the “Board”) for certification as the representative of an appropriate unit of Erie Brush’s production and maintenance employees. The Board then conducted a secret ballot election on January 14, 2003. Of twenty-seven eligible voters, eighteen cast ballots for the Union, five cast votes against the Union and two ballots were challenged. A week later, Erie Brush filed three timely objections to the .election. The first objection alleged that the Union threatened violence against any company employee who attempted to work during a strike against Erie Brush. According to the second objection, the Union threatened to charge a $250 initiation fee to those employees who voted against the Union in the election but not to those who voted for the Union. The third objection asserted that the conduct of pro-Union employees created an atmosphere of fear and coercion that made a fair election impossible.

Because the objections raised substantial and material issues of fact, the Board conducted a hearing on February 13 and 14, 2003. Most of the witnesses were Spanish-speaking employees of Erie Brush, and they testified through an interpreter. The hearing officer was also fluent in Spanish, stating on the record that her Spanish was even better than her English. Tr. at 16. After hearing the testimony of nine witnesses, the hearing *798 officer issued a Report on Objections, recommending that each of the employer’s objections be overruled.

In support of the first objection, Erie Brush alleged that Union representative Oscar Sandoval told employees during a January 11, 2003 meeting that if there was a strike, the employees would surround the building and block the entrances. According to Erie Brush, Sandoval told the employees that workers who tried to enter the plant during a strike would have their car windshields broken and their tires slashed, and that if they still tried to enter, they would be taken for a ride and beaten. Erie Brush presented the testimony of Sergio Barraza, Javier Tapia and Luis Rodriguez Soto, three employees who were present at the January 11 meeting, in support of this charge. The Union countered with three other employees present at the meeting, Clemente Isidro, Carlos Santana and Sergio Moreno, as well as Union representative Sandoval. The hearing officer found that Barraza, Tapia and Rodriguez Soto were not credible in their accounts of the January 11 meeting. To the extent that their stories conflicted with the testimony of the Union’s witnesses, she credited the version of events told by the Union’s witnesses. She based her credibility finding for Barraza on changes in demean- or between direct and cross-examination, confrontational and impatient responses, reluctance to answer questions, outright evasiveness, facial expressions and body language. She noted similar problems with Tapia’s testimony, finding that his demeanor changed substantially from direct to cross-examination, when he suddenly struggled to understand questions and appeared irritated, uncooperative and unresponsive. The hearing officer observed that, on cross, Tapia seemed to be answering questions other than those asked so that he could make a particular point. In the case of Rodriquez Soto, the hearing officer found that he was reluctant to answer questions on both direct and cross-examination, that the few answers he gave were evasive or inconsistent with a prior affidavit, and that he admitted he was motivated to testify because he wanted to protect his job. The hearing officer instead credited the testimony of Sandoval and Santana, who both responded to direct and cross-examination in a thoughtful, calm and straightforward manner. Sandoval denied that he ever told employees to break windshields, slash tires or beat persons who tried to cross a picket line. Santana corroborated Sandoval’s testimony, and because the hearing officer credited that testimony, she recommended that the first objection be overruled in its entirety.

On the second objection, the employer presented testimony from Margarita Sal-gado and Miroslava Onofre in addition to Barraza, Tapia and Rodriguez Soto. The hearing officer again found Barraza and Tapia not credible. She noted that Salga-do testified with a great deal of prompting and thus she credited only those parts of the testimony that were not prompted by the employer’s lawyer. She also credited Salgado’s testimony to the extent it was corroborated by other credible witnesses. According to Salgado, Clemente Isidro called her numerous times to discuss the Union. He gave her a paper on which to write her name and social security number and told her that it was for the Union to know that she was with them. On another day, Isidro told her that those employees who voted against the Union would have to pay an initiation fee. Isidro also asked Salgado to tell other female employees that workers who did not vote for the Union would have to pay an initiation fee. On the day of the election, Salgado told Onofre that she should vote for the Union to avoid paying the initiation fee. Salgado then told Isidro that Onofre was with the Union. Isidro called Salgado on her cell phone later that day when she was with *799 Onofre. According to Salgado, both she and Onofre had their ears to the phone when Isidro repeated that he would let the Union know they were with the Union so that they did not have to pay an initiation fee. Salgado admitted on cross-examination that she never signed a Union card and that she never heard any other employees talk about an initiation fee. Onofre corroborated Salgado’s testimony. She testified that Salgado told her on the day of the election that if she did not vote for the Union, they would charge her an entry fee. She also testified that she listened in on the telephone conversation between Salgado and Isidro on the day of the election, when Isidro told Salgado that he would tell the Union to put the women’s names on a list so that they would not be charged an entry fee.

Erie Brush tried to establish that Isidro was an agent of the Union when he engaged in this pro-Union conduct.

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Bluebook (online)
406 F.3d 795, 177 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2129, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 7529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-erie-brush-and-manufacturing-corporation-ca7-2005.