Viking Industrial Security, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board

225 F.3d 131
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 28, 2000
DocketNos. 2100, 2440, Docket Nos. 98-4395, 99-4013
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 225 F.3d 131 (Viking Industrial Security, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Viking Industrial Security, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board, 225 F.3d 131 (2d Cir. 2000).

Opinion

JACOBS, Circuit Judge:

New Jersey-based Viking Security, Inc. (“Viking New Jersey”) petitions for review of the November 30, 1998 supplemental decision and order of the National Labor Relations Board (the “Board”), and the Board cross-petitions for enforcement.

Based on a determination that Viking New Jersey and its now-defunct companion company, New York-based Viking Industrial Security, Inc. (‘Viking New York”), once constituted a “single employer,” the Board’s order holds Viking New Jersey derivatively liable for backpay to Israel Marrero, a former employee of Viking New York whose discharge was found to be an unfair labor practice.

Viking New Jersey contends that (i) the Board erred in finding single employer status as of the time Marrero was fired, (ii) the Board erroneously determined the amount of backpay due,' and (iii) because the two companies were no longer a single employer during the unfair labor practice proceedings, the Board’s imposition of derivative liability deprived Viking New Jersey of due process of law. Because we find that the Board’s imposition of derivative liability on Viking New Jersey violated that company’s right to due process, we grant Viking New Jersey’s petition for review and deny the Board’s petition for enforcement. We do not reach Viking New Jersey’s other claims of error.

BACKGROUND

A. Facts

In April 1987, Allan Larson founded Viking New York, a New York corporation, based in Brooklyn, that provided security guard services. Later that year or early the next, Larson hired Ralph Day as vice president of Viking New York. Day contributed several thousand dollars of capital to Viking New York, became co-owner, and assumed supervisory authority over the security guards.

Larson and Day incorporated Viking New Jersey in May 1988 to provide security guard services in New Jersey. For a time, the two Viking entities were operated jointly, held themselves out to the public as a single company, and used the same letterhead, listing both New York and New Jersey addresses. The companies shared an accountant, a payroll service, and some clients, and the record demonstrates that Larson and Day wanted the two companies to be perceived as one by the public.

In August 1989, Viking New York hired Marrero as a security guard. Day terminated Marrero a few weeks later, on September 23, 1989. Marrero asserted that this termination was retaliation for his refusal to disclose to Day how Marrero voted in a union representation election.

At some point during 1988 or 1989, Day and Larson had a falling out, and Viking New York and Viking New Jersey ceased doing business as related entities. Day [133]*133ran Viking New Jersey; and Larson ran Viking New York until it went out of business on December 10, 1990. All of Viking New York’s employees were hired by a company called Roundstone Security, which bought Viking New. York’s assets and began servicing its customers. On February 10, 1992, Roundstone too went out of business.

B. Prior proceedings

About the time of the Viking New York union election, several unfair labor practice charges were filed against that company, one of which related to Marrero’s termination. On December 29, 1989, the Board issued a complaint against Viking New York on behalf of Marrero and others. Though Marrero had been fired by Day (who by year’s end had left Viking New York and become sole principal at Viking New Jersey), Viking New Jersey was not named as a respondent to the complaint.

The case was tried before an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) in October 1990. Day (no longer associated with Viking New York in any way) testified as a witness at the proceeding, without presence of counsel. At one point, the issue of single employer status for Viking New Jersey and Viking New York was raised in the hearing, but the ALJ cut short the discussion by stating that no such allegation had been made. The ALJ issued his decision on September 17, 1991, holding that Marrero’s termination violated the National Labor Relations Act (the “Act”). See Viking Indus. Sec., Inc., Nos. 29-CA-14365, -14370, -14489, -14490 (Edelman, A.L.J., Sept. 17, 1991) (“Viking I”). When no timely exception was received, the ALJ’s recommended order was adopted as the order of the Board. See 29 U.S.C. § 160(c); Viking Indus. Sec., Inc., 327 N.L.R.B. No. 43, 1998 WL 835609, at *2 n. 7 (Nov. 30, 1998) {“Viking III”) (noting that the Board adopted the ALJ’s recommended order on October 25, 1991). That order required Viking New York to take certain affirmative actions, among them:

Offer Israel Marrero immediate and full reinstatement to his former position, o[r] if that job no longer exists, to a substantially equivalent position, without prejudice to his seniority or other rights and privileges previously enjoyed, and make him whole for any loss of earnings sustained as a result of [Viking New York’s] unlawful conduct.."..

Viking I, at 9. This Court granted enforcement of the Board’s order on September 15, 1992. See NLRB v. Viking Indus. Sec., Inc., No. 92-4139 (2d Cir. Sept. 15, 1992).

On July 2, 1994,..four years after Marre-ro’s termination, the Regional Director of the Board issued a backpay specification. This specification alleged that Viking New York and Viking New Jersey constituted a single entity, and treated Viking New Jersey as derivatively hable for Viking New York’s obligations. This was the first time Viking New Jersey was named as a party in this dispute. (The specification was subsequently amended, twice, both times with .Viking New Jersey as a party.)

A supplemental compliance hearing to determine the validity of the backpay specification was conducted by a second ALJ on October 23, 24, and 25, 1995, and January 25, 1996. One issue raised at this hearing was single employer status; Viking New Jersey argued that it had split from Viking New York prior to Marrero’s termination. The ALJ agreed with Viking New Jersey that “if ... the-split came about before the unfair labor practicef] occurred, then Viking New Jersey would not be liable to remedy [it].” See Viking Indus. Sec., Inc., Nos. 29-CA-14365, - 14370, -14489, -14490, (Green, A.L.J., May 13, 1996) (“Viking II”), aff'd by, and reprinted in Viking III, 1998 WL 835609, at *7, *11.

On the facts found, however, the ALJ agreed with the backpay specification. He found that the two businesses began operating separately at some undetermined point after October 1, 1989 — that is, after [134]*134Marrero’s termination in September 1989, see id. at *11 — and concluded that Viking New Jersey’s obligation to reinstate Mar-rero continued despite Viking New York’s demise. He made no finding that the two companies continued operating as a single employer on the date that the unfair labor practice complaint was served on Viking New York. The ALJ assessed backpay through the end of 1994, and left open the possibility of backpay after that time. The backpay calculation is complicated by the fact that Marrero held nine different jobs between his 1989 firing and the end of 1994; except for employment at his parents’ video store, none of these jobs lasted as long as nine months. See id. at *16.

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Bluebook (online)
225 F.3d 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/viking-industrial-security-inc-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca2-2000.