National Labor Relations Board v. M. A. Hanna Co.

125 F.2d 786, 9 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 509, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4471
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 1942
DocketNo. 8964
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 F.2d 786 (National Labor Relations Board v. M. A. Hanna Co.) 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. M. A. Hanna Co., 125 F.2d 786, 9 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 509, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4471 (6th Cir. 1942).

Opinion

McAllister,’ circuit judge.

On a petition for enforcement of an order of the National Labor Relations Board, the principal question to be determined is whether there was evidence to sustain the findings of the Board that the respondents have been guilty of illegal interference, discrimination, and support of a company union.

About 1932, the respondents formed the Employees’ Organization, printed its bylaws, and were active in inducing their employees to participate therein. This organization was administered by committees of employee representatives, and joint committees composed of an equal number of employees and representatives of the management. The committee meetings were held during working hours and the employees were compensated for the time therein spent. No provisions were made for general meetings of the employees. Grievances were presented to joint committees and thence to the presidents of the companies, and arbitration could be had only if the president consented. This organization continued in existence for two years after the passage of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq., and when the Act was held valid by the Supreme Court, the respondents advised the employees that the organization could not be continued. There is no question that the organization, up to this point, did not comply with the provisions of the Act. Thereafter, various officials of the companies, including superintendents and foremen, became interested in advising the employees against joining an outside organization. About this time, the Steel Workers Organizing Committee of the CIO was attempting to organize the employees. A superintendent advised one of the employee representatives of the old organization that there was no use in joining an outside organization, and that the men should take over the company union and carry it on. One of the foremen told the same representative that it was foolish to pay dues to outsiders who. would get the men into trouble, when -they could have an organization that would cost them practically nothing. A superintendent convened a meeting of the employee representatives of the old organization, told them they could get lots more out of a local union than by affiliation with an organization like the CIO, which he referred to as a communistic organization, carried on by Communists. Thereafter, on May 1, 1937, Mr. Cannon, the assistant general manager of the M. A. Hanna Company, met with the superintendent of three of respondents’ mines and with the chief engineer, and told them that the' former organization could not be continued and that they should advise the representatives thereof that it was up to them as to what they did in the future. At the same time, the assistant general manager gave the superintendents a set of mimeographed bylaws, with advice to transmit them to the representatives of the old organization, with the information that they [788]*788represented the revision of the bylaws of the old organization and were available for use in forming a successor union if the representatives so wished. Pursuant to such instructions, the superintendents called together the representatives of the old organization and delivered to them copies of the revised bylaws, and the message of the assistant general manager concerning their use. Thereafter, the representatives of the old organization met to discuss the formation of an inside union and voted to put the question to the employees by referendum vote; but, subsequently, at another meeting of these representatives, it was voted to discard the plan of a referendum vote; and they decided to proceed with the formation of an inside union to be known as the Independent. Shortly thereafter, membership application cards in the proposed Independent union were circulated at respondents’ mines by the representatives of the former organization, and respondents, although aware of this activity, made no effort to stop this campaign, which was carried on largely during working hours. Superintendent Mahon took an especially active interest, about the first part of June, and, at a safety meeting held at one of the mines, addressed the employees, telling them that they would be better off if they joined the Independent. He compared the risk involved in choosing representatives to the danger of a child in playing with dynamite, and said that if respondents’ employees had been members of the outside union they would have been in danger of being “thrown into a strike which was caused by men and called for men in Chicago, and in which we might not have any interest whatsoever.” Mahon stated at this meeting that he was only expressing his personal views in the matter. On other occasions, he exhorted the employees to “go up to the machine shop and sign up right now” with the Independent; and at other times he reproached an employee for joining the CIO, referring to such union as a racket composed of a bunch of Communists. He also suggested that a man who joined the CIO was ungrateful because of everything the respondents had done for him, and told another that since he joined an outside organization, he should go back to another company where he had worked previously-

It further appears that Mr. Cannon, the assistant general manager, in questioning an applicant for employment, interrogated him as to whether he approved of a local or outside union. When a committee of employees associated with the Steel Workers Organizing Committee called upon Cannon to complain of intimidation of the miners by management representatives, he said, in reply to their protests, that he could not see why they had any cause for complaint, stating: “Well, I can’t see where you guys are kicking, you had three or four weeks start ahead of us.”

There is evidence that foremen made statements at various times to employees, advising certain ones who had become members of the CIO union to withdraw from such organization, and that they would be better off if they quit the CIO; that such union was a “bunch of Reds,” that it was imported from Russia; that in the event of an election conducted by the Board, “there won’t be no more mines, and the company won’t recognize no union”; and that the employees “would be better off without any union whatever.” When certain employees were questioned by one of the foremen concerning the meetings of the Steel Workers Organizing Committee, and they refused to divulge any information, they were told that the foremen could find out more about what was going on in that union than they, themselves, could. In other statements, foremen told employees that it was foolish to pay'dues to an outside union when a local union could be formed; and an intramural organization was emphatically and continually urged upon the employees by a number of the foremen.

Toward the latter part of May, 1938, when a committee from the Steel Workers Organizing Committee called upon the assistant general manager and advised him that they represented a majority of the mine employees, and requested sole collective bargaining rights for such employees, offering at the same time to withdraw their petition and charges filed with the Board if such rights were granted, Mr. Cannon replied that the matter would have to be referred to higher authorities. But no definite action was ever taken. Toward the latter part of June, George Miller, an employee, called a meeting of employees in the City Hall Auditorium in Iron River and the present organization, known as the Mine Workers Union, was thereupon formed. Practically all of the proposed bylaws submitted to the representatives of the former Employees’ Organization were [789]*789adopted as the bylaws for the Mine Workers Union.

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Bluebook (online)
125 F.2d 786, 9 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 509, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-m-a-hanna-co-ca6-1942.