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NLRB lacked jurisdiction to order reinstatement
of strikers
By G. Phillip Shuler
A panel of the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals
recently held that the National Labor Relations Board improperly
ordered an employer to reinstate striking construction workers.
Precision Concrete v. NLRB (D.C. Cir., No.02-1164, July 11).
The court held that the board lacked jurisdiction to order
reinstatement because the Board erroneously ruled that the
strike was caused by an unfair labor practice of the company.
In December 2001, the board ruled that a strike by the employees
of Precision Concrete was caused by a foreman who threatened
to discharge and actually transferred a worker because he
was wearing a union T-shirt. The employee was wearing the
T-shirt as a result of an organizing campaign led by a coalition
of unions under the banner, Building Trades Organizing Project.
The court held that the Board lacked jurisdiction to decide
whether this T-shirt incident was a violation of the National
Labor Relations Act (NLRA) because none of the unfair labor
practice charges filed by the union specifically included
the incident.
Moreover, the court found that the T-shirt incident was not
substantially related to other incidents that were referenced
in the union's charges. However, the Board only cited the
T-shirt incident in ruling that the strike was caused in part
by an unfair labor practice, which in turn gave the strikers
reinstatement rights.
The NLRB's 2001 decision grew out of the unions' attempt to
organize Precision's workers, which began in January 1997.
The unions filed an unfair labor practice charge later that
year, and it was eventually settled.
The unions then filed new charges against Precision in early
1998. The unions alleged that Precision discriminated against
certain workers who cooperated with the unions regarding the
settled charge; interrogated workers about their union views;
and threatened employees because they engaged in union activities.
In a charge filed on March 20, 1998, the unions alleged that
Precision interrogated employees, threatened employees with
unspecified reprisals, and invited employees to resign because
they were involved in protected, concerted activities.
In July 1998, nearly 100 of Precision's employee's went out
on strike, but it was an unsuccessful effort. Precision hired
replacement workers and many of Precision's employees crossed
the picket lines. Also, most of the strikers made unconditional
offers to return to work by October of that year. Nonetheless,
Precision refused to reinstate them.
As a result of the strike, the unions filed numerous unfair
labor practice charges in which they complained about Precision's
conduct during the strike. The unions filed one such charge
on September 17, 1998, in which they alleged that on August
25, 1998, Precision threatened employees with termination
and physical violence because of their union activities. The
Board then investigated the March 1998 and September 1998
charges, as well others filed by the unions.
Thereafter, the General Counsel issued a consolidated amended
complaint in March 1999 in which he alleged Precision had
committed a variety of unfair labor practices before, during,
and after the strike. The amended complaint contained a specific
allegation that a Precision foreman threatened to fire and
actually transferred a worker in July 1998 because he was
wearing a union T-shirt. Allegedly, the foreman told the worker
that he "didn't want any members of [his] team wearing
that kind of shirt."
At the hearing, a Board administrative law judge held that
the alleged T-shirt incident constituted a Section 8(a)(1)
violation and was a cause of the strike. The administrative
law judge also ordered Precision to reinstate nearly seventy
strikers. Precision appealed the decision to the full Board
and argued that the alleged T-shirt incident was not the subject
of a timely filed charge.
The Board acknowledged that the T-shirt incident was not the
subject of a timely filed charge, but it nonetheless concluded
that the incident was sufficiently related to the allegations
of the March 1998 and September 1998 charges and was properly
added to the complaint by the General Counsel.
In reviewing the Board's decision, the D.C. Circuit noted
that Section 10(b) of the NLRA has two functions. First, Section
10(b) has a jurisdictional component that places conditions
on the Board's authority to litigate cases. Specifically,
the Board only has authority to issue a complaint based on
allegations made in a timely charge. Second, Section 10(b)
has a temporal component that functions like a statute of
limitations. Section 10(b) restricts the proper subject of
any complaint issued by the General Counsel to conduct that
occurred within six months of the date the charge was filed.
Throughout the litigation of the case, Precision had focused
on the temporal component of Section 10(b). Precision initially
argued that the T-shirt incident should not have been included
in the amended complaint because it occurred six months prior
to the filing of the amendment. The D.C. Circuit rejected
this argument and stated that the six-month limitation in
Section 10(b) does not restrict the General Counsel to only
litigating conduct that occurred within six months of the
date the complaint was filed.
Instead, the temporal component of Section 10(b) merely requires
the complaint to be based on allegedly unlawful conduct that
occurred within six months of the date the charge was filed.
The more critical issue in this case, however, was whether
the Board had implicated the jurisdictional component of Section
10(b) because the T-shirt incident was never the subject of
any unfair labor practice charge filed against Precision.
Again, the Board does not have the authority initiate a charge
on its own and can only prosecute conduct about which someone
else has filed a charge. More importantly, the Board has the
burden to establish its authority to act once its jurisdiction
becomes an issue in a case.
Under the jurisdictional component of Section 10(b), the general
counsel may prosecute practices not specifically alluded to
in a charge if they are factually related to conduct alleged
in the charge and grow out of them while the proceeding is
pending before the Board. In 1989, the NLRB adopted a uniform
requirement that a complaint allegation be factually related
to the allegation in the underlying charge.
Under this requirement, the Board considers whether the allegations
in the complaint and in the charge 1) involve the same legal
theory; 2) arise from the same factual circumstances or sequence
of events; and 3) whether the charged party would raise similar
defenses to both allegations.
However, the D.C. Circuit has since modified application of
this requirement. First, the NLRB may not issue a complaint
based on a charge that only includes boilerplate allegations
that lack specific facts because it would be impossible to
sensibly apply the test of substantial relation. This test
is applied to determine whether there is a significant factual
affiliation between the charged conduct and the allegations
in the complaint. Also, the second component of the Board's
test-whether the conduct arises from same factual circumstances
or sequence of events-is not satisfied simply because allegations
in the charge and complaint arise out of the same organizing
campaign.
As previously described, the Board's complaint alleged that
in July 1998 a Precision foreman threatened to discharge or
transfer an employee for wearing a union T-shirt. The Board
argued that this uncharged conduct was related to certain
portions of both the March 1998 and September 1998 charges.
Specifically, the Board alleged that the T-shirt incident
was closely related to the allegations that Precision had
threatened employees with unspecified reprisals and threatened
employees with termination and physical violence for their
union activities.
The Board also set forth in its amended complaint that all
the allegations involved threatening conduct that occurred
within a common sequence of events in a six-month time span.
The Board also stated the allegations all arose under the
same section of the NLRA and implicated the same defenses.
An application of requirements of the jurisdictional component
of Section 10(b) revealed that the charges did not contain
enough detail about charged conduct to allow the court to
sensibly apply the substantial relation test to determine
if the uncharged conduct-the T-shirt-was factually related
to the conduct in the March 1998 and September 1998 charges.
All that could be gleaned from the record was that the March
charge involved interrogations and threats of reprisal, while
the September charge concerned an incident in August where
Precision's president accosted strikers who were picketing
near his the gated confines of his neighborhood. Though neither
of the charges were mere boilerplate, they lacked the necessary
specificity for the D.C. Circuit to reasonably ascertain whether
the allegations relating to the uncharged T-shirt incident
was factually related to the charged conduct.
Also, the Board made no attempt to demonstrate that the T-shirt
incident either shared a significant factual affiliation with
or grew out of the charged conduct. The only possible link
that between the T-shirt incident and the charged conduct
was that it all occurred during the course of the unions'
organizing campaign. However, the mere coincidence that two
separate violations occur during the same campaign is not
enough to establish that they are substantially related. The
Board's argument that all the incidents occurred within a
common sequence of events during a half-year time span was
insufficient to establish the necessary factual connection
between the charged conduct and the allegations in the Board's
amended complaint.
Accordingly, the Board failed to establish the requisite factual
relationship between the charged conduct and the allegation
in the amended complaint regarding the T-shirt incident. The
Board therefore lacked jurisdiction under Section 10(b) to
adjudicate the incident. More importantly, this uncharged
conduct was the sole violation upon which the Board relied
in finding that the union struck because of an unfair labor
practice.
The strike therefore could not be characterized as an unfair
labor practice strike and the strikers had no greater right
to reinstatement than economic strikers. Consequently, the
Board's order that the T-shirt incident was an unfair labor
practice and order of reinstatement of the strikers was vacated.
Editor's Note: G. Phillip Shuler
is a partner in the New Orleans office of Chaffe, McCall,
Phillips, Toler & Sarpy.
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