National Labor Relations Board v. Robin American Corporation

654 F.2d 1022, 108 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2229, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 18100
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 31, 1981
Docket79-4064
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 654 F.2d 1022 (National Labor Relations Board v. Robin American Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Robin American Corporation, 654 F.2d 1022, 108 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2229, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 18100 (5th Cir. 1981).

Opinion

GODBOLD, Chief Judge:

The Board sues to enforce its order. 1 The major issues concern threats and interrogation, lay-offs and discharges, failure to reinstate unfair labor practice strikers, and validity of a Gissel 2 bargaining order.

Principals of a company not involved in this case purchased the zipper manufacturing department of the company in March 1977 and under the name Robin American (“RA”) began producing zipper chain and the parts for the sliders that open and close zippers. 3 Of the three principals Robinson became president of the company, Benbasat vice president for manufacturing, and Sam-berg vice president for engineering. RA had several departments: coiling department, finishing department, sewing department, weaving department, slider department, shipping and receiving department.

Between November 5 and 10, 1977, 59 of approximately 86 to 88 non-clerical workers at RA’s plant at Hialeah, Florida, signed union authorization cards. 4 The union demanded recognition, the request was refused, and in mid-November the union petitioned for a representation election.

I. Interrogation and threats

The Board found that between November and mid-January managerial and supervisory employees engaged in a number of interrogations and 'threats to persons who had signed union cards. RA does not deny that these events occurred but merely argues that they were not coercive. The question is not even close. The evidence amply supports the tendency of the interrogations and threats to coerce.

II. Closing of the slider department and discharge of employees

All five employees in the slider department signed union cards. Three *1025 were subjected to interrogation or threats by management or supervisory employees. On December 9 without prior warning Sam-berg told these five employees that the department was being closed and all of them terminated. All except one had been working in the department since 1972 or 1973. RA had been manufacturing some of its slider requirements and purchasing others from suppliers. On closing the department it began purchasing all of its needs from suppliers.

As is true of several issues in this case, the question is sufficiency of the evidence. There was evidence both ways. The Board considered testimony that the slider department was — and was not — successful, that the costs of operating it were excessive, and that the sliders produced were — and were not — of acceptable quality. Portions of the evidence tending to show that the slider department was successful came from company witnesses, including vice president for engineering Samberg. The evidence that the department was closed and the employees discharged for anti-union motives was adequate to make out a prima facie case to support the inferences that protected conduct was a motivating factor in RA’s decision. The burden shifted to the employer to demonstrate that the same action would have been taken in the absence of protected conduct. Wright Line, a Division of Wright Line, Inc., 251 NLRB No. 150, 105 LRRM 1169 (1980). RA did not discharge this burden.

III. Other lay-offs

(a) Oses and Ruiz

These two employees worked in the sewing department. Both had signed cards. In early January superintendent Quiros, who was in charge of the sewing department, told Oses not to think that the union was going to protect her from lay-off. On January 20, a Friday, Oses was told by Quiros that she was laid off. Union spokesman Luna intervened with Quiros, who said he had been ordered to lay off Oses. Luna accused Quiros of laying Oses off because she was a member of the union. Quiros replied with an “affirmative gesture” and reiterated that he was following orders. Luna made the same accusation to Benbasat, who told him to “tell the union to stay in Coral Gables.” 5 Oses had more seniority than sewing machine operators not laid off.

The next day, Saturday, Ruiz was laid off. On the Monday following, Luna asked Quiros about both of the lay-offs. Quiros responded that “the Company don’t want the Union inside” and “if any people put the Union inside, I think he’s not working in this Company.”

RA contends that Oses and Ruiz were laid off because of a decline in sales and excessive inventory. According to Benbasat it was evident as early as September that RA was overproducing. But the lay-offs did not occur until four months later and two months after the union had come in and demanded recognition and approximately two weeks before the date of a scheduled election. Benbasat attempted to explain this discrepancy, but the Board was not required to accept his explanation.

The evidence adequately supports that Oses and Ruiz were laid off because of their union membership and not for economic reasons.

(b) Izquierdo

This employee, a sister-in-law of Octavio-Rodriguez, the prime union supporter, worked in the finishing department. She had signed a union card and solicited three others. On January 20 she was told she was being laid off. This was done in the presence of her brother-in-law, Rodriguez. Rodriguez protested the discharge but without success. The company explains that it laid off Izquierdo because arrangements it had made with an outside firm to perform some manufacturing functions eliminated the need for her job. But immediately after Izquierdo was laid off the company replaced her with a worker from another department, who, however, had more seniority. Soon after the lay-off Arroyo, a junior employee in the finishing department, quit. *1026 Although Arroyo’s job was difficult and Izquierdo had previously performed it, Izquierdo was not recalled to fill the vacancy-

We agree with the company that there is not substantial evidence that it had knowledge of Izquierdo’s union activity. Izquierdo’s situation is different from that of Oses and Ruiz. No statements were made at the time of her lay-off that tended to show company knowledge of her union activities or anti-union bias. When Rodriguez accused Ballarino of laying off Izquierdo because she was his sister-in-law and was a union member Ballarino merely responded that he was carrying out orders. Rodriguez repeated his accusation to Benbasat, who only said “this is my decision.” Izquierdo was not one of the persons found by the Board to be leaders of the organizational campaign. The Board made general findings that since the plant was small and relationships were informal and friendly it was likely that everybody knew what was going on. To infer knowledge the Board also relies upon the evidence that Ballarino and Benbasat did not deny they laid off Izquierdo for union activities when accused of having done so. These failures to deny their motives, the locale of a small and informal plant, plus the in-law relationship with Rodriguez, are not substantial evidence on which to base an inference that the company knew Izquierdo was a union supporter.

IV. The strike

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654 F.2d 1022, 108 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2229, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 18100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-robin-american-corporation-ca5-1981.