UNF West, Incorporated v. NLRB , 844 F.3d 451 ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •       Case: 16-60124   Document: 00513806450    Page: 1   Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 16-60124                       FILED
    December 20, 2016
    Lyle W. Cayce
    UNF WEST, INCORPORATED,                                             Clerk
    Petitioner Cross-Respondent
    v.
    NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD,
    Respondent Cross-Petitioner
    On Petition for Review and Cross-Application
    for Enforcement of an Order of the
    National Labor Relations Board
    Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and SMITH and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.
    CARL E. STEWART, Chief Judge:
    UNF West, Inc. (“UNF”) petitions for review of a National Labor Relations
    Board (“Board”) Decision and Order finding that UNF engaged in unfair labor
    practices by (1) interrogating employees about their union activities, (2)
    threatening employees with futility regarding their rights to organize and
    bargain collectively, and (3) threatening employees with reduction of wages.
    The Board cross-applies for enforcement of its Order. UNF’s petition is
    DENIED; the Board’s cross-application is GRANTED.
    I.    Background
    UNF is a California corporation involved in distributing natural and
    organic foods. It maintains a facility in Moreno Valley, California. The
    Case: 16-60124      Document: 00513806450         Page: 2    Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 166 (“Union”) began an
    organizing campaign at the Moreno Valley facility in 2012. That same year the
    Board conducted a representation election, which the Union lost. The Union
    subsequently filed objections based on alleged unfair labor practices, asking
    for the result to be set aside. The Regional Director found merit in the Union’s
    claims, and the matter was heard before an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”).
    However, before the ALJ ruled, the Union withdrew its objections to the
    election and sought again to be elected as the employees’ representative. The
    ALJ eventually rendered his decision, which the Board adopted and the D.C.
    Circuit enforced in UNF West, Inc. I, 
    361 NLRB No. 42
     (2014). Meanwhile, the
    Board set a new election date for late May, but canceled that election the night
    before due to fresh allegations of unfair labor practices on the part of Juan
    Negroni (“Negroni”) and Carlos Ortiz (“Ortiz”), Kulture labor consultants who
    acted as UNF’s agents. 1
    After a hearing, a second ALJ found the conduct of these consultants to have
    violated Section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”) insofar
    as it involved (1) engaging in coercive interrogation with and making threats
    of futility to employee Armando Perez Aceves (“Aceves”), (2) doing the same
    with respect to employee Lino Contreras (“Contreras”), and (3) threatening a
    group of employees with the possibility of a reduction in wages. According to
    testimony presented at the hearing, the culpable conduct occurred on three
    separate occasions.
    First, on May 9, 2014, Aceves attended a meeting with Ortiz, at which
    Negroni was also present. Aceves was an open union supporter, but the ALJ
    1  Although not specifically stated in the record, it appears from the context of the
    references in the witnesses’ testimony, the ALJ’s decision, and the parties’ briefs that
    “Kulture” refers to Kulture Consulting, LLC—an organization that offers consulting services
    in the field of labor relations.
    2
    Case: 16-60124    Document: 00513806450    Page: 3   Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    found no evidence that this fact was known to UNF. Aceves testified that the
    meeting lasted about 40–50 minutes. After the meeting, Aceves testified that
    he returned to his work area in the warehouse. Negroni approached Aceves in
    the warehouse and asked him, “How are you doing? How do you feel with the
    Union?” Aceves replied, “Is this an interrogation? I’m working. Leave me alone.
    I’m working. Don’t interrupt me.” Negroni said, “Calm down.” Aceves then
    showed Negroni a document entitled “Employee Rights Under the National
    Labor Relations Act” because, as Aceves testified, Negroni pressured
    employees and spoke ill of the Union. After seeing the document, Negroni said,
    “This document doesn’t work here, my brother.” He also said, “Who pays your
    check, the company or the Union?” Aceves then asked Negroni, “If the firemen,
    the policemen, have [a] union, why are you always talking bad about the
    Union?” Negroni stared at Aceves and then left.
    With regard to the second incident, Contreras alleged that he had a
    conversation with Negroni in the warehouse on May 22, 2014. Negroni
    purportedly approached him in an aisle and asked, “What about the Union?”
    Negroni went on to say, “I have heard that the Union is making a lot of
    promises.” After Contreras denied this and suggested that Negroni and his
    colleagues were “making false promises” and “[l]ying to people and threatening
    them,” Negroni allegedly said “I hope the company won’t hear what you’re
    saying.” In response, Contreras showed him the same document that Aceves
    had shown Negroni two weeks prior, which prompted Negroni to admonish
    that the document was “useless,” as “[t]he company ha[d] its own policies.”
    As to the third incident, on May 16, 2014, UNF called Contreras to attend
    an employee meeting in the human resources department at which Ortiz gave
    a slide presentation. Contreras testified that Ortiz began the meeting by
    speaking ill of the Union, whereupon Contreras interjected with the following:
    “I have heard from the warehouse that you guys are saying that if the Union
    3
    Case: 16-60124     Document: 00513806450      Page: 4    Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    wins, the Company’s going to reduce the wages of all the employees.” Ortiz
    responded, “Lino, we put that message on the projector so everybody could see
    it. Lino, of course, if the Union wins, the Company could reduce your wages.”
    Contreras responded, “But that’s illegal.” Ortiz responded again, “Lino, who
    pays your salary? The Company, right? Therefore, the Company has the right
    to reduce your salary.” Employee Juan Urquiza, also present at the meeting,
    corroborated this version of events, testifying that in response to questioning
    by Contreras, Ortiz said, “If the Union won and they would represent [you] , .
    . the company could lower [your] wages, salaries . . . because the company pays
    [your] salaries.”
    The Board considered and affirmed the ALJ’s rulings and adopted his
    recommended Order. UNF then filed the instant petition with this court.
    II.    Standard of Review
    We will affirm the Board’s findings of fact if they are “supported by
    substantial evidence on the record, considered as a whole.” Poly-Am., Inc. v.
    NLRB, 
    260 F.3d 465
    , 476 (5th Cir. 2001). “Substantial evidence is that which
    is relevant and sufficient for a reasonable mind to accept as adequate to
    support a conclusion. It is more than a mere scintilla, and less than a
    preponderance.” El Paso Elec. Co. v. NLRB, 
    681 F.3d 651
    , 656 (5th Cir. 2012)
    (emphasis omitted) (quoting Spellman v. Shalala, 
    1 F.3d 357
    , 360 (5th Cir.
    1993)). Although the reviewing court is “obligated to consider evidence that
    detracts from the Board’s finding,” Asarco, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    86 F.3d 1401
    , 1406
    (5th Cir. 1996), the ALJ’s decision stands “if a reasonable person could have
    found what the ALJ found, even if the appellate court might have reached a
    different conclusion had the matter been presented to it in the first instance.”
    Standard Fittings Co. v. NLRB, 
    845 F.2d 1311
    , 1314 (5th Cir. 1988). The ALJ’s
    credibility choices bind this court “unless one of the following factors exists: (1)
    the credibility choice is unreasonable, (2) the choice contradicts other findings,
    4
    Case: 16-60124     Document: 00513806450      Page: 5   Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    (3) the choice is based upon inadequate reasons or no reason, or (4) the ALJ
    failed to justify his choice.” Asarco, 
    86 F.3d at 1406
    .
    Challenges to legal conclusions are reviewed de novo, 
    id.,
     while procedural
    and evidentiary rulings are reviewed for abuse of discretion. Marathon
    LeTourneau Co., Longview Div. v. NLRB, 
    699 F.2d 248
    , 254 (5th Cir. 1983).
    III.   Discussion
    The NLRA functions to regulate conduct attending organizational activities
    in the workplace in a manner that balances between protecting the rights of
    employees, employers, and “to a lesser extent, . . . the union.” 2 Section 7 of the
    NLRA grants employees a wide range of rights to organize themselves, to “form
    join, or assist labor organizations,” to engage in collective bargaining via their
    chosen representatives, “to engage in concerted activities” to further collective
    bargaining or “other mutual aid or protection,” or to refrain from these
    activities. 
    29 U.S.C. § 157
     (2015). Section 8(a)(1) functions to protect employees
    in the exercise of these rights, and it outlaws as “unfair labor practices” any
    employer activities that “interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the
    exercise of the rights guaranteed in [Section 7].” 
    29 U.S.C. § 158
     (a)(1). In this
    case, the alleged unfair labor practices take the form of (1) a threat to reduce
    wages, (2) threats of futility regarding exercise of Section 7 rights, and (3)
    coercive interrogation of employees.
    A. Threats to Reduce Wages
    The ALJ determined (1) that Ortiz’s statement—that UNF could reduce
    employees’ wages because it pays those wages—came before the slide
    presentation and included no mention of collective bargaining, and (2) that
    even if the later slide presentation referenced collective bargaining, the earlier
    2 1 ABA SECTION OF LABOR & EMPLOYMENT LAW, THE DEVELOPING LABOR LAW 81
    (John E. Higgins, Jr., et al. eds., 6th ed. 2012).
    5
    Case: 16-60124     Document: 00513806450       Page: 6   Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    statement without that reference was never specifically corrected. Accordingly,
    Ortiz’s statement could be reasonably interpreted as conveying a threat that
    UNF would unilaterally reduce wages should the Union win the election.
    On appeal, UNF contends that because (1) the slide presentation began by
    defining collective bargaining as the subject of the meeting and (2) Ortiz read
    slides describing collective bargaining in an objective manner and specifically
    disclaimed authority to make threats, the slides should establish that Ortiz’s
    statements were made in the context of collective bargaining.
    The alleged threats to reduce wages at the May 16, 2014 meeting violate
    Section 8(a)(1) “if, under the totality of the circumstances, ‘the employees could
    [have] reasonably conclude[d] that the employer [was] threatening economic
    reprisals if they support[ed] the Union.’” TRW-United Greenfield Div. v. NLRB,
    
    637 F.2d 410
    , 418 (5th Cir. 1981) (quoting Hendrix Mfg. Co. v. NLRB, 
    321 F.2d 100
    , 105 (5th Cir. 1963)). Employers are “free only to tell ‘what [they]
    reasonably believe[ ] will be the likely economic consequences of unionization
    that are outside [their] control,’ and not ‘threats of economic reprisal to be
    taken solely on [their] own volition.’” NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co., 
    395 U.S. 575
    , 619 (1969) (quoting NLRB v. River Togs, Inc., 
    382 F.2d 198
    , 202 (2d Cir.
    1967)). Although employers can communicate “general views about unionism”
    or “specific views about a particular union,” TRW, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    654 F.2d 307
    ,
    313 (5th Cir. 1981), statements that carry “any implication that an employer
    may or may not take action solely on his own initiative for reasons unrelated
    to economic necessities and known only to him,” are considered impermissible
    threats of retaliation. Gissel, 
    395 U.S. at 618
    .
    Cases applying this rule to statements regarding reductions in wages or
    benefits have found that such a statement is not a threat of reprisal where it
    “was made in a context . . . indicat[ing] . . . that bargaining is a process in which
    each side makes its own proposals, that it requires mutual agreement, and
    6
    Case: 16-60124    Document: 00513806450     Page: 7   Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    where existing benefits may be traded away.” Histacount Corp., 
    278 NLRB 681
    , 689 (1986). But if the statement in its context “fail[s] to include any
    reference to the collective-bargaining process or to any economic necessities or
    other objective facts as a basis for its prediction that wages might be reduced,”
    then it is impermissible, because it implies that an employer may act on its
    own initiative, unilaterally, and for its own reasons. President Riverboat
    Casinos of Mo., Inc., 
    329 NLRB 77
    , 77 (1999).
    We agree with the Board and the ALJ that Ortiz’s statements constitute a
    threat to reduce wages in violation of Section 8(a)(1). Our review of the record
    evidence shows that the context existing contemporaneously with or
    immediately prior to Ortiz’s statements was devoid of reference to the give and
    take of collective bargaining. This is because the only statements objectively
    characterizing collective bargaining began at the second slide of the
    presentation, and according to testimony credited by the ALJ, Ortiz’s
    problematic statements were made before he began reading the slides. In the
    absence of prior or contemporaneous context indicating that collective
    bargaining is a give-and-take process, Ortiz’s admonition that “of course, if the
    Union wins, the Company could reduce your wages,” along with “Lino, who
    pays your salary? . . . The Company, right? Therefore, the Company has the
    right to reduce your salary” reasonably implied that UNF could unilaterally
    lower wages for any reason it chose. See 
    id. at 77
    ; Gissel, 
    395 U.S. at 618
    .
    Second, Ortiz’s later statements, which consisted of his reading the slide
    presentation text word for word, did not even address the earlier implication
    that UNF could unilaterally reduce wages. While only contemporaneous or
    earlier contextual factors can influence a statement’s reasonable import for the
    listener at the time that the statement was uttered, see TRW, 
    654 F.2d at 313
    (noting that “language used by the parties involved in a union representation
    campaign . . . must be considered in light of the circumstances existing when
    7
    Case: 16-60124      Document: 00513806450        Page: 8    Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    such language was spoken” (emphasis added)), additional comments can be
    made to clarify, expand, or otherwise alter the context and reasonable import
    of that statement. See Plastronics, Inc., 
    233 NLRB 155
    , 156 (1977) (noting that
    “statements are not objectionable when additional communication to the
    employees” establishes that reductions in wages will come only as a result of
    “the normal give and take of collective bargaining,” thus dispelling any
    misimpressions). However, any remedial statements must be, inter alia,
    specific in nature to the coercive conduct. Passavant Mem’l Area Hosp., 
    237 NLRB 138
    , 138 (1978); accord Teksid Aluminum Foundry, Inc., 
    311 NLRB 711
    ,
    711 n.2 (1993). In this case, the content of the slides that Ortiz read—stating
    that “bargaining starts from where you are now and you can gain, stay the
    same, or you can lose,” and that “as a result of bargaining, you may end up
    with more than you have today, the same as you have today, or less than you
    have today”—fails to specifically address the earlier implication that UNF
    could unilaterally lower wages if the Union carried the election. Accordingly,
    we conclude that the ALJ’s holding is not in error. 3 Asarco, 
    86 F.3d at 1406
    .
    B. Threats of Futility
    The ALJ found that Negroni’s May 9th statement in relation to the
    document listing employee rights that Aceves handed to him “doesn’t work
    here” clearly conveyed that Section 7 rights, “including the right to form a
    union, did not apply to [UNF] and it was therefore useless for Aceves to
    attempt to organize with his coworkers and . . . join the Union.” The ALJ also
    3 UNF also argues that Ortiz’s use of “could”—as opposed to “would”—in reference to
    wage reduction establishes the permissibility of his statements. We find this view
    unpersuasive. Telling employees that UNF could choose to lower wages at its option—i.e.,
    regardless of Union exception—no more objectively and accurately represents the give and
    take of collective bargaining negotiations than would a more direct statement of UNF’s
    unilateral intention to reduce wages in the event of unionization. See President Riverboat
    Casinos of Mo., 
    329 NLRB 77
    , 77 (1999).
    8
    Case: 16-60124      Document: 00513806450        Page: 9    Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    found that Negroni’s May 22nd statement to Contreras that the document
    detailing employee rights was “useless” because “[t]he Company has its own
    policies” communicated the same message.
    On petition for review, UNF argues principally that neither of the
    statements that the ALJ found to be threats of futility was accompanied by a
    threat to take action to ensure futility, and so they do not run afoul of Section
    8(a)(1) under this court’s precedent. We disagree.
    Threats of futility include “remarks concerning the futility of electing a
    union,” NLRB v. Laredo Coca Cola Bottling Co., 
    613 F.2d 1338
    , 1341 (5th Cir.
    1980), or those that communicate a message to “employees that selection of a
    union would be an ‘exercise in futility.’” 4 While the Board proscribes such
    remarks where they “were clearly intended to and had the effect of conveying
    to the employees the futility of their support of the Union,” Wellstream Corp.,
    
    313 NLRB 698
    , 706 (1994), “this Court has only found comments to be unlawful
    statements about futility when accompanied by a threat or implication that
    the employer will take some action to render union support futile.” Brown &
    Root, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    333 F.3d 628
    , 634 (5th Cir. 2003) (emphasis added).
    Accordingly, we review the record for affirmative evidence that (1) remarks
    were made concerning the futility of exercising unionization rights and (2)
    those remarks were conjoined with a threat or implication that UNF would act
    to ensure the futility of union organization. See Brown & Root, Inc., 
    333 F.3d at 634
    .
    Because our review reveals such evidence, we agree with the Board and the
    ALJ that Negroni’s statements constituted threats of futility in violation of
    Section    8(a)(1).   Regarding     the   conversation      with   Aceves,     a   UNF
    4 DEVELOPING LABOR LAW, supra note 2, at 150; see also NLRB v. Varo, Inc., 
    425 F.2d 293
    , 299 (5th Cir. 1970).
    9
    Case: 16-60124     Document: 00513806450     Page: 10   Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    representative’s remark that “this document doesn’t work here” in reference to
    a document detailing inter alia, employee rights to (1) organize; (2) form, join,
    or assist a Union; (3) bargain collectively; (4) discuss wages and benefits; and
    (5) improve working conditions, suggests that such rights are not enforceable
    by employees of UNF. This statement thus communicates the futility of
    exercising these rights. See Wellstream, 313 NLRB at 706. Moreover, Negroni’s
    reminder of who pays Aceves’s check constitutes a threat or implication that
    UNF could take some action to ensure the futility of unionization. The
    reference to Aceves’s check highlights Aceves’s economic dependence on his
    employer, and tells Aceves that the employer is in sole control of the results
    and achievements of unionization. Combined with the earlier statement
    regarding the disutility of the employee rights document, this paycheck
    reference can be reasonably understood to mean that UNF could take action to
    ensure futility by lowering wages, by firing employees, or by disregarding
    employee rights—including their rights to bargain and discuss wages.
    Regarding Contreras, Negroni’s comments that the employee rights
    document in Contreras’s possession (the same document Aceves showed
    Negroni) was “useless” because “[t]he company has its own policies,” coupled
    with Negroni’s earlier comment that “I hope the company won’t hear what
    you’re saying” constituted a threat of futility. First, Negroni’s comment on the
    uselessness of the employee rights document signifies that attempts to exercise
    employee rights are futile because UNF has its own policies. See Wellstream,
    313 NLRB at 706.     Second, the full context of Negroni’s remarks establishes
    the presence of an accompanying threat to ensure futility. See Brown & Root,
    Inc., 
    333 F.3d at 634
    . This conclusion depends on the aggregation of two
    aspects of the conversation: (1) the statement regarding UNF’s policies, which
    signals that UNF is in full control of anything going on inside the facility; and
    (2) Negroni’s statement prior to the remarks concerning futility, which implied
    10
    Case: 16-60124     Document: 00513806450      Page: 11   Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    consequences for Negroni’s expression of discontent with UNF’s actions and so
    imparts information regarding UNF’s disposition to punish. To join an
    assertion of control with a disposition to punish is to combine a threat of
    punishment with a statement of capability. Combine this further with a
    remark of futility, and the jurisprudential requirements are met.
    The difficulty is the timing of the comments to be combined. The actual
    threat communicating disposition to punish came before the subject matter
    prompting the remarks of futility and before the comments asserting unilateral
    control. Accordingly, one might claim that these statements are disconnected,
    and that the threat does not accompany the remark of futility. However, this
    view would seem to ignore the requirement that threats of futility, just like
    other violations of Section 8(a)(1), are to be examined according to their full
    context. See Whirlpool Corp., 
    337 NLRB 726
    , 730–31 (2002) (describing legal
    principles generally applicable to § 8(a)(1) violations); Rossmore House, 
    269 NLRB 1176
    , 1177 (1984) (“To fall within the ambit of § 8(a)(1), either the words
    themselves or the context in which they are used must suggest an element of
    coercion or interference.”(emphasis added)). A threat communicating a
    disposition to punish in one part of a conversation does not simply evaporate
    as regards another part of the conversation transpiring mere moments later.
    Because the threat was already part of the context surrounding the remarks
    of futility, Negroni’s comments to Contreras constituted a threat of futility. See
    Rossmore House, 269 NLRB at 1177; Brown & Root, Inc., 
    333 F.3d at 634
    . For
    the above reasons, we conclude that the ALJ’s holding on this issue was not in
    error. Asarco, 
    86 F.3d at 1406
    .
    C. Coercive Interrogation
    The ALJ found that both the May 9th and May 22nd conversations
    between Negroni and employees Aceves and Contreras, respectively,
    11
    Case: 16-60124         Document: 00513806450        Page: 12   Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    constituted coercive interrogations. The ALJ concluded that the “entire [May
    9th] conversation established” the interrogation’s coerciveness because: (1)
    Aceves was questioned by a UNF agent charged with combatting the Union’s
    organizing campaign shortly before an election; (2) there was no evidence that
    Aceves engaged in open Union activity at the workplace or that Negroni was
    aware of the degree of Aceves’s Union involvement; (3) the conversation
    between Negroni and Aceves was neither casual, friendly, nor joking (Aceves
    told Negroni, “Leave me alone”); and (4) Negroni issued “an employer’s
    ultimate threat, that it controlled Aceves’s employment.” As for the May 22nd
    conversation, the ALJ found that its entire context established coerciveness
    based on the information sought by Negroni’s questioning and his statement
    that UNF would not want to hear what Contreras was saying, implying
    adverse consequences for Contreras.
    UNF’s primary objection to the ALJ’s analysis of this issue is that it failed
    to apply all of the Bourne factors. 5 UNF asserts that some of those that were
    not applied would have weighed in its favor. UNF asserts that the ALJ’s
    treatment of the factors is legal error preventing enforcement. We disagree.
    Interrogation of employees is illegal when “the words themselves or the
    context in which they are used . . . suggest an element of coercion or
    interference.” Rossmore House, 269 NLRB at 1177. The presence of such an
    element is ascertained by examining the totality of the circumstances, an
    analysis guided by the application of several factors: (1) the background, or
    history of employer hostility and discrimination; (2) the nature of the
    information the questioner seeks; (3) the rank of the questioner in the company
    hierarchy; (4) the place and manner of the interrogation; (5) the truthfulness
    of the employee’s reply; (6) whether the employer had a valid purpose in
    5   Bourne v. NLRB, 
    332 F.2d 47
    , 49 (2d Cir. 1964).
    12
    Case: 16-60124     Document: 00513806450      Page: 13   Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    obtaining the information sought about the union; (7) whether a valid purpose,
    if existent, was communicated to the employee; and (8) whether the employer
    assured the employee that no reprisals would be forthcoming should he or she
    support the union. NLRB v. Brookwood Furniture, 
    701 F.2d 452
    , 460–61 (5th
    Cir. 1983); accord Paceco v. NLRB, 
    601 F.2d 180
    , 183 (5th Cir. 1979); TRW-
    United, 
    637 F.2d at 416
    ; see also Bourne v. NLRB, 
    332 F.2d 47
    , 49 (2d Cir.
    1964).
    The Bourne factors are analytical guiding lights—not a mandate for
    formalistic analysis. See Sturgis Newport Business Forms, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    563 F.2d 1252
    , 1256 (5th Cir. 1977) (noting that “a proper evaluation of the
    evidence goes beyond examining a list of factors and then comparing the
    number that favor the employer to the number that favor the union,” since
    “[i]ntimidation may occur even if all factors cut in favor of the employer”). Both
    the NLRB and this circuit have repeatedly stressed that “[n]o single factor is
    determinative and ‘coercive interrogation may still be found . . . even if all the
    above enumerated factors operate in the employer’s favor.’” Tellepsen Pipeline
    Servs. Co. v. NLRB, 
    320 F.3d 554
    , 561 (5th Cir. 2003) (quoting McCullough
    Envtl. Servs., Inc., 
    5 F.3d 923
    , 928 (5th Cir. 1993)); accord TRW-United, 
    637 F.2d at 416
     (noting that the list of factors “is not exhaustive . . . and coercion
    may occur even if all of these factors operate in favor of the employer”).
    Moreover, it is important to note that the inquiry relates to potentiality, and
    not to actuality—that is, “the test is whether the questioning tends to be
    coercive, not whether the employees are in fact coerced.” NLRB v. Varo, Inc.,
    
    425 F.2d, 293
    , 298 (5th Cir. 1970).
    Our review of the record evidence indicates that the Board and ALJ properly
    concluded that Negroni’s conduct on May 9th and May 22nd constituted
    coercive interrogation in violation of Section 8(a)(1). There is no requirement
    that an ALJ apply all the factors to every situation, and coerciveness can be
    13
    Case: 16-60124       Document: 00513806450        Page: 14     Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    found even where no enumerated factors favor the Board. See, e.g., Tellepsen
    Pipeline, 
    320 F.3d at 561
    . If not all are required, then a failure to apply them
    all cannot be legal error, and although it is true that the Board’s opinion must
    provide an appellate court with a basis to determine whether these factors
    were applied and “evaluate the substantiality of the evidence to support each
    factor,” Paceco, 
    601 F.2d at 183
    , the Board’s discussion of facts relevant to the
    factors it did apply in this case met that requirement.
    For both scenarios, the ALJ specifically mentioned the Bourne factors and
    based his decision on a number of facts relevant to them in consideration of the
    totality of the circumstances, including (1) the background, namely that these
    incidents occurred “shortly before an election”; (2) the identity of the questioner
    as a UNF agent “charged with combatting the Union’s organizing campaign”;
    (3) the nature of Aceves’s responses to questioning, concluding that these
    indicated that the conversation was not friendly or joking; (4) the place and
    method of the interrogation, noting that the questions Negroni asked were
    accompanied by a threat referencing Aceves’s economic dependence. Indeed,
    the presence of a threat implies the absence of a free choice, and accordingly,
    “interrogation accompanied by threats has been held to interfere with an
    election even though only one percent of the employees were threatened.” 6 For
    the reasons stated, we see no basis upon which to disturb the ALJ’s finding on
    coerciveness. 7
    6DEVELOPING LABOR LAW, supra note 2, at 182; see also Super Thrift Mkts., Inc., 
    233 NLRB 409
    , 409 (1977) (noting that one can reasonably expect coercive statements made to a
    small number of employees in election campaigns to be disseminated to others).
    7 UNF also claims that Negroni’s statements to Aceves and Contreras are too
    ambiguous to violate the NLRA, highlighting what it perceives as a lack of evidence to
    support the ALJ’s finding that Negroni’s statements had a threatening aspect. As this
    contention relates to inferences drawn from the evidence as to the meaning of words in
    context and what meaning employees took from those words, whether statements have a
    threatening quality is a factual question (as opposed to whether statements violated the
    NLRA, which would be a legal question). See, e.g., Louisville Chair Co., 
    146 NLRB 1380
    , 1381
    14
    Case: 16-60124       Document: 00513806450         Page: 15     Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    D. Remaining Objections
    UNF also raises three other objections to the Board and ALJ’s decision, all
    of which we conclude to be without merit.
    First, UNF objects that the Board and ALJ erred by refusing to allow Ortiz
    to testify in Spanish while allowing the General Counsel’s witnesses to do so.
    Evaluations regarding the competence of a witness to testify in English and
    the corresponding “need for an interpreter [are] within the discretion of the
    [ALJ].” Meat Packers Int’l, 
    225 NLRB 294
     n.8 (1978). Ortiz is fluent in English,
    and a significant part of his job involves translating between English and
    Spanish. He displayed no apparent difficulty testifying in English, and review
    of the transcript uncovers no evidence of his confusion or misunderstanding.
    Moreover, the ALJ’s decision to withhold an interpreter was subject to revision
    if Ortiz began to display linguistic difficulty—which he did not. We conclude
    that the ALJ reasonably exercised his discretion in requiring Ortiz to testify in
    English. See Marathon LeTourneau Co., 
    699 F.2d at 254
    .
    Second, UNF objects that the Board and ALJ erred by ordering the
    extraordinary remedy of public notice reading. Because “[t]he particular means
    by which the effects of unfair labor practices are to be expunged are matters
    for the Board[,] not the courts to determine,” Va. Elec. & Power Co. v. NLRB,
    
    319 U.S. 533
    , 539 (1943) (quotation marks omitted), administrative remedial
    choices “stand unless it can be shown that the order is a patent attempt to
    achieve ends other than those which can fairly be said to effectuate the policies
    (1964) (finding the record too conflicted to support treating statement that employee would
    “have to walk the chalk line” or “was going out” as a threat); Bomber Bait Co. Inc., 
    210 NLRB 673
    , 674 (1974) (finding the record rendered statement “won’t be there long enough” too
    ambiguous to support finding of violation). Accordingly, this court will defer to the ALJ’s
    reasonable inferences drawn from the record if there is substantial evidence to support them.
    Standard Fittings Co., 
    845 F.2d at 1314
    . Considering the evidence before him, the ALJ found
    that the statements were threatening. Based on our review of the record, we conclude that
    this was a reasonable inference to draw.
    15
    Case: 16-60124    Document: 00513806450      Page: 16   Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    of the Act.” Id. at 540; accord J.P. Stevens & Co. v. NLRB, 
    417 F.2d 533
    , 537
    (5th Cir. 1969). Public notice reading in particular is designed to “ensure that
    the important information set forth in the notice is disseminated to all
    employees, including those who do not consult the [employer’s] bulletin
    boards.” Excel Case Ready, 
    334 NLRB 4
    , 5 (2001). This court has previously
    noted that “[f]or repeated violations persisted in despite intervening
    declarations of illegality, the Board is warranted in impliedly concluding that
    such conduct has created a chill atmosphere of fear and, further, in recognizing
    that the reading requirement is an effective but moderate way to let in a
    warming wind of information and, more important, reassurance.” J.P. Stevens
    & Co., 
    417 F.2d at 540
    .
    It is incontrovertible that UNF is a repeat violator of Section 8(a)(1). In
    2014, in the same Moreno Valley facility, an ALJ found UNF to have (1) made
    threats of futility, (2) made threats to reduce benefits, and (3) coercively
    interrogated employees. UNF West, Inc. I, 367 NLRB at *2. The instant case
    thus represents the second round of the same problematic conduct in the same
    facility, in the context of the same unionization campaign—only with new
    characters. Accordingly, the Board’s choice of remedy was not a patent attempt
    to extend itself beyond the policies of the Act. See Va. Elec. & Power Co., 
    319 U.S. at 540
    .
    Finally, UNF objects that the Board and ALJ erred by refusing to allow it
    to present testimony that established that there was a petition to ask the
    Union to withdraw, that proffered witnesses had signed the petition, and that
    those witnesses had never heard Ortiz or Negroni make any of the allegedly
    problematic statements to Aceves or Contreras or to them individually. The
    ALJ enjoys wide discretion to exclude irrelevant or otherwise inadmissible
    evidence. See Marathon LeTourneau Co., 
    699 F.2d at 254
    . The Board conducts
    its proceedings in accordance with the Federal Rules of Evidence, so far as
    16
    Case: 16-60124        Document: 00513806450          Page: 17     Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    possible. 
    Id. at 253
    . Under the Rules, evidence is relevant only if it has a
    tendency to make a fact of consequence more or less probable. Fed. R. Evid.
    401. Additionally, testimony is admissible only where there is evidence to show
    the witness has personal knowledge of the matter to which she testifies. Fed.
    R. Evid. 602.
    Neither the petition expressing the opinion of some employees about the
    Union nor the proffered testimony regarding each witness’s individual lack of
    experience with the labor consultants is probative of what happened to Aceves
    or Contreras. Moreover, there is no evidence that these witnesses were in a
    position to observe Aceves, Contreras, Ortiz, or Negroni at key moments—
    thus, the witnesses seemingly lacked personal knowledge from which to testify
    about the interactions between these individuals. Lastly, despite UNF’s claims
    to the contrary, whether Union support was in fact chilled by an Section 8(a)(1)
    violation—i.e., whether the problematic conduct in fact coerced anyone or
    interfered with a campaign—is inconsequential in an 8(a)(1) case, 8 and so
    cannot serve as a predicate to establish the relevance of evidence. Fed. R. Evid.
    401 (noting that evidence must relate to a fact of consequence). Thus, the ALJ
    did not abuse his discretion in excluding the proffered evidence. 9 See Marathon
    LeTourneau Co., 
    699 F.2d at 254
    .
    8  See, e.g., TRW-United, 
    637 F.2d at 419
     (discussing what threatened employees could
    reasonably conclude as the litmus test for a Section 8(a)(1) violation); cf. Super Thrift Mkts.,
    Inc., 238 NLRB at 409.
    9 UNF also raises a number of challenges to the ALJ’s evidentiary findings and
    credibility determinations. UNF argues that there is no substantial evidence on the record to
    support that any of the three allegedly problematic incidents occurred at all. However, the
    record is almost entirely composed of testimony, and there is no question that testimonial
    evidence exists to support each of the ALJ’s findings. Accordingly, the essence of UNF’s
    objections as to the occurrence of certain events is that its witnesses—who deny the
    occurrence of those events—are more credible than the Board’s witnesses, who UNF claims
    are unreliable. As discussed above, the ALJ’s credibility determinations are binding on this
    court except in very rare instances. Asarco, 
    86 F.3d at 1406
    . Here, the ALJ’s credibility
    findings, which were based on witness demeanor and extent of contradiction or corroboration,
    17
    Case: 16-60124      Document: 00513806450        Page: 18    Date Filed: 12/20/2016
    No. 16-60124
    IV. Conclusion
    For the aforementioned reasons, UNF West’s petition is DENIED. The
    Board’s cross-application for enforcement is GRANTED.
    were eminently reasonable. Thus, we decline to disturb either those determinations or any
    factual findings based upon them. 
    Id.
    18
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-60124

Citation Numbers: 844 F.3d 451

Filed Date: 12/20/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (21)

Bonnie Bourne, an Individual, D/B/A Bourne Co. v. National ... , 332 F.2d 47 ( 1964 )

National Labor Relations Board v. River Togs, Inc. , 382 F.2d 198 ( 1967 )

sturgis-newport-business-forms-inc-a-division-of-litton-business , 563 F.2d 1252 ( 1977 )

Poly-America, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board , 260 F.3d 465 ( 2001 )

Standard Fittings Company v. National Labor Relations Board , 845 F.2d 1311 ( 1988 )

Brown & Root, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board , 333 F.3d 628 ( 2003 )

Trw-United Greenfield Division, Petitioner-Cross-Respondent ... , 637 F.2d 410 ( 1981 )

Asarco, Inc., Petitioner-Cross-Respondent v. National Labor ... , 86 F.3d 1401 ( 1996 )

Paceco, a Division of Fruehauf Corporation v. National ... , 601 F.2d 180 ( 1979 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Brookwood Furniture, ... , 701 F.2d 452 ( 1983 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Laredo Coca Cola Bottling ... , 613 F.2d 1338 ( 1980 )

Marathon Letourneau Company, Longview Division, Petitioner-... , 699 F.2d 248 ( 1983 )

Neva SPELLMAN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Donna E. SHALALA, M.... , 1 F.3d 357 ( 1993 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Varo, Inc. , 425 F.2d 293 ( 1970 )

National Labor Relations Board v. McCullough Environmental ... , 5 F.3d 923 ( 1993 )

Hendrix Manufacturing Company, Inc. v. National Labor ... , 321 F.2d 100 ( 1963 )

Tellepsen Pipel Svcs v. NLRB , 320 F.3d 554 ( 2003 )

j-p-stevens-co-inc-petitioner-respondent-v-national-labor , 417 F.2d 533 ( 1969 )

Trw, Incorporated v. National Labor Relations Board , 654 F.2d 307 ( 1981 )

Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. National Labor Relations ... , 63 S. Ct. 1214 ( 1943 )

View All Authorities »