National Labor Relations Board v. Sherwood Trucking Company

775 F.2d 744, 120 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3009, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 24396
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 28, 1985
Docket84-5627, 84-5653
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 775 F.2d 744 (National Labor Relations Board v. Sherwood Trucking Company) 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. Sherwood Trucking Company, 775 F.2d 744, 120 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3009, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 24396 (6th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an application by the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB” or “Board”) for enforcement of its order requiring Sherwood Trucking Company (“Sherwood”), inter alia, to offer twelve truckers immediate employment plus back pay, recognize and bargain with the Teamsters Local Union (the “Union”) as the exclusive bargaining representative of all employees in the appropriate unit, and post notice of its alleged wrongdoings. The Board accepted without modification the ALJ’s recommended decision. Because we do not find substantial evidence supporting its findings, we DENY enforcement of the Board’s order.

I. BACKGROUND

Emery Air Freight Corporation (“Emery”) engages in the air freight business at a facility located at the Dayton airport in Vandalia, Ohio. 1 Emery contracts its local pick-up and delivery service to drayage companies which use trucks with Emery markings. For a period ending on October 24, 1980, Emery’s drayage contractor for the Dayton airport was Foreman Express, Inc. (“Foreman”). Sherwood, which replaced Foreman as Emery’s drayage subcontractor on October 24, was not related to Foreman. Sherwood was incorporated in 1978, long before Emery’s problems with Foreman, Mr. Blodgett, Sherwood’s sole owner, did not have any financial interest in Foreman; Sherwood used completely different (and new) equipment; it “leased” its drayage employees from a personnel agency rather than hiring them itself, and paid these drivers a percentage of revenues as their sole compensation rather than paying them on salary.

In mid-1977, Foreman and the Union signed a three-year collective bargaining agreement covering Foreman’s drivers and combination driver-dockman at the Dayton terminal. The contract contained a union security clause requiring union membership. On June 27, 1980, Foreman and the Union signed a contract addendum increasing the drivers’ wages in June, August and September, their health insurance effective August 1, 1980, and extending the contract through March, 1981.

During July 1980, Emery began to investigate obtaining a replacement drayage contractor because there were indications that Foreman was having financial problems, its equipment was in “poor repair,” and there were morale and productivity 2 problems among its work force. In late July 1980, Jim Irwin, Sherwood’s president, spoke with Gary O’Dell, Emery’s local service manager, about submitting a proposal for the drayage work, but he indicated that there was no real press for time about it. Sherwood did not begin drafting the proposal until early October when O’Dell asked where the proposal was. At least two other drayage subcontractors submitted proposals to Emery in October and November; O’Dell, Emery’s manager, said he wanted a “clean sweep: new trucks, new drivers.” 3

*746 On October 17, Sherwood submitted a written bid to Emery. With respect to Emery’s requirement that it employ a new driver work force, Sherwood proposed using drivers from a personnel leasing service and paying them on a commission basis as their sole compensation. One week later, on Friday, October 24, Foreman asked Emery for a ten per cent rate increase to cover its additional labor costs, but Emery refused. Foreman informed O’Dell that it would discontinue service and go out of business at the end of the day.

At about 2:00 p.m. on that same day, O'Dell telephoned Blodgett in Indianapolis, Indiana, and asked him to have Sherwood begin service on an interim basis at 8:00 a.m. on Monday, October 27, using ten new trucks and ten new drivers but retaining Joe Phillips, a Foreman supervisor and dispatcher. Blodgett then called Sherwood’s president, Irwin, stationed in Akron, Ohio, and asked him to line up the trucks and contact personnel agencies for drivers. The specification for “new drivers” came from Emery.

Late that afternoon, Blodgett and Irwin met at Emery’s airport terminal with O’Dell and his boss, Mike Gunkel, to discuss the details of the new operation. They discussed economics and Emery’s desire that Foreman’s employee, Phillips, be hired by Sherwood but that all of the drivers be replaced, and these specifications were agreeable to Sherwood.

Immediately after this meeting, at about 6:00 p.m., Blodgett met with Phillips and hired him “on a temporary basis.” There is considerable controversy concerning the position in and status with which Sherwood employed Phillips. In particular, the Board found that he was a supervisor, whereas Sherwood claims he was merely a dispatcher. Upon careful examination of the record, we find that substantial evidence does not support the Board’s finding that Phillips was a supervisor at the relevant time when Sherwood became the new contractor and hired its initial employees.

At the Board’s hearing, Phillips was asked “what were your responsibilities with Foreman?”, to which he responded “[b]asically the same I have with Sherwood” (emphasis added). Phillips had been a supervisor at Foreman. In describing the differences between his authority at Foreman and at Sherwood he noted: (1) At Sherwood he is more of a manager because he gets “to look at the books and know[s] the money end of the operation”, and (2) at Foreman he had the authority to hire employees, but at Sherwood he did not.

According to Blodgett, who interviewed and hired Phillips for Sherwood, Phillips had nothing to do with the selection of drivers although he did administer Department of Transportation (“DOT”) tests to the new drivers. Blodgett stated that Phillips was to “run the day to day operations,” but with Blodgett’s directions concerning the way he wanted it dispatched and the equipment and drivers he wanted used.

Jim Irwin, Sherwood’s president, who was present to oversee the Sherwood operation, was asked whether he had ever reversed Phillips’ recommendations regarding discipline. Irwin responded “Oh, yes. Yeah, many times. Joe does not really have that responsibility. Joe basically takes care of our day-to-day operation” (emphasis added). Irwin then related an instance of his overruling Phillips about a replacement driver.

One of the complaining parties, Terry Hutton, testified that the Sunday after Sherwood had hired Phillips, Phillips described his new position as that of a dispatcher. Lawrence Coomer, another complaining witness, during the Board’s investigation of the claim stated: “He [Phillips] could pick and choose the people [the personnel firm] sent him. I’ve heard this from other people.” During the hearing, however, Coomer claimed that he learned that Phillips had this authority from Phillips himself. Coomer’s testimony was inconsistent and Phillips’ testimony was not compatible with that of Coomer.

The ALJ concluded, nevertheless:

*747 On Sunday, October 26, 11 driver candidates were sent by [the personnel agency] to Sherwood for road testing by Phillips. Those approved 4 by Phillips were hired. Two or three were rejected by Phillips and were not hired.

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775 F.2d 744, 120 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3009, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 24396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-sherwood-trucking-company-ca6-1985.