National Labor Relations Board v. Roswil, Inc., Doing Business as Ramey Supermarkets

55 F.3d 382
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 7, 1995
Docket94-2929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 55 F.3d 382 (National Labor Relations Board v. Roswil, Inc., Doing Business as Ramey Supermarkets) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Roswil, Inc., Doing Business as Ramey Supermarkets, 55 F.3d 382 (8th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

LOKEN, Circuit Judge.

The National Labor Relations Board petitions to enforce its order requiring Roswil, Inc., to remedy violations of Sections 8(a)(1) and 8(a)(3) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 158(a)(1) and (3). The Board held that Roswil committed the unfair labor practices by disciplining two employees because they criticized their store manager during collective bargaining negotiations. We conclude that the Board abused its discretion in refusing to defer its proceedings until completion of a pending grievance-arbitration proceeding under the govérning collective bargaining agreement. Accordingly, we deny enforcement.

I. Background Facts.

On October 1, 1991, Richard Taylor, Ro-swil’s president, met with representatives of the Congress of Independent Unions (“CIU”) to negotiate a new collective bargaining agreement. CIU has represented Roswil employees since 1973. As the Board found, Roswil and CIU have a positive relationship, and they have employed their collectively bargained grievance-arbitration machinery “to good effect over a number of years.” The October 1 negotiations were successful, producing accord on the terms of a new collective bargaining agreement that same day.

The CIU representatives at this bargaining session included Vickie Floyd and Shirley Holbrook, two checkers with over fifteen years experience at Roswil’s supermarket in Houston, Missouri. During the bargaining meeting, in response to a routine question from Taylor.about conditions at the Houston store, Floyd and Holbrook voiced a number of complaints about their relatively new store manager, Michael Kempton, including an allegation that Kempton was displaying favoritism toward another checker, with whom he was rumored to be having an affair. Fearing *385 reprisal by Kempton, the employees asked Taylor to keep their complaints confidential, and he assured them that he would.

Properly concerned about the rumored affair, Taylor directed Kempton’s immediate supervisor, area store supervisor Jerry Isem-inger, to investigate, without telling Iseminger the source of the rumors. Iseminger visited the Houston store three of the next four days. Though Iseminger did not accuse Kempton of having an affair (indeed Isem-inger ultimately concluded that the rumors were false), the investigation angered Kemp-ton, whose comments to another employee suggested that he attributed this scrutiny by his superior to something that was said at the October 1 negotiations.

Holbrook is reprimanded. On October 10, checker Holbrook ignored a request that she call manager Kempton to the front of the store. Kempton summoned Holbrook to the break room and, as the ALJ found, “told Holbrook that he didn’t know what her problem was but that he would be watching her and he was going to write her up every time she turned around.” That threat was the basis of the Board’s § 8(a)(1) finding as to employee Holbrook; she suffered no other adverse action by Roswil.

Floyd is discharged. Floyd was the store’s most experienced checker, and her duties included stocking health and beauty aid products, many of which must be rotated on the store shelves or they will not be sold before the manufacturer’s expiration date. In mid-September, the independent supplier of these products, acting on a special request from her superiors, had pulled all outdated health and beauty aid products from the Houston store’s shelves. These products were sitting in a shopping cart and in four “totes” in Kempton’s office when Iseminger visited the store in early October. Iseminger expressed concern, and Kempton advised that Floyd was responsible. Iseminger told Kempton to find out the value of these outdated products.

In late October, Kempton reported to Is-eminger that the outdated health and beauty aid products had a wholesale value of approximately $1000. After cheeking with Taylor, who confirmed that this was unacceptable, Iseminger instructed Kempton to terminate Floyd’s employ. On October 31, Kempton did so, in a stormy meeting in which Floyd accused Kempton of being “mad about something I’ve done.” Because Floyd had received no warning or other lesser discipline for not properly rotating these products, she believed that Kempton caused her discharge in retaliation for her complaints at the collective bargaining session.

II. Procedural History.

The next day, Floyd filed a grievance in accordance with the collective bargaining agreement between Roswil and CIU. The agreement provides that Roswil may “discipline and discharge employees for such cause as the Company in good faith determines to be desirable.” The prescribed grievance and arbitration procedures are rapid. The parties must complete each grievance step within five working days and, if a matter remains unresolved, must submit it to an arbitration panel within ten days thereafter. Consistent with this expedited process, Article 11, Section 4(f), of the agreement provides that the arbitrators may not require Roswil

to pay back wages under any grievance more than twenty (20) days retroactive to the date the arbitrator’s decision is delivered to the Company or more than three (3) days prior to the date the grievance is first reduced to writing and presented to the Company.

On November 12, 1991, while her grievance was being processed by Roswil and CIU, Floyd filed a parallel unfair labor practice charge with the Board. On December 19, the Board’s Supervisory Examiner denied Roswil’s request that the Board defer its unfair labor practice investigation until Floyd’s pending grievance was resolved. On December 30, the charge was amended to allege that Roswil committed an unfair labor practice when Kempton “threatened to discipline” Holbrook on October 10 because “she had engaged in union or other protected, concerted activities.”

Floyd was rehired to her former position on January 13, 1992. The Board’s administrative law judge conducted a three-day *386 hearing on July 30, August 20, and September 30, 1992. Most of the hearing concerned whether Roswil’s stated reasons for Floyd’s discharge, primarily the outdated health and beauty aid products, were pretextual. Taylor also testified that CIU’s National Secretary-Treasurer had declined to go forward with Floyd’s pending grievance until the Board completed its proceedings.

Following the hearing, the ALJ held that deferral was inappropriate because the collective bargaining agreement “indisputably prevents an arbitrator from granting the type of make-whole relief' necessary to perpetuate the policies underlying the Act.” On the merits, the ALJ found that Roswil violated § 8(a)(1) when Kempton threatened Hol-brook and § 8(a)(1) and § 8(a)(3) when Isem-inger and Kempton discharged Floyd. A three-member panel of the Board summarily affirmed but added a footnote regarding the deferral issue:

Member Devaney would generally support deferral to the arbitral process even in-those cases where it does not provide complete make-whole relief.

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55 F.3d 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-roswil-inc-doing-business-as-ramey-ca8-1995.