San Joaquin Tomato Growers v. Agric. Labor Rel. Bd. CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 14, 2015
DocketF068406
StatusUnpublished

This text of San Joaquin Tomato Growers v. Agric. Labor Rel. Bd. CA5 (San Joaquin Tomato Growers v. Agric. Labor Rel. Bd. CA5) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Joaquin Tomato Growers v. Agric. Labor Rel. Bd. CA5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 5/14/15 San Joaquin Tomato Growers v. Agric. Labor Rel. Bd. CA5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

SAN JOAQUIN TOMATO GROWERS, INC., F068406 Petitioner, (ALRB Decisions 38 ALRB No. 4, v. 38 ALRB No. 12, 39 ALRB No. 14, 39 ALRB No. 15) AGRICULTURAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, OPINION Respondent;

UNITED FARM WORKERS OF AMERICA,

Real Party in Interest.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDING; petition for writ of review. Littler Mendelson, Spencer H. Hipp and George J. Tichy II for Petitioner. J. Antonio Barbosa, Paul M. Starkey and Laura F. Heyck for Respondent. Mario Martinez and Edgar Aguilasocho for Real Party in Interest. -ooOoo- Petitioner, San Joaquin Tomato Growers, Inc. (San Joaquin), failed to bargain in good faith with real party in interest, United Farm Workers of America (UFW), following certification of the UFW’s representation of San Joaquin’s agricultural employees. Thereafter, the Agricultural Labor Relations Board (ALRB) ordered San Joaquin to make its employees whole for the loss of pay resulting from San Joaquin’s refusal to bargain. Approximately 20 years later, the ALRB set the “make-whole” amount at $231,875 plus interest that will be collected as each employee is located. (San Joaquin Tomato Growers, Inc. (2013) 39 ALRB No. 14.) San Joaquin challenges this award on the grounds that the ALRB’s methodology and resulting decisions are not supported by substantial evidence and are unreliable. San Joaquin further contends the ALRB erred in ordering any unclaimed principal to be paid to the Agricultural Employee Relief Fund because that fund did not exist at the time San Joaquin was first ordered to make the employees whole. However, there is a plausible basis for the ALRB’s findings. Therefore, under the highly deferential standard of review applicable to ALRB decisions, we will affirm. BACKGROUND San Joaquin contracts with growers to grow and harvest fresh market round green tomatoes on the growers’ properties. San Joaquin and the growers coordinate the harvest and San Joaquin packs and markets the tomatoes. San Joaquin employs a labor contractor to provide the agricultural employees who harvest the tomatoes. The harvest begins in late June to early July and concludes in approximately late October to early November of each year. In August 1989, the San Joaquin agricultural employees voted in favor of UFW representation. San Joaquin filed objections to the election and an evidentiary hearing was held in August 1991. Following the investigating hearing examiner’s decision in August 1992, the UFW was certified as the collective bargaining representative of all San Joaquin agricultural employees on May 3, 1993.

2. By letter dated June 14, 1993, the UFW requested negotiations with San Joaquin. On July 12, 1993, San Joaquin informed the UFW that it was declining the bargaining request in order to obtain judicial review of the certification. In August 1994, the ALRB found that San Joaquin’s “technical” refusal to bargain was conducted in bad faith. The ALRB ordered San Joaquin to bargain collectively and in good faith with the UFW and to “[m]ake whole its agricultural employees for all losses of pay and other economic losses they have suffered as a result of [San Joaquin’s] failure and refusal to bargain in good faith .…” (San Joaquin Tomato Growers, Inc. (1994) 20 ALRB No. 13, pp. 19-20.) San Joaquin began negotiating with the UFW on September 8, 1994. Accordingly, the period of time covered by the make-whole award is July 12, 1993 through September 8, 1994. (San Joaquin Tomato Growers, Inc. (2012) 38 ALRB No. 4.) In July 1995, the case was released for compliance and the ALRB’s Visalia Regional Office (Regional Office) began compliance efforts. San Joaquin was asked to provide payroll records but did not do so. Rather, San Joaquin took the position that no make-whole was due because during the period in question San Joaquin “‘paid tomato pickers $0.475 per bucket, which was the highest rate paid for the harvest of fresh tomatoes ‘anywhere in the world.’” (San Joaquin Tomato Growers, supra, 38 ALRB No. 4, pp. 2-3.) Eventually, in December 1996, San Joaquin provided the Regional Office with payroll check stubs for six workers showing the $0.475 per bucket rate. During this period, the Regional Office also asked the UFW to provide its position. However, the UFW did not respond to these requests. (San Joaquin Tomato Growers, supra, 38 ALRB No. 4, p. 3.) San Joaquin and the UFW negotiated during this period and by August 1998 had agreed to a series of proposals and appeared to have reached a collective bargaining agreement. However, the contract was never prepared and signed. In 2012, the ALRB

3. concluded that the agreement was nonbinding and directed the parties to mandatory mediation and conciliation. (San Joaquin Tomato Growers, Inc. (2012) 38 ALRB No. 2.) In April 2001, the case was transferred to the ALRB’s General Counsel Headquarters in Sacramento. In May 2002, counsel prepared a memo recommending that a contract averaging method be used to calculate the make-whole amount when no comparable contracts are available. Counsel’s memo was accompanied by a report from Dr. Philip Martin, a professor of agricultural economics at U.C. Davis, which included a survey of 22 UFW contracts in effect between 1992 and 1994. (San Joaquin Tomato Growers, supra, 38 ALRB No. 4, pp. 3-4.) The Regional Office evaluated the 2002 memo and report and concluded that payroll data was required to complete the recommended calculations. When the Regional Office again asked San Joaquin to provide payroll records, San Joaquin responded that it did not have them. In November 2005, the Regional Office informed the ALRB that it lacked the necessary payroll data. Several years later, in May 2009, the Regional Office filed a motion requesting the ALRB to close the case without full compliance. (San Joaquin Tomato Growers, supra, 38 ALRB No. 4, p. 4.) The ALRB granted this motion to close in February 2010 based on the unavailability of crucial records. The UFW filed a request for reconsideration. The ALRB denied the UFW’s request but granted reconsideration on other grounds sua sponte and the case was reopened. In June 2010, the UFW announced that it had located the relevant San Joaquin payroll records.1

1 San Joaquin’s request that this court take judicial notice of an excerpt from the opening brief filed by the UFW in the Third Appellate District in United Farm Workers of America v. Agricultural Labor Relations Board, case No. C075210, is denied. The UFW’s unsubstantiated statement that it provided San Joaquin’s payroll records to the Regional Office in the mid-1990’s is not relevant to the issues on appeal here.

4. The General Counsel issued a make-whole specification in April 2011. Using the contract averaging approach outlined by Dr. Martin, the Regional Office calculated an average wage increase of 4.3 percent, plus a 5 percent increase for holidays, vacation and miscellaneous benefits, and an increase of 10.5 to 17.7 percent for medical insurance and pension contributions for a total of $347,170 in principal plus interest for 700 workers. (San Joaquin Tomato Growers, supra, 38 ALRB No. 4, p. 5.) San Joaquin contested the amount of the make-whole. Therefore, the matter proceeded to a compliance hearing before an administrative law judge (ALJ) in July and August 2011. The ALJ issued his recommended decision in January 2012.

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San Joaquin Tomato Growers v. Agric. Labor Rel. Bd. CA5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-joaquin-tomato-growers-v-agric-labor-rel-bd-ca5-calctapp-2015.