1. Under the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the
National Labor Relations Board may not, either directly or
indirectly, compel concessions or otherwise sit in judgment upon
the substantive terms of collective bargaining agreements. Pp.
343 U. S.
401-404.
2. It is not
per se an "unfair labor practice" under
§ 8(a)(1) or (5) of the Act for an employer to bargain for the
inclusion in a collective bargaining agreement of a "management
functions clause" providing that the right to select, hire,
promote, discharge, demote, or discipline for cause and to
determine the schedules of work, is a prerogative of management on
which the employer's final decision shall not be subject to
arbitration. Pp.
343 U. S.
404-409.
(a) The Act does not empower the Board to disrupt common
collective bargaining practices by forbidding employers to bargain
for flexible treatment of such matters and by requiring them to
include in labor agreements provisions establishing fixed standards
for work schedules or any other condition of employment. P.
343 U. S.
408.
(b) The duty to bargain collectively is to be enforced by
application of the good faith bargaining standards of § 8(d)
to the facts of each case, rather than by prohibiting all employers
in every industry from bargaining for management functions clauses
altogether. P.
343 U. S.
409.
3. Congress has charged the Courts of Appeal, not this Court,
with the normal and primary responsibility of reviewing the
conclusions of the Board and deciding whether to grant or deny
enforcement of the Board's orders, and it is not for this Court to
review a conflict of the evidence, nor to reverse a Court of
Appeals because this Court might find the record tilting one way,
rather than the other -- especially in cases involving a statutory
standard such as "good faith," which can have meaning only in its
application to the facts of a particular case.
Labor Board v.
Pittsburgh S.S. Co., 340 U. S. 498. Pp.
343 U. S.
409-410.
Page 343 U. S. 396
The Court of Appeals granted in part and denied in part
enforcement of an order of the National Labor Relations Board, 89
N.L.R.B. 185, requiring an employer to bargain collectively with a
union and, in effect, forbidding the employer to bargain for any
"management functions clause" covering a condition of employment.
187 F.2d 307. This Court granted certiorari. 342 U.S. 809.
Affirmed, p.
343 U. S.
410.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE VINSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case arises out of a complaint that respondent refused to
bargain collectively with the representatives of its employees as
required under the National Labor Relations Act, as amended.
[
Footnote 1]
The Office Employees International Union A.F. of L., Local No.
27, certified by the National Labor Relations Board as the
exclusive bargaining representative of respondent's office
employees, requested a meeting with respondent for the purpose of
negotiating an agreement governing employment relations. At the
first meetings,
Page 343 U. S. 397
beginning on November 30, 1948, the Union submitted a proposed
contract covering wages, hours, promotions, vacations, and other
provisions commonly found in collective bargaining agreements,
including a clause establishing a procedure for settling grievances
arising under the contract by successive appeals to management,
with ultimate resort to an arbitrator.
On January 10, 1949, following a recess for study of the Union's
contract proposals, respondent objected to the provisions calling
for unlimited arbitration. To meet this objection, respondent
proposed a so-called management functions clause listing matters
such as promotions, discipline, and work scheduling as the
responsibility of management, and excluding such matters from
arbitration. [
Footnote 2] The
Union's representative took the position, "as soon as [he] heard
[the proposed clause]," that the Union would not agree to such a
clause so long as it covered matters subject to the duty to bargain
collectively under the Labor Act.
Several further bargaining sessions were held without reaching
agreement on the Union's proposal or respondent's counterproposal
to unlimited arbitration. As a result, the management functions
clause was "by-passed" for bargaining on other terms of the Union's
contract proposal. On January 17, 1949, respondent stated in
writing its agreement with some of the terms proposed by the Union
and, where there was disagreement, respondent offered
counter-proposals, including a clause entitled "Functions and
Prerogatives of Management" along the
Page 343 U. S. 398
lines suggested at the meeting of January 10th. The Union
objected to the portion of the clause providing:
"The right to select and hire, to promote to a better position,
to discharge, demote or discipline for cause, and to maintain
discipline and efficiency of employees and to determine the
schedules of work is recognized by both union and company as the
proper responsibility and prerogative of management to be held and
exercised by the company, and, while it is agreed that an employee
feeling himself to have been aggrieved by any decision of the
company in respect to such matters, or the union in his behalf,
shall have the right to have such decision reviewed by top
management officials of the company under the grievance machinery
hereinafter set forth, it is further agreed that the final decision
of the company made by such top management officials shall not be
further reviewable by arbitration."
At this stage of the negotiations, the National Labor Relations
Board filed a complaint against respondent based on the Union's
charge that respondent had refused to bargain as required by the
Labor Act, and was thereby guilty of interfering with the rights of
its employees guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act, and of unfair
labor practices under Sections 8(a)(1) and 8(a)(5) of the Act.
[
Footnote 3]
Page 343 U. S. 399
While the proceeding was pending, negotiations between the Union
and respondent continued with the management functions clause
remaining an obstacle to agreement. During the negotiations,
respondent established new night shifts and introduced a new system
of lunch hours without consulting the Union.
On May 19, 1949, a Union representative offered a second
contract proposal which included a management functions clause
containing much of the language found in respondent's second
counterproposal, quoted above, with the vital difference that
questions arising under the Union's proposed clause would be
subject to arbitration as in the case of other grievances. Finally,
on January 13, 1950, after the Trial Examiner had issued his report
but before decision by the Board, an agreement between the Union
and respondent was signed. [
Footnote 4] The agreement contained a management functions
clause that rendered nonarbitrable matters of discipline, work
schedules and other matters covered by the clause. The subject of
promotions
Page 343 U. S. 400
and demotions was deleted from the clause and made the subject
of a special clause establishing a union-management committee to
pass upon promotion matters.
While these negotiations were in progress, the Board's Trial
Examiner conducted hearings on the Union's complaint. The Examiner
held that respondent had a right to bargain for inclusion of a
management functions clause in a contract. However, upon review of
the entire negotiations, including respondent's unilateral action
in changing working conditions during the bargaining, the Examiner
found that, from and after November 30, 1948, respondent had
refused to bargain in a good faith effort to reach agreement. The
Examiner recommended that respondent be ordered in general terms to
bargain collectively with the Union.
The Board agreed with the Trial Examiner that respondent had not
bargained in a good faith effort to reach an agreement with the
Union. But the Board rejected the Examiner's views on an employer's
right to bargain for a management functions clause, and held that
respondent's action in bargaining for inclusion of any such clause
"constituted, quite [apart from] Respondent's demonstrated bad
faith,
per se violations of Section 8(a)(5) and (1)."
Accordingly, the Board not only ordered respondent in general terms
to bargain collectively with the Union (par. 2(a)), but also
included in its order a paragraph designed to prohibit bargaining
for any management functions clause covering a condition of
employment. (Par. 1(a)). [
Footnote
5] 89 N.L.R.B. 185.
Page 343 U. S. 401
On respondent's petition for review and the Board's
cross-petition for enforcement, the Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Circuit agreed with the Trial Examiner's view that the Act does not
preclude an employer from bargaining for inclusion of any
management functions clause in a labor agreement. The Court of
Appeals further found that the evidence does not support the view
that respondent failed to bargain collectively in good faith by
reason of its bargaining for a management functions clause. As a
result, enforcement of the portion of the Board's order directed to
the management functions clause (par. 1(a)) was denied. Other
portions of the Board's order (pars. 1(b) and 2(a)) were enforced
because respondent's unilateral action in changing working
conditions during bargaining does support a finding that respondent
had not bargained collectively in good faith as required by the
Act. 187 F.2d 307. We granted certiorari on petition of the Board
for review of the denial of enforcement as to paragraph 1(a) of the
Board's order. 342 U.S. 809.
First. The National Labor Relations Act is designed to
promote industrial peace by encouraging the making of voluntary
agreements governing relations between unions
Page 343 U. S. 402
and employers. [
Footnote 6]
The Act does not compel any agreement whatsoever between employees
and employers. [
Footnote 7] Nor
does the Act regulate the substantive terms governing wages, hours,
and working conditions which are incorporated in an agreement.
[
Footnote 8] The theory of the
Act is that the making of voluntary labor agreements is encouraged
by protecting employees' rights to organize for collective
bargaining, and by imposing on labor and management the mutual
obligation to bargain collectively.
Enforcement of the obligation to bargain collectively is crucial
to the statutory scheme. And, as has long been recognized,
performance of the duty to bargain requires more than a willingness
to enter upon a sterile discussion of union-management differences.
Before the enactment of the National Labor Relations Act, it was
held that the duty of an employer to bargain collectively required
the employer
"to negotiate in good faith with his employees' representatives;
to match their proposals, if unacceptable, with counter-proposals,
and to make every reasonable effort to reach an agreement.
[
Footnote 9]"
The duty to bargain
Page 343 U. S. 403
collectively, implicit in the Wagner Act as introduced in
Congress, was made express by the insertion of the fifth employer
unfair labor practice, accompanied by an explanation of the purpose
and meaning of the phrase "bargain collectively in a good faith
effort to reach an agreement." [
Footnote 10] This understanding of the duty to bargain
collectively has been accepted and applied throughout the
administration of the Wagner Act by the National Labor Relations
Board and the Courts of Appeal. [
Footnote 11]
Page 343 U. S. 404
In 1947, the fear was expressed in Congress that the Board
"has gone very far, in the guise of determining whether or not
employers had bargained in good faith, in setting itself up as the
judge of what concessions an employer must make and of the
proposals and counterproposals that he may or may not make.
[
Footnote 12]"
Accordingly, the Hartley Bill, passed by the House, eliminated
the good faith test and expressly provided that the duty to bargain
collectively did not require submission of counterproposals.
[
Footnote 13] As amended in
the Senate and passed as the Taft-Hartley Act, the good faith test
of bargaining was retained and written into Section 8(d) of the
National Labor Relations Act. That Section contains the express
provision that the obligation to bargain collectively does not
compel either party to agree to a proposal or require the making of
a concession. [
Footnote
14]
Thus, it is now apparent from the statute itself that the Act
does not encourage a party to engage in fruitless marathon
discussions at the expense of frank statement and support of his
position. And it is equally clear that the Board may not, either
directly or indirectly, compel concessions or otherwise sit in
judgment upon the substantive terms of collective bargaining
agreements.
Second. The Board offers in support of the portion of
its order before this Court a theory quite apart from the
Page 343 U. S. 405
test of good faith bargaining prescribed in Section 8(d) of the
Act, a theory that respondent's bargaining for a management
functions clause as a counterproposal to the Union's demand for
unlimited arbitration was "
per se" a violation of the
Act.
Counsel for the Board do not contend that a management functions
clause covering some conditions of employment is an illegal
contract term. [
Footnote 15]
As a matter of fact, a review of typical contract clauses collected
for convenience in drafting labor agreements shows that management
functions clauses similar in essential detail to the clause
proposed by respondent have been included in contracts negotiated
by national unions with many employers. [
Footnote 16] The National War Labor Board,
empowered
Page 343 U. S. 406
during the last war
"[t]o decide the dispute, and provide by order the wages and
hours and all other terms and conditions[customarily included in
collective bargaining agreements], [
Footnote 17]"
ordered management functions clauses included in a number of
agreements. [
Footnote 18]
Several such clauses ordered by the War Labor Board provided for
arbitration in case of union dissatisfaction with the exercise of
management functions, while others, as in the clause proposed by
respondent in this case, provided that management decisions would
be final. [
Footnote 19]
Without intimating any opinion as to the form of management
functions
Page 343 U. S. 407
clause proposed by respondent in this case or the desirability
of including any such clause in a labor agreement, it is manifest
that bargaining for management functions clauses is common
collective bargaining practice.
If the Board is correct, an employer violates the Act by
bargaining for a management functions clause touching any condition
of employment without regard to the traditions of bargaining in the
particular industry or such other evidence of good faith as the
fact in this case that respondent's clause was offered as a
counterproposal to the Union's demand for unlimited arbitration.
The Board's argument is a technical one, for it is conceded that
respondent would not be guilty of an unfair labor practice if,
instead of proposing a clause that removed some matters from
arbitration, it simply refused in good faith to agree to the Union
proposal for unlimited arbitration. The argument starts with a
finding, not challenged by the court below or by respondent,
[
Footnote 20] that at least
some of the matters covered by the management functions clause
proposed by respondent are "conditions of employment" which are
appropriate subjects of collective bargaining under Sections
8(a)(5), 8(d) and 9(a) of the Act. [
Footnote 21] The Board considers that employer bargaining
for a clause under which management retains initial responsibility
for work scheduling, a "condition of employment," for the duration
of the contract is an unfair labor practice because it is "in
derogation of" employees' statutory
Page 343 U. S. 408
rights to bargain collectively as to conditions of employment.
[
Footnote 22]
Conceding that there is nothing unlawful in including a
management functions clause in a labor agreement, the Board would
permit an employer to "propose" such a clause. But the Board would
forbid bargaining for any such clause when the Union declines to
accept the proposal, even where the clause is offered as a
counterproposal to a Union demand for unlimited arbitration.
Ignoring the nature of the Union's demand in this case, the Board
takes the position that employers subject to the Act must agree to
include in any labor agreement provisions establishing fixed
standards for work schedules or any other condition of employment.
An employer would be permitted to bargain as to the content of the
standard so long as he agrees to freeze a standard into a contract.
Bargaining for more flexible treatment of such matters would be
denied employers even though the result may be contrary to common
collective bargaining practice in the industry. The Board was not
empowered so to disrupt collective bargaining practices. On the
contrary, the term "bargain collectively," as used in the Act,
"has been considered to absorb and give statutory approval to
the philosophy of bargaining as worked out in the labor movement in
the United States."
Order of Railroad Telegraphers v Railway Express
Agency, 321 U. S. 342,
321 U. S. 346
(1944).
Congress provided expressly that the Board should not pass upon
the desirability of the substantive terms of
Page 343 U. S. 409
labor agreements. Whether a contract should contain a clause
fixing standards for such matters as work scheduling, or should
provide for more flexible treatment of such matters, is an issue
for determination across the bargaining table, not by the Board. If
the latter approach is agreed upon, the extent of union and
management participation in the administration of such matters is
itself a condition of employment, to be settled by bargaining.
Accordingly, we reject the Board's holding that bargaining for
the management functions clause proposed by respondent was,
per
se, an unfair labor practice. Any fears the Board may
entertain that use of management functions clauses will lead to
evasion of an employer's duty to bargain collectively as to "rates
of pay, wages, hours and conditions of employment" do not justify
condemning all bargaining for management functions clauses covering
any "condition of employment" as
per se violations of the
Act. The duty to bargain collectively is to be enforced by
application of the good faith bargaining standards of Section 8(d)
to the facts of each case, rather than by prohibiting all employers
in every industry from bargaining for management functions clauses
altogether.
Third. The court below correctly applied the statutory
standard of good faith bargaining to the facts of this case. It
held that the evidence, viewed as a whole, does not show that
respondent refused to bargain in good faith by reason of its
bargaining for a management functions clause as a counterproposal
to the Union's demand for unlimited arbitration. Respondent's
unilateral action in changing working conditions during bargaining,
now admitted to be a departure from good faith bargaining, is the
subject of an enforcement order issued by the court below and not
challenged in this Court.
Last term, we made it plain that Congress charged the Courts of
Appeals, not this Court, with the normal and primary responsibility
for reviewing the conclusions of
Page 343 U. S. 410
the Board. We stated that this Court
"is not the place to review a conflict of evidence, nor to
reverse a Court of Appeals because, were we in its place, we would
find the record tilting one way, rather than the other, though
fair-minded judges could find it tilting either way."
Labor Board v. Pittsburgh S.S. Co., 340 U.
S. 498,
340 U. S. 503
(1951). We repeat and reaffirm this rule, noting its special
applicability to cases where, as here, a statutory standard such as
"good faith" can have meaning only in its application to the
particular facts of a particular case.
Accepting as we do the finding of the court below that
respondent bargained in good faith for the management functions
clause proposed by it, we hold that respondent was not in that
respect guilty of refusing to bargain collectively as required by
the National Labor Relations Act. Accordingly, enforcement of
paragraph 1(a) of the Board's order was properly denied. [
Footnote 23]
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
49 Stat. 449 (1935), 29 U.S.C. § 151
et seq., as
amended, 61 Stat. 136 (1947), 29 U.S.C. (Supp. IV) § 151
et seq.
[
Footnote 2]
As drafted during the bargaining session, the proposed clause
read:
"The right to select, hire, to promote, demote, discharge,
discipline for cause, to maintain discipline and efficiency of
employees, and to determine schedules of work is the sole
prerogative of the Company, and the Company's decision with respect
to such matters shall never be the subject to arbitration."
(R.I. p. 97.)
[
Footnote 3]
61 Stat. 136, 140-143 (1947):
"SEC. 7. Employees shall have the right to self-organization, to
form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively
through representatives of their own choosing. . . ."
"SEC. 8. (a) It shall be an unfair labor practice for an
employer --"
"(1) to interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the
exercise of the rights guaranteed in section 7;"
"
* * * *"
"(5) to refuse to bargain collectively with the representatives
of his employees, subject to the provisions of section 9(a)."
"
* * * *"
"(d) For the purposes of this section, to bargain collectively
is the performance of the mutual obligation of the employer and the
representative of the employees to meet at reasonable time and
confer in good faith with respect to wages, hours, and other terms
and conditions of employment, or the negotiation of an agreement,
or any question arising thereunder, and the execution of a written
contract incorporating any agreement reached if requested by either
party, but such obligation does not compel either party to agree to
a proposal or require the making of a concession. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 9. (a) Representatives designated or selected for the
purposes of collective bargaining by the majority of the employees
in a unit appropriate for such purposes shall be the exclusive
representatives of all the employees in such unit for the purposes
of collective bargaining in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours
of employment, or other conditions of employment. . . ."
[
Footnote 4]
Respondent's suggestion that negotiation of a contract rendered
the case moot has been properly rejected below.
See Labor Board
v. Mexia Textile Mills, 339 U. S. 563;
Labor Board v. Pool Mfg. Co., 339 U.
S. 577 (1950).
[
Footnote 5]
The Board ordered that respondent:
"1. Cease and desist from: "
"(a) Refusing to bargain collectively with Office Employees
International Union, A.F.L., Local No. 27, as the exclusive
representative of all of its employees at its Galveston, Texas,
office, excluding guards, secretaries to department heads and
executives, agents, building and maintenance employees,
professional employees, department heads, and all other supervisors
as defined in the Act, by insisting, as a condition of agreement,
that the said Union agree to a provision whereby the Respondent
reserves to itself the right to take unilateral action with respect
to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, and other terms and
conditions of employment;"
[Paragraph (b) proscribes other conduct not pertinent to the
issues before this Court.]
"2. Take the following affirmative action which the Board finds
will effectuate the policies of the Act: "
"(a) Upon request, bargain collectively with Office Employees
International Union, A.F.L., Local No. 27, as the exclusive
representative of all its employees in the appropriate unit
described above with respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of
employment, and other conditions of employment. . . ."
[
Footnote 6]
61 Stat. 136 ("Findings and Policies");
Consolidated Edison
Co. v. Labor Board, 305 U. S. 197,
305 U. S. 236
(1938).
[
Footnote 7]
Labor Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.,
301 U. S. 1,
301 U. S. 45
(1937).
[
Footnote 8]
Terminal Railroad Assn. of St. Louis v. Trainmen,
318 U. S. 1,
318 U. S. 6
(1943):
"The Railway Labor Act, like the National Labor Relations Act,
does not undertake governmental regulation of wages, hours, or
working conditions. Instead, it seeks to provide a means by which
agreement may be reached with respect to them. The national
interest expressed by those Acts is not primarily in the working
conditions, as such. So far as the Act itself is concerned, these
conditions may be as bad as the employees will tolerate, or be made
as good as they can bargain for. The Act does not fix and does not
authorize anyone to fix generally applicable standards for working
conditions. . . ."
[
Footnote 9]
Houde Engineering Corp., 1 N.L.R.B. (old) 35 (1934),
decided by the National Labor Relations Board organized under 48
Stat. 1183 (1934).
[
Footnote 10]
Before the addition of Section 8(5), now Section 8(a)(5), to the
bill, Senator Wagner described the bill as imposing the duty to
bargain in good faith, citing the
Houde Engineering case,
note 9 supra. Hearings
before the Senate Committee on Education and Labor on S.1958, 74th
Cong., 1st Sess. 43 (1935). Section 8(5) was inserted at the
suggestion of the Chairmen of the Board that decided
Houde. Id. at 79, 136-137. The insertion of
Section 8(5) was described by the Senate Committee as follows:
"The committee wishes to dispel any possible false impression
that this bill is designed to compel the making of agreements or to
permit governmental supervision of their terms. It must be stressed
that the duty to bargain collectively does not carry with it the
duty to reach an agreement, because the essence of collective
bargaining is that either party shall be free to decide whether
proposals made to it are satisfactory."
"But, after deliberation, the committee has concluded that this
fifth unfair labor practice should be inserted in the bill. It
seems clear that a guarantee of the right of employees to bargain
collectively through representatives of their own choosing is a
mere delusion if it is not accompanied by the correlative duty on
the part of the other party to recognize such representatives as
they have been designated (whether as individuals or labor
organizations) and to negotiate with them in a
bona fide
effort to arrive at a collective bargaining agreement. . . ."
S.Rep.No.573, 74th Cong., 1st Sess. 12 (1935).
See H. J.
Heinz Co. v. Labor Board, 311 U. S. 514
(1941).
[
Footnote 11]
The Board applied the good faith test of bargaining from the
outset. 1 N.L.R.B.Ann.Rep. 85-87 (1936). Cases in the Courts of
Appeal approving and applying the good faith test of bargaining are
collected in 29 U.S.C.A. § 158, note 265.
[
Footnote 12]
H.R.Rep.No.245, 80th Cong., 1st Sess.19 (1947).
[
Footnote 13]
H.R. 3020, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., § 2(11) (1947).
[
Footnote 14]
Note 3 supra. The
term "concession" was used in place of "counterproposal" at the
suggestion of the Chairman of the Board that the statutory
definition of collective bargaining should conform to the meaning
of good faith bargaining as understood at the passage of the Wagner
Act. S.Rep.No.105, 80th Cong., 1st Sess. 24 (1947); Hearings before
House Committee on Education and Labor on Amendment to the National
Labor Relations Act, 80th Cong., 1st Sess. 3174-3175 (1947).
See H.R.Rep.No.510, 80th Cong., 1st Sess. 34 (1947).
[
Footnote 15]
Thus, we put aside such cases as
Labor Board v. National
Maritime Union, 175 F.2d 686 (1949) (bargaining for
discriminatory hiring hall clause), where a party bargained for a
clause violative of an express provision of the Act.
[
Footnote 16]
H.R.Doc.No.125, 81st Cong., 1st Sess. 3-10 (1949) (U.S.Dept. of
Labor Bull. No. 908-12); Collective Bargaining Contracts
(B.N.A.1941) 363-368; Classified Provisions of Thirty-Seven
Collective Bargaining Agreements for Wage Earners in the Iron and
Steel Industry (American Iron & Steel Inst.1948) 68-73; Tested
Clauses for Union Contracts (Labor Relations Inst. (1945)), 11-16;
Welty, Labor Contract Clauses (1945), 76-82; Hoebreckx, Management
Handbook for Collective Bargaining (1947), 177-182; Smith, Labor
Law Cases and Materials (1950), 1008-1011; Industrial Relations
Research Service Study No. 1, Management's Prerogatives (1945),
App.; Pace, Management Prerogatives Defined in Union Contracts
(Calif.Inst. Tech.1945); Teller, Management Functions under
Collective Bargaining (1947), 427-437 (23 out of 53 collective
bargaining agreements examined by the author contained management
functions clauses).
Writers advocating inclusion of detailed management functions
clauses in collective bargaining agreements urge the desirability
of defining the respective functions of management and labor in
matters such as work scheduling consistent with the needs of the
particular industry.
See Cox and Dunlop, Regulation of
Collective Bargaining by the National Labor Relations Board, 63
Harv.L.Rev. 389 (1950); Hill and Hook, Management at the Bargaining
Table (1945), 56-138; Teller, Management Functions under Collective
Bargaining (1947), 114-116. Separate views on "Management's Right
to Manage" were presented by the Labor and Management members of
The President's National Labor-Management conference, November
5-30, 1945, U.S.Dept. of Labor Bull.No.77 (1946), 56-62.
[
Footnote 17]
57 Stat. 163, 166 (1943), § 7.
[
Footnote 18]
United Aircraft Corp., 18 War Lab.Rep. 9 (1944);
Mead Corp., 8 War Lab.Rep. 471 (1943);
Hospital Supply
Co., 7 War Lab.Rep. 526 (1943).
See also McQuay-Norris
Mfg. Co., 28 War Lab.Rep. 211 (1945); Teller, Management
Functions under Collective Bargaining (1947), 29-49.
Disputes as to the content of management functions clauses have
also been considered by the present Wage Stabilization Board,
Basic Steel Industry, 18 Lab.Ar.Rep. 112 (1952)
(recommendation that proposed changes in clause be rejected), and
by a Presidential Emergency Board,
Northwest Airlines,
Inc., 5 Lab.Ar.Rep. 71 (1946) (recommendation that clause be
incorporated in agreement).
[
Footnote 19]
Compare East Alton Mfg. Co., 5 War Lab.Rep. 47 (1942)
(arbitration provision ordered),
with Atlas Power Co., 5
War Lab.Rep. 371 (1942) (arbitration provision denied).
Union objections to a management functions clause as covering
matters subject to collective bargaining did not deter the War
Labor Board from ordering such a clause where deemed appropriate in
a particular case.
Curtiss-Wright Corp., 25 War Lab.Rep.
83, 114-115 (1945).
[
Footnote 20]
This is not the case of an employer refusing to bargain over an
issue on the erroneous theory that, as a matter of law, such an
issue did not involve a "condition of employment" within the
meaning of the Act.
Compare Inland Steel Co. v. Labor
Board, 170 F.2d 247 (1948) (pensions);
Labor Board v. J.
H. Allison & Co., 165 F.2d 766 (1948) (merit wage
increases).
[
Footnote 21]
Note 3 supra.
See Bus Employees v. Wisconsin Board, 340 U.
S. 383,
340 U. S. 399
(1951).
[
Footnote 22]
The Board's argument would seem to prevent an employer from
bargaining for a "no-strike" clause, commonly found in labor
agreements, requiring a union to forego for the duration of the
contract the right to strike expressly granted by Section 7 of the
Act. However, the Board has permitted an employer to bargain in
good faith for such a clause.
Shell Oil Co., 77 N.L.R.B.
1306 (1948). This result is explained by referring to the "salutary
objective" of such a clause.
Bethlehem Steel Co., 89
N.L.R.B. 341, 345 (1950).
[
Footnote 23]
See Labor Board v. Crompton-Highland Mills,
337 U. S. 217,
337 U. S.
226-227 (1949).
MR. JUSTICE MINTON, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE
DOUGLAS join, dissenting:
I do not see how this case is solved by telling the National
Labor Relations Board that, since some "management functions"
clauses are valid (which the Board freely admits), respondent was
not guilty of an unfair labor practice
in this case. The
record is replete with evidence that respondent insisted on a
clause which would classify the control over certain conditions of
employment as a management prerogative, and that the insistence
took the form of a refusal to reach a settlement unless the Union
accepted the clause. [
Footnote 2/1]
The Court of
Page 343 U. S. 411
Appeals agreed that respondent was "steadfast" in this demand.
Therefore, this case is one where the employer came into the
bargaining room with a demand that certain topics upon which it had
a duty to bargain were to be removed from the agenda -- that was
the price the Union had to pay to gain a contract. There is all the
difference between the hypothetical "management functions" clauses
envisioned by the majority and this "management functions" clause
as there is between waiver and coercion. No one suggests that an
employer is guilty of an unfair labor practice when it proposes
that it be given unilateral control over certain working conditions
and the union accepts the proposal in return for various other
benefits. But where, as here, the employer tells the union that the
only way to obtain a contract as to wages is to agree not to
bargain about certain other working
Page 343 U. S. 412
conditions, the employer has refused to bargain about those
other working conditions. There is more than a semantic difference
between a proposal that the union waive certain rights and a demand
that the union give up those rights as a condition precedent to
enjoying other rights. [
Footnote
2/2]
I need not and do not take issue with the Court of Appeals'
conclusion that there was no absence of good faith. Where there is
a refusal to bargain, the Act does not require an inquiry as to
whether that refusal was in good faith or bad faith. [
Footnote 2/3] The duty to bargain about
certain subjects is made absolute by the Act. [
Footnote 2/4] The majority seems to suggest that an
employer could be found guilty of bad faith if it used a
"management functions" clause to close off bargaining about all
topics of discussion. Whether the employer closes off all
bargaining or, as in this case, only a certain area of bargaining,
he has refused to bargain as to whatever he has closed off, and any
discussion of his good faith is pointless.
That portion of § 8(d) of the Act which declares that an
employer need not agree to a proposal or make concessions does not
dispose of this case. Certainly the Board lacks power to compel
concessions as to the substantive terms of labor agreements. But
the Board in this case was seeking to compel the employer to
bargain about subjects properly within the scope of collective
Page 343 U. S. 413
bargaining. [
Footnote 2/5] That
the employer has such a duty to bargain and that the Board is
empowered to enforce the duty is clear.
An employer may not stake out an area which is a proper subject
for bargaining and say, "As to this, we will not bargain." To do so
is a plain refusal to bargain in violation of § 8(a)(5) of the
Act. If employees' bargaining rights can be cut away so easily,
they are indeed illusory. I would reverse.
[
Footnote 2/1]
A member of respondent's negotiating committee stated that the
committee
"had given considerable thought to the character of prerogative
that, in our opinion, the Company was entitled to maintain for its
management, as well as considerable thought to the character of
safeguard which would make the retention of such prerogatives . . .
of value and worth to the Company, and invulnerable to attack. . .
. [W]e orally stated to the Union that that was going to be the
position of the company. . . ."
(R. II, p. 32.)
A union negotiator testified as follows:
"Q. Now, as I understand your testimony, you have said that
Company said you would have to agree. . . ."
"A. It was the condition of a contract."
"Q. Now, how often, if it was more than once, did the Company
state that or something similar to that . . . -- did they only say
it once or did they state it more than once?"
"A. I can't testify as to the number of times. I will say they
said it several times."
"
* * * *"
"A. To get a contract, an agreement must be reached and must be
made by the Union to include Article II-A as the Company's
prerogative clause."
(R. III, pp. 60-61.)
The same Company negotiator told the Union that the clause in
question was the "meat of the contract," and that, if the Union
accepted it, a contract could be obtained in "short order." (R.
III, p. 60.)
[
Footnote 2/2]
There is similarly a difference between a union voluntarily
disbanding, and the employer insisting that it disband as a
condition of granting a wage increase.
Cf. McQuay-Norris Mfg.
Co. v. Labor Board, 116 F.2d 748.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The only exception is that an employer in good faith can
challenge the majority status of the bargaining representative and
request proof that it does in fact, have such status.
Cf. Joy
Silk Mills v. Labor Board, 87 U.S.App.D.C. 360, 369, 185 F.2d
732, 741.
[
Footnote 2/4]
J. I. Case Co. v. Labor Board, 321 U.
S. 332;
H. J. Heinz Co. v. Labor Board,
311 U. S. 514,
311 U. S.
525.
[
Footnote 2/5]
National Licorice Co. v. Labor Board, 309 U.
S. 350,
309 U. S. 360;
Inland Steel Co. v. Labor Board, 170 F.2d 247, 252;
Labor Board v. Bachelder, 120 F.2d 574, 577.