Optical Workers' Union Local 24859 v. National Labor Relations Board

227 F.2d 687, 37 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2188, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4599
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 13, 1955
Docket15460
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 227 F.2d 687 (Optical Workers' Union Local 24859 v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Optical Workers' Union Local 24859 v. National Labor Relations Board, 227 F.2d 687, 37 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2188, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4599 (5th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

Local 24859, Optical Workers Union, AFL, and thirty-four members thereof here seek review 1 of a National Labor Relations Board order dismissing the union’s petition for certification as bargaining agent for the employees of Rogers Brothers Wholesalers, a Texas partner-' ship, and a complaint issued against the partnership for unfair labor practices. The dismissal was pursuant to the Board’s policy, announced June 80,1954, 2 whereby it will not hear cases falling within its statutory jurisdiction over labor disputes “affecting commerce,” 3 if the nature or volume of the business of the employer involved do not meet certain admittedly more stringent requirements.

In this case, the volume of the employer’s business satisfied the Board’s prior jurisdictional limitations, laid down in October, 1950, 4 and the proceedings under these criteria had gone forward to the point where the certification petition and the unfair labor practice complaint had been consolidated for a single hearing, which had been held before a Trial Examiner. From the evidence there adduced, the Trial Examiner had made findings of fact concerning the employer’s volume of business and the unfair labor practices for which the union seeks relief, and had recommended that the employer be ordered to cease and desist from these unfair labor practices and that it also be ordered to recognize and bargain with the'union as the exclusive representative of its employees.

While the Trial Examiner’s report was awaiting action by the Board, the Board *689 promulgated its present jurisdictional limitations. Accordingly, when the case came before it, it adopted the Trial Examiner’s findings and conclusions — “to the limited extent that they are consistent with this Decision and Order”— but dismissed the complaint and the representation petition because the employer’s volume of business did not satisfy the new standards. 110 N.L.R.B. 75.

The petitioners here urge that the Board, while having the authority to decline jurisdiction over particular labor disputes on a case-by-case basis, cannot adopt a rule “legislating” a substantial number of employees and employers out of the administration of the Act. In the alternative, they contend that the rule adopted is an arbitrary one. Finally, they argue that it cannot be applied retroactively, because, they say, the Trial Examiner’s finding that the employer was engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act established N. L. R. B. jurisdiction as the law of the case.

At the outset, it will be observed that all of these objections stem from a view of the Board’s powers and functions as legislative and judicial, or quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial, in character. These analogies, however, while they have been at times useful and convenient in explaining the law relative to administrative agencies, are not always valid or true to the fundamental principles which they are intended to serve.

It is true that some agencies, whose histories extend back to the early development of administrative law in this country, have had their powers and functions molded by decisional law into forms resembling the leading available models at the time, i. e., courts and legislatures. This mode of analysis did not prevail without well-reasoned dissent, however, and administrative agencies created under the later law were not given a judicial construction of their powers so closely simulated to these older forms.

Characteristic examples of this development may be found in the experience of the Interstate Commerce Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission. Under the Interstate Commerce- Act, railroad carriers were required to file schedules of rates with the Interstate Commerce Commission, and the granting of any lesser rate was declared to be unlawful. 5 These rates were required to be reasonable, however, and the ICC had the authority to order reparation for rates it found to be excessive. 6 The Hepburn Act and the Transportation Act granted the ICC the further power of establishing maximum and minimum rates which carriers could charge. 7

In exercising these powers, the ICC on July 15, 1915, authorized a rate not exceeding $1.20 a ton for coal shipped from Alabama mines to Meridian, Mississippi. Thereafter, it granted several general increases and recommended one general reduction, without specifically authorizing an increase in this particular rate. The Southern Railway Co.- and others, however, raised this rate whenever a general increase was allowed, and decreased it when the general reduction was recommended. The rate thus being charged by the carriers in 1925 was $2.03 a ton, and the Eagle Cotton Oil Company thereafter brought an action before the ICC for reparation, on the ground that this rate was excessive. The ICC ruled that the rate was excessive to the extent that it exceeded $1.85 from certain mines and $1.95 from other mines, prescribed these rates as reasonable for the future, and awarded reparation for the amount of the charges exceeding the $1.85 and $1.95 rates, for a period beginning two years before the proceeding was initiated *690 by the shipper. The district court refused to enforce the award for damages, reasoning that the Commission could not retroactively reverse its prior ruling that $2.03 per ton was a reasonable rate.

This court reversed on the narrow ground that the $2.03 rate had not been fixed or prescribed by the Commission. Judge Hutcheson, concurring specially, said that although the $2.03 rate had not been “specifically promulgated by the Commission”, “I think it equally plain that, speaking generally, the rate had received the Commission’s approval and sanction.” He concluded that the ICC had “through a long course of practice * * * built up and established * * a character of flexibility in the matter of the approach to * * * rates and practices * * * in which the principle of res judicata or estoppel by decision has had and can have no just place.” Eagle Cotton Oil Co. v. Southern Ry. Co., 5 Cir., 51 F.2d 443, 445, 446.

This view was rejected by the Supreme Court in Arizona Grocery Co. v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co., 284 U.S. 370, 52 S.Ct. 183, 76 L.Ed. 348. The Court there analyzed the ICC’s function under the Interstate Commerce Act as judicial in character, and under the Hepburn Act and the Transportation Act as legislative in character. It said that the two functions could be combined, but that

“Where, as in this ease, the Commission has made an order having a dual aspect, it may not in a subsequent proceeding, acting in its quasi judicial capacity, ignore its own pronouncement promulgated in ' its quasi legislative capacity and retroactively repeal its own enactment as to the reasonableness of the rate it has prescribed.” Arizona Grocery Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
227 F.2d 687, 37 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2188, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/optical-workers-union-local-24859-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca5-1955.