Ridge Growers, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board

211 F.2d 752, 33 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2786, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3763
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 1954
Docket14423
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 F.2d 752 (Ridge Growers, Inc. 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
Ridge Growers, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board, 211 F.2d 752, 33 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2786, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3763 (5th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

RIVES, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner seeks review of an order of the Board finding it had committed unfair labor practices by increasing the work of its employees as a penalty for their union activities, by discharging four named employees for union membership, and by refusing reinstatement to two other named employees because of their union affiliation. See 101 N.L.R.B. 744. The inquiry is whether the Board’s findings of unlawful interference and discrimination are supported by substantial evidence on the record considered as a whole. Universal Camera Corp. v. N. L. R. B., 340 U.S. 474, 71 S.Ct. 456, 95 L.Ed. 456.

Petitioner is a Florida corporation, with offices at Lake Wales, Florida, where it operates a packing house and is engaged in the business of packing and selling citrus fruits. Its operations are more or less seasonal in nature, the normal annual packing period extending from late September through the following June or July. Until about the first of November, 1950, the fruit was packed in bags with the employees tying the bags by hand. On that date, a bag-chain-conveyor system, which had been installed the previous summer, was put in use to increase production and efficiency of the packing operations. When the new system of tying the bags mechanically began operating effectively, petitioner reduced appreciably the piece-rate wages of the women fruit packers, which caused dissatisfaction among the employees, and, after an en masse protest to petitioner’s President, Laird, proved ineffective, resulted in all of the employees joining a union. When Laird received a letter from the union requesting recognition on Saturday, November 18, 1950, he sent for his packing house foreman, White, and showed White the union’s letter with the remark, “You know what that means, don’t you * * they will tell us what to do instead of us telling them * * *.” On that occasion Laird further observed, “The best thing to do is to find out which ones belong to it and work them out.” Laird later showed White a list containing the names of five of the six women packers who had been actively pro-union, namely, Frances Clifford, Verna McMillan, Mary Hodge, Lorene Fowler, and Catherine Mixon, and stated, “We will fire them * * * I will write their time up this afternoon” and “you can let them go at 8 o’clock Monday morning * * *.” However, these five employees were not discharged the following Monday, because that same afternoon Laird told White, “We better not fire them * * I have been to Bartow and seen my attorney ; he says we might get into trouble.”

According to further testimony, Laird ordered White that same day to discharge another pro-union employee, Sellers, because “He has gone to Auburn-dale to see the Union man”. White accordingly effected Sellers’ discharge the following Monday, even though Sellers then verified his permission from a supervisor, Griffin, to leave that day on a personal errand.

*754 On Monday, November 20, 1950, White, acting on orders from Laird, began “to make it hard on the packers, make them use their packer’s stamp, run the fruit up so high it would make it hard to pack, * * * top the fruit off, * * * so they would have to quit.” 1 Also, White was required by Laird to inform the packers that, in the future, no employee would be permitted to leave the packing house without obtaining permission. All of these new rules were found by the Trial Examiner and the Board to be discriminatorily motivated, because they had not been enforced before the advent of the union in the packing house, although the “topping of fruit” and use of the “Packer’s stamps” had at times been required for special orders and for holiday season shipments. Subsequent to petitioner’s enforcement of the above rules increasing the work load of the packers, employees Clifford, McMillan, and Hodge were discharged and employees Fowler and Mixon were denied re-employment under circumstances hereafter stated.

According to petitioner’s version of the testimony, Frances Clifford was discharged for justifiable cause because she left her work without permission, this defense being mainly based upon a denial by petitioner’s foreman, Danley, that he told Clifford’s son, Preston Pickles, that she could leave for home because of illness, since “we only have a few grapefruit to run.” However, the Trial Examiner and the Board rejected Danley’s testimony as unconvincing, and inconsistent with his other statements, as well as with testimony by petitioner’s own witnesses, one of whom testified that Danley also gave her permission to leave that same morning and that she took Clifford home.

Another pro-union employee, Verna McMillan, was discharged by Foreman Danley on December 9, 1950, for the asserted reason that she was the aggressor in a fight in petitioner’s packing house with another employee, Ailine Proveau, which admittedly took place at the latter employee’s regular place of work. It is without dispute that both she and Proveau were discharged by Danley at that time, although Proveau, by that time an actively anti-union employee, was later reinstated by petitioner upon her application. According to petitioner another pro-union employee, Mary Hodge, was “laid off” for becoming involved in “a heated argument on the premises of the packing house” with an anti-union employee, Bernice Brackin, but the Trial Examiner and the Board found from other testimony that the argument was a more or less trivial incident which did not unreasonably impede the work, since it occurred during the lunch hour and near the packing house while it was not in operation; further, that under the circumstances petitioner’s action was tantamount to discharge, and its failure to discipline the other anti-union employee, Brackin, in like manner after the incident revealed its discriminatory motivation.

Two remaining pro-union employees of petitioner, Lorene Fowler and Catherine Mixon, were permitted to work for the remainder of the packing season after the union’s abortive attempt to secure recognition on November 18, 1950, but were found to have been dis-criminatorily denied re-employment the following season because of their prior *755 union activities. Fowler had admittedly worked for petitioner for three seasons and Mixon for nearly two seasons before they joined the union. Shortly before the 1951-1952 packing season opened they both telephoned petitioner’s foreman, Danley, to inquire whether they were on that season’s list to work. On that occasion, according to the credited testimony, Danley promised to call Mixon the following week and let her know, which promise was not carried out, and told Fowler flatly that she was “just not on the list to work this season.” It is undisputed that all employees who had worked for petitioner the previous season were then rehired except Fowler and Mixon, who had been actively pro-union in their sentiments the previous year, and that they were replaced by two new employees.

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211 F.2d 752, 33 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2786, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridge-growers-inc-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca5-1954.