National Labor Relations Board v. St. Louis Printing Pressmen & Assistants Union No. 6, Inc.

385 F.2d 956
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 30, 1967
DocketNo. 18608
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 385 F.2d 956 (National Labor Relations Board v. St. Louis Printing Pressmen & Assistants Union No. 6, Inc.) 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. St. Louis Printing Pressmen & Assistants Union No. 6, Inc., 385 F.2d 956 (8th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

BLACKMUN, Circuit Judge.

This is a jurisdictional dispute. The National Labor Relations Board seeks enforcement of its order issued October 20, 1965, against the respondent Pressmen’s union under § 10(k) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 160(k). The decision and order are reported as 155 NLRB No. 30. The Board’s earlier decision determining the dispute was made March 12, 1965, and is reported at 151 NLRB 628.

The employer is Nordmann Printing Company. It is engaged in commercial printing, primarily community and school newspapers, in Saint Louis, Missouri. The unions involved are the respondent, St. Louis Printing Pressmen and Assistants Union No. 6, Inc., affiliated with International Printing Pressmen & Assistants Union of North America, AFL-CIO; St. Louis Typographical Union No. 8, affiliated with International Typographical Union, AFL-CIO; and St. Louis Stereotypers Union No. 8, affiliated with International Stereotypers & Electrotypers Union, AFL-CIO. Prior to June 1964 these three unions respectively represented certain Nordmann employees.

The Board found that the Pressmen had violated § 8(b) (4) (i, ií) (D) of the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 158(b) (4) (i, ii) (D), by threats and coercion with an object of forcing or requiring Nordmann to assign certain work to employees represented by the Pressmen rather than to employees represented by the Typographers.

The facts are not in dispute. In 1963 Nordmann investigated the feasibility of a changeover from letterpress to offset printing methods. This would have a direct impact on employees so far as offset preparatory work was concerned. We need not here describe all the details of letterpress and offset operations and their differences. For present purposes it is sufficient to note the following: Under both methods composing room employees, represented by the Typographers, do the typesetting, make up the page forms, pull proofs, make corrections, and lock the type. The letterpress, a curved press plate, is then made from the flat bed. This operation was performed by employees represented by the Stereotypers; those employees then delivered the curved plate to the pressmen. With an offset press, however, a repro[958]*958duetion proof is taken from the flat bed, is photographed, is corrected by opaquing, and is transferred to a flexible metal sheet which becomes the plate for the offset press. It is this work which is in controversy here.

In December 1963 Nordmann ordered a rotary offset press. As it was obligated to do by its several bargaining agreements, Nordmann notified each of the three unions of this fact and thereafter held a meeting with each. Each union then requested that the offset preparatory work be assigned to workers it represented and offered to train company employees in offset practices.

On June 4, 1964, Nordmann by letter notified each union that it had assigned the operation of the offset press to employees represented by the Pressmen and the offset preparatory work to employees represented by the Typographers. This served to eliminate the employees represented by the Stereotypers. All stereotyping equipment was sold and the stereotypers (2 full time and 3 part time) were dismissed. There was, however, no loss of jobs among Nordmann’s 10 pressmen and 38 composing room employees. The first offset production job was run about June 10, 1964.

On June 11 a representative of the International Pressmen notified Nordmann that the International had authorized a strike subject to local approval and that their Local would strike Nordmann “if necessary to get the operation of this equipment”. The offset preparatory work was formally demanded for pressmen employees by letter written the following day to Nordmann by the president of the Local. Later that day the Local voted a protest strike.

Nordmann responded on June 15 by filing an unfair labor practice charge against the Pressmen. In the meantime, the disputed work has been performed by employees represented by the Typographers. This, apparently, is with the temporary acquiescence of the Pressmen and of the Stereotypers.

For some time the Pressmen’s bargaining agreements have been negotiated with the Graphic Arts Association of St. Louis. Nordmann then executes each contract with an addendum specifically covering wages for its employees operating its duplex tubular press. The jurisdictional clause in this contract covers, in addition to the operation of presses, “all work in connection with offset platemaking, including camera operation, all dark room work, stripping, layout, opaquing and plate-making”. This language first appeared in the 1958 Pressmen contract and was repeated in subsequent agreements. Nordmann signed the latest in this series of contracts in January 1964 but noted in its letter transmitting that agreement to the Local that a jurisdictional dispute existed.

On the other hand, Nordmann’s corresponding contract with the Typographers, concluded in September 1963, provides that that union’s jurisdiction “begins with the markup of copy and continues until the material is ready for the printing press (but excluding the making of stereotypes and the burning of offset plates)”. Predecessor contracts beginning in 1956 (more than a year before the critical language, described above, first appeared in the Pressmen’s contracts) had described the Typographers’ jurisdiction in terms of individual jobs, including the composing room classifications “and employees engaged in proofing, waxing and paste-makeup with reproduction proofs [required for offset platemaking], processing the product of- photo-typesetting machines, including development and waxing * * * [and] imposition of the paste-makeup serving as the completed copy for the camera used in the platemaking process”. The company’s negotiator testified at the original hearing that the language in the Typographers’ current agreement was a “short form” expression which “continued the same coverage as that originally put into the contract in 1955, inso[959]*959far as its substance was concerned and insofar as it covered the preparatory work processes of offset”.

Thus, both the Pressmen and the Typographers, relying on the language of their respective contracts, lay claim to the offset preparatory work.

The record reveals that a press plate can be produced by the photographic method in approximately half the time required by the stereotype method. Nordmann’s 38 composing room employees, represented by the Typographers, work in two shifts five days a week. About five of these do the offset preparatory work in an area which adjoins the composing room. When no work is required in the offset area, these employees ^return to their tasks in the composing room. They are under the same supervision in both places.

The situation as to the 10 Nordmann pressmen is contrasting. Two men work full time on a single shift five days a week. The others work one shift a day, either day or evening, depending on production needs. Thus, it is possible that in as many as five shifts a week no pressman would be at work while the composing room is in operation. The manning requirements of the Pressmen’s contract specify the number of workers required to operate a press; if the removal of men for offset preparatory work would reduce the crew below the specified number, the press is to be stopped.

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385 F.2d 956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-st-louis-printing-pressmen-assistants-ca8-1967.