Trinity Valley Iron & Steel Company, a Division of C. C. Griffin Manufacturing Company, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board

410 F.2d 1161, 71 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2067, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12579
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 1969
Docket23856
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 410 F.2d 1161 (Trinity Valley Iron & Steel Company, a Division of C. C. Griffin Manufacturing Company, 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
Trinity Valley Iron & Steel Company, a Division of C. C. Griffin Manufacturing Company, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board, 410 F.2d 1161, 71 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2067, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12579 (5th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:

Trinity Valley (the “Employer”) and the National Labor Relations Board (the “Board”) are before this Court on petition for review and cross-petition for enforcement of a Supplemental Backpay Order stemming from allegedly tardy and inadequate reinstatement of over 80 unfair labor practice strikers who walked off their jobs for approximately six months during a dispute which occurred nearly ten years ago. 1

*1165 Certain threshold facts can be severely compressed. On June 8, 1959, the Union 2 struck the Employer in an economic dispute. Some replacements were hired. On June 30, 1959, the dispute evolved into an unfair labor practice strike by virtue of certain Employer conduct not herein material. Thereafter, the majority of the striker replacements were hired.

On December 11,1959, the International Representative of the Union informed the Employer by letter that its strike was officially terminated, that all picketing had been ordered discontinued immediately, and that the letter constituted an “unconditional request on behalf of each of the striking employees [a list of whose names was supposedly appended to the letter] for reinstatement to [his] former position or [alternatively] other employment * * The letter asked where and when the returning strikers should report for work.

Following a telephone conversation between the Union spokesman and the Employer counsel in which neither was willing to admit that he could then state conclusively what those whom he represented would ultimately do, the Employer replied by letter dated December 14, 1959, that strikers “who desire to individually abandon the strike and report for work” should appear at the foundry on December 19,1959 and that “problems of feeding these people into the process of production are going to be rather numerous * *

No more than 38 strikers reported on the designated date. Two of these, for reasons not material herein, are not involved in the instant backpay proceeding. 3 Forty-six other strikers straggled back individually, 35 reporting by December 31, 1959, ten more appearing in January 1960, and one showing up on February 2, 1960. None of the replacements hired during the strike were discharged as the strikers gradually returned to work.

General Counsel noted the following statistical information. The maximum work force before the strike, computed quarterly for the preceding year, averaged only 142 employees. The work force, including returned strikers and retained replacements for the quarter after the strike terminated averaged 164 employees. 4

Brandishing various other statistics based upon his reading of the Employer’s production and employment records, General Counsel made several other observations critical to any disposition of this case. Returning strikers found the Employer had less business than before the strike, he had decreased the work schedule from five to four production cycles per week, yet he maintained a work force averaging 22 more employees (during the quarter immediately following the strike termination when the strikers were returning) than the annual pre-strike average complement. Translated into pocketbook terminology according to General Counsel, less business and fewer production cycles per week with an increased post-strike work force size meant ipso facto that returning strikers worked an average of twelve less hours per week, *1166 including virtual elimination of weekly overtime hours for which compensation would have been made at one and one-half the “regular” rate as required by the Wage Hour Law. 5

Finally, the returning strikers were admittedly reinstated without credit for two five cent per hour periodic wage increases, normally accrued on a regular quarterly basis but denied strikers who were absent when they were awarded. The Employer asserts these were “merit” increases awarded on the basis of performance shown and experience gained; General Counsel, using more elaborate statistics, concluded these periodic increases had been granted to over 90 percent of otherwise eligible employees. 6

*1167 On the above facts, the Trial Examiner and the Board arrived at conflicting conclusions as to what the Employer’s back-pay obligation should be under the Original Board Order enforced by this Court. Their respective figures for total amount due were over $42,500 apart (with the Board arriving at an amount of $71,979-78 onto which we are asked to stamp our judicial imprimatur). 7

On review, this case can be reduced to six issues:

(1) Whether rejection by General Counsel of a compromise backpay settlement, agreed upon and signed by a representative of his Regional Office, and issuance by General Counsel thereafter of an amended backpay specification (in an amount eight times the sum of the original specification and formulated on three entirely new theories) constitutes “punishment” prohibited by the Act;

(2) Whether economic strikers allegedly permanently replaced before the dispute became an unfair labor practice strike are entitled to backpay when Employer, without advancing any business justification, seeks to deny them “full and immediate” reinstatement after their timely application;

(3) Whether strikers, who fail to report on the date designated by Employer in response to Union’s blanket reinstatement request, have waived any right to backpay or at least a right to any awarded until after expiration of five days from the date on which the striker(s) actually reported for work;

(4) Whether the Employer, in the absence of any proof he would not have granted interim quarterly wage increases but for strike-caused absences, must credit reinstated strikers with two such periodic pay hikes otherwise routinely made in the past “with a high degree of regularity” to eligible employees;

(5) Whether the Employer with a work-cycle rather than work-week method of production operation, with a number of legitimate business reasons for maintaining an employment complement of approximately 165, and with economic justification for holding overtime to a minimum must necessarily reduce his post-strike work force to its 142 man pre-strike annual average by discharging retained striker replacements (and by implication not make any post-strike “new hires” inflating the 142 man pre-strike force) in order to grant returning strikers “full” reinstatement, namely, guarantee them substantially equivalent average post-strike overtime work opportunities as enjoyed during a “representative” pre-strike quarter selected arbitrarily by General Counsel;

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Bluebook (online)
410 F.2d 1161, 71 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2067, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trinity-valley-iron-steel-company-a-division-of-c-c-griffin-ca5-1969.