1. Respondent discharged an employee for refusing to cross, in
the performance of his duties, a lawful picket line maintained at
premises other than his employer's by a union of which he was not a
member. His own union had not forbidden him to cross the line, and
his fellow employees did cross it. Their union had a contract with
respondent which provided against strikes, lockouts, other
cessation of work or interference therewith except as against a
party failing to comply with a decision of an Adjustment Board for
which it provided. On arbitration, this Adjustment Board decided in
favor of respondent. The employee then filed with the National
Labor Relations Board a charge that his discharge violated §
8(a) of the National Labor Relations Act. There was no evidence
that it resulted from anti-union bias or was intended to discourage
his membership in the union.
Held: in the circumstances of this case, respondent's
discharge of this employee was not an unfair labor practice under
§ 8(a) of the Act. Pp.
345 U. S.
72-81.
2. In issuing a cease and desist order against respondent in
this case, the National Labor Relations Board erred in ignoring
respondent's contract with the union on the ground that it was
utterly null and void under the Board's recent decision in another
case, which was decided after the discharge of the employee here
involved. Pp.
345 U. S.
76-78.
3. The no-strike and arbitration provisions of respondent's
contract with the employee's union are not unlawful, nor, in the
circumstances of this case and in view of the savings and
separability clauses of the contract, were they rendered illegal by
appearing in the same contract with forbidden provisions for union
security not expressly conditioned on a vote of employees under
§ 9(e) of the Labor Management Relations Act. Pp.
345 U. S.
78-81.
197 F.2d 111 affirmed.
Page 345 U. S. 72
The National Labor Relations Board ordered respondent to cease
and desist from labor practices which it found violative of §
8(a) of the National Labor Relations Act, to reinstate a discharged
employee, and to post appropriate notices. 95 NLRB 336. The Court
of Appeals set aside the order. 197 F.2d 111. This Court granted
certiorari. 344 U.S. 863.
Affirmed, p.
345 U. S.
81.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Court of Appeals has set aside the National Labor Relations
Board's order that Rockaway News Supply Co. reinstate one Charles
Waugh as a chauffeur and routeman and make him whole for an
unlawful discharge. The court below was divided, [
Footnote 1] and we granted certiorari.
[
Footnote 2]
Waugh had been employed by respondent about seven years. His
duty was to drive a truck along a regular route to pick up and
deliver certain newspapers and other publications. One of his
scheduled stops was at
Page 345 U. S. 73
the Rockville Center plant of The Daily Review Corporation,
publisher of the Nassau Daily Review, consignments of which he was
to pick up and deliver to various retail dealers. Waugh, like all
others similarly employed by respondent, was a member of the
Newspaper and Mail Deliverers' Union of New York and Vicinity. For
some years, respondent had recognized this union as the exclusive
bargaining representative of its employees, without the formality
of an election. It had an employment contract bargained with this
union which contained a union security clause not conditioned upon
a vote of the employees under § 9(e) of the Labor Management
Relations Act, an omission which raised questions as to the
validity of the clause and of the contract as a whole.
The Nassau County Typographical Union No. 915, AFL, of which
Waugh was not a member, established a picket line about the
premises of The Daily Review Corporation which, on March 2, 1950,
prevented a pickup of its newspaper except by passing through the
picket line. Waugh assured himself that the line was ordered by the
Typographical Union in connection with a labor dispute. He then
informed his foreman that, because he was himself a union man, he
would not cross the picket line of another union. He was advised
not to take that attitude, and was told "It might mean your job."
Waugh insisted that he would not do harm to another union, and
asked to have the papers somehow delivered to him outside of the
picket line. This was done for two days, but, the following day, he
was ordered to cross the line and get the papers -- "Otherwise you
are fired; if you refuse, you are fired." Waugh left the premises,
but returned daily for three weeks seeking reemployment, which was
refused. Waugh had been willing to perform all duties provided he
was not required personally to cross the picket line.
Page 345 U. S. 74
The other drivers were also members of the same union as Waugh,
but only he refused to cross the line. Waugh's union had a
collectively bargained contract with respondent which provided
against strikes, lockouts, other cessation of work, or interference
therewith except as against a party failing to comply with a
decision, award, or order of the Adjustment Board for which it
provided. The union initiated an arbitration thereunder, and the
Adjustment Board, on March 31, 1950, made an award in favor of
respondent. [
Footnote 3] Waugh
then filed the charge of unfair labor practice, and the General
Counsel initiated these proceedings.
Page 345 U. S. 75
The parties here see the case as requiring decision of sweeping
abstract principles as to the respective rights of employer and
employee regarding picket lines. But this decision does not, and
should not be read to, declare any such principles. The actual
controversy here is within a very narrow scope, so narrow that the
Board, in its opinion, said:
"Although Waugh's refusal to cross the picket line was a
protected activity, the Respondent, as a normal incident of its
right to maintain its operations, could have required Waugh to
elect whether to perform all his duties or, as a striker, to vacate
his job and make way for his replacement by the Respondent. Instead
the Respondent discharged Waugh."
The Court of Appeals said (197 F.2d 114), "We cannot follow the
Board's reasoning." Nor can we. The distinction between discharge
and replacement in this context seems to us as unrealistic and
unfounded in law as the Court of Appeals found it. This application
of the distinction is not sanctioned by
Labor Board v. Mackay
Radio & Telegraph Co., 304 U. S. 333,
304 U. S. 347.
It is not based on any difference in effect upon the employee. And
there is no finding that he was not replaced either by a new
employee or by transfer of duties to some nonobjecting employee, as
would appear necessary if the respondent were to maintain the
operation. Substantive rights and duties in the field of
labor-anagement do not depend on verbal ritual reminiscent of
medieval real property law.
In this case, there is no finding, evidence, or even charge that
the dismissal of Waugh resulted from anti-union bias or was
intended to or did discriminate against him to discourage
membership in a labor organization. Waugh's refusal to cross the
line was not in obedience to any action by his union. Even Waugh
was willing to have the picket line breached, so long as it was
done by
Page 345 U. S. 76
others. No other member of his own union joined him. He held his
position under his union's collectively bargained contract, the
adjustment processes of which went against him. It is ironical that
respondent has been denied the result of the arbitration by the
Board solely because the respondent, by the contract, conceded too
much to union security, allowing the union what the Taft-artley Act
does not permit. If respondent pursued any wrong course in dealing
with Waugh, it evidently was not due to hostility to labor
organizations.
The Board, apparently conceding that, if valid, the contract
between the union and respondent would establish the latter's
defense against the charge of unfair labor practice, held the
contract utterly null and void and denied it any effect whatever in
this case. Also, in a proceeding decided June 5, 1951, the Board
declared the contract to be illegal in its entirety, and set it
aside. In the present case, it followed that decision and said,
"It would not effectuate the policies of the Act to give effect
in this case to a contract which the Board set aside in its
entirety in a prior proceeding. Accordingly, the no-trike clause of
that contract can have no impact upon Waugh's refusal to cross the
picket line."
The Board's reference to a prior case refers to one decided
about a month and a half before the present case. But it was not
prior to the conduct out of which this case arises. The Board did
not choose to rely on the doctrine of
res judicata in the
present proceedings, a doctrine whose applicability here is not
free from doubt. [
Footnote 4]
The ruling that the contract is without effect was reexamined in
these proceedings and readopted as an essential part of the
decision in this case.
There are two obstacles in the way of the Board's complete
disregard of this contract. The first is that, even
Page 345 U. S. 77
if inclusion of a forbidden provision is enough to justify the
Board in setting it aside as to the future, it does not follow that
it can be wholly ignored in judging events that occurred before it
was set aside. It is one thing for the Board to say that the
parties should not go on under such a contract; it is another to
say that no effect whatever may be given to a contract negotiated
in good faith by the union and the employer which both believed to
be valid and operative, to which both were conforming their
conduct, and which no authority had yet held void.
Even where a statute is unconstitutional, and hence declared
void as of the beginning, this Court has held that its existence
before it has been so declared is not to be ignored.
We think the principle is applicable here which Mr. Chief
Justice Hughes stated for a unanimous Court:
"The courts below have proceeded on the theory that the Act of
Congress, having been found to be unconstitutional, was not a law;
that it was inoperative, conferring no rights and imposing no
duties, and hence affording no basis for the challenged decree. . .
. It is quite clear, however, that such broad statements as to the
effect of a determination of unconstitutionality must be taken with
qualifications. The actual existence of a statute, prior to such a
determination, is an operative fact, and may have consequences
which cannot justly be ignored. The past cannot always be erased by
a new judicial declaration. The effect of the subsequent ruling as
to invalidity may have to be considered in various aspects, with
respect to particular relations, individual and corporate, and
particular conduct, private and official. Questions of rights
claimed to have become vested, of status, of prior determinations
deemed to have finality and acted upon accordingly,
Page 345 U. S. 78
of public policy in the light of the nature both of the statute
and of its previous application, demand examination. . . ."
Chicot County Drainage District v. Baxter State Bank,
308 U. S. 371,
308 U. S.
374.
The second hurdle in the way of the Board's position is that it
ignores savings and separability clauses of the contract itself,
which we set forth in the margin. [
Footnote 5] We have never known that they are
per
se illegal. We do not, of course, question that there may be
cases where a forbidden provision is so basic to the whole scheme
of a contract and so interwoven with all its terms that it must
stand or fall as an entirety. But the Board here simply held that
the provision concerning union security invalidates the whole
contract, as the examiner said,
"because it does not
expressly provide that the
operation of the union security provision was to be conditioned
upon compliance with the provisions of Section 9(e) of the Act.
[
Footnote 6]"
(Italics supplied.)
The features to which the Board rightly objects not only may be
severed but are separated in the contract. The whole contract shows
respect for the law and not defiance of it. The parties, who could
not foresee how
Page 345 U. S. 79
some of the provisions of the statute would be interpreted,
proposed to go as far toward union security as they are allowed to
go, and this is their right, and they proposed to go no farther,
and that is their whole duty. Moreover, there is no showing that
these illegal provisions in any way affected Waugh's employment,
his discharge, or any conduct of any party that is relevant to this
decision.
The total obliteration of this contract is not in obedience to
any command of the statute. It is contrary to common law contract
doctrine. It rests upon no decision of this or any other
controlling judicial authority. We see no sound public policy
served by it. Realistically, if the formal contract be stricken,
the enterprise must go on -- labor continues to do its work, and is
worthy of some hire. The relationship must be governed by some
contractual terms. There is no reason apparent why terms should be
implied by some outside authority to take the place of legal terms
collectively bargained. The employment contract should not be taken
out of the hands of the parties themselves merely because they have
misunderstood the legal limits of their bargain, where the excess
may be severed and separately condemned as it can here.
We therefore consider this controversy to require no
determination of rights or duties respecting picket lines broader
than this contract itself prescribes. It is provided in this
agreement that
"No strikes, lockouts or other cessation of work or interference
therewith shall be ordered or sanctioned by any party hereto during
the terms hereof except as against a party failing to comply with a
decision, award, or order of the Adjustment Board."
If this be considered ambiguous in meaning, respondent offered,
as evidence of its intent and meaning, to prove that, during the
negotiations one of the demands made by the union was a clause in
the contract
Page 345 U. S. 80
with reference to work stoppages which would have said "No man
shall be required to cross a picket line," that this clause was
rejected by respondent and the union acquiesced in the rejection
and consented to the no-trike clause as above recited. The trial
examiner said: "All right. Let the offer of proof appear in the
record." From this, it is not clear whether it was accepted or
rejected. But the arbitrators' interpretation of the contract was
in harmony with the offer. They said,
"In addition, the contract between the parties does not
specifically permit the refusal by the employee to comply with such
an order, although other contracts in the industry do contain such
a provision."
In the section by which the Labor Management Relations Act
prescribes certain practices of labor organizations which shall be
deemed unfair, there is a proviso that nothing therein
"shall be construed to make unlawful a refusal by any person to
enter upon the premises of any employer (other than his own
employer), if the employees of such employer are engaged in a
strike ratified or approved by a representative of such employees
whom such employer is required to recognize under this act. . . .
[
Footnote 7]"
This clearly enables contracting parties to embody in their
contract a provision against requiring an employee to cross a
picket line if they so agree. And nothing in the Act prevents their
agreeing upon contrary provisions if they consider them appropriate
to the particular kind of business involved. An employee's breach
of such an agreement may be made grounds for his discharge without
violating § 7 of the Act.
Labor Board v. Sands Mfg.
Co., 306 U. S. 332,
306 U. S. 334.
In some instances, he may not, even with an employer's assent,
supplement the collective agreement with individual preferences
over others employed
Page 345 U. S. 81
under it.
J. I. Case Co. v. Labor Board, 321 U.
S. 332.
We hold that the no-trike and arbitration provisions of the
contract are not prohibited, nor were they rendered illegal by
appearing in the same contract with forbidden provisions in view of
the circumstances we have recited. Under the circumstances of this
case, it was not an unfair labor practice to discharge Waugh, and
the judgment below is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
197 F.2d 111.
[
Footnote 2]
344 U.S. 863.
[
Footnote 3]
"The undersigned, constituting the members of the Board of
Adjustment, designated in accordance with the agreement between the
parties, having heard the proof and allegations, award as follows:
Under Section 4 of the agreement between the parties, it is the
obligation of an employee to comply with orders of the foreman, and
if such orders are objectionable to him personally, to have the
issues discussed and brought to arbitration in accordance with the
procedure set forth therein. He may not, in the first instance,
refuse to obey the order merely because it is personally
distasteful to him, unless it is the type of order which might
subject him to physical danger or be contrary to public
policy."
"Of course, the order which the employee here refused to obey
cannot be held to have been against public policy (and concededly
it does not physically endanger him), particularly since the union
had knowingly refrained from taking any position, and the act
required was willingly performed without objection by six other
employees who were members of the union. In addition, the contract
between the parties does not specifically permit the refusal by the
employee to comply with such an order, although other contracts in
the industry do contain such a provision."
"Consequently, it must be ruled that the act of Charles Waugh in
refusing to obey the order of the foreman on March 7, 1950,
constituted a just cause for discharge. Signed, I. Robert Feinberg,
Impartial Chairman; John Somyak, John Fylstra."
Thereunder is stated "The members of the Adjustment Board
designated by the Union dissent from this award, dated, New York,
New York, March 31, 1950."
[
Footnote 4]
See Wallace Corp. v. Labor Board, 323 U.
S. 248.
[
Footnote 5]
"To the best knowledge and belief of the parties, this contract
now contains no provision which is contrary to federal or state law
or regulation. Should, however, any provision of this agreement, at
any time during its life, be in conflict with federal or state law
or regulation, then such provision shall continue in effect only to
the extent permitted. In event of any provision of this agreement
thus being held inoperative, the remaining provisions of this
agreement shall nevertheless remain in full force and effect."
[
Footnote 6]
29 U.S.C. § 159(e)(1):
"Upon the filing with the Board, by 30 percentum or more of the
employees in a bargaining unit covered by an agreement between
their employer and a labor organization made pursuant to section
158(a)(3) of this title, of a petition alleging they desire that
such authority be rescinded, the Board shall take a secret ballot
of the employees in such unit and certify the results thereof to
such labor organization and to the employer."
[
Footnote 7]
29 U.S.C. § 158(b)(4)(D).
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR. JUSTICE
MINTON concur, dissenting.
Section 7 of the Taft-artley Act recognizes a right of employees
to work together in "concerted activities" for their mutual aid and
protection. One way some union men help others is to refrain from
crossing picket lines. Habitual respect for union picket lines has
long been the practice of union men. This practice has been a
prized asset of the unions. The Taft-artley Act was designed to
regulate and restrict the type of concerted activities in which
employees could engage. But even that Act did not attempt to
deprive unions of the advantage of a policy that required union men
to respect picket lines. In § 8(b)(4)(D) of the Act, Congress
specifically declared that none of its union-estrictive provisions
should be construed to make it unlawful for a man to refuse to
cross a picket line thrown up to support a lawful strike.
Consequently I agree with the Labor Board that it was an unfair
labor practice for this employer to discharge a union employee who
refused to cross a picket line. In holding to the contrary, I think
the Court takes away rights of employees that the Taft-artley Act
left standing.
I say this despite the fact that the Court's opinion is based
upon its interpretation of a collective bargaining
Page 345 U. S. 82
agreement. In the first place, I would accept the Labor Board's
holding that the contract did not conform to the requirements of
the Taft-artley law. It seems to me an unwise precedent for the
Court to substitute its judgment about this contract for that of
the Board. In the second place, I can find no language in that
contract which would justify the discharge of the employee here
because he insisted upon respecting a union picket line -- a right
reserved to each employee by reason of § 8(b)(4)(D) of the
Act. Believing that the Court departs from the Act's policy in
holding as it does, I would affirm the Board's order.