National Labor Relations Board v. Spiewak

179 F.2d 695
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 11, 1950
Docket9875_1
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 179 F.2d 695 (National Labor Relations Board v. Spiewak) 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. Spiewak, 179 F.2d 695 (3d Cir. 1950).

Opinion

McLaughlin, circuit judge.

This is a petition by the National Labor Relations Board for enforcement of its order against respondents following proceedings under Section 10 of the. National Labor Relations Act, 49 Stat. 449, U.S.C.A. Title 29, § 160.

Respondents are garment manufacturers. During the period with which we are concerned, they were engaged principally in *696 making leather sport jackets. 1 Since 1937 respondents’ employees have been represented in their collective bargaining by the Golden Fleece Association. In 1941, the Board conducted an election among the employees to determine whether they desired to be represented by the Golden Fleece Association or by the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America. The Association won the election. In 1942 and 1943, contracts between the Association for the employees and the respondents were entered into. The expiration date of the 1943 contract was April 1, 1944. That contract, in effect, called for a closed-shop. It was so treated by the parties to it, and no contrary contention has been raised in this proceeding. It provided that new employees could be hired from without the Association, but would be required to join it within a four week period. The contract also contained clauses covering weekly dues check-offs, maintenance of membership, and a “no-strike” provision.

In February, 1944, there were negotiations between the Association and the respondents with respect to a new contract. The main quesition had to do with wage increases. It is conceded that rumors of activity during that period on behalf of Amalgamated were known to the employer, and, with them in mind, respondent Philip Spiewak, in the -latter part of February, 1944, asked an employee wage increase committee of the cutters whether they were from the Association or another organization. The answer was that “right now” it was the Association. Shortly thereafter, two foremen, Newfield and Klein, made a “proposition” to a member of the cutters’ committee that if the cutters would leave the rest of the factory out of the organization and “not bother the operators” and “forget about the union”, Newfield or Klein would “see to it” that the cutters got a ten per cent raise. Following this, Newfield told three other employees that he had asked Spiewak to give the cutters a raise “providing you will not bother with the operators and also not with the union”. Around the same time (late in February, 1944) Klein said to Mary Tarantino, an employee active on behalf of Amalgamated, “You know, you are a silly kid. You know Mr. Spiewak will never permit another union in here but the Golden Fleece.”

On March 6, Amalgamated called a srike contrary to the plain language of the “no-strike” clause of the 1943 employment contract. Practically all of the employees were out for two days, but, on March 8, a number of them returned to work. On March 13, the organizer for Amalgamated asked Harber, respondents’ assistant general manager, “* * * if it was not possible for us to- get together with Mr. Spiewak in regard to a contract with the Spiewak company as we had the majority of the workers.” Harber stated that he told Spiewak of this and that Spiewak said to him, “ * * * whatever is to be done in that direction, he is capable to take care of it himself without any help from me.” On March 17, Amalgamated filed a petition for certification as bargaining representative for the employees with the Board. Meanwhile, on March 17, a contract was entered into between the Association and respondents extending for another year the 1943 agreement which was about to expire.

Without attempting to outline it at length, there is substantial evidence in the record that, as the Board found, during the strike respondents tried to induce individual strikers to return to work. Negotiations for the termination of the strike started in the latter part of April, 1944. These continued during May and June, but broke down over the exclusion of six strikers who, the Association insisted, were not to be reemployed “because of the actions by them in assaulting and threatening members of the Golden Fleece with physical violence and in their misleading and unauthorized behavior.”

The Board did not hold an election following Amalgamated’s claim for representation. Almost-two years later, on February 26, 1946, a complaint was issued and thereafter hearings were held. On June 11, 1946, the Trial Examiner’s report was filed. The decision and order of the Board was filed November 27, 1946. Petition *697 for enforcement was served on respondents on or about January 1, 1949.

The Board held that “in the period immediately preceding Amalgamated’s request for recognition unlawful assistance was given by the respondents to the Association,” It held further that such assistance alone “rendered the respondents’ subsequent recognition of, and contract with, the Association unlawful”, and that “by entering into the closed-shop contract of March 17, 1944, with the Association, respondents interfered with, restrained and coerced their employees, within the meaning of Section 8 (1) of the Act.” It also held that “respondents discriminated with respect to hire, tenure of employment and terms and conditions of employment, thereby discouraging membership within the meaning of Section 8 (3) of the Act by their conduct in enforcing their closed-shop and check off of dues provisions of the Association contract on and after March 17, 1944.”

With direct reference to the strike, the Board found “that the respondents, by attempting through various supervisors, and by permitting employees to leave work, to induce striking employees to return to work, unlawfully interfered with their employees’ concerted activities, within the meaning of Section 8 (1) of the Act.” The Board states that “ * * * the respondents’ efforts to induce individual strikers to return to work, in our opinion, constituted a calculated effort to weaken and discredit the strike called by the Amalgamated, by depriving it of the support of the individuals solicited to abandon the strike.” By such solicitation respondents were found to have “interfered with, restrained, and coerced their employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act.”°

The order of the Board calls for the respondents to cease and desist from recognizing or dealing with Golden Fleece Association as the representative of any of their employees; from giving effect to either the 1944 or 1945 contracts with the Association; from discouraging membership in Amalgamated or in any other labor organization of their employees, by discharging or refusing to reinstate, etc.; in any other manner interfering with employees in their right to form labor organizations, in joining or assisting Amalgamated or any other labor organization, in bargaining collectively through representatives of their own choosing or in engaging in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
179 F.2d 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-spiewak-ca3-1950.