Taylor Forge & Pipe Works v. National Labor Relations Board

234 F.2d 227, 38 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2230, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4533
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 1956
Docket09-2242
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 234 F.2d 227 (Taylor Forge & Pipe Works v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor Forge & Pipe Works v. National Labor Relations Board, 234 F.2d 227, 38 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2230, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4533 (7th Cir. 1956).

Opinions

MAJOR, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner, while engaged in bargaining negotiations with the Forge and Machine Workers Union, the statutory bargaining representative of its employees, refused the Union’s request for information as to certain “point ratings” which petitioner used in determining each employee’s rate of pay. The Board (with two members dissenting) concluded that the requested information was relevant and essential to the parties’ bargaining and that, consequently, petitioner’s conduct constituted a refusal to bargain, in violation of Sec. 8(a) (5) and (1) of the Act, Title 29 U.S.C.A. § 158 (a) (5) and (1). The Board’s decision, rendered August 16, 1955, required petitioner to cease and desist from refusing to bargain with the Union, and as affirmative relief required petitioner to furnish the Union with the information sought and to post notices with a showing of compliance within ten days.

The case is here on petition of the employer to review and set aside the Board’s order. In answer, the Board has requested enforcement.

There is no dispute of consequence as to the evidentiary facts. It is the conclusion which the Board has drawn therefrom that forms the basis of the instant controversy. More specifically, the issue is legal rather than factual. Nevertheless, a statement of the facts in some detail appears essential.

On April 16, 1954, representatives of petitioner and the Union were engaged in a bargaining conference, including the matter of a wage increase sought by the Union. At this conference the Union’s attorney requested of petitioner’s personnel manager information contained in its files relative to certain factors which petitioner took into consideration in evaluating each job and upon which the salary paid therefor depended. The denial of this request constitutes the basis for the instant controversy.

Petitioner paid its employees, some 238 in number, an hourly wage rate, determined as to each job by the number of “points” assigned to that particular job. It appraised the various factors, each being awarded a certain number of points, and the resulting point total determined the rate per hour to be paid for each job. A separate sheet was used for each job, with a written analysis of the work to be done, together with its physical aspects, on one side, and on the other, an evaluation of the human factors involved and the point ratings which the various factors merited. The side of the sheet listing the physical aspects was headed “Job Description.” The other side was headed “Job Rating Sub[229]*229stantiating Data.” We need not dwell upon the “Job Description” information for the reason that this was furnished to the Union and is not in dispute. It is the information setting forth the “Job Rating Substantiating Data” which petitioner refused to furnish the Union. On this side of the sheet petitioner recorded the value of each rating factor. For such purpose eleven factors were employed: Education, Experience, Initiative and Ingenuity, Physical Demand, Mental or Visual Demand, Responsibility for Material or Product, Responsibility for Equipment or Process, Responsibility for Safety of Others, Responsibility for Work of Others, Working Conditions and Unavoidable Hazards. In appraising such rating factors petitioner used as its yardstick a Job Rating Manual, issued by the National Metal Trades Association, which defined the factors and prescribed that each be given a rating from 1st to 5th degree. The manual provided for the conditions required for each degree of a given factor, with the point value to be allowed under the degree determined. Rating was made by comparing the written job description against the manual’s degree requirements. Petitioner sought to give each job rating factor that degree (from 1st to 5th) and hence that point value which was called for by the job conditions as described.

While the appraisement which petitioner made of these various rating factors is important, we think they need not be discussed in detail, in view of the admission of the parties relative thereto. It is conceded by the Board that some of the factors lend themselves to a rating as to point value capable of ascertainment to a mathematical certainty. On the other hand, certain other factors are not capable of a point evaluation with any degree of certainty. In other words, the evaluation of such factors for the purpose of determining their point value depends upon the experience and judgment of the evaluator. We do not understand that petitioner disagrees with the Board as to the manner in which it arrives at the point value to be ascribed to the different factors. In its brief it states, “Each described job is evaluated under certain factors according to the judgment of the evaluator who assigns point values to the job to be used in comparing one job and its wage rate with another job and its wage rate.” Moreover, petitioner’s personnel manager as a witness admitted that the evaluation of some factors calls for a knowledge of the job rating system, familiarity with the job conditions involved and the exercise of a certain amount of judgment.

We think it is hardly open to dispute but that the total point evaluation assigned by petitioner to the eleven involved factors was not only directly related to the pay determined for each job but that it constituted an important consideration in petitioner’s entire wage structure. Moreover, petitioner regarded such information as important to the Union in adjusting grievances arising in individual cases. Over a period of nine years of processing such grievances it had disclosed to the Union the “degree” ratings of 95 individual jobs out of a total of 238 in its plant. In fact, it was a company policy and practice to allow not only the Union but also individual employees, upon request and a showing of good reason, an opportunity to examine its evaluation information. Petitioner’s personnel manager testified that the disclosure of such information resulted in the disposition of a number of grievances involving the hourly pay rate.

It is contended here, as it was before the Board, that the Union with the information supplied by the company was in as good a position as petitioner to evaluate the involved factors. The testimony of petitioner’s personnel manager on this point, however, carried little weight because the witness in attempting to evaluate the points assigned to a certain job came up with a total far short of those which petitioner had previously found such job to merit. This evidently resulted from the fact that the evaluation service for petitioner was performed by a specialist in that field. The witness [230]*230had not.participated in the rendition of this service and hence was unable to ,de-; termine the points to which the particular job was entitled. This was because the points assigned to a number of factors depended upon the judgment of the evaluator. It follows that an evaluation by persons equally competent and qualified was calculated to produce different results and consequently the wages determined by petitioner for each job would depend upon such varying judgment.

We think petitioner stresses to its disadvantage the fact that its point evaluation resulted from the exercise of judgment, with the consequent determination of the wage fixed for each job. In our view, the fact that the exercise of judgment is involved increases the area where controversy is likely to result.

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Bluebook (online)
234 F.2d 227, 38 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2230, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-forge-pipe-works-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca7-1956.