San Clemente Ranch, Ltd. v. Agricultural Labor Relations Board

633 P.2d 964, 29 Cal. 3d 874, 176 Cal. Rptr. 768, 1981 Cal. LEXIS 169
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1981
DocketL.A. 31316
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 633 P.2d 964 (San Clemente Ranch, Ltd. v. Agricultural Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Clemente Ranch, Ltd. v. Agricultural Labor Relations Board, 633 P.2d 964, 29 Cal. 3d 874, 176 Cal. Rptr. 768, 1981 Cal. LEXIS 169 (Cal. 1981).

Opinion

Opinion

TOBRINER, Acting C. J.

This case arises out of the same factual setting as Highland Ranch v. Agricultural Labor Relations Bd., (1981) ante, page 848 [176 Cal.Rptr. 753, 633 P.2d 949], Unlike Highland Ranch, however, this case concerns the obligations under the Agricultural Labor Relations Act (ALRA) incurred by San Clemente Ranch, Ltd. (San Clemente or employer) upon purchasing and subsequently undertaking the farming operation previously run by Highland. After examining all of the circumstances surrounding both the change in ownership and San Clemente’s commencement of its business operation, the Agricultural Labor Relations Board (ALRB or Board) concluded that San Clemente should properly be considered a “successor employer” to Highland. It held that San Clemente succeeded, inter alia, to Highland’s obligation to recognize and bargain with the United Farm Workers of America, AFL-CIO (UFW or union), the union that was officially certified as the exclusive bargaining representative of Highland’s agricultural employees on virtually the same date that San Clemente assumed control of the farming operation. San Clemente now objects to the ALRB’s conclusion, maintaining that the Board’s successorship determination in this case is inconsistent with the governing federal successorship precedents under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA).

For the reasons discussed below, we have concluded that the ALRB’s determination should be upheld. As we point out, San Clemente’s position in this case is fatally flawed in two distinct respects. First, although San Clemente argues that the ALRB’s findings with regard to the composition of the San Clemente work force after the change in ownership, taken alone, precluded a determination of successorship under the relevant federal authorities, we conclude that the employer’s position rests upon a misreading of the federal cases and that the federal authorities support, rather than conflict with, the ALRB’s successorship finding in this case.

Second, and more fundamentally, we shall explain that San Clemente is additionally in error in assuming that in making successorship determinations under the ALRA, the ALRB is obligated blindly to apply *877 existing federal precedent without regard to the significant differences that exist between the industrial setting of the NLRA and the agricultural setting of the ALRA. As we shall see, in this case the ALRB identified a number of important factors peculiar to the agricultural setting that add complexity to the issue of successorship liability under the ALRA, and that caution against undue reliance upon the single factor of “workforce continuity” stressed by San Clemente. In light of the unique attributes of California’s agricultural setting, we believe that the ALRB was totally justified in eschewing the rigid, mechanical test for determining successorship proposed by San Clemente, and in adopting instead a case-by-case approach under which all relevant considerations relating to a change of ownership are taken into account. Reviewing all of the circumstances in the present case, we conclude that the Board’s finding of successorship was clearly warranted.

1. The facts and proceedings below.

As already noted, the legal issues in this case arise from Highland’s sale of its farming operations to San Clemente in late November 1977. Our opinion in Highland Ranch, supra, sets forth the basic chronology of events leading up to the sale. At the time of its purchase of the ranch, San Clemente was aware that several months earlier the UFW had won an overwhelming victory in a representation election held among Highland’s employees and that, on the day before its officials signed the final escrow papers, the UFW had been officially certified by the ALRB as the exclusive bargaining representative for the ranch’s agricultural employees. In addition, during the negotiations for the purchase of the ranch, Highland had informed San Clemente of several unfair practice charges that had been filed by the UFW against Highland as a result of Highland’s allegedly discriminatory treatment and discharge of several prounion employees. San Clemente consulted its attorneys with respect to its potential liability for these pending unfair labor practice charges, and the ultimate sale agreement between Highland and San Clemente included a contractual provision addressing this matter. 1 Thus, upon acquiring the farming operation, San Clemente was fully cognizant of the union’s relationship to the ranch.

Under the terms of the sale agreement, San Clemente acquired substantially all of the ranch assets of Highland, including the ground lease *878 and all of the farming equipment and facilities. The administrative law officer (ALO) who presided over the administrative hearing found that in purchasing the ranch, San Clemente planned to carry on substantially the same farming operation as had been conducted by Highland; specifically, San Clemente intended to grow and harvest the same crops in the same places and at the same times, and to process the harvested crops in substantially the same manner, as had been the case under Highland. Moreover, the ALO additionally found that, through the time of the ALRB hearing in March 1978, San Clemente had in fact conducted its operations in the same fashion as had Highland.

Upon taking possession of the ranch on December 1, 1977, San Clemente immediately hired one of Highland’s principal supervisors as its ranch supervisor and also employed several additional Highland supervisors to help manage the farm operations. At that time the ranch’s tomato crop had just been harvested and the employer’s need for agricultural workers was at the farm’s annual lowpoint. Consequently, on December 1, San Clemente hired only a single field worker—an irrigator—who had worked for Highland and who was needed to water a recently planted cabbage crop. Over the weeks and months that followed, as the cabbage crop grew to maturity and other crops were planted, tended and harvested, San Clemente hired additional agricultural workers to handle its normal farming tasks. The following table records the makeup of San Clemente’s workforce over the four-month period preceding the unfair labor practice hearing held between March 13 and March 30, 1978.

Agricultural

Total Employees Who Other

Agricultural Had Worked Agricultural

Date Employees for Highland Employees

Dec. 7 12 12 0

Jan. 31 31 20 11

Mar. 7 49 46 3

Mar. 25 150 70 80 2

On December 9, 1977, at a time when apparently all of the agricultural employees employed by San Clemente were workers previously employed by Highland, the UFW presented a written demand for nego *879 tiation to San Clemente, asserting its certified status as exclusive bargaining representative.

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Bluebook (online)
633 P.2d 964, 29 Cal. 3d 874, 176 Cal. Rptr. 768, 1981 Cal. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-clemente-ranch-ltd-v-agricultural-labor-relations-board-cal-1981.