National Labor Relations Board v. Leiferman Enterprises, LLC , 649 F.3d 873 ( 2011 )


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  •                      United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 10-2801/10-2978
    ___________
    National Labor Relations Board,        *
    *
    Petitioner/Cross-Respondent, *
    *    On Petition for Review and Cross
    v.                              *    Application for Enforcement
    *    of an Order of the National
    Leiferman Enterprises, LLC, doing      *    Labor Relations Board.
    business as Harmon Auto Glass and      *
    its successor Auto Glass Repair and    *
    Windshield Replacement Service, Inc., *
    *
    Respondent/Cross-Petitioner. *
    ___________
    Submitted: March 15, 2011
    Filed: August 12, 2011
    ___________
    Before SMITH, ARNOLD, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    SMITH, Circuit Judge.
    Leiferman Enterprises, LLC ("Leiferman") unilaterally suspended negotiations
    with the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades District Council 82 (the
    "Union") regarding the renewal of the two parties' collective-bargaining agreement.
    The National Labor Relations Board (the "Board") eventually filed a complaint, but,
    during the litigation's pendency, a secured creditor forced Leiferman into receivership.
    During the receivership, the secured creditor sold Leiferman to Auto Glass Repair and
    Windshield Replacement Service (WRS), agreeing to indemnify WRS against any
    potential Board liability. At length, the Board found Leiferman liable for certain unfair
    labor practices and imposed that liability on WRS, which it determined to be a liable
    successor-in-interest under Golden State Bottling Co. v. NLRB, 
    414 U.S. 168
    (1973).
    The Board now petitions this court to enforce its order, and Leiferman cross-petitions
    for review of that order. For the reasons that follow, we affirm and enforce the Board's
    order, and deny Leiferman's petition for review.
    I. Background
    The now-defunct Leiferman sold and installed automotive glass at various
    facilities in the Minneapolis area. At all relevant times, the Union represented 15 of
    Lieferman's employees pursuant to a collective-bargaining agreement that was
    effective July 1, 2003, through June 30, 2006.
    Leiferman financed the purchase of its business through a series of secured-
    lending agreements with Harmon Auto Glass Intellectual Property (HAIP). In
    September 2005, Leiferman consummated the most recent of these agreements but,
    shortly thereafter, defaulted on the loan. On April 30, 2006, Leiferman and HAIP
    entered into a "Forbearance Agreement," under which Leiferman agreed to (1) make
    periodic payments to HAIP and (2) complete the sale of Leiferman to a third party
    before September 15, 2006. HAIP perfected its valid security interests in Leiferman's
    assets under Minnesota law. Subsequently, Leiferman defaulted on the Forbearance
    Agreement's payment provisions, prompting HAIP to demand possession of and
    access to its collateral. Leiferman refused to do so, and, in response, HAIP filed a
    complaint in Minnesota state court for the appointment of a receiver, citing
    Leiferman's multiple defaults as well as its "erratic economic behavior in the operation
    of its business."
    Contemporaneously, Leiferman and the Union conducted ongoing negotiations
    aimed at ironing out the terms of a new collective-bargaining agreement to replace the
    then-current agreement set to expire June 30, 2006. On August 13, 2006, after roughly
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    two months of negotiations, Leiferman implemented its final offer, apparently by fiat,
    and unilaterally altered its employees' terms and conditions of employment. From
    August through October 2006, the Union filed unfair labor practice charges with the
    Board, claiming that Leiferman's conduct violated §§ 8(a)(5) and (1) of the National
    Labor Relations Act (NLRA).
    Meanwhile, on September 20, 2006, the Minnesota court administering
    Leiferman's receivership appointed Lighthouse Management Group ("the Receiver")
    as Leiferman's receiver and authorized the Receiver to operate Leiferman until the
    Receiver found a suitable buyer to purchase Leiferman's assets. Post-receivership,
    HAIP had to invest over $300,000 to continue Leiferman's day-to-day operations and
    thus protect its collateral.
    Beginning in October 2006, the Receiver transmitted bid solicitations to nine
    potential buyers of Leiferman's assets. Those solicitations included due-diligence data
    apprising potential buyers of the liability risk stemming from Leiferman's ongoing
    labor disputes before the Board. On November 1, 2006, while these bid solicitations
    were outstanding, the Board issued a complaint and notice of hearing alleging that
    Leiferman had violated the NLRA by (1) unlawfully declaring an "impasse" in
    collective-bargaining negotiations and (2) unilaterally implementing changes without
    having reached a bona fide impasse.
    On January 31, 2007, during this complaint's pendency, the Minnesota court
    administering Leiferman's receivership approved the sale of Leiferman to WRS. WRS
    knew of Leiferman's labor dispute from the bid solicitations and, in fact, required as
    a condition of its purchase of Leiferman that HAIP agree to indemnify WRS from any
    pending claims in the litigation before the Board. Notably, the Minnesota court's order
    approving the sale found that the "manner and terms of the proposed sale . . . are fair
    and commercially reasonable" and further provided that WRS's purchase of Leiferman
    was "free and clear of any liens and encumbrances." Subsequently, on August 20,
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    2007, a judgment was entered in HAIP's favor and against Leiferman and its former
    proprietor, Scott Leiferman, in the amount of $3,626,095, plus attorneys' fees and
    costs in the amount of $97,000.50, totaling $3,723,085.50. Following a sale of
    Leiferman's eligible assets, a deficiency of over $3,000,000 remains unpaid.
    There was substantial continuity between pre-receivership Leiferman and the
    post-receivership, WRS-acquired Leiferman. After purchasing Leiferman, WRS
    continued Leiferman's business of automotive-glass sales and installation without
    interruption. All of the retail outlets that WRS added to its chain were Leiferman
    leaseholds that it assumed. Of the seven glass installers that WRS hired to staff these
    locations, five were selected from among Leiferman's 15 glass installers, and only two
    were hired from outside Leiferman. WRS also hired Lieferman's nine store
    managers—each of whom had installed glass at Leiferman before being promoted to
    store manager—and had them install glass at the locations as well. WRS took on four
    of Leiferman's five customer service representatives and Leiferman's lone salesperson.
    Finally, WRS also licensed the same trade name that Leiferman had licensed.
    Still, WRS's acquisition of Leiferman did not produce a clone. WRS operated
    with a different corporate management and headquarters. WRS paid glass installers
    who previously worked for Leiferman different benefits and offered them different
    terms and conditions of employment, increased their job responsibilities, and required
    that they use different equipment and methods to install glass.
    On February 21, 2008, the Board's administrative law judge (ALJ) issued her
    decision and order. The order directed Leiferman (and its successors and assigns) to
    reimburse its employees for any losses suffered as a result of Leiferman's unfair labor
    practices. Those practices included Leiferman's unilateral alteration of employment
    terms and conditions and its implementation of these changes absent a good-faith
    impasse during its bargaining with the Union. Furthermore, the ALJ found WRS liable
    as Leiferman's successor pursuant to the Supreme Court's decision in Golden State
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    Bottling Co. v. NLRB, 
    414 U.S. 168
    (1973), and consequently assessed the monetary
    penalties to WRS. WRS agrees that, if found liable, the total amount that it owes is
    $54,518.25.
    WRS appealed this ruling to the Board on the primary grounds that it was
    immune from Golden State successorship liability because (1) the Minnesota court's
    order approving its purchase of Leiferman explicitly stipulated that the purchase was
    "free and clear of any liens and encumbrances" and (2) HAIP will ultimately pay the
    penalty by virtue of its promise to indemnify, resulting in an inequitable outcome of
    a grossly underpaid secured lender having to pay unsecured claims stemming from
    labor abuses in which it had no hand. The Board rejected both of WRS's arguments
    and concluded that WRS is a Golden State successor that must pay for its
    predecessor's unfair labor practices. Specifically, the Board found that WRS satisfied
    all of the requirements for Golden State-successor liability, including the key
    requirement that there be substantial continuity between the business operations of the
    predecessor and that of the successor.
    The Board petitions this court for enforcement of its order, and WRS cross-
    petitions this court for review of that order.
    II. Discussion
    On petition for review, WRS maintains that the Board erred in imposing Golden
    State-successor liability on WRS for Leiferman's past unfair labor practices. WRS
    advances several theories why Golden State successorship is inapplicable, but these
    may be distilled to three primary arguments: (1) it would be inequitable for a secured
    creditor like HAIP, that did not receive full recovery on its secured claims, to pay the
    claims of unsecured creditors who ordinarily would be lower in payment priority
    under traditional debtor/creditor law; (2) WRS, in any case, is not Leiferman's Golden
    State successor because (a) substantial continuity does not exist, and (b) even if it did,
    Leiferman was in receivership and thus financially unable to pay the claims itself; and
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    (3) the Minnesota court's order approving WRS's purchase of Leiferman expressly
    provided that the sale was "free and clear" of any and all liens and encumbrances.
    WRS's arguments are unpersuasive, and we therefore affirm and enforce the Board's
    order and deny WRS's petition for review.
    A. Overview of Golden State Successorship
    As WRS concedes, "[the Board's] decisions are given deference." Congress has
    significantly limited the scope of this court's review over Board decisions.
    Specifically, the same standard of review applies to both WRS's petition for review
    and the Board's petition for enforcement, and that standard mandates that "[t]he
    findings of the Board with respect to questions of fact if supported by substantial
    evidence on the record considered as a whole shall be conclusive." 29 U.S.C. § 160(e)
    (applying to Board petitions for enforcement); accord 
    id. § 160(f)
    (applying to
    employer petitions for review). As we have reinforced,
    [o]ur standard of review affords great deference to the Board's
    affirmation of the ALJ's findings. We will enforce the Board's order if
    the Board has correctly applied the law and its factual findings are
    supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole. Substantial
    evidence exists when a reasonable mind might accept a particular
    evidentiary record as adequate to support a conclusion.
    Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    400 F.3d 1093
    , 1097 (8th Cir. 2005) (internal
    quotations and citations omitted).
    In the instant case, the record as a whole contains substantial evidence to
    support the Board's imposition of Golden State-successor liability on WRS. In Golden
    State, the Supreme Court affirmed the Board's authority under the NLRA to hold a
    bona fide purchaser of a company liable for the company's pre-purchase, unfair labor
    
    practices. 414 U.S. at 176
    . Specifically, the Court premised this conclusion on its
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    reading of § 10(c) of the NLRA. 
    Id. Section 10(c)
    of the NLRA provides, in pertinent
    part, that
    [i]f upon the preponderance of the testimony taken the Board shall be of
    the opinion that any person named in the complaint has engaged in or is
    engaging in any such unfair labor practice, then the Board shall state its
    findings of fact and shall issue and cause to be served on such person an
    order requiring such person to cease and desist from such unfair labor
    practice, and to take such affirmative action including reinstatement of
    employees with or without back pay, as will effectuate the policies of this
    subchapter . . . .
    29 U.S.C. § 160(c) (emphasis added).
    Relying on § 10(c)'s broad directive to the Board to issue orders "as will
    effectuate the policies of this subchapter," the Court read § 10(c) to confer "remedial
    powers . . . [which] include broad discretion to fashion and issue [an] order" imposing
    liability for a company's past unfair labor practices on a bona fide purchaser of that
    company, even if that bona fide purchaser had no hand in the company's pre-purchase
    practices. Golden 
    State, 414 U.S. at 176
    . A unanimous court declared that "§ 10(c)
    does not limit the Board's remedial powers to the actual perpetrator of an unfair labor
    practice and thereby prevent the Board from issuing orders binding a successor who
    did not himself commit the unlawful act." 
    Id. Rather, "[t]he
    Board's orders run to the
    evader and the bona fide purchaser, not because the act of evasion or the bona fide
    purchase is an unfair labor practice, but because the Board is obligated to effectuate
    the policies of the [NLRA]." 
    Id. at 177.
    Accordingly, the Supreme Court in Golden
    State announced the following rule for determining when a bona fide purchaser may
    be deemed a "successor in interest," and thus be held liable for the past unfair labor
    practices of the company it acquired: "[w]hen a new employer . . . has acquired
    substantial assets of its predecessor and continued, without interruption or substantial
    change, the predecessor's business operations, those employees who have been
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    retained will understandably view their job situations as essentially unaltered." 
    Id. at 184.
    Finally, the Court added that, in order to prevent judicial enforcement of such
    Board orders from running afoul of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(d)—which
    permits injunctions to be binding only on parties to an action, or those in privity with
    a party—the bona fide purchaser must acquire the malfeasant company "with
    knowledge that the wrong remains unremedied" so that the purchaser "may be
    considered in privity with its predecessor for purposes of Rule 65(d)." 
    Id. at 180.
    B. Application of Golden State-successorship to WRS
    The Golden State successor-liability test confirms that the Board properly found
    WRS liable as a successor-in-interest to Leiferman for Leiferman's unfair labor
    practices. This circuit has addressed Golden State successorship in NLRB v. Winco
    Petroleum Co. There, we concluded that "[s]uccessorship cases are fact-intensive."
    
    668 F.2d 973
    , 975 (8th Cir. 1982). "'[P]articularly in light of the difficulty of the
    successorship question, the myriad factual circumstances and legal contexts in which
    it can arise, and the absence of congressional guidance as to its resolution, emphasis
    on the facts of each case as it arises is especially appropriate.'" 
    Id. (quoting Howard
    Johnson, Co. v. Detroit Local Joint Exec. Bd., 
    417 U.S. 249
    , 254 (1974)). In Winco
    Petroleum, we affirmed the Board's imposition of Golden State successorship based
    on the following four factual findings: (1) the bona fide purchaser acquired the
    company "with actual knowledge of [the company's] pending unfair labor practice
    charges"; (2) "there was little or no interruption in business operations at the [acquired
    company's] stations as a result of the acquisition"; (3) the bona fide purchaser
    "continued to operate the enterprise without substantial change"; and (4) a majority
    of the bona fide purchaser's employees at the acquired company's stations were former
    employees of the acquired company. 
    Id. at 978.
    A review of the whole record, as presented to the Board, reveals that substantial
    evidence of each of these factors existed. Notably, WRS filed a "Stipulation of Fact"
    in advance of its Board proceedings, and the Board essentially recited this stipulation
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    in its order. First, WRS concedes that it knew of Leiferman's ongoing case before the
    Board because it was among the nine potential investors to whom the Receiver
    presented due-diligence data warning of the pending suit and its attendant liability
    risks. Moreover, WRS purchased Leiferman on the condition that HAIP indemnify it
    against any liabilities arising out of the existing Board suit. Second, the Board found,
    and WRS does not dispute, that, after purchasing Leiferman, WRS continued
    Leiferman's business of automotive-glass sales and installation without interruption.
    Third, substantial evidence supports the Board's finding that WRS continued to
    operate Leiferman without substantial change. All of the retail outlets that WRS added
    to its chain were Leiferman leases that it assumed, and WRS even licensed the same
    trade name that Leiferman had licensed.
    In its favor, WRS observes with respect to this third factor that it operated
    Leiferman with a different corporate management and headquarters, paid glass
    installers who previously worked for Leiferman different benefits and offered them
    different terms and conditions of employment, increased those employees' job
    responsibilities, and required that they use different equipment and methods to install
    glass. However, we find these alterations to Leiferman's business model to be
    relatively minor and do not represent the kind of material change that would make
    successor liability inapplicable.
    Fourth, and finally, a majority of the employees constituting the reorganized
    Leiferman were holdovers from the old Leiferman entity. Of the seven glass installers
    that WRS hired to staff the Leiferman locations that it assumed, five were selected
    from among Leiferman's 15 glass installers, and only two were hired from outside
    Leiferman. WRS also hired Lieferman's nine store managers, each of whom had
    installed glass at Leiferman before being promoted to store manager, and had them
    install glass at Leiferman's old locations as well. WRS took on four of Leiferman's
    five customer service representatives and Leiferman's lone salesperson.
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    For its part, WRS argues that its retention of only five of Lieferman's 15 glass
    installers militates against a finding of substantial continuity. However, the
    overwhelming majority of Leiferman's labor force post-receivership at the old
    Leiferman locations are former, pre-receivership Leiferman employees. We have
    stated that, as one of the prerequisites for concluding that a successor owes a duty to
    collectively bargain pursuant to its predecessor's collective-bargaining agreement, a
    "a majority of the successor's employees must have been employed by the preceding
    employer," Smegal v. Gateway Foods of Minneapolis, Inc., 
    819 F.2d 191
    , 194 (8th
    Cir. 1987). But the Supreme Court as well as our circuit have stressed that "'[t]here is,
    and can be, no single definition of 'successor' which is applicable in every legal
    context. A new employer, in other words, may be a successor for some purposes and
    not for others.'" Winco Petroleum 
    Co., 668 F.2d at 977
    n.1 (quoting Howard Johnson
    
    Co., 417 U.S. at 263
    n.9). Indeed, in assessing the continuity between a predecessor
    and successor for purposes of Golden State liability in Winco, we focused not on the
    percentage of former employees retained, but instead on what percentage of the
    successor's labor force at its predecessor's old locations is comprised of the
    predecessor's former employees. 
    Id. at 978.
    1 Thus, because "a majority of [WRS's]
    employees at the former [Leiferman] stations were former [Leiferman] employees,"
    sufficient labor force continuity exists between Leiferman and WRS for Golden State-
    successorship purposes.
    1
    This court, in dictum, cited Winco for the proposition that "[i]n one case the
    circuit did determine that an employer was a successor when a majority of the
    predecessor's employees had been hired." 
    Smegal, 819 F.2d at 194
    . This reading of
    Winco is squarely at odds with what that case actually held and thus represents a
    misreading of the case. Therefore, we disregard this language in Smegal because it is
    dictum and, insofar as it contradicts Winco, has no precedential value because a
    subsequent panel of this court cannot overrule a prior panel's decision. See United
    States v. Gaines, 
    639 F.3d 423
    , 428 n.4 (8th Cir. 2011) ("We therefore apply the more
    accurate prior panel statement of the law under the rule that precludes one panel of
    this court from overruling a prior panel's decision").
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    Similarly, on the entire record as a whole, substantial evidence exists such that
    "a reasonable mind might accept [this] particular evidentiary record as adequate to
    support [the] conclusion" that WRS is Leiferman's Golden State successor. See Wal-
    Mart Stores, 
    Inc., 400 F.3d at 1097
    (quotations and citations omitted). Moreover, none
    of WRS's novel legal arguments against the imposition of Golden State successorship
    are availing. For instance, that HAIP, an unsecured creditor, will ultimately pay
    approximately $55,000 to compensate unsecured labor claimants is a direct product
    of HAIP's own free bargaining. HAIP wanted to recover some value from its collateral
    in Leiferman's assets, and, to accomplish this, it voluntarily agreed to indemnify the
    purchaser. Indeed, this type of transaction is precisely what the Supreme Court
    envisioned as one of the benefits that Golden State successorship conferred:
    Since the successor must have notice before liability can be imposed, his
    potential liability for remedying the unfair labor practices is a matter
    which can be reflected in the price he pays for the business, or he may
    secure an indemnity clause in the sales contract which will indemnify
    him for liability arising from the seller's unfair labor practices.
    Golden 
    State, 414 U.S. at 185
    (internal quotations and citations omitted). WRS's
    appeal to equity on a third party's behalf when that third party freely contracted for the
    purportedly inequitable treatment is meritless. WRS's argument that the Minnesota
    court order's "free and clear" language somehow preclude's Golden State
    successorship is likewise meritless. The Minnesota court order approved the sale
    based in part on its finding that the "manner and terms of the proposed sale . . . are fair
    and commercially reasonable." One of the sale's terms was the indemnification clause
    compelling HAIP to indemnify WRS against any resulting NLRA liability.
    In sum, the record, reviewed as a whole, contains substantial evidence to
    support the Board's conclusion that WRS is Leiferman's Golden State successor-in-
    interest.
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    III. Conclusion
    Based on the foregoing, we hereby enforce the Board's order and deny WRS's
    petition for review.
    ______________________________
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