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            Title Indiana Hospital, Inc. v. NLRB

 

            Date 1993

            By Alito

            Subject Misc

                

 Contents

 

 

Page 1





LEXSEE 10 F3D 151


INDIANA HOSPITAL, INC., A Wholly-Owned Subsidiary of Indiana Health Care Corporation, Petitioner v. NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Respondent International Union of Operating Engineers, Local Union of 95-95A, AFL-CIO ("the Union"), Intervenor; NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Petitioner v. INDIANA HOSPITAL, INC., A Wholly-Owned Subsidiary of Indiana Health Care Corporation, Respondent


No. 93-3070, No. 93-3096


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT



10 F.3d 151; 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 31002; 144 L.R.R.M. 2809; 126 Lab. Cas. (CCH) P10,926


September 30, 1993, Argued

November 26, 1993, Filed


PRIOR   HISTORY:              **1        ON           PETITION FOR   REVIEW   AND   CROSS-APPLICATION   FOR ENFORCEMENT OF A DECISION AND ORDER OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD. Board No. 6-CA--24965.


CASE SUMMARY:



PROCEDURAL    POSTURE:            Appellant               employer sought  review  of  an  order  of  respondent  labor  board, which  held  that  appellant  had  committed  an  unfair  la- bor  practice  by  refusing  to  bargain with  the  union  that had  been  certified  after  an  election,  as  the  bargaining representative  appellant's  skilled  maintenance  workers. Respondent cross-petitioned for enforcement of its order.


OVERVIEW: The union petitioned to represent a bar- gaining  unit  consisting  of  appellant  employer's  skilled maintenance  employees.  Respondent  labor  board's  re- gional  director  directed  that  an  election  be  held,  after which the union won. Appellant refused to bargain with the union because it believed that the election had been tainted by misconduct on the part of respondent's agents. To substantiate this charge, appellant subpoenaed respon- dent's officers to provide testimony and documents, but the subpoenas were revoked by the hearing officer, and respondent upheld the revocation on the ground that ap- pellant had not been prejudiced. Appellant petitioned for review  of  the  respondent's  order  that  it  had  committed an unfair labor practice by refusing to bargain with the union.  Respondent  cross-petitioned  for  enforcement  of its order. On review, the court remanded the case because it found that appellant had been prejudiced by the revo- cation of its subpoenas. Appellant could have sought to introduce memoranda of the identities of agents who had


received relevant calls in connection with the misconduct, and could have sought to call those officers to testify.


OUTCOME: The court granted appellant employer's pe- tition for review of respondent labor board's order that it committed unfair labor practices by refusing to bargain with  the  union,  and  denied  respondent's  cross-petition for enforcement of its order, because appellant was prej- udiced by the revocation of its subpoenas at the hearing.


LexisNexis(R) Headnotes


Labor & Employment Law > Collective Bargaining & Labor Relations > Enforcement

Labor & Employment Law > Collective Bargaining & Labor Relations > Unfair Labor Practices

HN1  Information officers are National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) representatives who are assigned the duty of  handling  telephone  calls  and  visits  from  the  public. Under  NLRB  procedures,  information  officers  are  re- quired to complete memoranda containing, among other things, the name and employer of each person who makes an inquiry, the nature of the inquiry, and the advice given. NLRB Casehandling Manual §§ 10012.2, .3, .5.


Labor & Employment Law > Collective Bargaining & Labor Relations > Fair Representation

Labor & Employment Law > Collective Bargaining & Labor Relations > Unfair Labor Practices

HN2    Actions   by   National   Labor   Relations   Board

(NLRB),  agents  that  compromise  the  NLRB's  neutral- ity may constitute in some cases a basis for setting aside an election.


COUNSEL:   JAMES   B.   BROWN,   ESQ.,   (Argued), JOSEPH M. McDERMOTT, ESQ.,  JEFFREY A. VAN


10 F.3d 151, *; 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 31002, **1;

144 L.R.R.M. 2809; 126 Lab. Cas. (CCH) P10,926

Page 2


DOREN,  ESQ.,   COHEN  &  GRIGSBY,  2900  CNG Tower,  625  Liberty  Avenue,  Pittsburgh,  Pennsylvania

15222, Counsel for Petitioner/Cross Respondent.


PAUL  J.  SPIELBERG,  ESQ.  (Argued),   AILEEN  A. ARMSTRONG, ESQ., WILLIAM A. BAUDLER, ESQ., National  Labor  Relations  Board,   1717  Pennsylvania Avenue,  N.W.,  Washington,  D.C.  20570,  Counsel  for Respondent/Cross Petitioner.


MICHAEL  R.  FANNING,  ESQ.  (Argued),  HELEN  L. MORGAN, ESQ., 1125 17th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036, Counsel for Intervenor/Respondent.


JUDGES: Before:  SCIRICA, ALITO, and ALDISERT, Circuit Judges.


OPINIONBY: ALITO


OPINION:   *151   OPINION OF THE COURT


ALITO, Circuit Judge:


The Indiana Hospital, Inc., has petitioned for review of an order of the National Labor Relations Board, and the Board has cross-petitioned for enforcement of its order. The Board held that the hospital had committed an unfair labor practice by refusing to bargain with the union that had been certified, after an election, as the bargaining rep- resentative for   **2   the hospital's skilled maintenance workers. The hospital's refusal to bargain was based on its belief that the election had been tainted by misconduct on the part of the Board's agents. To substantiate this charge,

*152    the  hospital  subpoenaed  Board  officers  to  pro- vide testimony and documents, but the subpoenas were revoked by the hearing officer, and the Board upheld the revocation on the ground that the hospital had not been prejudiced. Because we cannot accept the Board's con- clusion that the hospital was not prejudiced, we grant the hospital's petition for review and deny the Board's cross- petition for enforcement.


I.


In May 1991,  the International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 95-95A, AFL-CIO, petitioned to rep- resent a bargaining unit consisting of Indiana Hospital's skilled maintenance employees. Over the hospital's ob- jections,  the Board's Regional Director directed that an election be conducted, and the Board itself subsequently denied the hospital's appeal. In September 1991, the elec- tion was held, and the union won by a vote of 17 to 3.


The  hospital  filed  numerous  objections,   arguing, among other things, that agents of the Board's Regional Office for Region Six had engaged **3   in misconduct


during the campaign. Specifically, the hospital alleged: On  or  about  July  11,  1991,  and  con-

tinuing  thereafter,  agents  of  the  Pittsburgh Regional Office of the NLRB incorrectly ad- vised  eligible  voters  that  unless  they  were represented by a union, they would not fall within the protection of the National Labor Relations Act . . . and that the NLRB thus could  not  assist  them  with  any  discrimina- tory complaints.


On  or  about  July  11,  1991,  and  con- tinuing  thereafter,   agents  of  the  NLRB's Pittsburgh  Regional  Office  incorrectly  ad- vised eligible voters that even if the NLRB were able to handle their complaints, the em- ployees would have to retain private counsel, at their own expense, to process their cases.


App. at 47a.


The Regional Director recommended that all of the hospital's objections be overruled without a hearing and that the union be certified as the bargaining representative for the skilled maintenance employees. With respect to the hospital's claim that Board agents had misled employees, the  Regional  Director  stated  that  the  hospital  had  pro- vided the names of employees who had allegedly spoken with the Board agents, that several employees had been interviewed,   **4    and that none had corroborated the hospital's charges. Id. at 55a-56a. The hospital appealed, and the Board, while rejecting most of the hospital's objec- tions, concluded that the hospital had raised "substantial issues" concerning the conduct of the Board's agents and that these issues could "best be resolved after a hearing." Id. at 84a. The Board therefore remanded the case to the Regional Director for a hearing on those issues.


In preparation for that hearing, the hospital served a subpoena on the Board's custodian of records for Region Six. This subpoena required the custodian to appear at the hearing and produce the following documents:


1. All Information Officer Memoranda pre- pared by NLRB Region 6 staff members that reflect telephone conversations or visits with employees of Indiana Hospital for the period May 24, 1991 through September 19, 1991.


2. All memoranda or instructions issued to NLRB Region 6 staff members concerning Information Officer duties for the period May

24, 1991 through September 19, 1991.


Id. at 315a. HN1  Information Officers are Board rep-


10 F.3d 151, *152; 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 31002, **4;

144 L.R.R.M. 2809; 126 Lab. Cas. (CCH) P10,926

Page 3


resentatives who are assigned the duty of handling tele- phone calls and visits from the public. **5  Under Board procedures, information officers are required to complete memoranda containing, among other things, the name and employer of each person who makes an inquiry, the nature of the inquiry, and the advice given. NLRB Casehandling Manual §§ 10012.2, .3, .5.


The hospital also served a subpoena upon the Board's Regional Director for Region 6 requiring his appearance at  the  hearing.  The  hospital  explains  that  it  sought  the testimony  of  the  Regional  Director  in  order  "to  deter- mine what, if any, instructions he had issued to his agents as a result of Indiana Hospital's complaint that employ- ees were receiving grossly inaccurate information from the Region Six Information Officers."   *153    Indiana Hospital Br. at 12. Shortly after serving these subpoenas, the hospital, as required by 29 C.F.R. § 102.118, sent a written request for compliance with the subpoenas to the Board's General Counsel, but the General Counsel never responded.


On the same day when the hospital sent its request to the General Counsel, counsel for the Regional Director filed a petition to revoke the hospital's subpoenas based on the hospital's failure to obtain the General Counsel's consent and on a limited evidentiary **6   privilege ap- plicable to the Board's informal investigation and pretrial preparation process. App. at 336-38a. At the beginning of the hearing on the hospital's objections to the election, the hearing officer granted the petition to revoke. The hearing officer explained that he had done so because "no written consent from the General Counsel had been received al- lowing this testimony" and because "the objecting party has responsibility to support its objection with testimony that was presumably available at the time that the objec- tions were filed and going down that road rather than any other road." Id. at 99a.


Denied  the  documents  and  testimony  sought  by  its subpoenas, the hospital called several of its management officials  to  testify  concerning  statements  made  in  their presence by members of the bargaining unit regarding the advice that they had received from the Board's information officers. Dominic Paccapaniccia, the hospital's vice presi- dent of personnel services, testified that employees within the unit had been concerned that they would be terminated because of their concerted activities if the union did not win the election. To allay these fears, Paccapaniccia tes- tified,   **7   the hospital had distributed a letter advising the employees that the National Labor Relations Act pro- tected employees from discrimination based on union and certain concerted activities. This letter recommended that the employees telephone the Board's Regional Office in Pittsburgh to inquire about the protection afforded by the


Act. Paccapaniccia stated that an employee, Dan Provias, told him on the day after the letter was distributed that he had been informed by the Board's regional office that the employees would have no protection unless they were members of a union. Paccapaniccia also testified that he heard another employee, Will Fetterman, say that a Board agent had given him similar advice.


Another hospital  management          official,    Daniel Severin, also testified that he had heard Fetterman make a similar statement and that several other employees who were present at the time immediately expressed agreement with Fetterman. In addition, Severin stated that another employee,  Allen  Gray,  had  said  that  he  had  been  told by a Board agent that the Board could not help him if he  was  not  a  union  member  and  that  he  would  need  a privately retained attorney. A third hospital management official,              **8     Norman  Thiel,  corroborated  much  of Paccapaniccia's and Severin's testimony regarding these matters.


The hospital did not call as witnesses the employees to whom the Board's information officers had allegedly made  the  false  or  misleading  statements.  The  hospital states that it did not do so because it knew that these em- ployees had been interviewed by Board agents and had provided statements that contradicted those they had made to the hospital's management officials prior to the elec- tion. Indiana Hospital's Br. at 30. Without the evidence sought by the subpoenas, the hospital maintains, it could not have challenged these employees' credibility. Id. Following  the  hearing,  the  hearing  officer  recom- mended that the hospital's objections be overruled since the  hospital  had  not  provided  sufficient  competent  evi- dence to support them. The hearing officer dismissed the testimony of Paccapannicia, Severin, and Thiel as hearsay

and added:


Because the record is clear that the witnesses who allegedly spoke with representatives of the Regional Office were available to testify at this hearing, I can only conclude that the Employer's  failure  to  present  them  as  wit- nesses  to  give  testimony   **9        regarding those alleged conversations is caused by the fear that their testimony would not support the objection.


App. at 197a.


The  hospital  appealed  to  the  Board,  but  the  Board adopted the hearing officer's findings   *154    and rec- ommendations and certified the union as the bargaining representative. The Board addressed the revocation of the subpoenas in a footnote, which stated in pertinent part:


10 F.3d 151, *154; 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 31002, **9;

144 L.R.R.M. 2809; 126 Lab. Cas. (CCH) P10,926

Page 4


The hearing officer faulted the Employer for not calling the employees because they had di- rect knowledge of the statements the Board agents purportedly made and were available to testify. We agree with this finding. We do not believe the Employer was prejudiced in presenting  its  case  by  the  hearing  officer's revocation of the subpoenas addressed to the Region.  We  find  it  unnecessary  to  address the hearing officer's additional ruling at the hearing that the Employer failed to obtain the General Counsel's written permission.


App. at 241a n.2.


Unable  to  seek  judicial  review  of  the  Board's  deci- sion, n1 the hospital refused to recognize or bargain with the union. The Board's General Counsel issued a com- plaint alleging that the hospital's refusal to bargain vio- lated Section 8(a)(1) and **10    (5) of the NLRA, 29

U.S.C. § 158(a)(1) and (5). The hospital filed an answer defending  its  refusal  on  the  basis  of  its  previously  as- serted objections to the election and the certification of the union. The Board took jurisdiction over the proceedings and subsequently granted the General Counsel's motion for summary judgment. The Board issued an order requir- ing the hospital to bargain with the union on request, to post an appropriate notice, and to cease and desist from interfering with the employees' exercise of their statutory rights. The hospital then filed a petition for review, and the Board filed a cross-petition for enforcement.


n1 See American Federation of Labor v. NLRB,

308 U.S. 401, 84 L. Ed. 347, 60 S. Ct. 300 (1940)

(holding that certification is not a final order); Vitek

Elec. Inc. v. NLRB, 763 F.2d 561, 567 n.10 (3d Cir.

1985) (noting that a company may obtain review of a denial of its objections to an election only by refusing to bargain and appealing the resulting un- fair labor practice order); Monmouth Medical Ctr. v. NLRB, 604 F.2d 820, 823 n.3 (3d Cir. 1979) (same).


**11  II.


The Board's brief acknowledges that " HN2  actions by Board agents that compromise the Board's neutrality may  constitute  in  some  cases  a  basis  for  setting  aside an  election."  NLRB  Br.  at  11;  see  also  NLRB  v.  ARA Servs. Inc., 717 F.2d 57, 68-69 (3d Cir. 1983) (in banc); NLRB v. Fenway Cambridge Motor Hotel, 601 F.2d 33,

37 (1st Cir. 1979). The Board's brief argues, however, that

"here, . . . the Hospital failed to present sufficient com-


petent evidence that the conduct on which its objections are premised --  alleged misleading statements by Board agents to unit employees regarding the employees' rights under the Act --  even occurred." NLRB Br. at 12. In re- sponse to the hospital's contention that the revocation of its subpoenas prevented it from obtaining such evidence, the Board's brief contends that "the Hospital could have attempted to prove its objections by calling as witnesses the employees on whom it assertedly relied in filing its objections in the first place." Id. at 16. Accordingly, the Board's  brief  argues,  "the  Hospital  is  in  no  position  to claim prejudice merely because it was denied access to the Board's files **12   and officials." Id.


We disagree with the Board's conclusion that the hos- pital was not prejudiced by the revocation of its subpoe- nas. If those subpoenas had been enforced, the documents and testimony that they sought could have been used by the hospital in at least three significant ways. First,  the hospital could have sought to introduce the information officer memoranda themselves. n2 Second, the hospital, after  discovering  from  those  memoranda  the  identities of  the  information  officers  who  had  received  the  rele- vant calls, could have sought to call those officers to tes- tify. Third, the hospital could have used the memoranda

*155   in examining the employees who made the calls. n2 These memoranda appear to constitute ad- missions by agents of the Board and thus appear to be admissible under Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(D). Therefore,  it appears that the hearsay rule would not have prevented their admission either at the pro- ceeding under Section 9(c) of the Act, 29 U.S.C. §

151 et seq., where the rules of evidence were not controlling ( 29 C.F.R. § 102.66(a)) or in the unfair labor proceeding, where these rules were control- ling so far as practicable ( 29 C.F.R. § 102.39).


**13


The Board reasoned that the hospital could have ob- tained  the  same  or  comparable  evidence  by  calling  the employees as witnesses, but that reasoning is flawed no matter what assumption is made about the nature of the testimony those employees would have given. If it is as- sumed that the employees would have testified that the information officers did not make any false or misleading statements, then the hospital could have used the docu- ments and testimony sought by the subpoenas in all three of the ways outlined above. Conversely, if it is assumed that the employees would have testified that the informa- tion officers did make false or misleading statements, the hospital could still have used the documents and testimony sought by its subpoenas in the first two ways noted -- i.e., the hospital could have sought to introduce the informa-


10 F.3d 151, *155; 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 31002, **13;

144 L.R.R.M. 2809; 126 Lab. Cas. (CCH) P10,926

Page 5


tion officers' memoranda and to call the information of- ficers as witnesses. The information officers' memoranda and  testimony  might  still  have  been  important  because the Board might not have been willing to accept the accu- racy or veracity of the employees' testimony, which would have been inconsistent with the statements those employ- ees had previously given **14    to the Board's agents. Moreover, it seems to us fundamentally illogical to hold against the hospital on the assumption that the employ- ees, if called as witnesses, would have given testimony supporting the hospital's position.


Accordingly, we reject the Board's conclusion that the hospital was not prejudiced by the revocation of its sub- poenas. We note that during the Board proceedings the Regional Director and the hearing officer advanced sev- eral other justifications for the revocation of the subpoe-


nas. A decision of the Board, however, "'stands or falls on its express findings and reasoning.'" NLRB v. Alan Motor Lines,  Inc.,  937  F.2d  887,  891  (3d  Cir.  1991)  (quoting NLRB v. Indianapolis Mack Sales & Serv. Inc., 802 F.2d

280,  285  (7th  Cir.  1986));  see  also  NLRB  v.  P  *  I  * E Nationwide, Inc.,  923 F.2d 506,  518 (7th Cir. 1991); Slaughter  v.  NLRB,  794  F.2d  120,  128  (3d  Cir.  1986). Here, the Board rested its decision solely on the ground that the hospital was not prejudiced, and because we can- not accept that reasoning, we cannot sustain the Board's order.


III.


For **15   these reasons, we grant the hospital's pe- tition for review, deny the Board's cross-petition for en- forcement of its order, and remand this case to the Board for further proceedings.


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