1. In requiring the disestablishment of a company union, the
National Labor Relations Board was authorized, by § 10(c) of
the National Labor Relations Act, upon the facts it found in this
case, supported by evidence, to order that the employer reimburse
its employees in full for amounts which had been deducted from
their wage and paid to that union as dues. P.
319 U. S.
539.
2. The Board's determination that reimbursement in full of the
checked-off dues is necessary to "effectuate the policies of the
Act" should stand in the absence of any showing that the order was
a patent attempt to achieve ends other than can fairly be said to
effectuate the policies of the Act. P.
319 U. S.
540.
3. The order is not to be regarded as adjudicating a right to
damages or as imposing a penalty. P.
319 U. S.
543.
132 F.2d 390 affirmed.
Certiorari, 318 U.S. 752, to review an order of the National
Labor Relations Board. The case was here before, and was remanded
for a redetermination,
314 U. S. 469.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY delivered the opinion of the Court.
After the remand of this case in
314 U. S. 314 U.S.
469, the Board reconsidered it upon the original record, made new
findings of fact, and concluded that the Company had violated
Page 319 U. S. 534
§§ 8(1), (2) and (3) of the Act. 29 U.S.C. § 158.
A new order was entered requiring the Company to cease and desist
from the unfair labor practices found, and from giving effect to
its contract with the Independent Organization of Employees. The
order also directed the Company to withdraw recognition from and
disestablish the I.O.E. as a representative of its employees, to
reinstate with backpay two of three employees found to have been
discriminatorily discharged, to reimburse its employees in the
amount of dues and assessments deducted from their wages by the
Company and paid to the I.O.E., and to post appropriate notices. 44
N.L.R.B. 404. The court below, one judge dissenting in part, upheld
the order in full. 132 F.2d 390. The I.O.E. then apparently decided
to dissolve, and the Company withdrew recognition from and
disestablished it. Because of an apparent conflict of decisions, we
granted the Company's petition for certiorari which challenged only
the authority of the Board to require reimbursement of the
checked-off dues, a point not reached when the case was here
before. [
Footnote 1]
The new findings are much more elaborate than those originally
before us in
314 U. S. 314 U.S.
469, and it would serve no
Page 319 U. S. 535
useful purpose to discuss them minutely. The following outline
is sufficient for an understanding of the issues raised: the
findings sketch in considerable detail the anti-union background of
the Company and the activities of Bishop, the superintendent of the
Company's Norfolk transportation department, including his
suggestions to employees Ruett and Elliott that they form
unaffiliated organizations. The growth of the I.O.E. is traced from
the speeches and meetings of May 24, 1937, which were held after
requests for collective bargaining were received by the Company
from several small groups of employees as a result of the bulletin
of April 26, and which were attended by representatives selected by
the employees at the suggestion of the Company. The tracing
continues with a discussion of the reactions of those
representatives after the Company officials left the meetings and
their subsequent reports delivered to the employees on Company
property, and in some instances on Company time with the help of
supervisory employees. Emphasis is placed upon the frequent
meetings on Company property held by the resultant Norfolk and
Richmond steering committees during the first part of June. The
Constitution and bylaws of the I.O.E. were adopted on June 15. The
membership campaign began June 17, and, within two weeks, the
I.O.E. had a majority of the Company's 3,000 widely scattered
employees. The Board contrasted this with its findings that, during
the critical formative period of the I.O.E., the Company discharged
one Mann, an outspoken foe of an "inside" union, that Edwards, a
supervisor, kept CIO meetings under surveillance and warned some
employees against "messing with the CIO," and that the Company
denied the use of its premises to representatives of national labor
organizations, and then drew the conclusion that the quick success
of the I.O.E. membership campaign
"must be attributed in large part to the respondent's
[Company's]
Page 319 U. S. 536
sponsorship of and assistance to the I.O.E. and its persistent
and well known opposition to national unions."
Continuing, the findings relate that the representatives of the
I.O.E., in convention on July 17 and 18, drew up a proposed
contract, embodying demands for a closed shop, check-off of I.O.E.
dues, and substantial wage increases, which was sent to the Company
with a request for a bargaining conference. The conference began on
July 30, and the Company quickly gave recognition and offered no
objection to the check-off provision, with the addition of a
proviso that the employees might revoke their authorizations at any
time. The bylaws of the I.O.E., however, required all members to
authorize the deduction of dues, and the membership applications
contained such authorizations. The closed shop provision was
discussed for two hours and then postponed for other matters until
the following day, when it was again taken up for two hours and
then agreed to with the addition, at the instance of the Company,
of a provision that nothing in the contract should prevent
employees from joining or remaining members of any other labor
organization. Wage increases, costing the Company $600,000
annually, were granted, and, as President Holtzclaw had promised at
the May 24 meeting in Richmond, they were made retroactive to June
1. The contract was formally executed August 5, and, on August 20,
the Company paid $3,784.50 to the I.O.E. as dues under the
check-off provision, although it had not yet deducted that entire
amount from the wages of its employees. The Board considered
"the promptness with which the respondent [Company] agreed to
grant the I.O.E. a check-off of dues and a closed shop . . . after
a comparatively few hours discussion,"
and then found that the Company "agreed to the closed shop and
the check-off of I.O.E. dues in order to entrench the I.O.E. among
the employees and to insure its financial stability."
Page 319 U. S. 537
On the basis of these findings, the Board concluded that:
"the respondent has engaged in a course of conduct calculated to
restrain and discourage its employees from self-organization in
nationally affiliated unions and to divert and canalize their
organizational efforts to the establishment of a company-wide
unaffiliated labor organization; that, in its totality, the
respondent's conduct has been coercive of its employees in the
exercise of their right to self-organization, with the result that,
when they formed the I.O.E., they were not as free as the statute
requires; that the I.O.E. is the fruit of the respondent's illegal
interference with, and restraint and coercion of its employees, and
that the respondent has dominated the formation and administration
of, the I.O.E., and has contributed financial and other support to
it,"
and again that:
"the I.O.E. was not the result of the employees' free choice;
that it was initiated in response to the urgings of the respondent
at the May 24 meetings to set up their 'own' organization; that the
respondent's support of the organization during the critical
formative period and its consistent opposition to nationally
affiliated organizations are largely responsible for the adherence
of the employees to the organization, and that the contract with
the I.O.E. granting a closed shop and the check-off of the I.O.E.
dues marked the climax of the respondent's efforts to erect an
unaffiliated organization as a bulwark against nationally
affiliated organizations. We find that the respondent has dominated
and interfered with the formation and administration of the I.O.E.
and has contributed support to it. . . ."
In discussing the appropriate remedy for the unfair labor
practices found, the Board stated that the Company's domination and
interference in the formation and administration of the I.O.E.
constituted "a continuing obstacle to the exercise by the employees
of the rights guaranteed them by the Act," and therefore the
disestablishment of the I.O.E. was necessary. In addition, the
Board was of opinion that, "under the circumstances of
Page 319 U. S. 538
this case," the Company should be ordered to reimburse its
employees for the amounts checked-off their wages and paid to the
I.O.E. [
Footnote 2]
The company no longer attacks the conclusion that the I.O.E. was
dominated by it, but it does contest the validity of the findings
relating to domination insofar as may be pertinent to the
reimbursement order, and it challenges the power of the Board to
make that order under the circumstances of the case.
Under the applicable principles governing the scope of our
review of Board orders, we think the Board's findings and
conclusions regarding the Company's domination of and interference
with the I.O.E. are supported by substantial
Page 319 U. S. 539
evidence, and therefore conclusive.
See Labor Board v.
Link-Belt Co., 311 U. S. 584;
I. A. of M. v. Labor Board, 311 U. S.
72;
Labor Board v. Automotive Maintenance Machinery
Co., 315 U. S. 282;
Labor Board v. Nevada Consol. Copper Corp., 316 U.
S. 105;
Labor Board v. Southern Bell Tel. & Tel.
Co., ante, p.
319 U. S. 50. These
findings and conclusions are not subject to the infirmities of the
original ones which prompted our decision in
314 U. S. 314 U.S.
469. While the bulletin of April 26 and the speeches of May 24 are
still stressed, they are considered not in isolation, but as part
of a pattern of events adding up to the conclusion of domination
and interference. We are also of opinion that the Board had power
to enter the check-off reimbursement order in the circumstances of
this case.
Section 10(c) of the Act [
Footnote 3] authorizes the Board to require persons found
engaged or engaging in unfair labor practices "to take such
affirmative action, including reinstatement of employees with or
without backpay, as will effectuate the policies of this Act." The
declared policy of the Act in § 1 is to prevent, by
encouraging and protecting collective bargaining and full freedom
of association for workers, the costly dislocation and interruption
of the flow of commerce caused by unnecessary industrial strife and
unrest.
See Labor Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel
Corp., 301 U. S. 1. Within
this limit, the Board has wide discretion in ordering affirmative
action; its power is not limited to the illustrative example of one
type of permissible affirmative order -- namely, reinstatement with
or without backpay.
Phelps Dodge Corp. v. Labor Board,
313 U. S. 177,
313 U. S.
187-189. The particular means by which the effects of
unfair labor practices are to be expunged are matters "for the
Board, not the courts, to determine."
I.A. of M. v. Labor
Board, supra, at p.
311 U. S. 82;
Labor Board v. Link-Belt Co.,
Page 319 U. S. 540
supra, at p.
311 U. S. 600.
Here, the Board, in the exercise of its informed discretion, has
expressly determined that reimbursement in full of the checked-off
dues is necessary to effectuate the policies of the Act. We give
considerable weight to that administrative determination. It should
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 of the Act. There is no such showing
here.
The Board found that the Company was responsible for the
creation of the I.O.E. by providing its initial impetus and
direction and by contributing support during its critical formative
period. It further found that the Company quickly agreed to give
its creature closed shop and check-off privileges "in order to
entrench the I.O.E. among the employees and to insure its financial
stability." The result was that the employees, under the I.O.E.
bylaws, had to authorize wage deductions for dues to remain members
of the I.O.E., and they had to remain members to retain their jobs.
[
Footnote 4] Thus, as a price
of employment, they were required by the Company to support an
illegal organization which foreclosed their rights to freedom of
organization and collective bargaining. To hold that the Board is
without power here to order reimbursement of the amounts so exacted
is to hold that an employer is free to fasten firmly upon his
employees the cost of maintaining an organization by which he
effectively defeats the free exercise of their rights to
self-organization and collective bargaining. That this may pervert
the purpose of the Act is clear. It is equally clear that the
undoing of the effects of such a practice may, in the judgment of
the Board, remove a very real barrier to the effectuation
Page 319 U. S. 541
of the policies of the Act, the protection of commerce through
the elimination of industrial conflict by guaranteeing full freedom
of association and genuine collective bargaining to employees. An
order such as this, which deprives an employer of advantages
accruing from a particular method of subverting the Act, is a
permissible method of effectuating the statutory policy.
It is argued that disestablishment of the I.O.E. sufficiently
effectuates the policies of the Act by restoring to the employees
of the Company their freedom of association. But the Board need not
be satisfied with the remedy alone. It has here determined that, to
effectuate fully the policies of the Act, it is necessary to
expunge the effects of the unfair labor practices by ordering the
reimbursement of checked-off dues. Such a determination seems
manifestly reasonable. It returns to the employees what has been
taken from them to support an organization not of their free
choice, and places the burden upon the Company whose unfair labor
practices brought about the situation. The deduction of dues from
wages under the circumstances of this case is not unlike a loss
occasioned by a discriminatory discharge, and an order for the
return of those checked-off dues promotes the policies of the Act
in substantially the same manner as would a backpay award. By
returning their money to the employees, the order severs possible
economic ties which they may have with the employer-dominated
I.O.E., and, to this extent, aids in completely disestablishing
that organization and restoring to the employees that truly
unfettered freedom of choice which the Act demands. If employees
have some assurance that an employer may not with impunity impose
upon them the cost of maintaining an organization which he has
dominated, any more than he can make them bear the burden of a
discriminatory discharge, they may be more confident in the
exercise of their statutory rights.
Page 319 U. S. 542
The Company contends that the Board did not find that it
continued to interfere with the I.O.E. after its organization
except with regard to the closed shop and check-off clauses of the
contract, and this finding is attacked as without foundation in
evidence. It is said that the demand for a closed shop and
check-off originated with the employees, who were free to abandon
those provisions at any time by changing their bylaws or the
contract, and that therefore the continuation of those requirements
was the voluntary action of the employees, for which the Company is
not responsible. Finally it is urged that the Company should not be
compelled to reimburse these voluntary payments because the
employees received benefits, including substantial wage increases,
from the I.O.E.
The short answer is that the Board has resolved all these
contentions against the Company, and we cannot say it exceeded its
competence in so doing. It made no finding of specific management
interference in the I.O.E. after the execution of the contract, but
it did conclude that the I.O.E.'s existence was a "continuing
obstacle" to the employees' exercise of their statutory rights.
This conclusion of continuation of the effects of an
employer-dominated beginning is a permissible one for the Board to
draw.
Cf. Labor Board v. Southern Bell Tel. Co.,
319 U. S. 50. It
disposes of the argument that the men were free at any time to
eliminate the check-off; because of the I.O.E.'s origin the Board
could conclude, as it did, that they were not as free as the
statute requires. Also, in view of the Company's interference in
and support given to the I.O.E. and the celerity of agreement in
the bargaining conference, the Board could infer, despite the fact
that demands for the closed shop and the check-off originated with
the I.O.E., that the Company seized upon those provisions to
establish the I.O.E. firmly. The fact that a contrary inference is
possible from the evidence does not allow us to set aside the
one
Page 319 U. S. 543
drawn by the Board.
Labor Board v. Nevada Consol. Copper
Co., 316 U. S. 105.
This dissipates the force of the argument that the closed shop and
check-off provisions were forced upon the Company against its
will.
The instant reimbursement order is not a redress for a private
wrong. Like a backpay order, it does restore to the employees in
some measure what was taken from them because of the Company's
unfair labor practices. In this, both these types of monetary
awards somewhat resemble compensation for private injury, but it
must be constantly remembered that both are remedies created by
statute -- the one explicitly and the other implicitly in the
concept of effectuation of the policies of the Act -- which are
designed to aid in achieving the elimination of industrial
conflict. They vindicate public, not private rights.
Cf.
Agwilines, Inc. v. Labor Board, 87 F.2d 146, 150, 151;
Phelps Dodge Corp. v. Labor Board, 313 U.
S. 177. For this reason, it is erroneous to characterize
this reimbursement order as penal, or as the adjudication of a mass
tort. It is equally wrong to fetter the Board's discretion by
compelling it to observe conventional common law or chancery
principles in fashioning such an order, or to force it to inquire
into the amount of damages actually sustained. Whether and to what
extent such matters should be considered is a complex problem for
the Board to decide in the light of its administrative experience
and knowledge. The Board has here determined that the employees
suffered a definite loss in the amount of the dues deducted from
their wages, and that the effectuation of the policies of the Act
requires reimbursement of those dues in full. We cannot say this
considered judgment does not effectuate the statutory purpose.
The argument that the employees received some value from their
contributions via the check-off to the Company dominated I.O.E. is
based upon the assumption that
Page 319 U. S. 544
such an organization necessarily gives some
quid pro
quo. But, in view of the purposes of the Act, a contrary
assumption -- that employees receive no benefit from a type of
organization which Congress has characterized as detrimental to the
interests of employees and provocative of industrial unrest -- is
possible. These are considerations for the Board to decide
according to its reasoned judgment. We hold that the Board here
made an allowable judgment. That judgment cannot be upset by
pointing to substantial wage increases which the I.O.E. was
granted. As the court below said,
"it is manifestly impossible to say that greater benefits might
not have been secured if the freedom of choice of a bargaining
agent had not been interfered with."
132 F.2d at 398.
Cf. Texas & New Orleans R. Co. v.
Brotherhood of Railway Clerks, 281 U.
S. 548,
281 U. S.
559.
This reimbursement order cannot be labeled "penal." The purpose
of the order is not to penalize the Company by requiring repayment
of sums it did not retain in its treasury. Those sums did go into
the treasury of the Company's creature to accomplish purposes the
Company evidently believed to be to its advantage, and the order of
reimbursement is intended to remove the effects of this unfair
labor practice by restoring to the employees what would not have
been taken from them if the Company had not contravened the Act.
This is not a case in which the Board has ordered the payment of
sums to third parties, or has made employees more than whole.
Cf. Republic Steel Corp. v. Labor Board, 311 U. S.
7. The fact that the Board may only have approximated
its efforts to make the employees whole, because of asserted
benefits of dubious and unascertainable nature flowing from the
I.O.E., does not convert this reimbursement order into the
imposition of a penalty.
Cf. Overnight Motor Transp. Co. v.
Missel, 316 U. S. 572,
316 U. S.
583-584.
Page 319 U. S. 545
We need not now examine the various situations that were before
the Circuit Courts of Appeals in the cases collected in
Note 1 ante, or consider
hypothetical possibilities. We decide only the case before us, and
sustain the power of the Board to order reimbursement in full under
the circumstances here disclosed.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
In eleven cases, five circuits, under varying circumstances and
on diverse reasoning, have refused to enforce Board orders
requiring reimbursement of checked-off dues.
See Western Union
Tel. Co. v. Labor Board, 113 F.2d 992;
Corning Glass Works
v. Labor Board, 118 F.2d 625;
Labor Board v. West Kentucky
Coal Co., 116 F.2d 816;
Labor Board v. United States Truck
Co., 124 F.2d 887;
Labor Board v. Gerity Whitaker
Co., 137 F.2d 198;
Labor Board v. J. Greenebaum Tanning
Co., 110 F.2d 984;
A. E. Staley Mfg. Co. v. Labor
Board, 117 F.2d 868;
Reliance Mfg. Co. v. Labor
Board, 125 F.2d 311;
Kansas City Power & Light Co. v.
Labor Board, 111 F.2d 340;
Labor Board v. Southwestern
Greyhound Lines, Inc., 126 F.2d 883;
Labor Board v.
Continental Oil Co., 121 F.2d 120.
[
Footnote 2]
The Board's full statement on this point follows:
"The respondent concluded a closed shop contract with the
I.O.E., a company-dominated organization, thus compelling its
employees to become and remain members of the illegal organization.
Employees were in fact discharged because they refused to join the
I.O.E. The check-off provision, a device by which the respondent
assured the financial stability of the company-dominated
organization, could no more be avoided by the employees than could
the compulsory membership requirement. The bylaws of the I.O.E.
required its members to execute check-off authorizations under
penalty of being dropped from membership in the I.O.E., and
thereby, under the closed shop provision, from their jobs. We find
that the monies thus deducted from the wages of the employees
constituted the price of retaining their jobs, a price coerced from
them for respondent's purpose of supporting and maintaining the
organization which respondent had dominated in order to thwart
bona fide representation. We further find that, as a
result of the imposition of the illegal closed shop and check-off
requirements, the employees suffered a definite loss and
deprivation of wages equal to the amounts deducted from their wages
and paid over to the I.O.E. It is appropriate that the employees be
made whole by reimbursement of amounts exacted from them for
illegal purposes. We find that, in these circumstances, the effects
of the unfair labor practices may be fully remedied, and the
purposes and policies of the Act may be completely effectuated,
only by restoring the
status quo. Hence, we shall order
the respondent to reimburse its employees for the amounts deducted
from their wages for dues and assessments in the I.O.E."
[
Footnote 3]
49 Stat. 449, 29 U.S.C. § 151
et seq.
[
Footnote 4]
The proviso in the check-off agreement that employees might
revoke their individual authorizations at any time was admittedly
meaningless in view of the closed shop agreement and the
requirement in the I.O.E. bylaws that its members authorize the
check-off.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, concurring.
If the controlling facts in this case were like those in
Western Union Tel. Co. v. Labor Board, 113 F.2d 992, I
too, would accept the reasoning of Judge Learned Hand's opinion in
that case, and join my brother ROBERTS. But the vital difference
between the
Western Union and this case is that, in the
former, "there was no evidence that all those [employees] who asked
to have their wages stopped did so in any part because they were
coerced."
Id., 113 F.2d at 997. Here, the employees had no
such choice; they could avoid the check-off of union dues only by
giving up their jobs.
We start with the Board's finding -- a finding not here for
review -- that, through its domination of the I.O.E., the Company
indulged in an unfair labor practice. But not only did it foster
that company union, it foisted membership in the union upon all its
employees. The Board had a right to find that membership in the
union, which the employees had no power to reject, equally denied
the employees the power to reject the costs of that membership. It
was therefore justified in concluding that the employees should be
made whole for that which was the consequence of the Company's
compulsion upon them. Therein this case differs not only from the
Western Union case, but also from the decisions in four
other circuits upon which my brother ROBERTS relies:
Labor
Board v. West Kentucky Coal Co., 116 F.2d 816, 823;
Reliance Mfg. Co. v. Labor Board, 125 F.2d 311;
Page 319 U. S. 546
Labor Board v. Southwestern Greyhound Lines, 126 F.2d
883, 887;
Labor Board v. Continental Oil Co., 121 F.2d
120, 125.
Needless to say, we have nothing to do with the wisdom of the
Board's requirement that the coerced dues be restored to the
employees. Our decision can go no further than that, within the
framework of the general authority given to it by Congress, the
Board is empowered to find that, when men pay dues to a
company-dominated union, upon pain of forfeiting their jobs, it is
the company which has, in fact, commanded the payment of the dues,
and it is the company which must make restoration.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS.
The single question presented is whether the National Labor
Relations Board, in ordering disestablishment of an unaffiliated
union, may, in the circumstances disclosed, order reimbursement of
dues paid by the employees to the union pursuant to individual
assignments by employees and a union agreement for a closed shop
and a check-off of dues.
The court below (one judge dissenting) has sustained this
feature of the order. I am of opinion that its judgment should be
reversed.
The only provision of the Act on which the Board relies is that
found in § 10(c), [
Footnote
2/1] which is that the Board may require the employer
"to cease and desist from such unfair labor practice, and to
take such affirmative action, including reinstatement of employees
with or without backpay, as will effectuate the policies of this
Act."
The critical phrase is "to take such affirmative action . . . as
will effectuate the policies of this Act." The policies of the Act
are stated in § 1 [
Footnote
2/2] as the encouragement of the
Page 319 U. S. 547
practice and procedure of collective bargaining and the
protection of the exercise by workers of full freedom of
association, self-organization, and designation of representatives
of their own choosing, for the purpose of negotiating the terms and
conditions of their employment or other mutual aid or protection.
[
Footnote 2/3] It is plain that a
reimbursement order may be made by the Board only if it will
effectuate these policies.
The court below has interpreted this grant of power to the Board
as permitting what the court characterizes as a restoration of the
status quo. The Act, however, contains no such expression,
and, if it is given, as I think it has been in the present
instance, the meaning of redress of private wrongs, it
misrepresents the clear intent of the statute. [
Footnote 2/4]
The Act gives the Board no power to impose liability for any
supposed injury arising out of the compulsion of employees to
contribute dues to the union. Nor can the order of restitution be
grounded upon any theory that, although the unfair labor practice
constitutes a public, rather than a private, wrong, the power
granted to effectuate the policies of the Act envisages imposition
of a penalty for wrongful conduct on the part of the employer.
[
Footnote 2/5]
There remains the question whether the order under review can be
justified as appropriate to effectuate the policies of the Act.
This question should be answered in the light of the facts
disclosed by the record. The Board has found that the employer was
guilty of unfair labor practices in influencing employees in favor
of a company
Page 319 U. S. 548
union. The order requires the company to cease and desist from
the practices, to cease giving effect to the existing agreement
with the union, and to withdraw recognition from and disestablish
that organization as a bargaining unit. This order is supported by
findings that, at a time when no union existed, the company threw
its influence in favor of an unaffiliated or company union. All the
facts found in this connection relate to a time anterior to the
organization of the union. There is no finding, and no facts which
would justify a finding, that, subsequent to the organization of
the union, the employer interfered with it, dominated it, or
supported it in any manner. The union then organized made demands
upon the company which were the subject of negotiations, and out of
those negotiations grew an increase of wages totaling about
$600,000 per annum and a collective bargaining agreement which
contained provisions for a closed shop and for the check-off of
union dues, both of which features were demanded and insisted upon
by the union. There is no finding and no evidence that the employer
in fact inspired, instigated, or coerced the employees to make
these demands, or had, even remotely, anything to do with them
other than they followed its earlier encouragement of the
organization of the union. From the day that contract was signed,
no act of interference or domination and no word even of suggestion
from the company as to the union policy or practices is shown. The
record demonstrates that the employer insisted that the check-off
of union dues should be authorized by each employee individually,
subject to his untrammeled right of revocation, and that the closed
shop provision should not prevent any member of the company union
from also joining any other union of his choice. The fixation of
the union dues was a matter within the control of the union members
and continuance of check-off as respects any employee was a matter
for his voluntary determination so far as the
Page 319 U. S. 549
employer was concerned. While it is not denied that the union
procured substantial benefits for its members, or that it
represented them faithfully and fairly, nevertheless, because of
the company's interference at the time of the organization of the
union, that organization has been disestablished, and indeed has
now been dissolved.
It is to be noted that, had it not been for the defect which
tainted its capacity to represent the employees, its other
activities would have been wholly in accordance with the objects
and purposes of the National Labor Relations Act. Nothing in that
Act invalidates a collective bargaining agreement providing for a
closed shop or for a check-off of dues. If, in fact, those features
of the agreement were the voluntary act of the employees, as on
this record they must be found to have been, it is difficult to see
how the policies of the Act are to be effectuated by repayment to
the employees of the dues heretofore paid when such repayment can
in no wise benefit the association which has been
disestablished.
The company union having been disestablished, the employees are
free to form or join any union and make it their bargaining agent.
Any possible effect of company influence has been dissipated. The
only possible effect of restitution of dues to employees who have
not asked for repayment, who have received substantial benefits,
from their contribution of dues, is to punish the employer and
perchance operate as a warning to other employers that they will
similarly be punished for unfair labor practices.
The Board seeks to sustain the order on the ground that the Act
authorizes, as one form of affirmative action to effectuate the
policies of the Act, the reinstatement of employees with or without
backpay. The award of backpay, however, stands on a different
basis. If employees are to be faced with discriminatory discharge
for advocating union representation by an organization of their
choice, the threat will render doubtful, if not impossible, free
and
Page 319 U. S. 550
uncontrolled action on the part of the employees. The Act
therefore is an announcement to employees that, if they are
discharged for such activity, they may have reinstatement and, in
proper cases, backpay. Such a promise to employees was essential to
assure them immunity for conduct made lawful by the Act. But the
payment of union dues is quite another matter, particularly where,
as here, no employee was obliged to join the union, and no
discrimination between employees resulted from joining or paying
dues to the recognized union. It is inconceivable that the hope of
reimbursement of dues paid to the union in question would have any
effect on the conduct of the members to join or refrain from
joining this union or joining another, as they were free to do.
Moreover, the employees were free under the Act to adhere to
another organization and to bring about an election for the choice
of another bargaining representative. The Board made no inquiry and
no finding respecting coercion of individual employees.
As I have already indicated, the only effect of the order is to
redress a supposed private wrong to employees which the evidence
and findings indicate never was inflicted, and to inflict drastic
punishment of the employer for its earlier violation of the statute
by encouraging its employees to organize. Neither is within the
competence of the Board, as this court has repeatedly held.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Like orders have been before the courts in eleven other cases,
as shown by the opinion of the court. All have reached the
conclusion that the Act does not authorize such an order. [
Footnote 2/7] I think that should be the
decision of the Court in this case.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON join in this
dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
29 U.S.C. § 160(c).
[
Footnote 2/2]
29 U.S.C. § 151.
[
Footnote 2/3]
See Republic Steel Corp. v. Labor Board, 311 U. S.
7,
311 U. S. 10;
Labor Board v. Fansteel Metallurgical Corp., 306 U.
S. 240,
306 U. S.
257.
[
Footnote 2/4]
H.R. 972, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 21; H.R. 1147, 74th Cong.,
1st Sess., p. 24.
National Licorice Co. v. Labor Board,
309 U. S. 350,
309 U. S.
362-363.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Consolidated Edison Co. v. Labor Board, 305 U.
S. 197,
305 U. S. 236;
Republic Steel Corp. v. Labor Board, 311 U. S.
7,
311 U. S.
11-12.
[
Footnote 2/6]
See 319
U.S. 533fn2/4|>Notes 4 and 5,
supra.
[
Footnote 2/7]
I might well have contented myself, in lieu of writing, with a
reference to the opinion in
Western Union Tel. Co. v. Labor
Board, 113 F.2d 992, which exhaustively and convincingly deals
with the subject.