1. The conclusion of the National Labor Relations Board that all
nonsupervisory employees in the men's busheling rooms of a
department store, though numbering only 30 to 40 of the store's
5,000 employees, constituted an appropriate unit for collective
bargaining under § 9(b) of the Act, since these employees had a
degree of self-organization and a special trade which sufficiently
differentiated them from other employees, was amply supported by
the evidence. P.
326 U. S.
380.
2. In the circumstances of the election of a Joint Council as
bargaining representative in this case -- the Board having directed
the placing of the name of the Joint Council on the ballot,
although the employees in the unit were members of a local union
which the Joint Council represented -- there is no basis for the
employer's objection to the certification on the ground of possible
confusion of the employees. P.
326 U. S.
381.
3. Under the National Labor Relations Act, it is the duty of the
employer to bargain collectively only with the duly recognized or
accredited representative of the employees, and disregard of this
duty is a violation of § 8(1) of the Act. P.
326 U. S.
383.
4. The National Labor Relations Board was justified in finding
that the employer, in seeking the War Labor Board's approval of
wage increases for its employees, including employees in the unit
here involved, without bargaining collectively with the certified
representative in respect of the wages, was guilty of an unfair
labor practice in violation of § 8(1) of the Act. P.
326 U. S.
384.
5. The admission in evidence and consideration by the Board of
announcements made over the store's public address system and in
the house organ concerning the application for War Labor Board
approval of wage increases for its employees did not deny the
employer's freedom of speech under the First Amendment of the
Federal Constitution. P.
326 U. S.
386.
6. In the circumstances of this case, the injunction against the
employer
Page 326 U. S. 377
will be modified so as not to apply generally to all violations
of the rights of the employees in the bargaining unit here
involved, but only to other interferences, in violation of § 8(1)
or otherwise, with the certified agent's representation of these
employees. P.
326 U. S. 392.
146 F.2d 66 modified and affirmed.
Certiorari, 324 U.S. 838, to review a decree ordering
enforcement of an order of the National Labor Relations Board, 53
N.L.R.B. 1366.
MR. JUSTICE REED delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of certiorari brings here for review the decree of the
Circuit Court of Appeals enforcing an order of the National Labor
Relations Board which was entered after the Board found upon
hearings that petitioner had violated Sections 8(1) and 8(5) of the
National Labor Relations Act. [
Footnote 1] The petition for the writ presented issues
Page 326 U. S. 378
(1) as to whether two small related departments with thirty to
forty employees may be an appropriate bargaining unit when the
department store of which they are a part has around three hundred
and fifty departments and approximately five thousand employees;
(2) as to whether the Board could properly place the name of a
Joint Labor Council on the ballot for the employees' bargaining
representative when none of the employees were members of the
Council, but only of a local union which was associated with others
in the Council; (3) as to whether seeking authority by the employer
from the National War Labor Board to increase wages without taking
up the increase with a certified bargaining agent may be an unfair
labor practice under Section 8(1) of the Labor Act, and (4) as to
the propriety of a Board order to cease and desist generally from
unfair labor practices instead of an order to cease and desist only
from the type or types of unfair practices which the Board found
the employer committed. As these issues presented important
problems in the administration of the National Labor Relations Act,
certiorari was granted. 324 U.S. 838.
Appropriate Unit. After a hearing in which the
employer, the petitioner here, the May Department Stores Company,
doing business as Famous-Barr Company, a St. Louis department
store, took part, the Labor Relations Board, on June 16, 1943,
found that all nonsupervisory employees of the Company, then 28 in
number, working in the main and basement men's busheling rooms
constituted an appropriate unit for collective bargaining within
the meaning of Section 9(b) [
Footnote 2] of the Labor Relations Act.
Page 326 U. S. 379
An election was ordered. It resulted in the choice and
designation of the St. Louis Joint Council, United Retail,
Wholesale & Department Store Employees of America, CIO, as the
representative for collective bargaining of the employees of the
unit.
The Company contended that a storewide unit of its five thousand
employees was the most appropriate, and, at any rate, that
employees in the women's alteration and the fur alteration
departments should be added to the employees in the men's busheling
rooms to form the unit. As there is no provision for direct review
of the determination and certification of the bargaining
representative, the Company, in order to secure judicial view of
the finding as to the unit, awaited this proceeding, which sought a
decree directing it to bargain collectively with the
representative.
See Inland Empire Dist. Council v. Millis,
325 U. S. 697.
A few months before this proceeding, a determination that all
employees of the Company, subject to stated exceptions, were the
appropriate unit for collective bargaining had been sought by the
CIO. The Company objected because no sufficient showing of
representation was made and because it took exception to the
exclusion of certain employees from the proposed unit. This
petition was dismissed for failure of the CIO to make a substantial
showing of membership in the suggested storewide unit. 46 N.L.R.B.
305. That prior application is not a bar to this. The Board was
careful to note in this proceeding that a larger unit might be
fixed as appropriate if self-organization developed. Other
departments of the store had members of this and other unions as
employees. This presence of union members throughout the enterprise
was a matter of consideration in deciding upon the appropriate
unit, but was not decisive.
Compare Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co.
v. Labor Board, 313 U. S. 146,
313 U. S. 156.
No labor organization claimed to represent the entire body
Page 326 U. S. 380
of employees. Therefore, the Board determined to approve this
unit as appropriate so that collective bargaining might start for
these employees without waiting until more employees might be
organized into a larger unit.
Compare Labor Board v. Hearst
Publications, 322 U. S. 111,
322 U. S.
134.
Under Section 9(b), the Board is delegated the authority to
determine the unit. The judicial review afforded is not for the
purpose of weighing the evidence upon which the Board acted, and
perhaps to overrule the exercise of its discretion, but to
"guarantee against arbitrary action by the Board." [
Footnote 3] The Board had before it the
business of the company, the numbers of employees, the treatment of
all employees as a unit by management with reference to sick leave,
hospitalization, employee privileges, vacations,
et
cetera. Evidence was presented that a large proportion of
employees in the proposed unit were members of the same union. It
had testimony as to similarity and dissimilarity in tailoring and
altering between the men's and women's alteration rooms. There was
evidence that those who work on men's clothing, speaking generally,
belong to a different union organization than those who work on
women's clothes. The Board considered the interchange of workers
between the two groups. We think that there was ample testimony to
support the Board's conclusion that the employees of the two
busheling rooms were an appropriate unit, since these employees had
a degree of self-organization and a special trade which
sufficiently differentiated them from other employees.
Form of Ballot. Petitioner objects to the certification
because the ballot contained the name of the St. Louis Joint
Council, United Retail, Wholesale & Department Store Employees,
as a candidate for bargaining representative from the unit. This
was the organization which was
Page 326 U. S. 381
certified. It had filed the petition for determination of the
representative. The Council claimed that more than 51% of the
employees in the suggested unit had designated it as their
collective bargaining representative. The Board directs what names
go on the ballot. Unless there is a showing of a substantial number
of employees in the proposed unit who have become members of and
selected the petitioner as their bargaining representative, the
Board does not ordinarily order an election. [
Footnote 4] This is an administrative policy of
the Board. In this case, on the Joint Council's petition for
certification, the Board found that the Council had a majority of
the employees. As a matter of fact, it was a local union which the
employees had selected and joined. The Board pointed out in its
finding of facts on the petition for an election that the Joint
Council represented this local and similar locals in other
stores.
The Company says that some employees may have been misled by the
ballot into thinking that the Joint Council had a substantial
number of the unit's employees as members because elections are not
ordinarily called unless that situation exists. The local was
represented by the Joint Council.
Cf. Labor Board v. Franks
Bros. Co., 137 F.2d 989, 992,
aff'd on other grounds,
Franks Bros. Co. v. Labor Board, 321 U.
S. 702. The Joint Council was chosen by a majority of
the employees of the unit, and certified. In the circumstances of
this election, we see no basis for the Company's objection to the
certified representative on the ground of possible confusion of the
employees.
Action on Wages. The Board found that the Company
interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the
exercise of the rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act,
Page 326 U. S. 382
under the circumstances herein detailed, in seeking the
necessary approval (56 Stat. 765, Executive Order 9250, 7 Fed.Reg.
7871) on August 30, 1943, of the National War Labor Board for an
upward wage adjustment for a large proportion of its employees,
including the employees of the unit here involved, without
bargaining collectively on the subject of the wages with the
certified union. A letter accompanied the request to the War Labor
Board, which explained that certain craft employees, not here
involved, were excluded from the application for authority to
increase wages because they were covered by collective bargaining
agreements. The letter went on to say:
"The St. Louis Joint Council, United Retail, Wholesale and
Department Store Employees of America, CIO, . . . has been
certified by the National Labor Relations Board, but we do not
regard this as an appropriate unit, and have consistently taken
that position, and have so notified all parties concerned. It is
our intention to submit that question to the Courts if and when the
occasion arises. We have not recognized this Union and have not
bargained with it for the employees in Departments 280 or 281, and
no negotiations with that Union are pending. It is intended,
however, that the employees in Departments 280 and 281 shall be
included in this application."
"We do not believe that any of the organizations named in the
application, nor the organization named above, have any interest
whatever in the enclosed application. However, if the organization
named above should object to the inclusion of the employees of
Departments 280 and 281 in the application, you are advised that
said application may be considered as having been amended so as to
exclude those employees from the application."
The next morning, the employees were told over the store address
system of the application for a wage increase for all employees,
except higher paid executives and those employees "whose salaries
have been fixed by closed shop
Page 326 U. S. 383
agreements." A short time later, another reference to the
application was made over the address system. A similar
announcement appeared in the September 3 issue of the store paper.
The conditional offer to exclude the employees of the unit was not
referred to in the announcements. Upon these facts, the Board found
a violation of Section 8(1).
The Company urges that its request for authority, without
negotiation with the certified union as to the application to the
War Labor Board, was not an unfair practice under Section 8(1), but
only a necessary result of its position on nonrecognition of the
certified representative because the Company did not agree with the
Board's determination of the appropriate unit for the selection of
representatives. The Company says it could not give recognition to
the certified agent and maintain this position.
We have, in a preceding division of this opinion, stated our
conclusion that the Joint Council was a properly certified
bargaining representative. Therefore, at the time of the request to
the War Labor Board for authority to increase wages, the Joint
Council must be considered as a properly certified bargaining
agent. Company action in regard to it must be judged in that light,
even though its attitude toward the certification made its choice
difficult.
The Joint Council was certified on July 12, 1943. After the
election, the Council had requested a conference with the Company
for negotiating a contract to cover wages, hours, and working
conditions. This request was declined on July 19th with the
statement that the Company did not agree with the decision of the
Board, and desired to preserve its full rights to question the
result as it "may see fit." The application to the War Labor Board
followed on August 30th.
It is settled law that the Labor Relations Act makes it an
employer's duty to bargain collectively only with the
Page 326 U. S. 384
duly recognized or accredited representative of the employees.
Disregard of this duty violates Section 8(1) of the Act. Section
9(a).
Medo Photo Supply Corp. v. Labor Board, 321 U.
S. 678,
321 U. S.
683-684. Any other conclusion would infringe an
essential principle of collective bargaining.
See J. I. Case
Co. v. Labor Board, 321 U. S. 332,
321 U. S. 338.
Employer action to bring about changes in wage scales without
consultation and negotiation with the certified representative of
its employees cannot, we think, logically or realistically, be
distinguished from bargaining with individuals or minorities. The
fact that the application to the War Labor Board was not the actual
increase of wages, but a necessary preliminary, does not make
unilateral action, accompanied by publication of the step taken to
the employees, any the less objectionable. The application to the
War Labor Board marked a unilateral determination by the Company
that the employees of this unit should have the specific increase
deemed due them by the Company or none at all, if the bargaining
agent should object in accordance with the letter quoted above. The
employer was not getting into position to negotiate with the agent.
He declared the contrary, and proposed that he, as employer, would
make the increase if permission were granted.
Two national labor groups had each separately sought for months
to organize the Company. One effort to secure the designation of a
unit had failed. The present designation was made over the protests
of the Company. It had urged in its motion for reconsideration of
the order of election:
"There are two competing labor organizations seeking to organize
the employees in this store. By this decision, one of them is
granted an election in the unit composed of two departments. There
are some 350 departments in this store, and if this Employer is to
be confronted with elections and separate bargaining for each one
or two departments,
Page 326 U. S. 385
it will be an endless and intolerable interference with store
operations, which should not be permitted."
By going ahead with wage adjustments without negotiation with
the bargaining agent, it took a step which justified the conclusion
of the Board as to the violation of Section 8(1). Such unilateral
action minimizes the influence of organized bargaining. It
interferes with the right of self-organization by emphasizing to
the employees that there is no necessity for a collective
bargaining agent. If successful in securing approval for the
proposed increase of wages, it might well, as the Board points out,
block the bargaining representative in securing further wage
adjustments.
It may be that the Company sought only to preserve its
opportunity to contest the certification of the unit. It is pointed
out that the increases for which approval was sought covered
several thousand employees, and that it is hardly conceivable that
a general increase for so many would be sought to injure so few.
But the Board's contention is not that the application, as a whole,
was for the purpose of undermining the Council. Its conclusion was
that the manner of presenting and publicizing the application had
the effect of coercing the employees. Instead of taking up the
increase of this unit's wages with the Council, filing a joint
application, with reservation of the Company's legal right to
challenge the certification of the bargaining agent when any
complaint might be filed for refusal to bargain collectively, or,
omitting the employees of the questioned unit, if the Council would
not join in such an application, the Company chose to ignore the
properly certified agent. Nor can we agree that if, under the
procedure suggested, the employees in this unit had been omitted
from the employees who received increases, there would have been
danger that the National Labor Relations Board would have
considered such omission an
Page 326 U. S. 386
unfair labor practice. Whatever weight an omission might have
under other circumstances, under these, it would have followed an
effort to avoid injury to the employees, and could not properly be
held an interference with their rights.
We find no basis for eliminating the announcements or the
publication from consideration on the ground that they were an
exercise of the right of free expression, secured by the First
Amendment. They are a part of the totality of Company activities,
and were properly received by the Board as evidence of the
unilateral action of the employer.
Labor Board v. Virginia
Electric & Power Co., 314 U. S. 469,
314 U. S.
477.
Breadth of Order. Petitioner complains here of the
refusal of the Court to modify paragraph 1(b) of the Board's order
to the extent which petitioner explicitly asked for below in its
petition for rehearing. [
Footnote
5] That paragraph, together with another which enjoins refusal
to bargain, is
Page 326 U. S. 387
set out below. [
Footnote 6]
Petitioner argues that the broad, blanket provisions of 1(b) are
invalid even though, of course, restricted to the few employees in
the effected unit. The language of the prohibition covers
interferences with all the rights of these employees which are
secured by section 7 of the Labor Act, while, at the most,
petitioner urges, the
Page 326 U. S. 388
Board has found and the Circuit Court sustained only two unfair
labor practices by petitioner, "(1) refusal to bargain and (2) the
storewide salary increase." Both of these, it is asserted, are but
incidents in petitioner's effort to obtain judicial review of the
Board's certification. As the Board's selection of an appropriate
unit to choose the employees' bargaining representative and the
Board's subsequent certification of the representative chosen,
section 9, is not judicially reviewable directly, petitioner takes
the position that it committed the unfair labor practice of
refusing to bargain with an accredited union, merely to open the
way for judicial review of the certification. [
Footnote 7] Consequently petitioner urges the
cease and desist order should be no broader than the refusal to
bargain which is covered by paragraph 1(a),
note 6 supra, with the addition of "or from
any other acts in any manner interfering with the representative's
efforts to negotiate." The suggested addition is taken from the
Express Publishing Company case, 312 U.S. at
312 U. S. 438.
Thus, the breadth of paragraph 1(b) of the Board's order is sharply
challenged as being beyond the power of the Board in view of the
evidence and findings in this case.
The scope of injunctions which follow National Labor Relations
Board determinations is important to employer and employee. While
contempt proceedings can be instituted only by the Board and in the
public interest, [
Footnote 8]
the possibility of contempt penalties by the court for future Labor
Act violations adds sufficient additional sanctions to make
material the difference between enjoined and non-enjoined employer
activities. [
Footnote 9] The
decision
Page 326 U. S. 389
in the
Express Publishing Company case emphasized this
issue. [
Footnote 10] The
paragraph under attack in that case was substantially like the
paragraph here attacked.
Page 326 U. S. 390
The test of the proper scope of a cease and desist order is
whether the Board might have reasonably concluded from the evidence
that such an order was necessary to prevent the employer before it
"from engaging in any unfair labor practice . . . affecting
commerce." Section 10(a). [
Footnote 11] Equity has long been accustomed in other
fields to reach conclusions as to the scope of orders which are
necessary
Page 326 U. S. 391
to prevent interferences with the rights of those who seek the
courts' protection. [
Footnote
12] Injunctions in broad terms are granted even in acts of the
widest content, when the court deems them essential to accomplish
the purposes of the act. [
Footnote 13] We think that the Board has the same power
to
Page 326 U. S. 392
determine the needed scope of cease and desist orders under the
National Labor Relations Act that courts have, when authorized to
issue injunctions, in other litigation.
That power of the Board is subject to review under Section 10.
While the Board has been delegated initially the exclusive
authority to prevent unfair labor practices, [
Footnote 14] courts, which are called upon to
enforce such orders by their own decrees, may examine its scope to
see whether on the evidence they go so beyond the authority of the
Board as to require modification as a matter of law before
enforcement. Section 10(a) and (e). The
Express Publishing
Company case declared:
"To justify an order restraining other violations, it must
appear that they bear some resemblance to that which the employer
has committed or that danger of their commission in the future is
to be anticipated from the course of his conduct in the past."
312 U.S. at
312 U. S. 437.
We think that, in the circumstances of this proceeding, although
there is a violation of Section 8(1) as well as 8(5), the violation
of 8(1) is so intertwined with the refusal to bargain with a unit
asserted to be certified improperly that without a clear
determination by the Board of an attitude of opposition to the
purposes of the Act to protect the rights of employees generally,
the decree need not enjoin Company actions which are not determined
by the Board to be so motivated.
This conclusion requires a modification of the decree so that
the injunction will not apply generally to all violations
Page 326 U. S. 393
under the Act of the rights of the employees in Departments 280
and 281, but will apply to other interferences, in violation of
Section 8(1) or otherwise, with the Council's representation of
these employees. There should be added to paragraph 1(a) of the
decree,
note 6 supra,
the following clause,
"or from any other acts in any manner interfering with the
representative's efforts to negotiate for or represent the above
named employees as bargaining agent."
Paragraph 1(b) should be stricken. Textual corrections should be
made to conform to these changes. As thus modified, the decree
is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
49 Stat. 452, 453.
"Sec. 7. Employees shall have the right to self-organization, to
form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively
through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in
concerted activities, for the purpose of collective bargaining or
other mutual aid or protection."
"Sec. 8. It shall be an unfair labor practice for an employer
--"
"(1) To interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the
exercise of the rights guaranteed in section 7."
"
* * * *"
"(5) To refuse to bargain collectively with the representatives
of his employees, subject to the provisions of Section 9(a)."
Opinion of the C.C.A.,
Labor Board v. May Dept. Stores
Co., 146 F.2d 66; determination of National Labor Relations
Board, 53 N.L.R.B. 1366.
[
Footnote 2]
49 Stat. 453, Sec. 9.
"(b) The Board shall decide in each case whether, in order to
insure to employees the full benefit of their right to
self-organization and to collective bargaining, and otherwise to
effectuate the policies of this Act, the unit appropriate for the
purposes of collective bargaining shall be the employer unit, craft
unit, plant unit, or subdivision thereof."
[
Footnote 3]
S.Rep. No.573, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 14.
[
Footnote 4]
In re Houston Shipbuilding Corp., 41 N.L.R.B. 638;
In re American Manufacturing Co., 41 N.L.R.B. 995.
[
Footnote 5]
Section 10(e) of the National Labor Relations Act, 49 Stat. 454,
precludes the consideration by the Circuit Court of any objection
not raised before the Board unless such failure is excusable
because of "extraordinary circumstances." This Court therefore is
authorized,
sua sponte, to appraise the record to
determine the power of the Circuit Court to review paragraph 1(b)
of the Board's order.
Labor Board v. Bradford Dyeing
Assn., 310 U. S. 318,
310 U. S.
341.
In this proceeding, the paragraph first appeared in the
intermediate report of the Board's examiner. The petitioner
excepted specifically to paragraph 1(b) of the proposed order as
"not supported or justified by the record." This was the only
objection made to the paragraph in question in the record of the
proceedings before the Board. The examiner's recommendation was
adopted by the Board in its order. Unless this objection was
sufficiently specific to apprise the Board of the question now
presented, the Circuit Court had no power to consider it.
Marshall Field & Co. v. Labor Board, 318 U.
S. 253. In the
Marshall Field case, we declined
to consider an issue as to the power of the Board to grant a back
pay order which was construed as barring the deduction of
unemployment compensation from the award, although the question was
raised by answer and decided by the Circuit Court of Appeals,
Labor Board v. Marshall Field & Co., 129 F.2d 169. Our
reason for refusing review was that the only objection to the
Board's power was error by the examiner "in making each and every
recommendation." The remedy recommended by the examiner was the
usual back pay less earnings without any word in the report as to
the unemployment compensation. This was too general to apprise the
Board of an intention to bring up the question of the deductibility
of the compensation and of the necessity for findings.
Although it falls short of desirable specificity, we think the
objection was sufficient in the present case. No further findings
are needed. The paragraph in issue is a standard form of order
frequently used by the Board; the same question with respect to an
almost identical order was considered by this Court in
Labor
Board v. Express Pub. Co., 312 U. S. 426, and
has been a frequent subject of dispute in the Circuit Courts
(
see n 10,
infra). These circumstances, coupled with an objection
that the order was "not supported or justified by the record," put
the Board on notice of the issue now presented.
[
Footnote 6]
Decreed that May Department Stores Company, etc., shall:
"1. Cease and desist from: (a) Refusing to bargain collectively
with St. Louis Joint Council, United Retail & Department Store
Employees of America, affiliated with the Congress of Industrial
Organizations, as the exclusive representative of all its employees
at its St. Louis store engaged in the busheling room, second floor,
department 280, and in the busheling room, basement, department
281, including regular extra employees in these departments, but
excluding the two foremen and all other employees of the
respondent;"
"(b) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or
coercing its employees who are referred to in paragraph 1(a) in the
exercise of their right to self-organization, to form, join, or
assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively through
representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in concerted
activities, for the purpose of collective bargaining or other
mutual aid or protection, as guaranteed in Section 7 of the
National Labor Relations Act."
[
Footnote 7]
See American Federation of Labor v. Labor Board,
308 U. S. 401;
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. v. Labor Board, 313 U.
S. 146;
Inland Empire Dist. Council, v. Millis,
325 U. S. 697.
[
Footnote 8]
Amalgamated Utility Workers v. Consolidated Edison Co.,
309 U. S. 261,
309 U. S.
269.
[
Footnote 9]
See, for business operations under contempt orders, 41
Columbia L.Rev. at 913.
[
Footnote 10]
The problem of the scope of injunction dealt with in
Labor
Board v. Express Publishing Co., 312 U.
S. 426, has recently received careful consideration by
judges and writers. 41 Columbia L.Rev. 911; 29 Georgetown L.J.
1026; 53 Harvard L.Rev. 472; 23 Boston Univ.L.Rev. 447; 54 Yale
L.J. 141.
Illustrative of the decisions in the Circuit Courts are the
following cases:
1. National Labor Relations Board
(a) Upholding a general § 8(1) order on the basis of a
single unfair labor practice (the nature of the unfair practices is
given in brackets):
Labor Board v. Highland Park Mfg. Co., 110 F.2d 632 [§
8(5)];
Art Metals Const. Co. v. Labor Board, 110 F.2d 148
[§ 8(5)];
Wilson & Co. v. Board, 124 F.2d 845 [§
8(3)];
Labor Board v. Sunbeam Electric Mfg. Co., 133 F.2d
856 [§ 8(1)];
Labor Board v. Standard Oil Co., 138 F.2d
885 [§ 8(2)].
(b) Upholding a general § 8(1) order where there was more
than one unfair practice:
Labor Board v. Boss Mfg. Co., 107 F.2d 574 [§§ 8(1),
8(3), 8(5)];
Labor Board v. Reed & Prince Mfg. Co.,
118 F.2d 874 [§§ 8(1), 8(3), 8(5)];
F. W. Woolworth Co. v.
Board, 121 F.2d 658 [§§ 8(1), 8(3)];
Board v. Algoma Net
Co., 124 F.2d 730 [§§ 8(1), 8(3)];
Labor Board v. Baldwin
Locomotive Works, 128 F.2d 39 [§§ 8(1), 8(2), 8(3), 8(4)];
Labor Board v. Brezner Tanning Co., 141 F.2d 62 [§§ 8(1),
8(3)];
Idaho Potato Growers v. Board, 144 F.2d 295 [§§
8(3), 8(5)].
(c) Limiting a § 8(1) order based on a single unfair labor
practice to acts specifically condemned:
Globe Cotton Mills v. Board, 103 F.2d 91 [§ 8(5)];
Labor Board v. Swift & Co., 108 F.2d 988 [§ 8(2)];
McQuay-Norris Mfg. Co. v. Board, 119 F.2d 1009 [§ 8(5)];
Labor Board v. Newark Morning Ledger Co., 120 F.2d 262 [§
8(3)];
Labor Board v. Burry Biscuit Corp., 123 F.2d 540 [§
8(2)];
Labor Board v. Stone, 125 F.2d 752 [§ 8(1)];
Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Board, 135 F.2d 891 [§ 8(2)];
Consolidated Aircraft Corp. v. Board, 141 F.2d 785 [§
8(1)];
Labor Board v. Walt Disney Productions, 146 F.2d 44
[§ 8(3)];
Labor Board v. Lipshutz, 149 F.2d 141 [§
8(1)].
(d) Limiting a § 8(1) order where there was more than one
unfair labor practice:
Press Co., Inc. v. Board, 73 App.D.C. 103, 118 F.2d 937
[§§ 8(1), 8(3)];
Labor Board v. Grower-Shipper Vegetable
Assn., 122 F.2d 368 [§§ 8(1), 8(3)];
Wilson & Co. v.
Labor Board, 123 F.2d 411 [§§ 8(1), 8(2), 8(3)];
Labor
Board v. Servel, Inc., 149 F.2d 542 [§§ 8(1), 8(3)].
2. Office of Price Administration
A similar situation prevails with respect to the use of
injunctions to restrain violations of regulations issued under the
Emergency Price Control Act, 56 Stat. 23.
(a) Sustaining general injunctions on the basis of
particular violations of a regulation:
Bowles v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 143 F.2d 38,
(preliminary injunction against violation of any price regulation
for violation of several provisions of one regulation
sustained).
(b) Sustaining limited injunctions: --
Bowles v.
Town Hall Grill, 145 F.2d 680 (violation of restaurant ceiling
prices on poultry, lobster, gin items; injunction limited to such
items sustained);
Bowles v. Sacher, 146 F.2d 186
(sustaining preliminary injunction limited to particular type of
violation proved).
3. Federal Trade Commission
(a) Enforcing or affirming order broader than specific acts
complained of: --
Ostler Candy Co. v. FTC, 106 F.2d
962;
Hershey Chocolate Corp. v. FTC, 121 F.2d 968;
Eugene Dietzgen Co. v. FTC, 142 F.2d 321.
(b) Limiting orders to specific acts: --
FTC v.
Beechnut Packing Co., 257 U. S. 441;
FTC v. A. McLean & Son, 84 F.2d 910;
Helen
Ardelle, Inc. v. FTC, 101 F.2d 718.
[
Footnote 11]
Ethyl Gasoline Corp. v. United States, 309 U.
S. 436,
309 U. S. 461;
Union Pacific R. Co. v. United States, 313 U.
S. 450,
313 U. S. 470;
United States v. Bausch & Lomb Optical Co.,
321 U. S. 707,
321 U. S.
724.
[
Footnote 12]
Hecht Co. v. Bowles, 321 U. S. 321,
321 U. S. 328;
Wyoming v. Colorado, 286 U. S. 494,
286 U. S.
508.
[
Footnote 13]
Sherman Act --
Standard Oil Co. v. United States,
221 U. S. 1,
221 U. S. 77:
"It may be conceded that, ordinarily, where it was found that
acts had been done in violation of the statute, adequate measure of
relief would result from restraining the doing of such acts in the
future.
Swift & Co. v. United States, 196 U. S.
375. But, in a case like this, where the condition which
has been brought about in violation of the statute, in and of
itself, is not only a continued attempt to monopolize, but also a
monopolization, the duty to enforce the statute requires the
application of broader and more controlling remedies."
"So far as the owners of the stock of the subsidiary
corporations and the corporations themselves were concerned after
the stock had been transferred, § 6 of the decree enjoined them
from in any way conspiring or combining to violate the act, or to
monopolize or attempt to monopolize in virtue of their ownership of
the stock transferred to them, and prohibited all agreements
between the subsidiary corporations or other stockholders in the
future, tending to produce or bring about further violations of the
act."
221 U.S. at
221 U. S. 79.
"We so think, since we construe the sixth paragraph of the
decree not as depriving the stockholders or the corporations, after
the dissolution of the combination, of the power to make normal and
lawful contracts or agreements, but as restraining them from, by
any device whatever, recreating, directly or indirectly, the
illegal combination which the decree dissolved."
221 U.S. at
221 U. S. 81.
Local 167 v. United States, 291 U.
S. 293,
291 U. S.
299:
"Appellants seek elimination of the provision of the decree that
enjoins them from using any of the offices or positions in Local
167 or the shochtim union 'for the purpose of coercing marketmen to
buy poultry, poultry feed, or other commodities necessary to the
poultry business from particular sellers thereof.' The United
States is entitled to effective relief. To that end, the decree
should enjoin acts of the sort that are shown by the evidence to
have been done or threatened in furtherance of the conspiracy. It
should be broad enough to prevent evasion. In framing its
provisions, doubts should be resolved in favor of the government
and against the conspirators.
Warner & Co. v. Lilly &
Co., 265 U. S. 526,
265 U. S.
532. . . . When regard is had to the evidence disclosing
the numerous purposes of the conspiracy and the acts of coercion
customarily employed by defendants, it is plain that the clause
referred to cannot be condemned as unnecessary or without
warrant."
See American Steel Foundries v. Tri-City Central Trades
Council, 257 U. S. 184,
257 U. S.
194.
[
Footnote 14]
S.Rep. No. 573, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 15; H.Rep. No. 1147,
74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 23.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE, concurring in part.
I cannot agree, as the Court seems to say and the Labor Board
found, [
Footnote 2/1] that there
were two unfair practices in this case -- (1) refusal to bargain,
contrary to § 8(5), and (2) interference, restraint and coercion of
employees in violation of § 8(1). I think only one unfair labor
practice was shown -- namely, refusal to bargain -- and, for that
reason, I think the Board's order must be modified to eliminate the
restraints based on its finding of violation
Page 326 U. S. 394
of § 8(1) as the
Express Publishing Company case,
312 U. S. 426,
requires in such a situation.
I am unable to understand the majority's application of that
case to a situation in which the Board has found there were two
different and substantial violations of the Act. The Court does not
hold to the contrary, or rule that either finding was unsupported
by the evidence. Rather, it seems to approve and sustain both. Yet
it modifies, as I think, ambiguously, [
Footnote 2/2] the relief which the Board found
appropriate to prevent a repetition of the interference, coercion,
and restraint it determined had been inflicted upon the employees,
in addition to the refusal to bargain. The
Express
Publishing case covers no such situation. It was limited to
one where the Board had imposed both types of restraint upon a
finding only of refusal to bargain. [
Footnote 2/3]
It is apposite to inquire, therefore, whether that case has now
been expanded to forbid the Board to impose
Page 326 U. S. 395
both types of restraint where it has found both kinds of
violation and neither finding is overturned. If so, I think the
result squarely conflicts with repeated decisions, reflected in the
language of the opinion in the
Express Publishing case
itself, that, "having found the acts which constitute the unfair
labor practice, the Board is free to restrain the practice and
other like or related unlawful acts."
312 U. S. 312 U.S.
426,
312 U. S. 436.
[
Footnote 2/4]
It is important for the administration of the Act to know
whether the Board is to be free to adapt the remedy to fit the evil
it has found to exist, as the statute commands, § 10(c), or, on the
contrary, its remedy thus adapted may be stricken down or modified
although the finding which justifies it is approved. That, in my
judgment, goes beyond correction of abuse of the Board's discretion
and substitutes the Court's judgment for the Board's in devising
the appropriate remedy.
For this reason, it becomes important to state the different
reasons why I think the order should be modified to eliminate any
restraint based upon the finding of violation of § 8(1). It is not
because this Court has power or discretion, when there are two
substantial and different unfair practices, to modify the Board's
order by restricting the relief to what is appropriate to
prevent
Page 326 U. S. 396
repeating only one or by other modification to eliminate relief
appropriately designed by the Board to prevent repetition of unfair
practices it has found to exist. It is because, in my opinion,
there was only one unfair practice, and that was the refusal to
bargain. Hence, I think the
Express Publishing case
exactly applies, and does so without necessity for extending the
scope of its ruling, as the Court's application appears to do.
In my judgment, an employer does not commit an unfair labor
practice when he does no more than exercise rights secured by the
Federal Constitution and laws, including the Wagner Act. [
Footnote 2/5] That Act does not put him to
the choice of giving up his rights or exercising them on pain of
being found guilty of unfair practice. Apart from the evidence
relating to refusal to bargain under § 8(5), there was nothing, in
my opinion, which went beyond what was necessary to exercise or
preserve the employer's rights secured by law. The application to
the War Labor Board, for approval of the proposed weekly increase
of $2.00 for all the St. Louis employees, except those represented
by recognized unions, was made August 31, 1943, shortly after the
company had declined to bargain with the union in order to preserve
its right to contest appropriateness of the unit. Announcements of
this action over the public address system followed on September 1
and 11, with one also in "Store Chat" on September 3.
In the background of the facts, I do not think these acts
amounted to more than the exercise of legal rights secured to the
employer by the Wagner Act, the Stabilization Act, and the First
Amendment. They constituted neither a wage increase nor an offer of
one. There was no more than taking steps to secure official
approval, required in advance by the Stabilization Act, to make an
increase, or
Page 326 U. S. 397
tender one at some uncertain future date, possibly never to
arrive. The application was merely a necessary preliminary step to
later action. which might or might not materialize, in the nature
of dealing with employees or offering to do so, whether directly or
through their bargaining representatives.
The case, therefore, is not
Medo, [
Footnote 2/6] in spite of the Board's repeated and
insistent argument to the contrary. There, the employer actually
dealt with the employees, not only negotiating but contracting with
them. So, in
J. I. Case Co. v. Labor Board, 321 U.
S. 332. Here, there was neither negotiation nor
contracting. There was nothing the employer could offer at that
time, or the employees then could accept. There was only
preparatory action looking to the possibility of later
negotiations, and announcement of this action to the employees.
If the employer had the right to put itself legally in position
to negotiate, either with the employees or with the union, it also
had the right to state what it had done. The effect of the Board's
decision, and now apparently of the Court's, is to rule that the
Wagner Act so circumscribes an employer that he cannot take the
necessary preliminary steps -- in this case, required by law -- to
place himself in position to undertake bargaining with his
employees, whether directly or through their selected
representatives. It is further to hold that, if he takes such steps
without having first secured the union's permission, he must keep
the fact to himself, and dare not disclose to his employees what is
to all others a matter of public record. This goes beyond
protecting the rights of employees. It gives to the union a veto on
management, not only as respects negotiations for terms of
employment, but for putting the employer in position to negotiate.
No case here has gone so far, and, in my judgment, the Wagner Act
does not contemplate that any should do so.
Page 326 U. S. 398
Other facts bear out this conclusion. One is that the Board made
no finding that the employer's action was taken with intent to
interfere with, restrain, or coerce the employees in respect to
their rights. Naturally enough, there was no such finding. The
application affected some 4,500 employees. The unit involved only
about 30. It is hardly conceivable that the employer would have
taken this step in relation to so many for the purpose of coercing,
interfering with or restraining 30. There is lacking, therefore,
any showing or finding of intent, a factor the courts have
considered important in concluding from otherwise innocent or
equivocal facts that unfair practice may exist, [
Footnote 2/7] and one which, in this case, the
Court apparently makes crucial to determine whether relief relevant
to a finding of unfair practice may be sustained. The Board found
only that the employer's "unilateral action," in making the
application to the War Labor Board and in announcing this fact,
"
had the effect of depriving the Union of credit which
normally would accrue to it, and of nullifying its efficacy as a
bargaining agent." (Emphasis added.)
Even were this true, it has not heretofore been held that the
Wagner Act forbids an employer to take any preliminary step
whatever looking toward dealing with his employees in the future
which, though not intended to discredit the union, may have the
effect to prevent it from obtaining some credit for proposing
possible future action which in fact the employer has proposed.
Nothing in the Act requires an employer to maintain a union's
prestige or to give it credit for originating all proposals
Page 326 U. S. 399
which may have some future effect upon his relations with his
employees. Section 8(1) forbids interference, coercion, and
restraint upon employees, in the exercise of their rights, not the
mere failure of the employer to magnify the union's influence.
Moreover, the Board made no finding, presumably because there is
no evidence to sustain one, of particular and concrete facts
showing that the employer's so-called "unilateral action" adversely
affected the union's status among its members or other employees.
[
Footnote 2/8] It only concluded
that the action "reasonably [may] be said to have undermined the
Union . . . and to have discouraged employees generally in their
union affiliation." Presumably since no such effects were proved or
found specifically, the basis for this conclusion was the Board's
"experience," though this was not referred to in the order or the
report on which it was founded. That foundation was not sufficient,
in my judgment, in the absence of proof of more unequivocal acts of
unfair practice, of any finding of intent to interfere, restrain or
coerce, and of any showing whatever of specific discouraging or
undermining effects. Something more than supposition should
underlie a conclusion which supports a finding of unfair
practice.
Nor did the employer ignore the union's possibly legitimate
status, or its right to have a voice in the matter of the increase,
if approval by the War Labor Board should materialize. The
application set forth the essential facts with reference to the
existing dispute concerning appropriateness of the unit, the
employer's intention to litigate the question whenever it might,
its nonrecognition of the
Page 326 U. S. 400
union pending the obtaining of a decision, and its purpose for
these reasons to include the affected employees in the application.
But the application went on to say that, if the union should object
to the increase for Departments 280 and 281, the Board should
consider it as amended to exclude those employees. [
Footnote 2/9]
This hardly furnishes ground for concluding that the employer
was attempting to "short circuit" the union, undermine it, or
discredit it with the employees. It explicitly recognized that the
union, if rightly designated and certified, was entitled to say
whether or not the proposed change in pay should become effective.
Actually, that right was conceded, regardless of the ultimate
outcome of the issue on validity of the certification. [
Footnote 2/10] Clearly, in view of this
concession, there was no effort either to contract with the
employees directly or to deal with them, over the union's head,
about the increase. Whether or not it should become effective as to
them was left not to the employees themselves, but to the sole and
exclusive judgment of the union. There was therefore no semblance
of the short circuiting or direct dealing with employees which was
present in both the
Medo and the
J. I. Case
decisions.
Possibly for this reason, the Board is driven back to its
"undermining" contention. The company, it says, by including these
employees, "put the union on the spot," so that it had no real
choice. The argument shows concern for the union's "spot," but
gives no recognition to the employer's. The Board does not urge
that the company should have excluded these employees from the
general application, with good reason. Had this been done,
Page 326 U. S. 401
obviously the company would have laid itself open to a charge
and a finding of unfair practice under § 8(1). The Board is
unwilling, apparently, to put the employer in that dilemma.
Cf.
Medo Photo Supply Corp. v. Labor Board, 321 U.
S. 678,
321 U. S. 699.
It does not say, though the Court does, by way of dictum, that
excluding these employees from the application would not have been
an unfair practice. The Board says the employer's only way out was
to consult the union before making the application.
This can only mean that the employer was compelled to ask the
union's permission to include these employees -- in short, that the
union had the right under the Wagner Act to veto any action taken
by the employer to obtain the necessary legal authority to propose
any increase for them, whether directly or through the union. I do
not think the Wagner Act confers such a power on the union. Nor did
the Stabilization Act or the regulations in effect pursuant to its
provisions do so. [
Footnote 2/11]
Moreover, the employer asserts that it could not refer the matter
to the union without surrendering the very rights it was seeking to
preserve. This, it says, would have amounted to recognition,
Page 326 U. S. 402
and would have foreclosed it later from securing review under
the terms of § 10 upon the question whether the unit was
appropriate.
Whether or not that is true, there was certainly good reason to
believe it so. The right to review is given in terms only as an
incident of an unfair practice proceeding. § 10;
cf. American
Federation of Labor v. Labor Board, 308 U.
S. 401;
Inland Empire Dist. Council v. Millis,
325 U. S. 697. In
this state of the law, the company's only certain remedy was to
withhold recognition until the matter could be determined. Had it
recognized the union by seeking its permission to include the
affected employees, there would have been no factual or legal basis
for the only proceedings by which review was assured; and, in order
to secure it, the company then would have been forced to commit
some other act of unfair practice or to take its chance upon some
other doubtful remedy. In either event, it would have been
confronted with its prior action of dealing with the union and the
possibilities this would present either for applying the broad
doctrine of estoppel or for occupying the inconsistent -- not to
say indefensible -- position of having recognized the union and
then having deliberately repudiated the recognition.
I do not think the Wagner Act was intended to put the employer
in such a dilemma. It has been settled that he takes the risk of
his error when he mistakenly judges that the unit is not
appropriate, or for other reason, that the duly selected or
certified union is not entitled to recognition. [
Footnote 2/12] As to that, the employer's choice
was hard, made so by the very state of the law. Had the law been
that
Page 326 U. S. 403
certification was none of the Company's business, and that the
company had no right of review, it would have known its rights and
its liabilities. That was not and is not the law. The company was
told expressly that it had a right of review, but only in an unfair
practice proceeding. [
Footnote
2/13] It was therefore put to the choice, by the statute's
terms, of foregoing review or having it by an act of unfair
practice. Hence, the finding of unfair practice by refusal to
bargain must be sustained. But, in taking this risk, the employer
did no more than it was compelled by law to do to save its rights
under the Wagner Act and to avoid being found guilty, by virtue of
some alternative course of conduct relating to the application, of
further unfair practices.
I do not agree therefore that this necessitous action amounted
to an additional unfair practice, in the nature of interference,
coercion, or restraint of employees' rights, whether or not the
finding that it was is sufficient to sustain an independent
provision for relief.
A word remains to be said concerning the announcements. As has
been stated, if the company had the right to make the application
as it did, it also had the right to announce that fact to the
public and to the employees, so long as, in doing this, it did not
do so with intent or in a manner to violate the Act. I find nothing
in the announcements to justify a finding they were made with this
purpose or effect, and there is no finding to the contrary.
[
Footnote 2/14] They were, in my
judgment, no more than an
Page 326 U. S. 404
exercise of the employer's rights of free speech and a free
press, secured by the First Amendment.
Cf. Labor Board v.
Virginia Elec. & Power Co., 314 U.
S. 469;
Labor Board v. Ford Motor Co., 114 F.2d
905;
Labor Board v. American Tube Bending Co., 134 F.2d
993;
compare Texas & N.O. R. Co. v. Brotherhood,
281 U. S. 548,
281 U. S.
568.
It follows from my view of the case that the Board's order
should be modified by striking from it Paragraph 1(b) together with
the words "and (b)" from Paragraph 2(b), and, as so modified,
enforced. Accordingly, I think the judgment of the Court of
Appeals, enforcing the Board's order, should be modified in these
respects and, as thus modified, affirmed.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER join in this
opinion.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The Board adopted the trial examiner's intermediate report
without change, the employer not having applied for oral argument.
53 N.L.R.B. 1366. After reviewing the evidence under the separate
headings of "A. The refusal to bargain" and "B. Interference,
restraint and coercion," the report found as to the former that,
"on July 19, 1943, and at all times thereafter," the company had
refused to bargain collectively with the union; as to the latter,
"that, by its unilateral action in seeking approval of its proposed
wage adjustments," and by later publicizing this action, it had
"interfered with, restrained and coerced its employees" in the
exercise of the rights guaranteed in § 7. There were separate and
independent conclusions of law based on these findings, to which
the separate provisions of the order related.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The modification directed by the Court, if it is more than a
change in the form of words used in Paragraph 1(b) of the Board's
order, necessarily cuts down the substance of the order. But, since
the injunction will apply "to other interferences, in violation of
Section 8(1) or otherwise, with the Council's representation" of
employees in Departments 280 and 281, and since violation of § 8(1)
includes interference, restraint, or coercion of employees' rights
as guaranteed by § 7, it is difficult to understand in just what
particulars the order has been modified. In the absence of more
definite specification, we must accept the Court's modification as
meaning that some substantial change from the order's terms is
intended.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Under the ruling, the Board is not free to utilize § 8(1) as a
device for multiplying an unfair practice under § 8(5) so that the
single act of refusing to bargain may be made to justify an order
forbidding not only that conduct, but also the numerous types of
unfair practice prohibited by the broad language of § 8(1). The
gist of the decision was that the Board cannot thus pile unfair
practice on unfair practice, like presumption on presumption, for
purposes of enforceable relief notwithstanding the act of merely
refusing to bargain may be held technically to violate both
sections in view of the language of § 7.
Labor Board v. Express
Publishing Co., 312 U. S. 426,
312 U. S.
433.
[
Footnote 2/4]
This Court has, in various contexts, declared that the
particular means by which the effects of unfair labor practices are
to be expunged is for the Board, and not for the courts, to
determine.
Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Labor
Board, 319 U. S. 533,
319 U. S. 539;
Labor Board v. Link-Belt Co., 311 U.
S. 584,
311 U. S. 600;
International Association of Machinists v. Labor Board,
311 U. S. 72,
311 U. S. 82.
See Labor Board v. Bradford Dyeing Association,
310 U. S. 318,
310 U. S.
342-343. And the Court has said that "the relation of
remedy to policy is peculiarly a matter for administrative
competence," and that "courts must not enter the allowable area of
the Board's discretion. . . ."
Phelps Dodge Corp. v. Labor
Board, 313 U. S. 177,
313 U. S. 194.
See also Regal Knitwear Co. v. Labor Board, 324 U. S.
9,
324 U. S. 13.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Wagner Act, designed to promote the public interest by
securing employees' rights, does so by appropriate remedies which
also afford protections for the employer.
See text at
note 13
[
Footnote 2/6]
Medo Photo Supply Corp. v. Labor Board, 321 U.
S. 678.
[
Footnote 2/7]
See Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Labor Board, 107 F.2d
555, 559;
Labor Board v. Whittier Mills Co., 111 F.2d 474,
478, 479;
Labor Board v. Elkland Leather Co., 114 F.2d
221, 224;
Labor Board v. Chicago Apparatus Co., 116 F.2d
753, 756, 757;
Peter J. Schweitzer, Inc. v. Labor Board,
79 U.S.App.D.C. 178, 144 F.2d 520, 522.
[
Footnote 2/8]
The general "finding" that the company's action in making the
application and publicizing it "interfered with, restrained, and
coerced its employees," 53 N.L.R.B. at 1371, rested on no more than
the Board's assertion that "it logically follows" that these acts
"had the effect" of depriving the union of credit, and "may . . .
be said to have undermined" it.
[
Footnote 2/9]
The Board's brief states that the union objected and the War
Labor Board accordingly eliminated the bushelmen from the
application, citing
In re May Dept. Stores Co., N.W.L.B.
Case No. 7-6585 (unreported).
[
Footnote 2/10]
See 326
U.S. 376fn2/11|>note 11.
[
Footnote 2/11]
The regulations required that the application be signed "either
(a) jointly by the employer and a duly recognized collective
bargaining agency . . . or (b) by the employer alone." 4 War Labor
Rep. xxxi, xxxiii-xxxiv, § III, 3. It was further required, in
either case, that the application state whether or not there was "a
duly recognized collective bargaining agency . . . which has not
joined with the employer in the application." If so, provision was
made for the Wage and Hour Division to notify the organization and
request it to inform the office of objections, if any, to action on
the application.
Cf. 326
U.S. 376fn2/9|>note 9. If none were made, the application
would be acted on. If made, the matter was to be treated as a
dispute, and referred to the Conciliation Service of the Department
of Labor
It was apparently in compliance with this regulation that the
application in this case set forth the representations concerning
the nonrecognition of the union, the dispute, etc. The regulations
were amended later to include either a recognized or a certified
union. 9 War Labor Rep. xxxiii; 8 Fed.Reg. 16678.
[
Footnote 2/12]
See, e.g., Labor Board v. Hearst Publications,
322 U. S. 111;
Franks Bros. Co. v. Labor Board, 321 U.
S. 702;
Medo Photo Supply Corp. v. Labor Board,
321 U. S. 678;
J. I. Case Co. v. Labor Board, 321 U.
S. 332;
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. v. Labor
Board, 313 U. S. 146;
Labor Board v. Bradford Dyeing Assn., 310 U.
S. 318;
National Licorice Co. v. Labor Board,
309 U. S. 350;
cf. H. J. Heinz Co. v. Labor Board, 311 U.
S. 514,
311 U. S. 523
(employer bargained, but refused to sign written contract).
[
Footnote 2/13]
The attenuated character of the right makes all the more
essential that it not be whittled away or nullified by rulings
which make its exercise more precarious than it is by the very
conditions of its existence.
[
Footnote 2/14]
The mere fact that the announcements omitted specific reference
to Departments 280 and 281 does not supply this element. Such a
reference, if made, might have been construed, by its singling out
of this unit for special treatment and thereby for invidious
implication, as furnishing the very evidence of wrongful specific
intent and effect which the Board has failed to find.