NLRB v. FES

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 2002
Docket01-2267
StatusPublished

This text of NLRB v. FES (NLRB v. FES) 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
NLRB v. FES, (3d Cir. 2002).

Opinion

Opinions of the United 2002 Decisions States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

8-12-2002

NLRB v. FES Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential

Docket No. 01-2267

Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2002

Recommended Citation "NLRB v. FES" (2002). 2002 Decisions. Paper 489. http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2002/489

This decision is brought to you for free and open access by the Opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit at Villanova University School of Law Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 2002 Decisions by an authorized administrator of Villanova University School of Law Digital Repository. For more information, please contact Benjamin.Carlson@law.villanova.edu. PRECEDENTIAL

Filed August 8, 2002

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT

No. 01-2267

NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Petitioner

v.

FES, (A DIVISION OF THERMO POWER), Respondent

*Plumbers and Pipefitters Local No. 520, Intervenor-Petitioner

*(Pursuant to Clerk Order 6/26/01)

On Petition for Review of an Order of the Benefits Review Board (Board No. 5-CA-26276)

Argued: February 4, 2002

Before: BECKER, Chief Judge, McKEE and BARRY, Circuit Judges.

(Filed: August 8, 2002)

AILEEN A. ARMSTRONG, ESQUIRE DAVID A. FLEISCHER, ESQUIRE (ARGUED) FRED L. CORNELL, ESQUIRE National Labor Relations Board 1099 14th Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20570

Counsel for Petitioner

THOMAS R. DAVIES, ESQUIRE (ARGUED) MARK FEATHERMAN, ESQUIRE Harmon & Davies, P.C. 2306 Columbia Avenue Lancaster, PA 17603

Counsel for Respondent

DIANAH S. LEVENTHAL, ESQUIRE FRANCIS J. MARTORANA, ESQUIRE (ARGUED) O’Donoghue & O’Donoghue 4748 Wisconsin Avenue, NW Washington, D.C. 20016 Counsel for Intervenor

OPINION OF THE COURT

BECKER, Chief Judge.

FES, a company that manufactures industrial refrigeration equipment, has petitioned for review of an order of the National Labor Relations Board ("the Board") determining that FES violated SS 8(a)(1) and 8(a)(3) of the National Labor Relations Act ("NLRA") by refusing to hire nine job applicants due to their union membership. The challenged order required FES to offer each applicant instatement and back pay. The Board has cross-petitioned for enforcement. FES raises a host of procedural and substantive challenges to the Board’s decision. The central issues, however, are whether sufficient evidence supported: (1) the Board’s finding that anti-union animus contributed to FES’s decision not to hire the union applicants; and (2) its finding that FES failed to establish, as an affirmative defense, that the disparity between the union applicants’ previous wages and the lower wages offered by FES would have led FES to reject the union applicants regardless of the alleged animus. We conclude that the Board’s findings on these points are supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole, and hence we will deny FES’s

petition for review and grant the Board’s cross-petition for enforcement.

I.

FES is a division of Thermo Power Corporation and has an office and manufacturing facility in York, Pennsylvania. On February 4, 1996, FES ran an advertisement in a local newspaper seeking welders and pipe fitters. Shortly thereafter, Terry Peck, a business agent for Plumbers and Pipefitters Local Union 520, and five unemployed journeymen members of Local 520 applied in person for employment with FES as welders. They wore union hats and union jackets when they filed their employment applications, and videotaped the process.

FES again ran help-wanted ads for welders in March of 1996. After seeing these ads, Peck, along with three other union members, again applied for a job at FES. On April 1, 1996, Chip Roche, FES’s Vice President, was quoted in a local newspaper as saying that FES was having trouble finding workers, especially welders, in the York area, and that as a result, FES might have to build a new plant out of state. After Peck read the news story, he telephoned Roche, and according to Peck:

[W]e spoke briefly and I tried to explain to Mr. Roche how we have a common interest being that he needs journeymen pipefitters and welders and we have that type of individual available for employment. And we spoke shortly and he said he was not interested in the union or what the union could do for him or his company.

FES did not contact any of the union applicants or offer them positions. Roche testified that he did not hire the union applicants because they would not be a "good fit" for the Company. According to Roche, to determine an applicant’s fit, FES considered the completeness of the application, the applicant’s skills and experience, the stability of the applicant’s employment history, and the compatibility of the applicant’s wage history with the wages offered by FES.

Roche explained that the reason for the wage compatibility criterion was to address the problem of employee turnover -- "if you hire people . . . at wages that are substantially under the wages that they made at previous jobs, [they] do not tend to stay, so it increases our risk of losing an employee after we train them." As an example, Roche cited FES’s hiring of several welders who had been laid off from York International, which paid higher wages than FES. According to Roche, after FES had invested considerable time and money training these employees, FES lost them when they were recalled to their higher paying jobs with York.

Roche testified that FES did not interview or make offers to any of the union applicants because most of them had not completely filled out the applications, left gaps in their employment history or had unstable employment histories, and had been making higher wages than FES paid. In particular, the union applicants all made more than $22 per hour at their previous jobs, and FES’s top wage scale for welders and pipefitters was less than $17 per hour. Roche admitted, however, that except for Peck, who had not worked as a welder since 1992, the union applicants possessed the skills and experience that FES was seeking.

In particular, FES advertised that its "ideal candidate will be certified to build Pressure Vessels per ASME Section VIII and/or have experience building Carbon Steel Piping Systems per ANSI B31.5." Peck testified that the union applicants possessed the skills and experience that FES sought, and Roche confirmed that the non-union welders who were hired were less skilled than the union applicants. Roche admitted that some of the (non-union) applicants who were hired also had gaps in their employment histories and blanks in their application forms. Roche related that the wage compatibility criterion had been used to disqualify non-union applicants, but could not provide specific examples and did not know if FES would have the records to provide such examples.

The union filed an unfair labor practice charge, and the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), after holding a trial, found that FES had refused to consider the union applicants on the basis of their union affiliation in violation ofSS 8(a)(1)

and 8(a)(3) of the NLRA. See FES, 331 N.L.R.B. 9, 34 (2000) [hereinafter FES I]. Noting that the record was insufficient to determine whether FES would have actually hired any of the applicants had it considered them on a nondiscriminatory basis, id. at 34 n.8, the ALJ stated that if at the compliance stage of the proceeding it was shown that FES would have hired any of the nine union applicants in the absence of its discriminatory refusal to consider, those applicants would be entitled to back pay and instatement in positions substantially equivalent to those for which they would have been hired initially.

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