National Labor Relations Board v. International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union No. 98

317 F. App'x 269
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 2009
Docket07-4764
StatusUnpublished

This text of 317 F. App'x 269 (National Labor Relations Board v. International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union No. 98) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union No. 98, 317 F. App'x 269 (3d Cir. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

IRENAS, Senior District Judge.

Before the Court is the application of the National Labor Relations Board (“Board”) for enforcement of its order issued against the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union No. 98 (“the Union”). In a decision and order dated August 31, 2007, the Board affirmed the determination by an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) that the Union violated Section 8(b)(1)(A), 29 U.S.C.A. § 158(b)(1)(A), of the National Labor Relations Act (“Act”). 1 The Board also *271 adopted the ALJ’s recommendation that a broad cease-and-desist order should be imposed upon the Union. For the reasons that follow, we will grant the application for enforcement. 2

I.

A.

The pertinent factual events in this case occurred on, and adjacent to, the property of Genesis Healthcare (“Genesis”), a nursing home located on Edison Avenue in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (App. 16 ¶ 5, 19 ¶ 5.) Beginning in January 2006, an entirely new electrical system was installed in the Genesis facility as part of a significant renovation project. 3 (App.57-58.) Delran Builders Company was the general contractor in charge of the Genesis project, under the leadership of construction superintendent Steve Herman. (App.84-85.) Tri-M Group (“Tri-M”), a non-union employer, was the electrical subcontractor on the Genesis renovation. (App.57-58,127.) In April 2006, the Union began picketing at the Genesis facility. (App.131.) Raymond Della Vella, employed by the Union as a “business representative organizer,” directed the picketing activities. (App.44-45, 131.) The Union initially picketed daily, but later reduced its picketing to Fridays, including Friday, June 16, 2006. (App.131.)

The Union typically placed two pickets near each of the two entrances to the Genesis facility. (App.132.) To facilitate understanding of the factual history that follows, it is necessary to describe the contours of the southeastern portion of the Genesis property as it existed on June 16, 2006.

The eastern end of the Genesis parking lot bordered a public sidewalk and Edison Avenue. (App.59, 64-65, 191.) The southern end of the parking lot abutted a wooded area. (See App. 193-98.) Three large rectangular dumpsters sat at the southernmost end of the parking lot. (App.191.) The long sides of the dumpsters faced the sidewalk and Edison Avenue. (App.114, 191.) The eastern driveway into the parking lot was accessible only via Edison Avenue; that driveway was just north of the three dumpsters. (App.191.) Hence, a person standing on the sidewalk dividing Edison Avenue and the eastern driveway, who then walked slightly south, would be standing on the sidewalk between Edison Avenue and the dumpsters.

As noted previously, on June 16, 2006, the Union was picketing the Genesis work-site. (App.131.) As was its common practice, the Union had notified the Philadelphia Police Department that it would be picketing; two civil affairs officers were observing the demonstration at Genesis. (App.134.) Union members Craig Cummings and Mike Quinn were picketing in the vicinity of the dumpsters and the eastern driveway. (App.46-48.)

At approximately 1 p.m. that day, Sean Muth, a Tri-M employee, was driving a backhoe carrying construction debris. (App.l 13-14.) Muth intended to deposit the refuse in one of the dumpsters. (Id.) In order to unload the debris properly, it was necessary for Muth to approach the long side of the dumpster. (App.114.) Hence, Muth entered Edison Avenue, faced the dumpsters, and prepared to proceed. (App.114-15.) However, Muth could not unload the debris because Cummings and Quinn were picketing in front of the dump *272 sters, directly in Muth’s path. (App.116-18.)

With his ability to dispose of the debris obstructed, Muth maintained a position six or seven feet away from the pieketers. (App.118.) Joseph Prego, Tri-M’s foreman, was working in a different area of the Genesis property when he saw and heard the disturbance near the dumpsters. (App.60.) Prego informed Steve Herman that a problem was occurring on the work-site and then walked over to determine what was happening. (Id.) Prego directed Muth to drive the backhoe into the parking lot so that traffic on Edison Avenue would not be blocked. (App.63.) Once the backhoe was in the parking lot, Herman arrived at the incident scene. (App.87.)

Herman directed Prego and Muth to attempt to dump the debris. (App.89-90.) However, the pickets continued to block Muth’s path. (App.90-91.) Next, the civil affairs officers spoke to the Union members, but they still refused to yield their positions. (App.92-93.) After further discussion, Della Vella instructed Cummings and Quinn to move. Muth then deposited the refuse in the dumpster. (App.94-95.)

The parties disputed two key factual issues concerning the foregoing events during the proceedings before ALJ Paul Buxbaum. First, the parties disagreed about whether Cummings and Quinn were already standing in front of the dumpsters when Muth approached in the backhoe, or if they had moved specifically to obstruct him. Second, the parties contested how much time elapsed between Muth’s initial attempt to dispose of the debris and when he finally completed his task.

As to the first factual dispute, Della Vella claimed that Cummings and Quinn were picketing in front of the dumpsters before Muth arrived with the backhoe. (App.138.) Della Vella perceived Muth’s approach as an attempt to interfere with the Union’s lawful protest. (Id.) In contrast, Muth testified that Cummings and Quinn moved directly in front of the dumpsters to prevent him from disposing of his cargo. (App.116.) Neither Cummings nor Quinn testified at the administrative hearing.

The ALJ expressly credited Muth’s testimony over Della Vella’s for three reasons. (App.8.) First, the ALJ was impressed by the “calm, dispassionate manner” Muth displayed while testifying, leaving the ALJ “with a sense of [Muth’s] fundamental neutrality[.]” (Id.) Second, the ALJ found that “logic and common sense” indicated that the pickets would be located near the Genesis driveway, in full view of passerby, rather than in front of the dumpsters at the edge of the wooded area. (Id.) Third, the ALJ drew an adverse inference from the Union’s unexplained failure to present testimony from Cummings or Quinn. (App.8-9.) For those reasons, the ALJ concluded that Cummings and Quinn moved in front of the dumpsters when they saw Muth approaching in the backhoe. (App.9.)

The second factual dispute concerned the duration of the dumpster incident. Muth testified that thirty to thirty-five minutes passed between his initial approach with the backhoe and his successful deposit of the debris. (App.122.) Prego estimated that fifteen to twenty minutes passed from when he heard the dispute near the dumpsters to when Muth completed his task. (App.68.) Herman testified that ten minutes passed from when Prego informed him of the disturbance until his arrival at the incident scene, and another twenty minutes elapsed from his arrival at the incident scene to the end of the dispute. (App.87, 102.) Della Vella testified that the entire series of events took ten minutes or less.

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317 F. App'x 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-international-brotherhood-of-electrical-ca3-2009.