National Labor Relations Board v. Sumner Home for the Aged

599 F.2d 762, 101 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2494, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 14247
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 5, 1979
Docket77-1036
StatusPublished

This text of 599 F.2d 762 (National Labor Relations Board v. Sumner Home for the Aged) 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. Sumner Home for the Aged, 599 F.2d 762, 101 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2494, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 14247 (6th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

EDWARDS, Chief Judge.

In this case the National Labor Relations Board seeks enforcement of an order reported at 226 N.L.R.B. No. 155 (1976), which, among other things, required respondent employer to offer in contract form certain terms said to have been agreed upon before the union began a strike against Respondent and to draft proposals on other issues where there had been a pre-strike impasse as to which the union has now offered to agree to anything the company desires.

A union 1 won a consent election in Respondent’s Home for elderly people and was certified as the collective bargaining agent. After several months of collective bargaining which left 10 major issues unresolved, the union struck on April 19, 1975. The strike was broken and on August 20, the union called it off. Meanwhile the strikers had been replaced. Fourteen of the 31 strikers then sought re-employment but none was rehired. The union sought to resume negotiations and DeBruin, the lawyer for the Home, agreed to meet on September 18. At that meeting, Hennigin, the union’s representative, asked for the names and addresses of the employees, many of whom were newly hired. The Board found that DeBruin agreed to this request. Hen-nigin also proposed that DeBruin write out a proposed contract incorporating the terms which had been agreed on prior to the strike and proposing any terms the Home wanted as to the 10 major issues still in dispute. He added that the union “would agree in advance to any proposal” the Home made. Hennigin testified that De-Bruin agreed to draft such an agreement.

No draft agreement was ever submitted by the Home and DeBruin was replaced in negotiations by another lawyer, Kaminski, who corresponded with Hennigin but never met with him. With this background of facts, the union filed an unfair labor practice complaint.

After a hearing on the unfair labor practice complaint, the Administrative Law *764 Judge entered a proposed order which provided in applicable part the following:

2. Take the following affirmative action which is necessary to effectuate the policies of the Act:
(a) Upon request, forthwith execute and sign the collective bargaining contract agreed to on September 18, 1975, and give retroactive effect to the terms and conditions of the contract from September 18, 1975, with interest at 6 percent per annum for the loss of any benefits which would have accrued to the employees under the contract the Respondent refused to sign.
(b) If no such request is made, then, upon request, bargain collectively with Retail Clerks International Association, Local No. 698, AFL-CIO, as the exclusive representative of the employees in the appropriate unit and, if an understanding is reached, embody such understanding in a signed contract.

The Board’s decision and order has recited the following facts and conclusions which vary to some important degree from those of the Administrative Law Judge.

The Administrative Law Judge found that during a September 18, 1975, meeting following the Union’s unsuccessful strike Union Representative George Hen-nigin informed Respondent’s attorney, George DeBruin, that the Union would agree in advance to any forthcoming proposals on the 10 or so unresolved issues between the parties. In effect, Hennigin offered to let the Respondent “write its own ticket.” DeBruin, in turn, agreed that he would type up and send to the Union a complete contract including all agreements reached prior to the strike and the Respondent’s proposals on the unresolved items. Thereafter, despite the Union’s repeated demands, the Respondent failed to furnish the Union with either a complete proposed draft agreement or with specific proposals on any of the 10 unresolved items.
On these facts the Administrative Law Judge concluded that Respondent had unlawfully refused to bargain by failing to reduce to writing and execute an agreed-upon contract. The Administrative Law Judge recommended that Respondent’s unlawful conduct be remedied by requiring Respondent, upon request, to sign the bargaining contract agreed to on September 18, 1975, and to give retroactive effect to the terms and conditions of the contract from that date.
To the extent that the Administrative Law Judge found and remedied herein an H. J. Heinz [H. J. Heinz v. NLRB, 811 U.S. 514, 61 S.Ct. 320, 85 L.Ed. 309 (1941)] type violation, we must disagree with his finding and recommended remedy. Contrary to the Administrative Law Judge, we find on this record no basis for concluding that agreement was reached on September 18 on the substantive terms of a collective-bargaining agreement.
Although it is settled that the technical rules of contract law are not necessarily controlling in cases arising under the Act, it is plain on the facts of the instant case that the parties never reached final agreement with its concomitant obligation to reduce their agreement to writing and sign it. Thus the record reveals that when the parties met for the last time on September 18 the unresolved items that separated them from final agreement included union shop, checkoff, wages, health and welfare insurance, employee Christmas bonus, management rights, and the term or duration of the contract. Not only was there no agreement on these and other items, but so far as this record shows the Respondent had never presented any specific contract proposals with respect to these matters. Thus Hennigin, responding to the Home’s October 20 suggestion that the Union submit a “paste up” of the agreements reached by the parties prior to September 18, wrote to Respondent’s counsel:
I am unable to provide you with Sumner Home’s position on these [unresolved] issues in the contract language because it was never proposed. Mr. DeBruin was to make such a proposal on these issues as per our September 18, 1975 meeting. [Emphasis supplied.]
*765 Absent any proposals on the table on the several major open issues between the parties we fail to see how the promises exchanged on September 18, on the Union’s part to accept any proposals that might be made and on the Respondent’s part to make such proposals, can be taken as having created a complete bargaining agreement requiring only that the parties reduce their agreement to writing and sign it. Simply put, until the Respondent submitted its proposals to the Union there could be no agreement on the substantive terms of a collective-bargaining contract. Hence there could be no finding of a violation predicated solely on a failure to reduce to writing and execute an agreed-upon contract.
In view of our findings above, we shall modify the Administrative Law Judge’s recommended Remedy to require Respondent, upon request, to furnish the Union with a complete draft contract including both the agreements reached by the parties in negotiations prior to September 18, 1975, and Respondent’s proposals on all the items that were unresolved on and after that date.

26 N.L.R.B. at 976-77 (Footnotes omitted.)

Thereafter the Board “modified” the Administrative Law Judge’s proposed order as follows:

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599 F.2d 762, 101 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2494, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 14247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-sumner-home-for-the-aged-ca6-1979.