1. Under § 8(3) of the National Labor Relations Act, an employer
who refuses to hire an applicant for employment solely because of
the applicant's affiliation with a labor union is guilty of an
unfair labor practice. P.
313 U. S.
182.
2. When applicants have been unlawfully refused employment
solely because of their affiliations with a labor union, § 10(c) of
the Labor Act empowers the Labor Board to order the employer to
undo the discrimination by offering them the opportunity for
employment which should not have been denied them. P.
313 U. S.
187.
3. In this the Act does not violate the Fifth Amendment. P.
313 U. S.
187.
4. In § 10(c) of the Labor Act, empowering the Labor Board to
require an employer guilty of an unfair labor practice to desist
and
Page 313 U. S. 178
to take such affirmative action, "including reinstatement of
employees with or without back pay," as will effectuate the
policies of the Act, the participial phrase "including
reinstatement," etc., is illustrative merely, and is not to be
construed as a limitation upon the Board's power to remedy unlawful
discrimination in the hiring as well as in the discharge of
workers. P.
313 U. S.
188.
5. Under § 10(c) of the Labor Relations Act, an employer who has
been guilty of the unfair labor practice of refusing to hire men
because of their union affiliations may be required by the Board,
for effectuation of the policies of the Act, to offer them
opportunity for employment, even though they have, in the meantime,
obtained regular and substantially equivalent employment elsewhere.
P.
313 U. S.
189.
6. The broad meaning of the term "employee" as used in § 10(c)
of the Labor Act and in the earlier part of § 2(3), is not
restricted by the concluding clause of § 2(3), which declares that
the term "employee" shall include any individual whose work has
ceased as a consequence of any unfair labor practice "and who has
not obtained any other regular and substantially equivalent
employment." P.
313 U. S.
191.
This last provision is assignable to other purposes,
e.g., for determining who are the "employees" with whom an
employer must bargain collectively, §§ 8(5), 9(a), or who are to be
treated as "employees" within a bargaining unit, § 9(b).
7. To deny the Board power to neutralize discrimination merely
because workers have obtained other compensatory employment would
confine the "policies of this Act" to the correction of private
injuries, whereas the Board was not devised for such a limited
function, but is the agency of Congress for translating into
concreteness the purpose of safeguarding and encouraging the right
of self organization. P.
313 U. S.
192.
8. Although an employer who has denied reemployment to workers
solely because of their labor union affiliations may be required to
offer them employment notwithstanding their having obtained
equivalent employment elsewhere, this remedy does not flow from the
Act automatically when the discrimination is found, but depends
upon a finding by the Board, in the exercise of its informed
discretion, that effectuation of the policies of the Act requires
such reinstatement. P.
313 U. S.
193.
9. An order of the Labor Board requiring an employer to
reinstate strikers who obtained other employment, should state the
basis of the order. P.
313 U. S.
197.
Page 313 U. S. 179
10. The remedy of ordering back pay is in the Board's
discretion, not mechanically compelled by the Act. P.
313 U. S.
198.
11. Where an order of the Labor Board requires that a worker be
restored to employment and be compensated for loss of pay,
deduction should be made not only for actual earnings of the worker
while out of employment, but also for losses which he willfully
incurred. P.
313 U. S.
197.
12. The amount of such deduction should be determined by the
Board prior to formulation of it order. P.
313 U. S.
200.
113 F.2d 202, modified.
CERTIORARI, 312 U.S. 669, to review a judgment sustaining in
part and in part disapproving an order of the National Labor
Relations Board, 19 NLRB 547.
Page 313 U. S. 181
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The dominating question which this litigation brings here for
the first time is whether an employer subject to the National Labor
Relations Act may refuse to hire employees solely because of their
affiliations with a labor union. Subsidiary questions grow out of
this central issue relating to the means open to the Board to
"effectuate the policies of this Act," if it finds such
discrimination in hiring an "unfair labor practice." Other
questions touching the remedial powers of the Board are also
involved. We granted a petition by the Phelps Dodge Corporation and
a cross-petition by the Board, 312 U.S. 669, to review a decision
by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, 113 F.2d
202, which enforced the order of the Board, 19 NLRB 547, with
modifications. The main issue is intrinsically important, and has
stirred a conflict of decisions.
Labor Board v. Waumbec
Mills, 114 F.2d 226.
The source of the controversy was a strike, begun on June 10,
1935, by the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers
at Phelps Dodge's Copper Queen Mine, Bisbee, Arizona. Picketing of
the mine continued until August 24, 1935, when the strike
terminated. During the strike, the National Labor Relations Act
came into force. Act of July 5, 1935, 49 Stat. 449, 29 U.S.C. § 151
et seq. The basis of the Board's conclusion that the
Corporation had committed unfair labor practices in violation of §
8(3) of the Act was a finding, not challenged here, that a number
of men had been refused employment
Page 313 U. S. 182
because of their affiliations with the Union. Of these men, two,
Curtis and Daugherty, had ceased to be in the Corporation's employ
before the strike, but sought employment after its close. The
others, thirty-eight in number, were strikers. To "effectuate the
policies" of the Act, § 10(c), the Board ordered the Corporation to
offer Curtis and Daugherty jobs and to make them whole for the loss
of pay resulting from the refusal to hire them, and it ordered
thirty-seven of the strikers reinstated with back pay, and the
other striker made whole for loss in wages up to the time he became
unemployable. Save for a modification presently to be discussed,
the Circuit Court of Appeals enforced the order affecting the
strikers, but struck down the provisions relating to Curtis and
Daugherty.
First. The denial of jobs to men because of union
affiliations is an old and familiar aspect of American industrial
relations. Therefore, in determining whether such discrimination
legally survives the National Labor Relations Act, the history
which led to the Act and the aims which infuse it give direction to
our inquiry. Congress explicitly disclosed its purposes in
declaring the policy which underlies the Act. Its ultimate concern,
as well as the source of its power, was "to eliminate the causes of
certain substantial obstructions to the free flows of commerce."
This vital national purpose was to be accomplished "by encouraging
the practice and procedure of collective bargaining and by
protecting the exercise by workers of full freedom of association."
§ 1. Only thus could workers ensure themselves economic standards
consonant with national wellbeing. Protection of the workers' right
to self-organization does not curtail the appropriate sphere of
managerial freedom; it furthers the wholesome conduct of business
enterprise. "The Act," this Court has said, "does not interfere
with the normal exercise of the right of the employer to select
Page 313 U. S. 183
its employees or to discharge them." But "under cover of that
right," the employer may not "intimidate or coerce its employees
with respect to their self-organization and representation."
When
"employers freely recognize the right of their employees to
their own organizations and their unrestricted right of
representation, there will be much less occasion for controversy in
respect to the free and appropriate exercise of the right of
selection and discharge."
Labor Board v. Jones & Laughlin, 301 U. S.
1,
301 U. S. 45,
301 U. S. 46.
This is so because of the nature of modern industrialism. Labor
unions were organized "out of the necessities of the situation. . .
. Union was essential to give laborers opportunity to deal on
equality with their employer." Such was the view, on behalf of the
Court, of Chief Justice Taft,
American Steel Foundries v.
Tri-City Council, 257 U. S. 184,
257 U. S. 209,
after his unique practical experience with the causes of industrial
unrest as co-chairman of the National War Labor Board. And so the
present Act, codifying this long history, leaves the adjustment of
industrial relations to the free play of economic forces, but seeks
to assure that the play of those forces be truly free.
It is no longer disputed that workers cannot be dismissed from
employment because of their union affiliations. Is the national
interest in industrial peace less affected by discrimination
against union activity when men are hired? The contrary is
overwhelmingly attested by the long history of industrial
conflicts, the diagnosis of their causes by official
investigations, the conviction of public men, industrialists and
scholars. [
Footnote 1] Because
of
Page 313 U. S. 184
the Pullman strike, Congress, in the Erdman Act of 1898,
prohibited inroads upon the workingman's right of association by
discriminatory practices at the point of hiring. [
Footnote 2] Kindred legislation has been put
on the statute books of more than half the states. [
Footnote 3] And during the late war, the
National War Labor Board concluded that discrimination against
union men at the time of hiring violated its declared policy
that
"The right of workers to organize in trade unions and to bargain
collectively . . .
Page 313 U. S. 185
shall not be denied, abridged, or interfered with by the
employers in any manner whatsoever. [
Footnote 4]"
Such a policy is an inevitable corollary of the principle of
freedom of organization. Discrimination against union labor in the
hiring of men is a dam to self organization at the source of
supply. The effect of such discrimination is not confined to the
actual denial of employment; it inevitably operates against the
whole idea of the legitimacy of organization. In a word, it
undermines the principle which, as we have seen, is recognized as
basic to the attainment of industrial peace.
These are commonplaces in the history of American industrial
relations. But, precisely for that reason, they must be kept in the
forefront in ascertaining the meaning of a major enactment dealing
with these relations. To be sure, in outlawing unfair labor
practices, Congress did not leave the matter at large. The
practices condemned "are strictly limited to those enumerated in
section 8," S.Rep. No. 573, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 8. Section
8(3) is the foundation of the Board's determination that, in
refusing employment to the two men because of their union
affiliations Phelps Dodge violated the Act. And so we turn to its
provisions that
"It shall be an unfair labor practice for an employer . . . [b]y
discrimination in regard to hire or tenure of employment or any
term or condition of employment to encourage or discourage
membership in any labor organization."
Unlike mathematical symbols, the phrasing of such social
legislation as this seldom attains more than approximate precision
of definition. That is why all relevant aids are summoned to
determine meaning. Of compelling
Page 313 U. S. 186
consideration is the fact that words acquire scope and function
from the history of events which they summarize. We have seen the
close link between a bar to employment because of union affiliation
and the opportunities of labor organizations to exist and to
prosper. Such an embargo against employment of union labor was
notoriously one of the chief obstructions to collective bargaining
through self-organization. Indisputably, the removal of such
obstructions was the driving force behind the enactment of the
National Labor Relations Act. The prohibition against
"discrimination in regard to hire" must be applied as a means
towards the accomplishment of the main object of the legislation.
We are asked to read "hire" as meaning the wages paid to an
employee so as to make the statute merely forbid discrimination in
one of the terms of men who have secured employment. So to read the
statute would do violence to a spontaneous textual reading of §
8(3), in that "hire" would serve no function because, in the sense
which is urged upon us, it is included in the prohibition against
"discrimination in regard to . . . any term or condition of
employment." Contemporaneous legislative history [
Footnote 5] and, above all, the background of
industrial experience, forbid such textual mutilation.
The natural construction which the text, the legislative
setting, and the function of the statute command does not impose an
obligation on the employer to favor union members in hiring
employees. He is as free to hire as he is to
Page 313 U. S. 187
discharge employees. The statute does not touch "the normal
exercise of the right of the employer to select its employees or to
discharge them." It is directed solely against the abuse of that
right by interfering with the countervailing right of
self-organization.
We have already recognized the power of Congress to deny an
employer the freedom to discriminate in discharging.
Labor
Board v. Jones & Laughlin, 301 U. S.
1. So far as questions of constitutionality are
concerned, we need not enlarge on the statement of Judge Learned
Hand, in his opinion below, that there is "no greater limitation in
denying him [the employer] the power to discriminate in hiring than
in discharging." The course of decisions in this Court since
Adair v. United States, 208 U. S. 161, and
Coppage v. Kansas, 236 U. S. 1, have
completely sapped those cases of their authority.
Pennsylvania
R. Co. v. Labor Board, 261 U. S. 72;
Texas & N.O. R. Co. v. Railway Clerks, 281 U.
S. 548;
Virginian Ry. v. Federation,
300 U. S. 515;
Labor Board v. Jones & Laughlin, supra.
Second. Since the refusal to hire Curtis and Daugherty
solely because of their affiliation with the Union was an unfair
labor practice under § 8(3), the remedial authority of the Board
under § 10(c) became operative. Of course, it could issue, as it
did, an order "to cease and desist from such unfair labor practice"
in the future. Did Congress also empower the Board to order the
employer to undo the wrong by offering the men discriminated
against the opportunity for employment which should not have been
denied them?
Reinstatement is the conventional correction for discriminatory
discharges. Experience having demonstrated that discrimination in
hiring is twin to discrimination in firing, it would indeed be
surprising if Congress gave a remedy for the one which it denied
for the other. The powers of the Board, as well as the restrictions
upon
Page 313 U. S. 188
it, must be drawn from § 10(c), which directs the Board "to take
such affirmative action, including reinstatement of employees with
or without back pay, as will effectuate the policies of this Act."
It could not be seriously denied that to require discrimination in
hiring or firing to be "neutralized,"
Labor Board v. Mackay
Co., 304 U. S. 333,
304 U. S. 348,
by requiring the discrimination to cease not abstractly, but in the
concrete victimizing instances, is an "affirmative action" which
"will effectuate the policies of this Act." Therefore, if § 10(c)
had empowered the Board to "take such affirmative action as will
effectuate the policies of this Act," the right to restore to a man
employment which was wrongfully denied him could hardly be doubted.
Even without such a mandate from Congress, this Court compelled
reinstatement to enforce the legislative policy against
discrimination represented by the Railway Labor Act.
Texas
& N.O. R. Co. v. Railway Clerks, 281 U.
S. 548. [
Footnote 6]
Attainment of a great national policy through expert administration
in collaboration with limited judicial review must not be confined
within narrow canons for equitable relief deemed suitable by
chancellors in ordinary private controversies.
Compare
Virginian Ry. v. Federation, 300 U. S. 515,
300 U. S. 552.
To differentiate between discrimination in denying employment and
in terminating it would be a differentiation not only without
substance, but in defiance of that against which the prohibition of
discrimination is directed.
But, we are told, this is precisely the differentiation Congress
has made. It has done so, the argument runs,
Page 313 U. S. 189
by not directing the Board "to take such affirmative action as
will effectuate the policies of this Act"
simpliciter,
but, instead, by empowering the Board "to take such affirmative
action, including reinstatement of employees with or without back
pay, as will effectuate the policies of this Act." To attribute
such a function to the participial phrase introduced by "including"
is to shrivel a versatile principle to an illustrative application.
We find no justification whatever for attributing to Congress such
a casuistic withdrawal of the authority which, but for the
illustration, it clearly has given the Board. The word "including"
does not lend itself to such destructive significance.
Helvering v. Morgan's, Inc., 293 U.
S. 121,
293 U. S. 125,
note.
Third. We agree with the court below that the record
warrants the Board's finding that the strikers were denied
reemployment because of their union activities. Having held that
the Board can neutralize such discrimination in the case of men
seeking new employment, the Board certainly had this power in
regard to the strikers. And so we need not consider whether the
order concerning the strikers should stand, as the court below held
it should, even though that against Curtis and Daugherty would
fall.
Fourth. There remain for consideration the limitations
upon the Board's power to undo the effects of discrimination.
Specifically, we have the question of the Board's power to order
employment in cases where the men discriminated against had
obtained "substantially equivalent employment." The Board, as a
matter of fact, found that no such employment had been obtained,
but alternatively concluded that, in any event, the men should be
offered employment. The court below, on the other hand, in harmony
with three other circuits,
Mooresville Cotton Mills v. Labor
Board, 94 F. & 61 (C.C.A.4th);
Labor Board v. Botany
Worsted Mills,
Page 313 U. S. 190
533 (C.C.A. 9th), ruled that employment need not be offered any
worker who had obtained such employment, and, since the record as
to some of the strikers who had gone to work at the Shattuck Denn
Company was indecisive on this issue, remanded the case to the
Board for further findings. This aspect of the Board's authority
depends on the relation of the general remedial powers conferred by
§ 10(c) to the provisions of § 2(3).
The specific provisions of the Act out of which the proper
conclusion is to be drawn should be before us. Section 10(c), as we
already know, authorizes the Board "to take such affirmative
action, including reinstatement of employees with or without back
pay, as will effectuate the policies of this Act." The relevant
portions of § 2(3) follow:
"The term 'employee' shall include any employee, and shall not
be limited to the employees of a particular employer, unless the
Act explicitly states otherwise, and shall include any individual
whose work has ceased as a consequence of, or in connection with,
any current labor dispute or because of any unfair labor practice,
and who has not obtained any other regular and substantially
equivalent employment."
Merely as a matter of textual reading, these provisions in
combination permit three possible constructions: (1) a curtailment
of the powers of the Board to take affirmative action by reading
into § 10(c) the restrictive phrase of § 2(3) regarding a worker
"who has not obtained any other regular and substantially
equivalent employment"; (2) a completely distributive reading of §
10(c) and § 2(3), whereby the factor of "regular and substantially
equivalent employment" in no way limits the Board's usual power to
require employment to be offered a worker who has lost employment
because of discrimination; (3) an avoidance of this either-or
reading
Page 313 U. S. 191
of the statute by pursuing the central clue to the Board's
powers -- effectuation of the policies of the Act -- and, in that
light, appraising the relevance of a worker's having obtained
"substantially equivalent employment."
Denial of the Board's power to order opportunities of employment
in this situation derives wholly from an infiltration of a portion
of § 2(3) into § 10(c). The argument runs thus: § 10(c)
specifically refers to "reinstatement of employees"; the latter
portion of § 2(3) refers to an "employee" as a person "who has not
obtained any other regular and substantially equivalent
employment"; therefore, there can be no reinstatement of an
employee who has obtained such employment. The syllogism is
perfect. But this is a bit of verbal logic from which the meaning
of things has evaporated. In the first place, we have seen that the
Board's power to order an opportunity for employment does not
derive from the phrase "including reinstatement of employees with
or without back pay," and is not limited by it. Secondly, insofar
as any argument is to be drawn from the reference to "employees" in
§ 10(c), it must be noted that the reference is to "employees,"
unqualified and undifferentiated. To circumscribe the general
class, "employees," we must find authority either in the policy of
the Act or in some specific delimiting provision of it.
Not only is the Act devoid of a comprehensive definition of
"employee" restrictive of § 10(c), but the contrary is the fact.
The problem of what workers were to be covered by legal remedies
for assuring the right of self-organization was a familiar one when
Congress formulated the Act. The policy which it expressed in
defining "employee" both affirmatively and negatively, as it did in
§ 2(3), had behind it important practical and judicial experience.
"The term
employee'," the section reads,
"shall include any employee, and shall not
Page 313 U. S. 192
be limited to the employees of a particular employer, unless the
Act explicitly states otherwise. . . ."
This was not fortuitous phrasing. It had reference to the
controversies engendered by constructions placed upon the Clayton
Act and kindred state legislation in relation to the functions of
workers' organizations, and the desire not to repeat those
controversies.
Cf. New Negro Alliance v. Grocery Co.,
303 U. S. 552. The
broad definition of "employee," "unless the Act explicitly states
otherwise," as well as the definition of "labor dispute" in § 2(9),
expressed the conviction of Congress
"that disputes may arise regardless of whether the disputants
stand in the proximate relation of employer and employee, and that
self-organization of employees may extend beyond a single plant or
employer."
H.R.Rep. No. 1147, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 9;
see
also S.Rep. No. 573, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 6, 7.
The reference in § 2(3) to workers who have "obtained regular
and substantially equivalent employment" has a role consonant with
some purposes of the Act, but not one destructive of the broad
definition of "employee" with which § 2(3) begins. In determining
whether an employer has refused to bargain collectively with the
representatives of "his employees" in violation of § 8(5) and §
9(a), it is, of course, essential to determine who constitute "his
employees." One aspect of this is covered by § 9(b), which provides
for determination of the appropriate bargaining unit. And once the
unit is selected, the reference in § 2(3) to workers who have
obtained equivalent employment comes into operation in determining
who shall be treated as employees within the unit.
To deny the Board power to neutralize discrimination merely
because workers have obtained compensatory employment would confine
the "policies of this Act" to the
Page 313 U. S. 193
correction of private injuries. The Board was not devised for
such a limited function. It is the agency of Congress for
translating into concreteness the purpose of safeguarding and
encouraging the right of self-organization. The Board, we have held
very recently, does not exist for the "adjudication of private
rights"; it
"acts in a public capacity to give effect to the declared public
policy of the Act to eliminate and prevent obstructions to
interstate commerce by encouraging collective bargaining."
National Licorice Co. v. Labor Board, 309 U.
S. 350,
309 U. S. 362,
and see Amalgamated Utility Workers v. Edison Co.,
30 U. S. 261.
To be sure, reinstatement is not needed to repair the economic loss
of a worker who, after discrimination, has obtained an equally
profitable job. But to limit the significance of discrimination
merely to questions of monetary loss to workers would thwart the
central purpose of the Act, directed as that is toward the
achievement and maintenance of workers' self-organization. That
there are factors other than loss of wages to a particular worker
to be considered is suggested even by a meager knowledge of
industrial affairs. Thus, to give only one illustration, if men
were discharged who were leading efforts at organization in a plant
having a low wage scale, they would not unnaturally be compelled by
their economic circumstances to seek and obtain employment
elsewhere at equivalent wages. In such a situation, to deny the
Board power to wipe out the prior discrimination by ordering the
employment of such workers would sanction a most effective way of
defeating the right of self-organization.
Therefore, the mere fact that the victim of discrimination has
obtained equivalent employment does not itself preclude the Board
from undoing the discrimination and requiring employment. But
neither does this remedy automatically flow from the Act itself
when discrimination
Page 313 U. S. 194
has been found. A statute expressive of such large public policy
as that on which the National Labor Relations Board is based must
be broadly phrased, and necessarily carries with it the task of
administrative application. There is an area plainly covered by the
language of the Act, and an area no less plainly without it. But,
in the nature of things, Congress could not catalogue all the
devices and stratagems for circumventing the policies of the Act.
Nor could it define the whole gamut of remedies to effectuate these
policies in an infinite variety of specific situations. Congress
met these difficulties by leaving the adaptation of means to end to
the empiric process of administration. The exercise of the process
was committed to the Board, subject to limited judicial review.
Because the relation of remedy to policy is peculiarly a matter for
administrative competence, courts must not enter the allowable area
of the Board's discretion, and must guard against the danger of
sliding unconsciously from the narrow confines of law into the more
spacious domain of policy. On the other hand, the power with which
Congress invested the Board implies responsibility -- the
responsibility of exercising its judgment in employing the
statutory powers.
The Act does not create rights for individuals which must be
vindicated according to a rigid scheme of remedies. It entrusts to
an expert agency the maintenance and promotion of industrial peace.
According to the experience revealed by the Board's decisions, the
effectuation of this important policy generally requires not only
compensation for the loss of wages, but also offers of employment
to the victims of discrimination. Only thus can there be a
restoration of the situation, as nearly as possible, to that which
would have obtained but for the illegal discrimination. But even
where a worker has not secured equivalent employment, the Board,
under particular circumstances, may refuse to order his
employment
Page 313 U. S. 195
because it would not effectuate the policies of the Act. It has,
for example, declined to do so in the case of a worker who had been
discharged for union activities and had sought reemployment after
having offered his services as a labor spy.
Matter of Thompson
Cabinet Co., 11 NLRB 1106, 1116-1117.
From the beginning, the Board has recognized that a worker who
has obtained equivalent employment is in a different position from
one who has lost his job as well as his wages through an employer's
unfair labor practice. In early decisions, the Board did not order
reinstatement of workers who had secured such equivalent
employment.
See Matter of Rabhor Co., Inc., 1 NLRB 470,
481;
Matter of Jeffery-De Witt Insulator Co., 1 NLRB 618,
628. It apparently focused on the absence of loss of wages in
determining the applicable remedy. But other factors may well enter
into the appropriateness of ordering the offending employer to
offer employment to one illegally denied it. Reinstatement may be
the effective assurance of the right of self-organization. Again,
without such a remedy, industrial peace might be endangered because
workers would be resentful of their inability to return to Jobs to
which they may have been attached and from which they were
wrongfully discharged. On the other hand, it may be, as was urged
on behalf of the Board in
Mooresville Cotton Mills v. Labor
Board, 97 F.2d 959, 963, that, in making such an order for
reinstatement, the necessity for making room for the old employees
by discharging new ones, as well as questions affecting the
dislocation of the business, ought to be considered. All these and
other factors outside our domain of experience may come into play.
Their relevance is for the Board, not for us. In the exercise of
its informed discretion, the Board may find that effectuation of
the Act's policies may or may not require reinstatement. We have no
warrant for speculating on matters of fact the determination of
Page 313 U. S. 196
which Congress has entrusted to the Board. All we are entitled
to ask is that the statute speak through the Board where the
statute does not speak for itself.
The only light we have on the Board's decision in this case is
its statement that, if any of the workers discriminated against had
obtained substantially equivalent employment, they should be
offered employment "for the reasons set forth in"
Matter of
Eagle-Picher Mining & Smelting Co., 16 NLRB 727, 833. But,
in that case, the Board merely concluded that § 2(3) did not deny
it the power to order reinstatement; it did not consider the
appropriateness of its exercise. Thus, the Board determined only
the dry legal question of its power, which we sustain; it did not
consider whether, in employing that power, the policies of the Act
would be enforced. The court below found, and the Board has not
challenged the finding, that the Board left the issue of
equivalence of jobs at the Shattuck Denn Company in doubt, and
remanded the order to the Board for further findings. Of course, if
the Board finds that equivalent employment has not been obtained,
it is within its province to require offers of reemployment in
accordance with its general conclusion that a worker's loss in
wages and in general working conditions must be made whole. Even if
it should find that equivalent jobs were secured by the men who
suffered from discrimination, it may order employment at Phelps
Dodge if it finds that to do so would effectuate the policies of
the Act. We believe that the procedure we have indicated will
likewise effectuate the policies of the Act by making workable the
system of restricted judicial review in relation to the wide
discretionary authority which Congress has given the Board.
From the record of the present case, we cannot really tell why
the Board has ordered reinstatement of the strikers who obtained
subsequent employment. The Board first found that the men had not
obtained substantially
Page 313 U. S. 197
equivalent employment within the meaning of § 2(3); later, it
concluded that, even if they had obtained such employment it would
order their reinstatement. It did so, however, as we have noted,
merely because it asserted its legal power so to do. When the court
below held that proof did not support the Board's finding
concerning equivalence of employment at Shattuck Denn, and remanded
the case to the Board for additional evidence on that issue, the
Board took this issue out of the case by expressly declining to ask
for its review here.
The administrative process will best be vindicated by clarity in
its exercise. Since Congress has defined the authority of the Board
and the procedure by which it must be asserted and has charged the
federal courts with the duty of reviewing the Board's orders (§
10(e) and (f)), it will avoid needless litigation and make for
effective and expeditious enforcement of the Board's order to
require the Board to disclose the basis of its order. We do not
intend to enter the province that belongs to the Board, nor do we
do so. All we ask of the Board is to give clear indication that it
has exercised the discretion with which Congress has empowered it.
This is to affirm most emphatically the authority of the Board.
Fifth. As part of its remedial action against the
unfair labor practices, the Board ordered that workers who had been
denied employment be made whole for their loss of pay. In specific
terms, the Board ordered payment to the men of a sum equal to what
they normally would have earned from the date of the discrimination
to the time of employment less their earnings during this period.
The court below added a further deduction of amounts which the
workers "failed without excuse to earn," and the Board here
challenges this modification.
Making the workers whole for losses suffered on account of an
unfair labor practice is part of the vindication of the public
policy which the Board enforces.
Page 313 U. S. 198
Since only actual losses should be made good, it seems fair that
deductions should be made not only for actual earnings by the
worker, but also for losses which he willfully incurred. To this,
the Board counters that to apply this abstractly just doctrine of
mitigation of damages to the situations before it, often involving
substantial numbers of workmen, would put on the Board details too
burdensome for effective administration. Simplicity of
administration is thus the justification for deducting only actual
earnings and for avoiding the domain of controversy as to wages
that might have been earned.
But the advantages of a simple rule must be balanced against the
importance of taking fair account, in a civilized legal system, of
every socially desirable factor in the final judgment. The Board,
we believe, overestimates administrative difficulties and
underestimates its administrative resourcefulness. Here again, we
must avoid the rigidities of an either-or rule. The remedy of back
pay, it must be remembered, is entrusted to the Board's discretion;
it is not mechanically compelled by the Act. And in applying its
authority over back pay orders, the Board has not used stereotyped
formulas, but has availed itself of the freedom given it by
Congress to attain just results in diverse, complicated situations.
[
Footnote 7]
See
(1939) 48 Yale L.J.
Page 313 U. S. 199
1265. The Board has a wide discretion to keep the present matter
within reasonable bounds through flexible procedural devices. The
Board will thus have it within its power to avoid delays and
difficulties incident to passing on remote and speculative claims
by employers, while at the same time it may give appropriate weight
to a clearly
Page 313 U. S. 200
unjustifiable refusal to take desirable new employment. By
leaving such an adjustment to the administrative process, we have
in mind not so much the minimization of damages as the healthy
policy of promoting production and employment. This consideration
in no way weakens the enforcement of the policies of the Act by
exerting coercion against men who have been unfairly denied
employment to take employment elsewhere and later, because of their
new employment, declaring them barred from returning to the jobs of
their choice. This is so because we hold that the power of ordering
offers of employment rests with the Board even as to workers who
have obtained equivalent employment.
But though the employer should be allowed to go to proof on this
issue, the Board's order should not have been modified by the court
below. The matter should have been left to the Board for
determination by it prior to formulating its order, and should not
be left for possible final settlement in contempt proceedings.
Sixth. Other minor objections to the Board's order were
found without substance below. After careful consideration, we
agree with this disposition of these questions, and do not feel
that further discussion is required.
The decree below should be modified in accordance with this
opinion, remanding to the Board the two matters discussed under
Fourth and
Fifth herein, for the Board's
determination of these issues.
Modified.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS took no part in the consideration or
disposition of the case.
* Together with No. 641,
National Labor Relations Board v.
Phelps Dodge Corp., also on writ of certiorari, 312 U.S. 669,
to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
[
Footnote 1]
United States Industrial Commission, Final Report (1902) p. 892;
Anthracite Coal Strike Commission, Report to the President on the
Coal Strike of May-October, 1902, S.Doc. No. 6, 58th Cong.,
Spec.Sess., p. 78; Laidler, Boycotts and the Labor Struggle (1913)
p. 39
et seq.; United States Commission on Industrial
Relations, Final Report (1916) S.Doc. No. 415, 64th Cong., 1st
Sess., p. 118; Interchurch World Movement, Commission of Inquiry,
Report on the Steel Strike of 1919 (1920) pp. 27, 209, 219; Bonnet,
Employers' Associations in the United States (1922) pp. 80, 296,
550; Gulick, Labor Policy of the United States Steel Corporation
(1924) pp. 125-27; Cummins, The Labor Problem in the United States
(2d ed.1935) p. 351; Bureau of Labor Investigation of Western Union
and Postal Telegraph-Cable Companies (1909) S.Doc. No. 725, 60th
Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 39-41; S.Rep. No. 46, Part 1, 75th Cong., 1st
Sess., p. 8.
[
Footnote 2]
30 Stat. 424;
see United States Strike Commission,
Report on the Chicago Strike of June-July, 1894, S.Doc. No. 7, 53d
Cong., 3d Sess.; Olney, Discrimination Against Union Labor --
Legal? (1908) 42 Amer.L.Rev. 161.
[
Footnote 3]
Ala.Code Ann. (1928) 3451; Ark., Acts of 1905, Act 214, p. 545;
Cal. Labor Code (1937) §§ 1050-1054; Colo.Stat.Ann. (1935) c. 97,
§§ 88, 89, 93; Conn.Gen.Stat. (1930) §§ 6210-11; Fla.Comp.Gen.Laws
Ann. (1927) § 6606; Ill.Ann.Stat. (1935) c. 38, § 139;
Ind.Stat.Ann. (1933) §§ 40-301, 40-302; Iowa Code (1939) §§
13253-54; Kan.Gen.Stat. (1935) §§ 44-117, 44-118, 44-119; Me.Law
(1933) c. 108; Minn.Stat. (1927) § 10378; Miss.Code Ann. (1927) §§
9271-9274; Mo.Rev.Stat. (1939) § 4643; Mont.Rev.Code Ann. (1935) §§
3093-3094; Nev. Comp.Laws (1929) §§ 10461-10463; N.M.Stat.Ann.
(1929) §§ 35-4613, 35-4614, 35-4615; New York Labor Law § 704(2),
(9); N.C.Code Ann. (1939) §§ 4477-78; N.D. Comp.Laws Ann. (1913) §
9446; Okla.Stat.Ann. (1937) tit. 40, §§ 172-173; Ore.Comp.Laws Ann.
(1940) §§ 102-806, 102-807; Tex.Stat. (1936) arts. 1616-1618; Utah
Rev.Stat.Ann. (1933) §§ 49-5-1, 49-5-2; Va.Code (1936) § 1817;
Wash.Rev.Stat.Ann. (1932) § 7599; Wis.Stat. (1939) § 343.682.
See (1937) 37 Col.L.Rev. 816, 819; Witte, The Government
in Labor Disputes (1932) pp. 213-218.
[
Footnote 4]
Awards of the National War Labor Board: Sloss-Sheffield Steel
& Iron Co., Docket No. 12.
See also Omaha &
Council Bluffs Street Ry., Docket No. 154; Smith & Wesson Co.,
Docket No. 273.
Cf. Gregg, The National War Labor Board
(1919) 33 Harv.L.Rev. 39.
[
Footnote 5]
Rather clearly, the House Committee which reported the bill
viewed the word "hire" as covering the situation before us.
H.R.Rep. No. 1147, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 19. The Chairman of
the Senate Committee expressly stated during the debate that
"no employer may discriminate in hiring a man whether he belongs
to a union or not, and without regard to what union he belongs
[except where there is a valid closed shop agreement]."
79 Cong.Rec. 7674. For further materials bearing on the
legislative history
see the able opinion of Judge Magruder
in
Labor Board v. Waumbec Mills, 114 F.2d 226.
[
Footnote 6]
An injunction had been granted against interference with the
workers' self-organization and reinstatement was ordered in
contempt proceedings after employees had been discharged for union
activities. Surely a court of equity has no greater inherent
authority in this regard than was conveyed to the Board by the
broad grant of all such remedial powers as will, from case to case,
translate into actuality the policies of the Act.
[
Footnote 7]
In accordance with the Board's general practice, deductions were
made in the present case for amounts earned during the period of
the back pay award. But the deductions have been limited to
earnings during the hours when the worker would have been employed
by the employer in question.
Matter of Pusey, Maynes &
Breish Co., 1 NLRB 482;
Matter of National Motor Bearing
Co., 5 NLRB 409. And only "net earnings" are deducted,
allowance being made for the expense of getting new employment
which, but for the discrimination, would not have been necessary.
Matter of Crossett Lumber Co., 8 NLRB 440.
Even though a strike is caused by an unfair labor practice, the
Board does not award back pay during the period of the strike.
Matter of Sunshine Hosiery Mills, 1 NLRB 664. Employees
who are discriminatorily discharged are treated as strikers if,
during a strike, they refuse an unconditional offer of
reinstatement.
Matter of Harter Corp., 8 NLRB 391.
Originally, back pay was ordered from the date of application for
reinstatement,
Matter of Sunshine Hosiery Mills, supra,
but later orders have started back pay five days after application.
Matter of Tiny Town Togs, Inc., 7 NLRB 54.
If there is unjustified delay in filing charges before the
Board, a deduction is made for the period of the delay.
Matter
of Inland Lime & Stone Co., 8 NLRB 944. Similar action is
taken when a case is reopened after having been closed or
withdrawn.
Matter of C. G. Conn, Ltd., 10 NLRB 498. And if
the trial examiner rules in favor of the employer and the Board
reverses the ruling, no back pay is ordered for the period when the
examiner's ruling stood unreversed.
Matter of E. R.
Haffelfinger Co., 1 NLRB 760,
and see the order in
the present case.
The Board has refused to order any back pay where discriminatory
discharges were made with honest belief that they were required by
an invalid closed shop contract.
Matter of McKesson &
Robbins, Inc., 19 NLRB 778.
If the business conditions would have caused the plant to be
closed or personnel to be reduced, back pay is awarded only for the
period which the worker would have worked in the absence of
discrimination.
Matter of Ray Nichols, Inc., 15 NLRB 846.
At times, fluctuations in personnel so complicate the situation
that a formula has to be devised for the distribution of a lump sum
among the workers who have been discriminated against.
Matter
of Eagle-Picher Mining & Smelting Co., 16 NLRB 727.
The rate of pay used in computing awards is generally that at
the time of discrimination, but adjustments may be made for
subsequent changes.
Matter of Lone Star Bag & Bagging
Co., 8 NLRB 44;
cf. Matter of Acme Air Appliance Co.,
10 NLRB 1385. Normal earnings in tips or bonuses have been taken
into account.
Matter of Club Troika, 2 NLRB 90;
Matter
of Central Truck Lines, 3 NLRB 317.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY:
While I fully approve the disposition of the first three issues
in the opinion just announced, I cannot assent to the modification
of that part of the Board's order
Page 313 U. S. 201
which required reinstatement of certain employees, or to the
limitation imposed on the Board's power to make back pay
awards.
First. The Board is now directed to reconsider its
order of reinstatement merely because, in the course of its
recital, it stated that, even if the employees in question had
secured other substantially equivalent employment, it would
nevertheless order their reinstatement for the reasons set forth in
Matter of Eagle-Picher Mining & Smelting Co., 16 NLRB
727. [
Footnote 2/1] There is
neither claim nor evidence that reinstatement will not effectuate
the policies of the Act. There is no suggestion that the order the
Board issued was wrong or beyond its power. That order is
challenged only because the statement and reference to the
Eagle-Picher case are said to
Page 313 U. S. 202
demonstrate that the Board ordered reinstatement mechanically
due to a misconception of its functions under the statute, and that
it did not consider whether reinstatement would effectuate the
policies of the Act.
Even if it be assumed that this recital imports an inaccurate
appraisal of the Board's power, an assumption which I believe is
without justification, modification of its order is not a necessary
consequence. The question before us is whether the order the Board
issued was within its power. There is no occasion now to determine
what disposition should be made of an order which was not an
exercise of the Board's administrative discretion, or to infer that
the Board must investigate the substantial equivalency of other
employment before it may order reinstatement. Suffice to say the
Board found that certain employees had been the objects of unfair
labor practices and that it would effectuate the policies of the
Act to order their reinstatement. It expressly rested its order
upon those findings.
The circumstances occasioning the latter finding are convincing
evidence that the Board not only was required to, but did, exercise
discretion in the formulation of its order of reinstatement.
Throughout the hearing, the employer's counsel sought to show by
cross-examining them that the complaining employees were not
entitled to reinstatement. Shortly after that examination
commenced, the trial examiner requested the Board's attorney to
state the theory upon which he contended that those employees
should be reinstated. Considerable testimony was offered to show
the working conditions, hours, rates of pay, continuity of
operation, etc., of mines in which the witnesses had secured other
employment.
All this was in the record certified to the Board. Accompanying
it was the contention of the employer that reinstatement should be
denied for various reasons. The
Page 313 U. S. 203
Board explicitly considered the contention, among others, that
reinstatement would provoke further disputes and discord among the
employees, rather than promote labor peace. It also considered the
contention that many of the employees had obtained other
substantially equivalent employment, making both general and
specific findings concerning it. [
Footnote 2/2] Finally, it concluded that the policies of
the Act would be effectuated by ordering the employer to tender
reinstatement to designated employees.
That its order of reinstatement was more than a perfunctory
exercise of power is pointedly manifest from the Board's own
statements. Answering the employer's contention that reinstatement
might foster discord among the employees, the Board declared:
"We cannot but consider the difficulties of adjustment envisaged
in the foregoing testimony [upon which the employer relied] as
conjectural and insubstantial, especially in view of the lapse of
time since the strike. However, even assuming that the asserted
resentment of nonstrikers towards strikers and picketers persists,
the effectuation of the policies of the Act patently
requires [
Footnote 2/3] the
restoration of the strikers and picketers to their
status
quo before the discrimination against them."
In discussing its proposed order, the Board said:
"Having found that the respondent has engaged in unfair labor
practices, we will order it to cease and desist therefrom and to
take certain affirmative action
designed to effectuate the
polices of the Act [
Footnote
2/4] and to restore as nearly
Page 313 U. S. 204
as possible the condition which existed prior to the commission
of the unfair labor practices."
And in its formal order, the Board stated:
"Upon the basis of the above findings of fact and conclusions of
law, and pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations
Act, the National Labor Relations Board hereby orders that the
respondent, Phelps Dodge Corporation . . . shall: . . . 2. Take the
following affirmative action
which the Board finds will
effectuate the policies of the Act: [
Footnote 2/5] (a) Offer to the following persons
immediate and full reinstatement to their former or substantially
equivalent positions . . . ; (b) Make whole [the following
employees] for any loss of pay they may have suffered by reason of
the respondent's discriminatory refusal to reinstate them . . . ,
less the net earnings of each. . . ."
The italicized phrases in these quotations were not chance or
formal recitals. They expressed in summary a considered exercise of
administrative discretion. The Board carefully followed the precise
procedure which this Court says it should have adopted. It found
that the employees in question had been the victims of unfair labor
practices. It also found that the policies of the Act would be
effectuated by ordering their reinstatement. Since there was
evidence to support these findings, it is difficult to understand
what more the Board should or could have done.
But if we are now to consider in the abstract whether the Board
properly opined that it might have the power to order reinstatement
without regard to the substantial equivalency of other employment,
I am nevertheless unable to approve the modification of its order,
or to accept the inference that the Board must consider the
substantial equivalency of other employment before it may order
reinstatement. There is nothing in § 10(c) or in the Act
Page 313 U. S. 205
as a whole which expressly or impliedly obligates the Board to
consider the substantial equivalency of other employment or to make
findings concerning it before it may order reinstatement. Indeed,
such a rule narrows, rather than broadens, the administrative
discretion which the Act confers on the Board.
Practical administrative experience may convince the Board that
the self-interest of the employee is a far better gauge of the
substantial equivalency of his other employment than any extended
factual inquiry of its own. Conversely, the Board may conclude that
the policies of the Act are best effectuated by an investigation in
every case into the nature of his other employment. That choice of
rules is an exercise of discretion which Congress has entrusted to
the Board. Whichever rule the Board adopts, it does not follow that
reinstatement becomes a remedy which is granted automatically upon
a finding of unfair labor practices. If, for other reasons, the
Board finds that the policies of the Act will not be effectuated,
of course, it not only could, but should, decline to order an offer
of reinstatement.
Compare Matter of Thompson Cabinet Co.,
11 NLRB 1106.
Second. As already indicated, I am unable to accept the
limitation now imposed on the Board's power to make back pay
awards. Again the question is simply this: was the back pay order
within the power of the Board and supported by evidence? What order
the Board should have made or what rule of law it should have
followed if some of the employees had "willfully incurred" losses
are questions of importance which we should answer only when they
are presented. They are not here now.
The Board expressly found that the policies of the Act would be
effectuated by ordering the employer to make whole those employees
who had been the victims of discriminatory practices. We are
pointed to nothing which requires a different conclusion. We are
not referred to
Page 313 U. S. 206
any employee who "willfully incurred" losses, or to any evidence
in the record compelling us to hold that any of them did. At most,
the record shows only that some of the employees obtained other
employment -- which was not substantially equivalent -- and then
voluntarily relinquished it. For all we know, the Board could have
determined that this evidence did not establish "willfully
incurred" losses. Plainly, that was a permissible inference from
the evidence, and, this being so, there is no occasion now to
decide what the Board should have done had it drawn some other
inference.
But again, if we are now to rule on the abstract issue, I cannot
agree that the power to make back pay awards must be fettered in
the manner described in the opinion just announced. For if the
Board has no choice but to accept the limitation now imposed, its
administrative discretion is curbed by the very decision which
purports to leave it untouched.
It must be conceded that nothing in the Act requires such a
limitation in so many words. To be sure, nothing in the Act
requires a back pay award to be diminished by the amounts actually
earned (
compare Republic Steel Corp. v. Labor Board,
311 U. S. 7), but
that should admonish us to hesitate before we introduce yet another
modification which Congress has not seen fit to enact, especially
when the two situations differ in many respects. It is not our
function to read the Act as we think it should have been written,
or to supplant a rule adopted by the Board with one which we
believe is better. Our only office is to determine whether the rule
chosen, tested in the light of statutory standards, was within the
permissible range of the Board's discretion.
The Board might properly conclude that the policies of the Act
would best be effectuated by refusing to embark on the inquiry
whether the employees had willfully incurred losses. Administrative
difficulties engendered
Page 313 U. S. 207
by a contrary rule would be infinite, particularly as the number
of individuals involved in the dispute increased: underlying the
contrary rule is the supposition that the employee would purposely
remain idle awaiting his back pay award. But that attributes to the
employee an omniscience frequently not given to members of the
legal profession. He must be able to determine that the employer
actually has committed unfair labor practices; that the unfair
labor practices affect commerce within the meaning of §§ 2(6) and
2(7); that the Board will take favorable action and make a back pay
award; that the Circuit Court of Appeals will enforce that order in
full, and that this Court finally will affirm if the case comes
here.
This is not all. He must have capital sufficient to provide for
himself and for any dependents while he awaits the back pay award,
even though that may not come until several years later. [
Footnote 2/6] He must risk union disfavor
by dividing his efforts between a labor dispute and a search for a
new job. He must realize, although his natural suppositions are
otherwise, that he will probably not endanger seniority rights or
chance of reinstatement by accepting other employment. He must be
able to decide when he has made sufficient efforts to secure other
employment notwithstanding that he is not told whether he can or
must accept any job, no matter where it is or what type of
employment, wages, hours, or working conditions.
At his peril, he must determine all these things because
conventional common law concepts and doctrines of damages,
applicable in suits to enforce purely private rights, are to be
imported into the National Labor Relations Act.
Page 313 U. S. 208
Having these considerations in mind, supplemented perhaps by
others not available or suggested to us, the Board might well
decide that the rule disapproved here would best effectuate the
policies of the Act. I do not think we should substitute our
Judgment on this issue for that of the Board.
Accordingly, I would affirm the order of the Board in full.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS concur in this
opinion.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The entire paragraph in which this statement appears reads:
"We have found that the respondent has discriminated in regard
to hire and tenure of employment of certain individuals named
above. In accordance with our usual practice, we shall order the
reinstatement or the reemployment of such individuals. The
respondent contends that the Board lacks power to order the
reinstatement of any striker who has obtained other regular and
substantially equivalent employment. We have found that none of the
strikers discriminated against has obtained other regular and
substantially equivalent employment within the meaning of the Act.
Nevertheless, even if any striker had obtained such employment, we
would, for the reasons set forth in
Matter of Eagle-Picher
Mining & Smelting Co. . . . , still order his
reinstatement by the respondent."
19 NLRB 547, 598.
It is to be noted, of course, that, in the
Eagle-Picher
case, the Board's remarks were made in answer to the argument
advanced here, that § 2(3) narrows the application of the term
"employees" in § 10(c).
It is worth noting, too, that, in that case, the Board
stated:
"Further to effectuate the purposes and policies of the Act, and
as a means of removing and avoiding the consequences of the
respondents' unfair labor practices, we shall, in aid of our cease
and desist order, order the respondents to take certain affirmative
action, more particularly described below."
16 NLRB 727, 831.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Board found that none of the employees had obtained other
substantially equivalent employment. The Circuit Court of Appeals
reversed this finding in part. The reversal is not challenged here,
but that is immaterial, since the Court now decides that the Board
has the power to order reinstatement even though the employees have
found other substantially equivalent employment, provided that the
policies of the Act will be effectuated.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Emphasis added.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Emphasis added.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Emphasis added.
[
Footnote 2/6]
The labor dispute which gave rise to this proceeding occurred in
1935.
MR. JUSTICE STONE:
With two rulings of the Court's opinion, the CHIEF JUSTICE and I
are unable to agree.
Congress has, we think, by the terms of the Act, excluded from
the Board's power to reinstate wrongfully discharged employees, any
authority to reinstate those who have "obtained any other regular
and substantially equivalent employment." And we are not persuaded
that Congress, by granting to the Board, by § 10(c) of the Act,
authority
"to take such affirmative action, including reinstatement of
employees with or without back pay, as will effectuate the policies
of the Act,"
has also authorized it to order the employer to hire applicants
for work who have never been in his employ, or to compel him to
give them "back pay" for any period whatever.
The authority of the Board to take affirmative action by way of
reinstatement of employees is not to be read as conferring upon it
power to take any measures, however drastic, which it conceives
will effectuate the policies of the Act. We have held that the
provision is remedial, not punitive,
Consolidated Edison Co. v.
Labor Board, 305 U. S. 197,
305 U. S. 235,
236;
see also Labor Board v. Pennsylvania Greyhound Lines,
303 U. S. 261,
303 U. S. 267,
303 U. S.
268,
Page 313 U. S. 209
and that its purpose is to effectuate the policies of the Act by
achieving the "remedial objectives which the Act sets forth" and
"to restore and make whole employees who have been discharged in
violation of the Act."
Republic Steel Corp. v. Labor
Board, 311 U. S. 7,
311 U. S. 12. The
Act itself has emphasized this purpose when, in including in the
category of "employees" those who might not otherwise have been so
included, it provided, § 2(3), that the term "employee"
"shall include any individual whose work has ceased as a
consequence of, or in connection with, any current labor dispute or
because of any unfair labor practice, and who has not obtained any
other regular and substantially equivalent employment."
While the stated policy of a statute is an important factor in
interpreting its command, we cannot ignore the words of the command
in ascertaining its policy. In enlarging the category of
"employees" to include wrongfully discharged employees and, at the
same time, excluding from it those who have obtained "other regular
and substantially equivalent employment," the Congress adopted a
policy which it may well have thought would further the cause of
industrial peace quite as much as the enforced employment of
discharged employees where there was no occasion to compensate them
for the loss of their employment. It is the policy of the Act, and
not the Board's policy, which is to be effectuated, and, in the
face of so explicit a restriction of the definition of discharged
employees to those who have not procured equivalent employment, we
can only conclude that Congress has adopted the policy of
restricting the authorized "reinstatement of employees" to that
class.
Even if we read the language of § 2(3) distributively, it seems
difficult to say that the specially granted power to reinstate
employees extends to those who, by definition, are not employees,
and this is the more so when the effect of the definition is
consonant with what appears
Page 313 U. S. 210
to be the declared purpose of the reinstatement provision. Nor
can it fairly be said that the definition of employees is of
significance only for the purpose of determining the appropriate
bargaining agency of the employees. There is no evidence in the
statute itself, or to be derived from its legislative history, that
the definition was not to be applied in the one case quite as much
as in the other. Certainly the fact of substantially equivalent
employment has as much bearing upon making the discharged employee
whole as upon his right to participate in the choice of a
bargaining representative, and no ground has been advanced for
saying that it applies to one and not the other.
As a majority of the Court is of opinion that the Board does
possess the power to order reinstatement even though the discharged
employees had obtained other equivalent employment, we agree that
the case should now be remanded to the Board for a determination of
the question whether reinstatement here would further the policies
of the Act.
We agree that petitioner's refusal to hire two applicants for
jobs because of their union membership was an unfair labor practice
within the meaning of § 8(3) of the Act, even though they had never
been employees of the petitioner, and that, under § 9(c), the Board
was authorized to order petitioner to cease and desist from the
practice and to take appropriate proceedings under § 10 to enforce
its order. But it is quite another matter to say that Congress has
also authorized the Board to order the employer to hire applicants
for work who have never been in his employ, and to compel him to
give them "back pay."
The Congressional debates and committee reports give no hint
that, in enacting the National Labor Relations Act, Congress or any
member of it thought it was giving the Board a remedial power which
few courts had ever
Page 313 U. S. 211
assumed to exercise or had been thought to possess, and we are
unable to say that the words of the statute go so far. The
authority given to the Board by § 10(c) is, as we have said, not an
unrestricted power, and the grant is not to be read as though the
words "including reinstatement of employees with or without back
pay" were no part of the statute. None of the words of a statute
are to be disregarded, and it cannot be assumed that the
introduction of the phrase in this one was without a purpose.
Undoubtedly, the word "including" may preface an illustrative
example of a general power already granted,
Helvering v.
Morgan's, Inc., 293 U. S. 121,
293 U. S. 125,
or it may serve to define that power, or even enlarge it.
Cf.
Montello Salt Co. v. Utah, 221 U. S. 452,
221 U. S. 462,
et seq. Whether it is the one or another must be
determined by the purpose of the Act, to be ascertained in the
light of the context, the legislative history, and the subject
matter to which the statute is to be applied.
In view of the traditional reluctance of courts to compel the
performance of personal service contracts, it seems at least
doubtful whether an authority to the Board to take affirmative
action could, without more, fairly be construed as permitting it to
take a kind of affirmative action which had very generally been
thought to be beyond the power of courts. This is the more so
because the Board's orders were, by § 10(c), made subject to review
and modification of the courts without any specified restriction
upon the exercise of that authority.
It is true that, in
Texas & N.O. R. Co. v. Railway
Clerks, 281 U. S. 548,
this Court had held that, upon contempt proceedings for violation
of a decree enjoining coercive measures by the employer against his
union employees, a court could properly direct that the contempt be
purged on condition that the employer restore the
status
quo. But Congress, in enacting the National
Page 313 U. S. 212
Labor Relations Act, took a step further by providing that the
Board could order reinstatement of employees even though there had
been no violation of any previous order of the Board or of a court.
It thus removed the doubt which would otherwise have arisen by
defining and, as we think, enlarging the Board's authority to take
affirmative action so as to include the power to order
"reinstatement" of employees. But an authority to order
reinstatement is not an authority to compel the employer to instate
as his employees those whom he has never employed, and an authority
to award "back pay" to reinstated employees is not an authority to
compel payment of wages to applicants for employment whom the
employer was never bound to hire.
Authority for so unprecedented an exercise of power is not
lightly to be inferred. In view of the use of the phrase "including
reinstatement of employees" as a definition and enlargement, as we
think it is, of the authority of the Board to take affirmative
action, we cannot infer from it a Congressional purpose to
authorize the Board to order compulsory employment and wage
payments not embraced in its terms.