This case presents the question whether Rules on Containers
(Rules) in a collective bargaining agreement between the
International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) and employer
organizations in the shipping industry which were adopted in
response to the technological innovation of containerized shipping
are a lawful work preservation agreement. The new technology
involves the use on specially designed ships of large, reusable
metal receptacles which can be moved on and off the vessel unopened
and which can be attached to a truck chassis and transported intact
to and from the pier, saving costs and time in loading and
unloading ships and in warehousing cargo, as compared with the
amount of on-pier work involved in handling loose cargo for
conventional ships. The amount of work available for longshoremen
has been further reduced by the shipping companies' practice of
making their containers available for loading (stuffing) and
unloading (stripping) away from the pier by shippers and by freight
consolidators who combine the goods of various shippers into a
single shipment. The Rules permit the great majority of containers
to pass over the piers intact, reserving to the ILA the right to
stuff and strip at the pier only those containers that would
otherwise be stuffed or stripped "locally" (within a 50-mile radius
of the port) by anyone except employees of the beneficial owner of
the cargo, the shipping company being liable for specified
liquidated damages for any container handled in violation of the
Rules. Separate unfair labor practice proceedings were brought
before the National Labor Relations Board (Board) by truckers and
consolidators who, because of the operation against shipping
companies of the Rules' liquidated damages provisions, could no
longer perform local stuffing and stripping services. The Board
concluded that the Rules were not valid work preservation clauses
because the work of stuffing and stripping containers away from the
pier had not traditionally been done by ILA members, but had
instead been performed by employees of consolidators and truckers.
It therefore held that the Rules violated § 8(e) of the
National Labor Relations Act, which makes unlawful those collective
bargaining agreements whereby the employer agrees to cease doing
business with any other person, and that union action to
enforce
Page 447 U. S. 491
the Rules violated § 8(b)(4)(b), which prohibits unions
from engaging in secondary activities whose object is to force one
employer to cease doing business with another. The Court of
Appeals, consolidating the cases and holding that the Board had
erred as a matter of law in defining the work in controversy,
vacated the Board's decisions, denied its applications for
enforcement, and remanded the cases.
Held: The Board's definition of the work in controversy
in this dispute was erroneous as a matter of law. Pp.
447 U. S.
503-513.
(a) To constitute a lawful work preservation agreement, the
agreement must have as its objective the preservation of work
traditionally performed by employees represented by the union, and
the contracting employer must have the power to give the employees
the work in question. The first and most basic question is: what is
the "work" that the agreement allegedly seeks to preserve?
Cf.
NLRB v. Pipefitters, 429 U. S. 507;
National Woodwork Manufacturers Assn. v. NLRB,
386 U. S. 612. Pp.
447 U. S.
504-505.
(b) Identification of the work at issue in a complex case of
technological displacement requires a careful analysis of the
traditional work patterns that the parties are allegedly seeking to
preserve, and of how the agreement seeks to accomplish that result
under the changed circumstances created by the technological
advance. The inquiry must focus on the bargaining unit employees'
work, not on the work of other employees who may be doing the same
or similar work, and must examine the relationship between the work
as it existed before the innovation and as the agreement proposes
to preserve it. P.
447 U. S.
507.
(c) The Board's conclusion that the "work in controversy" was
the off-pier stuffing and stripping of containers erroneously
focused on the work done by the employees of truckers and
consolidators after the introduction of containerized shipping.
That approach foreclosed, by definition, any possibility that the
longshoremen could negotiate an agreement to permit them to play
any part in the loading and unloading of containerized cargo. The
Board's determination that the traditional work of ILA members was
to load and unload ships should have been only the beginning of the
analysis. The next step is to look at how the contracting parties
sought to preserve that work, to the extent possible, in the face
of a massive technological change that largely eliminated the need
for cargo handling at intermediate stages of the intermodal
transportation of goods, and to evaluate the relationship between
traditional longshore work and the work which the Rules attempt to
assign to ILA members. Pp.
447 U. S. 507-510.
(d) Viewing the work allegedly to be preserved by the Rules from
the proper perspective, the Board on remand will be free to
determine
Page 447 U. S. 492
whether the Rules represent a lawful attempt to preserve
traditional longshore work or whether, instead, they are tactically
calculated to satisfy union goals elsewhere. This determination
must be informed by an awareness of the congressional preference
for collective bargaining as the method for resolving disputes over
dislocations caused by the introduction of technological
innovations in the workplace, the question being not whether the
Rules represent the most rational or efficient response to
innovation, but whether they are a legally permissible effort to
preserve jobs. If the Board finds that the Rules have a lawful work
preservation objective, it must then consider the charging parties'
contention that members of the employer organization did not have
the right to control the stuffing and stripping of containers. Pp.
447 U. S.
510-512.
198 U.S.App.D.C. 157, 613 F.2d 890, affirmed.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BRENNAN, WHITE, BLACKMUN, and POWELL, JJ., joined. BURGER, C.J.,
filed a dissenting opinion, in which STEWART, REHNQUIST, and
STEVENS, JJ., joined,
post, p.
447 U. S.
522.
Page 447 U. S. 493
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents the question whether provisions of the
collective bargaining agreement between the International
Longshoremen's Association (ILA) and employer organizations in the
shipping industry which were adopted in response to the
technological innovation of containerized shipping are a lawful
work preservation agreement. The National Labor Relations Board
held that the provisions did not preserve traditional work
opportunities for employees represented by the union, but sought
instead to acquire work they had not previously performed;
therefore, it concluded that the provisions violated § 8(e) of
the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 158(e), and
union action to enforce them violated § 8(b)(4)(b) of the Act,
29 U.S.C. § 158(b)(4)(b).
International longshoremen's
Assn. (Dolphin Forwarding, Inc.), 236 N.L.R.B. 525 (1978);
International Longshoremen's Assn. (Associated Transport,
Inc.), 231 N.L.R.B. 351 (1977). A divided panel of the United
States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
declined to enforce the Board's orders. 198 U.S.App.D.C. 157, 613
F.2d 890 (1979). We granted certiorari,
444
U. S. 104 (1980), to resolve a conflict among the
Circuits on this important question of federal labor law. [
Footnote 1]
I
This controversy arises out of the collective bargaining
response of the ILA and the east coast shipping industry to
Page 447 U. S. 494
containerization, a technological innovation which has had such
a profound effect on that industry that it has frequently been
termed "the container revolution." [
Footnote 2] In the words of one observer,
"containerization may be said to constitute the single most
important innovation in ocean transport since the steamship
displaced the schooner." [
Footnote
3]
A
Containers are large, reusable metal receptacles, ranging in
length from 20 to 40 feet and capable of carrying upwards of 30,000
pounds of freight, which can be moved on and off an ocean vessel
unopened. Container ships are specially designed and constructed to
carry the containers, which are affixed to the hold. A container
can also be attached to a truck chassis and transported intact to
and from the pier like a conventional trailer.
The use of containers is substantially more economical than
traditional methods of handling ocean-borne cargo. [
Footnote 4] Because cargo does not have to be
handled and repacked as it moves from the warehouse by truck to the
dock, into the vessel, then from the vessel to the dock and by
truck or rail to its destination, the costs of handling are
significantly reduced. Expenses of separate export packaging,
storage, losses from pilferage and breakage, and costs of insurance
and processing cargo documents may also be decreased. Perhaps most
significantly,
Page 447 U. S. 495
a container ship can be loaded or unloaded in a fraction of the
time required for a conventional ship. [
Footnote 5] As a result, the unprofitable in-port time of
each ship is reduced, and a smaller number of ships are needed to
carry a given volume of cargo. [
Footnote 6]
Before the introduction of container ships, and as is still the
case with conventional vessels, trucks delivered loose, or
break-bulk, cargo to the head of the pier. The cargo was then
transferred piece by piece from the truck's tailgate to the ship by
longshoremen employed by steamship or stevedoring companies. The
longshoremen checked the cargo, sorted it, placed it on pallets and
moved it by forklift to the side of the ship, and lifted it by
means of a sling or hook into the ship's hold. [
Footnote 7] The process was reversed for cargo
taken off incoming ships. With the advent of containers, the amount
of on-pier work involved in cargo handling has been drastically
reduced, since the cargo need not be loaded and unloaded piece by
piece. The amount of work available for longshoremen has been
further reduced by the shipping companies' practice of making their
containers available to shippers
Page 447 U. S. 496
and consolidators [
Footnote
8] for loading and unloading away from the pier.
Containerization, then, was a technological advance of great
importance to the shipping industry which, at the same time,
threatened the jobs of longshoremen by dramatically increasing
their productivity. [
Footnote
9] As one might expect, the subject has been a hotly disputed
topic of collective bargaining between the union and the employers.
[
Footnote 10] We are
concerned with the results of that collective bargaining process as
it affects the shipping industry in the Ports of New York,
Baltimore, and Hampton Roads, Va.
B
It is necessary, in discussing the collective bargaining
agreements here at issue, to define certain industry terms of
art
Page 447 U. S. 497
pertaining to containerized cargo. Loading cargo into a
container is called "stuffing"; unloading cargo from a container is
called "stripping." Containers holding goods beneficially owned by
one shipper or consignee are called full shippers' loads (FSL).
Containers holding goods belonging to more than one shipper or
consignee are called consolidated container loads. Such cargo is
also called "less than trailer load" (LTL) or "less than container
load" (LCL) cargo.
The first collective bargaining agreement to contain a provision
dealing with containerized shipping was the 1959 agreement between
ILA and the New York Shipping Association (NYSA). At that time,
containerization was in its infancy. [
Footnote 11] The provision in the 1959 agreement was
prompted by a dispute over the use of Dravo containers, boxes eight
cubic feet in size.
See International Longshoremen's Assn.
(Consolidated Express, Inc.), 221 N.L.R.B. 956, 957 (1975),
enf'd, 537 F.2d 706 (CA2 1976),
cert. denied, 429
U.S. 1041 (1977). The agreement recognized the right of NYSA
members "to use any and all type [
sic] of containers
without restriction or stripping by the union." 221 N.L.R.B. at
957. In return, NYSA agreed to contribute royalty payments on
"containers which are loaded or unloaded away from the pier by
non-ILA labor."
Ibid. The agreement also provided:
"Any work performed in connection with the loading and
discharging of containers for employer members of NYSA which is
performed in the Port of Greater New York whether on piers or
terminals controlled by them,
Page 447 U. S. 498
or whether, through direct contracting out, shall be performed
by ILA labor at longshore rates."
Ibid.
After the 1959 agreement was reached, the development of
container shipping accelerated. In 1967, ILA demanded in collective
bargaining negotiations that longshoremen stuff and strip all
containers crossing the piers. Following a lengthy strike, ILA and
NYSA in 1969 adopted, as part of their 1968-1971 collective
bargaining agreement, the Rules on Containers (Rules). The terms of
that master agreement were adopted by other ports on the North
Atlantic coast, including Hampton Roads and Baltimore. The Rules
were slightly modified in 1971, after another long strike. In 1973,
ILA and the Council of North Atlantic Shipping Associations
(CONASA) executed the "Dublin Supplement" as an "interpretive
bulletin" to the Rules. The substance of the Dublin Supplement was
incorporated in the version of the Rules contained in the 1974-1977
collective bargaining agreement. [
Footnote 12]
In essence, the Rules contained in the 1968 and 1971 agreements
provided that, if containers owned or leased by the shipping
companies and carrying LTL or consolidated container loads were to
be stuffed or stripped within the local port area (that is, within
a geographical radius of 50 miles of the port) by anyone other than
the employees of the beneficial owner of the cargo, that work must
be done at the piers by ILA labor. The shipping companies were
required to pay a royalty on containers that passed over the piers
intact, as well as liquidated damages, presently set at $1,000 per
container, for any container handled in violation of the Rules. The
Dublin Supplement declared that the Rules applied to all
containers, including those designated as FSL containers, which
were stuffed or stripped in the local area by other than the
beneficial owner's own employees. The Supplement also noted an
exception for FSL containers warehoused locally for at least 30
days, and, as a method of enforcing the Rules,
Page 447 U. S. 499
prohibited the employers from releasing any of their containers
to known consolidators with facilities located within 50 miles of
the port.
Thus, under the final version of the Rules incorporated in the
1974 agreement, if containers owned or leased [
Footnote 13] by the shipping companies are to be
stuffed or stripped locally by anyone other than the employees of
the beneficial owner of the cargo, that work must be done at the
piers by ILA labor. FSL containers that are transported intact to
or from the beneficial owner or that are warehoused locally for 30
days, and consolidated containers coming from or bound for points
outside the local area, do not have to be stuffed and stripped by
ILA members. The practical effect of the Rules is that some 80% of
containers pass over the piers intact. App. 612. The remaining 20%
are stuffed and stripped by longshoremen, regardless of whether
that work duplicates work done by non-ILA employees off-pier.
C
This case involves two proceedings before the National Labor
Relations Board (Board) on charges that the Rules are illegal
secondary activity in violation of federal labor law. The cases
were consolidated on appeal. The
Dolphin proceeding, 236
N.L.R.B. 525 (1978), concerns the application
Page 447 U. S. 500
of the provisions on LCL cargo to containers used by
consolidators operating within 50 miles of the Port of New York.
The Associated Transport proceeding, 231 N.L.R.B. 351 (1977),
concerns the application of the Rules to FSL containers whose cargo
was transferred by truckers to their own trucks within 50 miles of
the Ports of Baltimore and Hampton Roads. The affected truckers and
consolidators filed unfair labor practice charges with the Board,
alleging that the Rules constituted a "hot cargo" agreement in
violation of § 8(e) of the National Labor Relations Act (Act),
and that the activities of the parties to the agreement in
enforcing its terms were an illegal secondary boycott prohibited by
§ 8(b)(4)(b) of the Act.
The facts underlying the charges may be briefly stated. Dolphin
Forwarding, Inc. (Dolphin), and San Juan Freight Forwarding, Inc.
(San Juan), were NVOCC consolidators,
see n 8,
supra, soliciting business from
shippers throughout the United States who wished to transport LCL
cargo between New York and Puerto Rico. [
Footnote 14] Dolphin and San Juan received their
customers' goods at their off-pier facilities, located within 50
miles of the Port of New York. Using subcontracted non-ILA labor,
they consolidated the goods of two or more shippers, stuffed them
into containers provided by members of NYSA, and had the filled
containers trucked to the pier to be loaded onto ships by
longshoremen. [
Footnote 15]
As a result of these practices, the NYSA members who had supplied
their containers to the consolidators were assessed liquidated
damages of approximately $47,000. Those carriers then
Page 447 U. S. 501
informed Dolphin and San Juan that they would no longer furnish
them with containers. Thereupon, Dolphin and San Juan filed unfair
labor practice charges with the Board.
Houff Transport, Inc. (Houff), and Associated Transport, Inc.
(Associated), [
Footnote 16]
were Interstate Commerce Commission-licensed common carriers who
operated motor freight terminals within 50 miles of the Ports of
Baltimore and Hampton Roads. Since the advent of containerization,
they had transported FSL container loads to consignees both within
and beyond the 50-mile radius, and routinely stripped such FSL
containers and restuffed the cargo into their own vehicles for
reasons of economy, safety, or state highway or bridge
regulations.
The practice of using non-ILA labor to strip and restuff FSL
cargo within the 50-mile radius is known as shortstopping. Although
the Rules, prior to the Dublin Supplement, did not expressly
discuss FSL cargo,
see App. 235-250, 270276, the ILA and
the shipping companies apparently regarded shortstopping as an
infraction,
see 198 U.S.App.D.C. at 162, 613 F.2d at 895;
231 N.L.R.B. at 355 (Fanning, Chairman, dissenting). The Dublin
Supplement, and subsequent versions of the Rules, provided that ILA
labor must handle all FSL containers that otherwise would be
handled within the local area by other than the consignee's own
employees, except for FSL cargo consigned to the beneficial owner's
place of business or warehoused for 30 days within the port
area.
After the new Rules became effective, Houff and Associated
shortstopped containers picked up from CONASA members. The shipping
companies were assessed liquidated damages for each such container.
When Houff and Associated refused to indemnify them for the fines,
the shipping companies canceled their interchange agreements.
Houff, Associated, and the Tidewater Motor Truck Association
(TMTA), an association
Page 447 U. S. 502
of which Associated was a member, filed unfair labor practice
charges.
In holding that the charges were substantiated in both the
Dolphin and
Associated Transport proceedings, the
Board relied on its previous decision in
International
Longshoremen's Assn. (Consolidated Express, Inc.), 221
N.L.R.B. 956 (1975),
enf'd, 537 F.2d 706 (CA2 1976),
cert. denied, 429 U.S. 1041 (1977) (hereinafter
Conex). [
Footnote
17] In
Conex, the Board held that the traditional work
of longshoremen has been to load and unload ships at the pier. As
the Board explained in the
Dolphin proceeding,
Conex
"held that the Rules were not valid work-preservation clauses in
that, traditionally, the off-pier stuffing and stripping of
containers was performed by consolidating companies, and not
longshoremen. Since the work was not traditional longshore work and
had never been performed by longshoremen, the Rules which required
the shipping companies to stop doing business with consolidators
did not have a lawful work-preservation object."
236 N.L.R.B. at 526. Similarly, in the
Associated
Transport proceeding, the Board affirmed the finding by the
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) of an unfair labor practice because
longshoremen "had
not historically done the work" of
stripping FSL containers away from the pier. 231 N.L.R.B. at 353
(emphasis in original).
Page 447 U. S. 503
In short, in the Board's view the Rules sought to acquire for
ILA members work that had historically been performed not by
longshoremen, but by employees of consolidators and truckers.
Therefore the Rules had a secondary objective forbidden by the
Act.
ILA and CONASA appealed to the Court of Appeals, and the Board
cross-applied for enforcement of its orders. [
Footnote 18] The cases were consolidated. A
divided panel of the Court of Appeals refused enforcement, holding
that the Board had erred as a matter of law in defining the work in
controversy. It therefore vacated the Board's decisions, denied its
applications for enforcement, and remanded the cases for further
proceedings. We affirm.
II
Section 8(b)(4)(B) of the Act [
Footnote 19] prohibits unions and their agents from
engaging in secondary activities whose object is to force one
employer to cease doing business with another. Section 8(e)
[
Footnote 20] makes unlawful
those collective
Page 447 U. S. 504
bargaining agreements in which the employer agrees to cease
doing business with any other person. Although § 8(e) does
not, in terms, distinguish between primary and secondary activity,
we have held that, as in § 8(b)(4)(B), Congress intended to
reach only agreements with secondary objectives.
See NLRB v.
Pipefitters, 429 U. S. 507,
429 U. S. 517
(1977) (hereinafter
Pipefitters);
National Woodwork
Manufacturers Assn. v. NLRB, 386 U. S. 612,
386 U. S. 620,
635 (1967) (hereinafter
National Woodwork) .
Among the primary purposes protected by the Act is "the purpose
of preserving for the contracting employees themselves work
traditionally done by them."
Pipefitters, supra at
429 U. S. 517.
Whether an agreement is a lawful work preservation agreement
depends on
"whether, under all the surrounding circumstances, the Union's
objective was preservation of work for [bargaining unit] employees,
or whether the [agreement was] tactically calculated to satisfy
union objectives elsewhere. . . . The touchstone is whether the
agreement or its maintenance is addressed to the labor relations of
the contracting employer
vis-a-vis his own employees."
National Woodwork, supra at
386 U. S.
644-645 (footnotes omitted). Under this approach, a
lawful work preservation agreement must pass two tests: first, it
must have as its objective the preservation of work traditionally
performed by employees represented by the union. Second, the
contracting employer must have the power to give the employees the
work in question -- the so-called "right of control" test of
Pipefitters, supra. The rationale of the second test is
that, if the contracting employer has no power to assign the work,
it is reasonable to infer that the agreement has a secondary
objective,
Page 447 U. S. 505
that is, to influence whoever does have such power over the
work.
"Were the latter the case, [the contracting employer] would be a
neutral bystander, and the agreement or boycott would, within the
intent of Congress, become secondary."
National Woodwork, supra at
386 U. S.
644-645.
In applying the work preservation doctrine, the first and most
basic question is: what is the "work" that the agreement allegedly
seeks to preserve? Sometimes the process of identifying the work at
issue will require no subtle analysis. In
National
Woodwork, for example, the agreement preserved for the
carpenters employed by a general contractor the work of fitting all
doors installed on the jobsite. This was work they had always done,
and the method the parties chose to preserve the carpenters' right
to that work was simply to prohibit the employer from purchasing
any doors that had been prefitted by any other employees. That the
provision incidentally required the employer to boycott all
prefitted doors was of no consequence to the validity of the
agreement.
See Pipefitters, supra at
429 U. S. 510,
429 U. S.
526.
But in many cases, it is not so easy to find the starting point
of the analysis. Work preservation agreements typically come into
being when employees' traditional work is displaced, or threatened
with displacement, by technological innovation. The national labor
policy expresses a preference for addressing "the threats to
workers posed by increased technology and automation" by means of
"labor-management agreements to ease these effects through
collective bargaining on this most vital problem created by
advanced technology."
National Woodwork, supra at
386 U. S. 641,
386 U. S. 642.
In many instances, technological innovation may change the method
of doing the work, instead of merely shifting the same work to a
different location. One way to preserve the work of the employees
represented by the union in the face of such a change is simply to
insist that the innovation not be adopted, and that the work
continue to be done in the traditional way.
Page 447 U. S. 506
The union in
National Woodwork followed this tactic,
and negotiated an agreement in which the employer agreed not to use
prefabricated materials. We held that agreement was lawful under
§§ 8(e) and 8(b)(4)(B). But the protection Congress
afforded to work preservation agreements cannot be limited solely
to employees who respond to change with intransigence. Congress, in
enacting § 8(e), did not intend to protect only certain kinds
of work preservation agreements; rather, it "had no thought of
prohibiting agreements directed to work preservation,"
National
Woodwork, supra at
386 U. S. 640.
The work preservation doctrine, then, must also apply to situations
where unions attempt to accommodate change while preserving as much
of their traditional work patterns as possible. [
Footnote 21] When this is the case, the
inquiry must be more refined, and the analysis more discriminating.
The Board held that
"'[t]he traditional work of the longshoremen represented by ILA
has been to load and unload ships. When necessary to perform their
loading and unloading work, longshoremen have been required to
stuff and strip containers on the piers.'"
231 N.L.R.B. at 364 (decision of ALJ, adopted by the Board),
quoting Conex, 221 N.L.R.B. at 959;
see 236 N.L.R.B. at
526. The Board then determined that the work in controversy was
"the off-pier stuffing and stripping of containers,"
ibid.;
see 231 N.L.R.B. at 364-365. Similarly, in
Conex, the
Board stated:
"It is clear from the record that the work in controversy here
is the LCL and LTL container work performed by [the charging
parties] at their own off-pier premises."
221 N.L.R.B. at 959. Because ILA members had never performed
such work, the Board concluded that the Rules were an illegal
attempt to reach out and acquire work that was not within the
union's traditional work jurisdiction and which its members had
never performed. We agree with the Court of Appeals that this
Page 447 U. S. 507
approach to defining the work at issue was incorrect as a matter
of law.
The Board's approach reflects a fundamental misconception of the
work preservation doctrine as it has been applied in our previous
cases. Identification of the work at issue in a complex case of
technological displacement requires a careful analysis of the
traditional work patterns that the parties are allegedly seeking to
preserve, and of how the agreement seeks to accomplish that result
under the changed circumstances created by the technological
advance. The analysis must take into account "all the surrounding
circumstances,"
National Woodwork, 386 U.S. at
386 U. S. 644,
including the nature of the work both before and after the
innovation. In a relatively simple case, such as
National
Woodwork or
Pipefitters, the inquiry may be of rather
limited scope. Other, more complex cases will require a broader
view, taking into account the transformation of several
interrelated industries or types of work; this is such a case.
Whatever its scope, however, the inquiry must be carefully focused:
to determine whether an agreement seeks no more than to preserve
the work of bargaining unit members, the Board must focus on the
work of the bargaining unit employees, not on the work of other
employees who may be doing the same or similar work, [
Footnote 22] and examine the
relationship between the work as it existed before the innovation
and as the agreement proposes to preserve it.
The Board, by contrast, focused on the work done by the
employees of the charging parties, the truckers and consolidators,
after the introduction of containerized shipping. It found that
work was similar to work those employees had done before the
innovation, and concluded that ILA was
Page 447 U. S. 508
trying to acquire the traditional work of those employees. That
conclusion ignores the fact that the impact of containerization
occurred at the interface between ocean and motor transport; not
surprisingly, the work of stuffing and stripping containers is
similar to work previously done by both longshoremen and truckers.
The Board's approach would have been entirely appropriate in
considering an agreement to preserve the work of truckers'
employees, but it misses the point when applied to judge this
contract between the ILA and the shipowner employers.
By focusing on the work as performed, after the innovation took
place, by the employees who allegedly have displaced the
longshoremen's work, the Board foreclosed -- by definition -- any
possibility that the longshoremen could negotiate an agreement to
permit them to continue to play any part in the loading or
unloading of containerized cargo. For the very reason, the Rules
were negotiated was that longshoremen do not perform that work away
from the pier, and never have. Thus, it is apparent that, under the
Board's approach, in the words of the Court of Appeals, the "work
preservation doctrine is sapped of all life." 198 U.S.App.D.C. at
176, 613 F.2d at 909.
That this is so is vividly demonstrated by considering how
different would have been the results in
National Woodwork
and
Pipefitters if we had adopted the approach now chosen
by the Board. In
National Woodwork, we held that
carpenters could seek to preserve their traditional work of
finishing blank doors at the construction jobsite by prohibiting
the employer, a general contractor, from purchasing prefinished
doors from the factory. If we had followed the Board's current
approach in analyzing the agreement, we would have defined the work
in controversy as "the finishing of blank doors away from the
construction site." That work, of course, had never been done by
the carpenters employed by the general contractor, but had been
performed by the employees of
Page 447 U. S. 509
the door manufacturers since before the adoption of the
agreement. We would perforce have determined that the object of the
agreement was work acquisition, not work preservation.
Similarly,
Pipefitters involved an agreement between a
subcontractor and a pipefitters' union that pipe threading and
cutting were to be performed on the jobsite. Relying on the
agreement, the union refused to install climate-control units whose
internal piping had been cut, threaded, and installed at the
factory. The Board held that the provision was a lawful work
preservation agreement, but that the refusal to handle the
pre-piped units was an unfair labor practice because the units had
been specified by the general contractor and the subcontractor had
no power to assign the employees the work they sought. Neither the
Court of Appeals nor this Court questioned the validity of the work
preservation clause but for the fact that it was enforced against
an employer who could not control the work. Under the Board's
current approach, however, the "work" would have been "cutting,
threading, and installing pipe in climate-control units at the
factory." Since the bargaining unit employees had never performed
that work, there would have been no reason to reach the "right of
control" issue.
Thus, the Board's determination that the work of longshoremen
has historically been the loading and unloading of ships should be
only the beginning of the analysis. The next step is to look at how
the contracting parties sought to preserve that work, to the extent
possible, in the face of a massive technological change that
largely eliminated the need for cargo handling at intermediate
stages of the intermodal transportation of goods, and to evaluate
the relationship between traditional longshore work and the work
which the Rules attempt to assign to ILA members. [
Footnote 23] This case presents
Page 447 U. S. 510
a much more difficult problem than either
National
Woodwork or
Pipefitters, because the union did not
simply insist on doing the work as it had always been done and try
to prevent the employers from using container ships at all --
though such an approach would have been consistent with
National Woodwork and
Pipefitters. Instead, ILA
permitted the great majority of containers to pass over the piers
intact, reserving the right to stuff and strip only those
containers that would otherwise have been stuffed or stripped
locally by anyone except the beneficial owner's employees. The
legality of the agreement turns, as an initial matter, on whether
the historical and functional relationship between this retained
work and traditional longshore work can support the conclusion that
the objective of the agreement was work preservation. rather than
the satisfaction of union goals elsewhere. [
Footnote 24] Respondents assert that the
stuffing and stripping reserved for the ILA by the Rules is
functionally equivalent to their former work of handling break-bulk
cargo at the pier. [
Footnote
25] Petitioners-intervenors, on the other hand, argue that
containerization has worked such fundamental changes in the
industry that the work formerly done at the pier by both
longshoremen
Page 447 U. S. 511
and employees of motor carriers has been completely
eliminated.
These questions are not appropriate for initial consideration by
reviewing courts. They are properly raised before the Board, whose
determinations are, of course, entitled to deference. Since the
Board has not had an opportunity to consider these questions in
relation to a proper understanding of the work at issue, we will
not address them here. We emphasize that neither our decision nor
that of the Court of Appeals implies that the result of the Board's
reconsideration of this case is foreordained. [
Footnote 26] Viewing the work allegedly to be
preserved by the Rules from the proper perspective, the Board will
be free to determine whether the Rules represent a lawful attempt
to preserve traditional longshore work, or whether, instead, they
are "tactically calculated to satisfy union objectives elsewhere,"
National Woodwork, 386 U.S. at
386 U. S. 644.
This determination will, of course, be informed by an awareness of
the congressional preference for collective bargaining as the
method for resolving disputes over dislocations caused by the
introduction of technological innovations in the workplace,
see
id. at
386 U. S.
641-642. Thus, in judging the legality of a thoroughly
bargained and apparently reasonable accommodation to technological
change, the question is not whether the Rules represent the most
rational or efficient response to innovation, but whether they are
a legally permissible effort to preserve jobs.
If the Board finds, on remand, that the Rules have a lawful work
preservation objective, it will then, of course, be obliged
Page 447 U. S. 512
to consider the charging parties' contention that CONASA members
did not have the right to control the stuffing and stripping of
containers. Because the Board held that the agreement was directed
at work acquisition, rather than work preservation, it did not
decide the right-to-control issue in this case. That issue remains
open on remand. Therefore, and because the arguments of the parties
were necessarily addressed to an erroneous conception of the work
whose control was disputed, [
Footnote 27] any discussion of that issue here would be
premature. Respondents have also argued that the employers, as
common carriers who are subject to Government regulation and to the
provisions of their own tariffs, shippers' bills of lading, and
intermodal interchange agreements with motor carriers, have no
legal right to withhold containers or container services from their
customers on a selective basis, to condition access to the
containers on compliance with the Rules, to seek indemnification
from their customers for fines imposed under the Rules, or to
enforce the Rules after the containers have been released to motor
carriers.
See, e.g., Shipping Act, 1916, 46 U.S.C. §
801
et seq.; Intercoastal Shipping Act, 1933, 46 U.S.C.
§ 843
et seq.; Sea-Land Service, Inc. -- Proposed ILA
Rules on Containers, 20 F.M.C. 788 (1978),
review
pending, No. 78-1776 (CADC). These contentions present
difficult and complex problems which are not properly before
us.
We conclude that the Court of Appeals correctly held that the
Board's definition of the work in controversy in this dispute was
erroneous as a matter of law, and we therefore affirm the Court of
Appeals' judgment vacating the Board's decisions,
Page 447 U. S. 513
denying the applications for enforcement, and remanding to the
Board for further proceedings
It is so ordered.
|
447
U.S. 490app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF THE COURT
"
1974 Rules on Containers"
"
CONASA-ILA RULES ON CONTAINERS"
"
PREAMBLE"
"This Agreement made and entered into by and between the carrier
and direct employer members of the CONASA Port Associations
(hereinafter referred to collectively as 'CONASA') and the
International Longshoremen's Association, AFL-CIO ('ILA'), its
Atlantic Coast District ('ACD') and its affiliated local unions in
each CONASA port ('locals') covers all container work at a
waterfront facility which includes but is not limited to the
receiving and delivery of cargo, the loading and discharging of
said cargo into and out of containers, the maintenance of
containers, and the loading and discharging of containers on and
off ships."
"CONASA agrees that it will not directly perform work done on a
container waterfront facility (as hereinafter defined) or contract
out such work which historically and regularly has been and
currently is performed by employees covered by CONASA-ILA
Agreements, including CONASA-ILA craft agreements, unless such work
on such container waterfront facility is performed by employees
covered by CONASA-ILA Agreements."
"
RULES"
"The following provisions are intended to protect and preserve
the work jurisdiction of longshoremen and all other ILA crafts
which was performed at deep-sea waterfront facilities. These rules
do not have any effect on work which historically was not performed
at a waterfront facility by deep-sea ILA labor. To assure
compliance with the collective
Page 447 U. S. 514
bargaining provisions, the following rules and regulations shall
be applied uniformly in all CONASA Ports to all imports or export
cargo in containers:"
"Definitions"
"(a) Loading a Container -- means the act of placing cargo into
a container."
"(b) Discharging a Container -- means the act of removing cargo
from a container."
"(c) Loading Containers on a vessel -- means the act of placing
containers aboard a vessel."
"(d) Discharging Containers from a vessel -- means the act of
removing containers from a vessel."
"(e) Waterfront facility -- means a pier or dock where vessels
are normally worked including a container compound operated by a
carrier or direct employer."
"(f) Qualified Shipper -- means the manufacturer or seller
having a proprietary financial interest (other than in the
transportation or physical consolidation or deconsolidation) in the
export cargo being transported and who is named in the dock/cargo
receipt."
"(g) Qualified Consignee -- means the purchaser or one who
otherwise has a proprietary financial interest (other than in the
transportation or physical consolidation or deconsolidation) in the
import cargo being transported and who is named in the delivery
order."
"(h) Consolidated Container Load -- means a container load of
cargo where such cargo belongs to more than one shipper on export
cargo or one consignee on import cargo."
"Rule 1 -- Containers To Be Loaded or Discharged by Deep-sea ILA
Labor"
"(a) Cargo in containers referred to below shall be loaded into
or discharged out of containers only at a waterfront facility by
deep-sea ILA labor:"
" (1) Containers owned, leased or used by carriers (including
containers on wheels and trailers), hereinafter
Page 447 U. S. 515
'containers', which contain consolidated container loads, which
come from or go to any point within a geographic area of any CONASA
port described by a 50-mile circle with its radius extending out
from the center of each port (hereinafter 'geographic area')
or"
" (2) Containers which come from a single shipper which is not
the manufacturer ('manufacturer's label') into which the cargo has
been loaded (consolidated) by other than its own employees and such
containers come from any point within the 'geographical area,'
or"
" (3) Containers designated for a single consignee from which
the cargo is discharged (deconsolidated) by other than its own
employees within the 'geographic area' and which is not warehoused
in accordance with Rule 2(b)."
"(b) Such ILA labor shall be paid and employed at deep-sea
longshore rates under the terms and conditions of the deep-sea ILA
labor agreement in each CONASA port, including the provisions for
all fringe benefits and any and all other benefits receivable by
deep-sea ILA craft workers in each such Port. No cargo shall be
loaded into or discharged out of any container by ILA deep-sea
labor more than once"
" (c) All export consolidated cargo, described in 1(a)(1) and
(2) above, shall be received at the waterfront facility by deep-sea
ILA labor and such cargo shall be loaded into a container at the
waterfront facility for loading aboard ship."
" (d) All import consolidated cargo, described in 1(a)(1) and
(3) above, shall be discharged from the container and the cargo
placed on the waterfront facility where it will be delivered and
picked up by each consignee."
"(e) No carrier or direct employee shall supply its containers
to any consolidator or deconsolidator. No carrier or direct
employer shall operate a facility in violation of the Rules on
Containers which specifically require that all Rule 1 Containers be
loaded or discharged at a waterfront facility
Page 447 U. S. 516
"
"Rule 2 -- Containers Not to be Loaded or Discharged by ILA
Labor"
"Cargo in containers referred to below shall no be loaded or
discharged by ILA labor:"
"A. Export Cargo:"
"(1) All cargo loaded in containers outside the 'geographic
area'."
"(2) Containers loaded with cargo at a qualified shipper's
facility with its own employees."
"(3) Containers loaded with the cargo of a single manufacturer
(manufacturer's label)."
"(4) Consolidated container loads of mail, household effects of
a person who is relocating his place of residence, with no other
type of cargo in the container, or personal effects of military
personnel."
"B. Import Cargo:"
"(1) All cargo discharged from containers outside the
'geographic area'."
"(2) Containers discharged at a qualified consignee's facility
by its own employees."
"(3) Consolidated container loads of mail, household effects of
a person who is relocating his place of business, with no other
type of cargo in the container, or personal effects of military
personnel."
"(4) Containers of a qualified consignee discharged at a bona
fide public warehouse within the 'geographic area' which comply
with all of the following conditions"
" 1. The container cargo is warehoused at a bona fide public
warehouse."
" 2. The qualified consignee pays the normal labor charge in and
out; and the normal warehouse storage fees for a minimum period of
thirty or more days, and;"
" 3. The cargo being warehoused (a) in the normal course of the
business of the qualified consignee; (b) title to
Page 447 U. S. 517
such goods has not been transferred from the qualified consignee
to another."
"The carrier on request will furnish all documentation and other
information which permits the Container Committee in the port to
determine whether conditions 1, 2 and 3 have been met. This
exception shall not apply where cargo is warehoused for the purpose
of avoidance or evasion of Rule 1. It is limited to containers
warehoused as provided in the above conditions and any warehouse
which does not conform to such conditions shall be deemed a
consolidator or deconsolidator."
"Rule 3 -- Batching"
"When an employer-member or carrier uses a trucker to remove or
deliver containers in batches, or in substantial number, from or to
a terminal to another place of rest (outside of its terminal) where
containers are stored pending their delivery to a consignee (or
after being received from a shipper and while waiting the arrival
of a ship), for the purpose of reducing the work jurisdiction of
the ILA or any of its crafts, such use is deemed to be batching and
an evasion of these Rules in violation of the CONASA-ILA
contract."
"Rule 1 Headload"
"Where a single qualified shipper sends an export container
which contains all of his own cargo to a waterfront facility and
such container is not full, the carrier or direct employer may load
this container with additional cargo at the waterfront facility. On
import cargo, the carrier or direct employer may discharge any such
additional cargo and send the remaining cargo in the container to
the qualified consignee. The loading or discharging of cargo at ILA
ports shall be performed at a waterfront facility by deep-sea ILA
labor. "
Page 447 U. S. 518
"Rule 5 -- Overland Movement of Containers from CONASA Port to
Non-CONASA Port"
"If a carrier moves containers from a CONASA Port to a
non-CONASA Port for the purpose of evading the Rules on Containers,
the carrier is in violation of the CONASA-ILA Agreement. If the
cargo is being moved to a non-CONASA-ILA Port in the normal course
of business, and not for the purpose of evasion, then such movement
is not a violation."
"Rule Importers Advertising Evasion of Rules"
"The circulation, in writing, by importers of methods developed
by them to evade the Rules on Containers by issuing single bills of
lading on what are in fact consolidated container loads shall be
deemed a violation and all CONASA-ILA Container Committees shall be
advised to stop such evasion at the waterfront facilities."
"Rule 7 -- No Avoidance or Evasion"
"The above rules are intended to be fairly and reasonably
applied by the parties. To obtain nondiscriminatory and fair
implementation of the above, the following principles shall
apply:"
"(a) Geographic Area -- Agreement in the Port to the geographic
area as provided in Rule 1 is based on present consolidated
movement patterns in the port. Should any person, firm or
corporation for the purpose of evading the provisions of the Rules
on Containers, seek to change such pattern by shifting its
operations to, or commencing new operations at, a point outside
said agreed upon geographic area, then either party may raise the
question whether said point should be included within the said
geographic area, and upon agreement that the purpose of the shift
in its operations was to evade the provisions of the Rules on
Containers, then said point shall be deemed to be within the said
geographic area for the purpose of these rules. "
Page 447 U. S. 519
"(b) Containers Owned, Leased or Used -- Containers owned,
leased or used by companies which are affiliated either directly or
through a holding company with a carrier or a direct employer shall
be deemed to be containers owned, leased or used by a carrier or
direct employer. Affiliation shall include subsidiaries and/or
affiliates which are effectively controlled by the carrier or
direct employer, its parent, or stockholders of either of
them."
"(c) Liquidated Damages -- Failure to load or discharge a
container as required under these rules will be considered a
violation of the contract between the parties. Use of improper,
fictitious or incorrect documentation to evade the provisions of
Rule 1 and Rule 2 shall also be considered a violation of the
contract. If for any reason a container is no longer at the
waterfront facility at which it should have been loaded or
discharged under the Rules, then the carrier or its agent or direct
employer shall pay, to the joint Container Royalty Fund, liquidated
damages of $1,000 per container which should have been loaded or
discharged. If any carrier does not pay liquidated damages within
30 days after exhausting its right to appeal the imposition of
liquidated damages to the Committee provided in Rule 9(a) below,
the ILA shall have the right to stop working such carrier's
containers until such damages are paid."
"(d) Any facility operated in violation of the Container Rules
will not have service supplied to it by any direct employer and the
ILA will not supply labor to such facility."
"Rule 8 -- Renegotiation and Cancellation -- No Arbitration"
"These Rules shall be in effect for the term of the CONASA-ILA
Agreement, provided, however, that either party shall have the
right to cancel the Rules on Containers at any time on or after
December 1, 1974, on thirty (30) days written
Page 447 U. S. 520
notice of a desire to renegotiate the provisions of these Rules.
Negotiations shall be held during such thirty (30) day period and
if the parties are unable to agree by the end of such period, these
Rules shall be deemed cancelled. Thereafter, the ILA shall have the
right to refuse to handle containers and CONASA shall have the
right to refuse to hire employees under the said Rules. The
negotiations referred to above shall, under no condition, be
subject to the grievance or arbitration provisions of any
CONASA-ILA Agreement."
"Rule 9 -- Enforcement of the Rules on Containers"
"To assure effective, fair and nondiscriminatory enforcement of
the above Rules, the following regulations shall apply:"
"(a) A Committee in each CONASA port represented equally by
management and union shall be formed and shall have the
responsibility and power to hear and pass judgment on any
violations of these Rules. Any inability to agree shall be
processed as a grievance under the applicable contract except as
limited by Rule 8 hereof . A joint committee, known as the
CONASA-ILA Container Committee, represented equally by management
and labor and made up of representatives (to be mutually agreed
upon) from each CONASA Port, namely, Boston, Rhode Island, New
York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Hampton Roads shall meet at least
quarterly each year for the purpose of insuring uniformity in the
interpretation of these Rules."
"(b) A Committee of carriers, together with CONASA-ILA Container
Committee will develop uniform documentation which shall be
required to be prepared and maintained by all carriers in order to
readily identify all Rule 1 containers which are subject to loading
or discharging by deep-sea ILA labor. It shall be the obligation of
employer-members to clearly mark each container's
Page 447 U. S. 521
documentation as to whether or not it is a Rule 1 container,
which shall be loaded or discharged. If a container's documentation
is not clearly marked, it shall be deemed a Rule 1 container and it
shall be loaded or discharged by deep-sea ILA labor at the
waterfront facility. With respect to all containers received at or
delivered from the waterfront facility, a record of the same shall
be made by ILA Checkers or Clerks. All carriers will distribute to
all other carriers any and all information and devices which are
being used by any person to circumvent the Rules on Containers. Any
carrier whose attention is brought to a violation of the Rules
shall immediately cease such violation and report the matter to the
appropriate CONASA-ILA Container Committee and to the policing
agency provided in(e) below in its port."
"(c) Every import container destined to a point within 50-miles
of a CONASA Port shall be delivered only on a delivery order. Every
export container coming from a point within 50-miles of a CONASA
Port shall be received only on a dock/cargo receipt. Such delivery
orders and dock/cargo receipts shall certify the place of delivery
and origin of the container, the name or names of the person to
whom the cargo is being delivered and from which it is shipped, the
identity of the owner of the cargo, weight of the cargo, identity
of the cargo and the origin and final destination of the container.
Copies of such delivery orders and dock/cargo receipts shall be
available to the local port Container Committee and the policing
agency provided for in (e) below."
"(d) The Container Committee in each CONASA Port shall
promulgate to all carriers and direct employers, and to the
Container Committees in each CONASA Port, any and all
interpretations of the Rules on Containers as and when they are
made. This will include uniform
Page 447 U. S. 522
interpretations as and when they are issued. The CONASA-ILA
Container Committee shall also promulgate uniform interpretations
to local port Container Committees, as and when they are
issued."
"(e) Policing Agency -- Each CONASA Port shall establish a
method of policing and enforcing these Rules on a uniform and
nondiscriminatory basis. No such method shall be implemented until
presented to and approved by the joint CONASA-ILA Container
Committee."
"Rule 10 -- Container Royalty Payments"
"The two Container Royalty payments required by the CONASA-ILA
collective bargaining agreements shall be payable only once in the
Continental United States. They shall be paid in that ILA Port
where the container is first handled by ILA longshore labor at
longshore rates. The second container royalty payment (provided by
paragraph 6 of the 1971-1974 CONASA-ILA Memorandum of Agreement)
shall be continued and shall be used for fringe benefit purposes
only, other than supplemental cash benefits, which purposes are to
be determined locally on a port by port basis. Containers
originating at a foreign port which are transshipped at a United
States port for ultimate destination to another foreign port
('foreign sea-to-foreign-sea containers') are exempt from the
payment of container royalties."
[
Footnote 1]
A contrary result was reached in
International
Longshoremen's Assn., Local 1575 v. NLRB, 560 F.2d 439 (CA1
1977), and in
International Longshoremen's Assn. v. NLRB,
537 F.2d 706 (CA2 1976),
cert. denied, 429 U.S. 1041
(1977).
Cf. Humphrey v. International Longshoremen's
Assn., 548 F.2d 494 (CA4 1977).
[
Footnote 2]
See, e.g., Ullman, The Role of the American Ocean
Freight Forwarder in Intermodal, Containerized Transportation, 2
J.Mar.L. & Comm. 625, 627 (1971); Schmeltzer & Peavy,
Prospects and Problems of the Container Revolution, 1 J.Mar.L.
& Comm. 203 (1970); Note, Containerization and Intermodal
Service in Ocean Shipping, 21 Stan.L.Rev. 1077, 1078 (1969).
[
Footnote 3]
Ross, Waterfront Labor Response to Technological Change: A Tale
of Two Unions, 21 Lab.L.J. 397, 398 (1970).
[
Footnote 4]
See Ross,
supra, n 3, at 399-400; Schmeltzer & Peavy,
supra,
n 2, at 206-210; Note,
supra, n 2, at
1087-1092.
[
Footnote 5]
See Ross,
supra, n 3, at 399 (36-48 hours, compared to 7 or 8 days for
conventional vessel); Schmeltzer & Peavy,
supra,
n 2, at 208 (8 hours compared
to 3 days).
[
Footnote 6]
See Note,
supra, n 2, at 1088 (container ship spends 25% of its time in
port, compared to 60% for conventional vessel).
[
Footnote 7]
The longshore unit in the Port of New York was certified by the
National Labor Relations Board as
"[a]ll longshore employees engaged in work pertaining to the
rigging of ships, coaling of same, loading and unloading of
cargoes, including mail, ships' stores and baggage, handling lines
in connection with the docking and undocking of ships, including
hatch bosses; cargo repairmen, checkers, clerks and timekeepers and
their assistants, including head receiving and delivery clerks;
general maintenance, mechanical and miscellaneous workers; horse
and cattle fitters, grain ceilers, and marine carpenters, in the
Port of Greater New York and vicinity. . . .
New York Shipping
Assn., 116 N.L.R.B. 1183, 1188 (1956) (footnote omitted)."
[
Footnote 8]
A freight consolidator combines the goods of various shippers
into a single shipment at its own off-pier terminal and delivers
the shipment to the pier. Ordinarily, consolidators operate no
transportation of their own except for pickup and delivery
equipment. They contract with carriers, such as truckers and
steamship lines, for the actual transportation of the goods.
See Comment, Intermodal Transportation and the Freight
Forwarder, 76 Yale L.J. 1360, 1362 (1967). A consolidator who acts
as a carrier by arranging for the transportation of goods from port
to port is called a nonvessel operating common carrier by water
(NVOCC), and is regulated by the Federal Maritime Commission.
See Federal Maritime Commission, Preliminary Staff Report
on Non-Vessel Operating Common Carriers by Water (Dec. 8, 1970);
see generally Ullman,
supra, n 2.
[
Footnote 9]
See, e.g., 198 U.S.App.D.C. at 159, 613 F.2d at 892;
Ross,
supra, n 3, at
400.
[
Footnote 10]
The longshoremen involved in this dispute are represented by the
ILA. Their employers, shipowners and stevedoring companies
operating in the Ports of New York, Baltimore, and Hampton Roads,
belong to several employers' organizations. These include the New
York Shipping Association (NYSA), the Steamship Trade Association
of Baltimore (STAB), and the Hampton Roads Shipping Association
(HRSA). Since 1970, the Council of North Atlantic Shipping
Associations (CONASA), a multiemployer bargaining association
representing shipping associations including NYSA, STAB, and HRSA,
has bargained with ILA on a master contract basis.
[
Footnote 11]
The first specially fitted container ship began operating in the
late 1950's between New York and Puerto Rico.
See App.
117. As late as 1966, the percentage of general cargo moved by
containers in the Port of New York was only 3%.
See Ross,
supra, n 3, at 398.
The first container ships did not appear in the Ports of Baltimore
and Hampton Roads until 1965 and 1966.
See 198
U.S.App.D.C. at 161, 613 F.2d at 894;
International
Longshoremen's Assn. (Associated Transport, Inc.), 231
N.L.R.B. 351, 359 (1977).
[
Footnote 12]
The 1974 Rules are reproduced in the
447
U.S. 490app|>appendix to this opinion.
[
Footnote 13]
The 1968 and 1971 versions of the Rules referred only to
containers "owned or leased" by the employers,
see App.
237, 238, 247, 272, 273. The 1974 agreement refers to containers
"owned, leased or used by carriers."
See infra at
447 U. S. 514.
There is nothing in the record to indicate that the fines which led
to the unfair labor practice charges before us were imposed for
infractions relating to containers which were not owned or leased
by CONASA members. Therefore we, like the Board and the Court of
Appeals, assume that the Rules have application only to containers
that belong to the contracting employers.
See 198
U.S.App.D.C. at 179, 613 F.2d at 912; 236 N.L.R.B. at 526; 231
N.L.R.B. at 359;
International Longshoremen's Assn.
(Consolidated Express, Inc.), 221 N.L.R.B. 956, 958, 959
(1975);
but see 231 N.L.R.B. at 353, n. 3 (Fanning,
Chairman, dissenting).
[
Footnote 14]
Dolphin has since ceased doing business in New York.
[
Footnote 15]
Dolphin began such operations several years before the adoption
of the Rules. The NYSA members contended that they supplied
containers to Dolphin only because it listed Massachusetts as the
point of origin for the containers, rather than the actual facility
within the port area. San Juan was established in 1972, several
years after the Rules were first adopted. It apparently listed
Chicago as the point of origin of containers it shipped. 198
U.S.App.D.C. at 166, 613 F.2d at 899.
[
Footnote 16]
Associated is no longer in business.
[
Footnote 17]
The Rules were first litigated in 1970 when the United States
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit rejected a claim that their
enforcement violated the antitrust laws. The Court of Appeals held
that the Rules came under the labor exemption.
Intercontinental
Container Trans port Corp. v. New York Shipping Assn., 426
F.2d 884 (1970). The plaintiff in the antitrust proceeding also
initiated related unfair labor practice proceedings before the
Board by filing unfair labor practice charges alleging violations
of §§ 8(e) and 8(b)(4)(b). The Regional Director's
dismissal of the charges, on the ground that the Rules were a valid
work preservation agreement, was affirmed on appeal by the Board's
General Counsel. App. 621.
[
Footnote 18]
Houff intervened on appeal, and TMTA and Dolphin were permitted
to intervene after the Court of Appeals issued its decision.
[
Footnote 19]
Section 8(b), as set forth in 29 U.S.C. § 158(b), provides
in pertinent part:
"It shall be an unfair labor practice for a labor organization
or its agents --"
"
* * * *"
"(4)(ii) to threaten, coerce, or restrain any person engaged in
commerce or in an industry affecting commerce, where . . . an
object thereof is --"
"
* * * *"
"(B) forcing or requiring any person to cease using, selling,
handling, transporting, or otherwise dealing in the products of any
other producer, processor, or manufacturer, or to cease doing
business with any other person. . . . Provided, That nothing
contained in this clause (b) shall be construed to make unlawful .
. . any primary strike or primary picketing. . . ."
[
Footnote 20]
Section 8(e), as set forth in 29 U.S.C. § 158(e), provides
in pertinent part:
"It shall be an unfair labor practice for any labor organization
and any employer to enter into any contract or agreement, express
or implied, whereby such employer ceases or refrains or agrees to
cease or refrain from handling, using, selling, transporting or
otherwise dealing in any of the products of any other employer, or
to cease doing business with any other person, and any contract or
agreement entered into heretofore or hereafter containing such an
agreement shall be to such extent unenforceable and void. . .
."
[
Footnote 21]
See Comment, Work Recapture Agreements and Secondary
Boycotts:
ILA v. NLRB (Consolidated Express, Inc.), 90
Harv.L.Rev. 815 (1977).
[
Footnote 22]
The effect of work preservation agreements on the employment
opportunities of employees not represented by the union, no matter
how severe, is, of course, irrelevant to the validity of the
agreement so long as the union had no forbidden secondary purpose
to affect the employment relations of the neutral employer.
See
Pipefitters, 429 U.S. at
429 U. S. 510,
429 U. S.
526.
[
Footnote 23]
We need hardly add that the analysis is not, as the parties have
sometimes seemed to suggest, simply a matter of deciding whether a
container is more like the hold of a ship or more like a big box.
The usefulness of a container lies precisely in the fact that it
may function as an integral part of the hold while it is aboard a
vessel, as a trailer when it is transported by truck, and as part
of a railroad car when it is carried by rail.
[
Footnote 24]
Obviously, the result will depend on how closely the parties
have tailored their agreement to the objective of preserving the
essence of the traditional work patterns. Thus, the claim that, if
the Rules are upheld, the union would be able to follow containers
around the country and assert the right to stuff and strip them far
inland is groundless. That work would bear an entirely different
relation to traditional longshore work, and would require a wholly
different analysis.
[
Footnote 25]
They contend that there is no significant economic advantage to
be gained from containerization over break-bulk handling at the
pier when the stuffing and stripping is to be done locally.
[
Footnote 26]
The dissenting opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE proceeds on the
assumption that we decide today the proper definition of the work
in controversy,
see post at
447 U. S. 528,
and hold that the Rules are a lawful work preservation agreement,
see post at
447 U. S. 525,
447 U. S.
528-529. Our holding, we repeat, is that the Board's
definition of the work in controversy was erroneous as a matter of
law. The question whether the Rules may be sustained under a proper
understanding of the work preservation doctrine must be answered
first by the Board on remand.
[
Footnote 27]
It is plain that the outcome of the right-to-control test will
be significantly affected by whether the work in controversy is
viewed as the stuffing and stripping done at the off-pier
facilities of truckers and consolidators by their own employees or
as, for example, the stuffing and stripping of certain types of
cargo from containers owned or leased by, and in the possession and
control of, the shipping companies.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, with whom MR. JUSTICE STEWART, MR
JUSTICE REHNQUIST, and MR. JUSTICE STEVENS join, dissenting.
This case turns on the definition of the work in controversy. If
viewed exclusively from the perspective of the ILA, without regard
to other aspects of the transportation industry or to the
evolutionary changes in methods of doing business, the work can be
characterized broadly as the loading and unloading of vessels; that
gives the contract Rules on Containers a plausible work
preservation objective sufficient to escape what
Page 447 U. S. 523
would otherwise be a violation of § 8(e) of the National
Labor Relations Act. If viewed from the perspective of the
consolidators and motor carriers -- many of whose employees are
also union members -- the objective is not preservation of
traditional longshoremen's work, but a claim to work historically
and traditionally performed by teamsters, truckers, and similar
inland laborers. Which of these perspectives is chosen, in turn,
depends on the view taken of the nature and function of a
"container."
This is where the Court's analysis runs astray. To the Court,
the work-in-controversy problem in the instant case is simply
analogous to that involved in
National Woodwork Manufacturers
Assn. v. NLRB, 386 U. S. 612
(1967), or
NLRB v. Pipefitters, 429 U.
S. 507 (1977), although the Court disclaims this.
Compare ante at
447 U. S.
508-509,
with ante at
447 U. S.
509-510. But viewing the work in controversy, as we
should, "under all the surrounding circumstances,"
National
Woodwork, supra at
386 U. S. 644,
the Court's analysis simply will not "wash." A door may be a door
in the carpenter's world, and a pipe may be a pipe to the plumber,
but a "container" can be seen as sometimes like the hold of a ship,
sometimes like the trailer of a truck -- and sometimes an
independent component.
Because of the many functions of a container, it affects both
sea and land transportation systems. The Court apparently
recognizes the complexities involved,
see ante at
447 U. S.
509-510, n. 23, but does not seem to respond to the
logical inferences as did the Board, which has a vast reservoir of
experience with day-to-day industrial operations. We cannot blink
the reality of this technological innovation, nor can we, as the
Court does, focus merely on one aspect of the work it has affected.
The Board understood the complexities involved here; consequently,
it invalidated only that part of the Rules on Containers whose
primary effect was to influence the loading and unloading of
containers functioning away from the pier as truck trailers.
See 231 N.L.R.B. 351 (1977) and 236 N.L.R.B. 525 (1978).
The Court's failure to appreciate
Page 447 U. S. 524
this distinction and unwillingness to concede its significance
underscores the reason why reviewing courts must give weight to the
Board's long and intimate experience with the workings of the
industries implicated.
See, e.g., Pipefitters, supra at
429 U. S.
531-532. Calling the issue one of law does not make it
so.
The ILA argues that a container should be viewed as the
functional equivalent of the hold of a ship.
See, e.g.,
Brief for Respondent ILA 4. Superficially, it can be made to appear
that this Court has acquiesced in such an approach, but only in the
context of discussing questions a.rising under the Longshoremen's
and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act (LHWCA).
See Northeast
Marine Terminal Co. v. Caputo, 432 U.
S. 249,
432 U. S.
270-271 (1977);
P. C. Pfeiffer Co. v. Ford,
444 U. S. 69
(1979). Even in that narrow context, a careful reading of the
Court's statements shows that what the Court characterized as
"maritime employment" within the meaning of the LHWCA was the work
of one who "moves cargo between ship and land transportation."
Pfeiffer, supra at
444 U. S. 84.
This characterization points toward the key to the proper view in
this case -- that the function of a container changes as it moves
through the transportation system.
Prior to containerization, both consolidators and truckers
functioned as part of the transportation industry. Teamsters and
others loaded the vehicles used by the truckers and consolidators.
When these vehicles reached the pier, longshoremen took over the
task of moving the cargo onto the pier or into the ship's hold.
Longshoremen also handled inbound cargo from the hold of the ship
to the pier and until placed on a land-based truck. After that, any
handling of the contents of the truck away from the pier was the
work of others than longshoremen.
See International
Longshoremen's Assn. (Consolidated Express, Inc.), 221
N.L.R.B. 956, 959 (1975),
enf'd, 537 F.2d 706 (CA2 1976),
cert. denied 429 U.S. 1041 (1977); 231 N.L.R.B. at 359,
365.
After the advent of containerization, truckers and consolidators
still perform their traditional functions. 221
Page 447 U. S. 525
N.L.R.B. at 959; 231 N.L.R.B. at 365. Their employees still load
and unload the vehicles they use, 221 N.L.R.B. at 960, but, with
containerization, the cargo-carrying part of those vehicles is the
removable container. When such a vehicle with outbound cargo
reaches the pier, there is no need whatever for anyone to "unpack"
it; the container may itself be lifted and placed in the hold of
the waiting ship, which is designed so that the container fits it
as it did the prefitted bed of the truck chassis. Similarly, a
container carrying inbound freight is hoisted from the hold of the
ship and placed on a truck chassis hooked up to a tractor; the
tractor-trailer is driven away from the pier, and the container is
then part of land transportation.
To me, the work in controversy has two aspects -- loading and
unloading ships and loading and unloading trucks. Under this view,
the Rules on Containers at issue would be valid insofar as they
regulate what happens to containers -- as distinguished from their
contents -- while they are on the pier; but those Rules are invalid
insofar as they attempt, through fines placed on the
shipowner/employers, to regulate what happens to containers once
they have left the pier for overland transportation.
The Court finds it sufficient to say that the main object of the
Rules on Containers is to preserve the traditional longshore work
of moving cargo between ship and land transportation. That is too
simplistic a view; it closes the eyes to the other aspects of the
transportation industry and to the evolution of methods of handling
freight. For our purposes, the relevant work in controversy is that
involved in the part of the Rules affected by the Board's orders
and now here for review. It seems clear to me -- as the Board saw
-- that the work which these Rules seek to control is the work of
loading and unloading land-based transportation -- the containers
functioning as truck trailers -- away from the pier; the record
supports the Board's conclusion that such work has never been
performed by longshoremen.
See, e.g., 231 N.L.R.B.
Page 447 U. S. 526
at 365. Through this aspect of the Rules, the ILA turns reality
on its head and seeks to take work from those who have
traditionally performed it. [
Footnote
2/1] This is prohibited by § 8(e).
The ILA complains that the loading and unloading of land
transportation which takes place away from the pier could be done
by them on the pier with equal efficiency.
See Tr. of Oral
Arg. 49, 51. But everyone except the ILA has found, from
experience, that this is not true, and, in any event, this
assertion shows that the ILA is trying to acquire the work of
others. Because the modern, efficient mechanism of containerization
has affected their work at the pier, the ILA is using the Rules to
reach out and bring to the pier work which employees of land-based
transporters have always performed. Under the work preservation
doctrine, the longshoremen may seek to mitigate the effect on them
of this new technology, but they may not lawfully do so by reaching
out for work which they have not traditionally performed. It is a
gross perversion of the work preservation doctrine to permit such
conduct; that doctrine, as applied here, ceases to be a shield to
protect work and becomes a sword to cut work away from those who
have traditionally performed it.
When a prepacked container which "violates" the Rules is taken
off its trailer at the pier, the ILA demands that its members be
paid for the utterly useless task of removing the contents and then
repacking them, or alternatively that a fine be imposed on the
shipping company which owns or leased the container. [
Footnote 2/2] This is nothing less than an
invidious
Page 447 U. S. 527
form of "featherbedding" to block full implementation of modern
technological progress. Allowing compromises in the interest of
those whose jobs are affected is one thing; but what the Court
sanctions today is quite another -- taking work from non-ILA
members to provide economically useless work for ILA members.
The Court of Appeals was obviously ill at ease with its
decision, and sought comfort by trying to restrict its scope
through the intimation that its holding was limited to the
presently claimed 50-mile limit. [
Footnote 2/3] That court deceived itself, and the Court
today puts on the same blinders in asserting that it is
"groundless" to claim that the logic of its decision would allow
the union "to follow containers around the country and assert the
right to stuff and strip them far inland. . . ."
Ante at
447 U. S. 510,
n. 24. Should this occur, the Court states, " [t] hat work would
bear an entirely different relation to traditional longshore work,
and would require a wholly different analysis."
Ibid.
It does not "reduce to absurdity,"
see 447
U.S. 490fn2/3|>n. 3,
supra, to ask why 51 or 100
miles "would require a wholly different analysis." Following the
Court's own strained reasoning, the work in controversy would still
be the same -- the longshoremen's
Page 447 U. S. 528
work on the pier. Since they have never worked off the pier, the
contested work could be nothing else. And, under the Court's
analysis,
"[t]he effect of work preservation agreements on the employment
opportunities of employees not represented by the union, no matter
how severe, is of course irrelevant to the validity of the
agreement so long as the union had no forbidden secondary purpose
to affect the employment relations of the neutral employer."
Ante at
447 U. S. 507,
n. 22.
By implying that the relevant work in controversy would suddenly
shift from the pier to land if it occurred beyond the arbitrary
50-mile limit, the Court's opinion exposes its own error, much as
the Court of Appeals comforted itself that the 50-mile point was
the limit. [
Footnote 2/4] Since
longshoremen's work is and has always been confined to work "on the
pier," the actual work in controversy here bears the same relation
to traditional longshore work as it would if it were performed 500
miles away. It simply is not traditional longshore work. By looking
only at one aspect of the problem and refusing to look at the
whole, as the Board did, the Court's holding recalls the blind
person who, holding an elephant's tail, concludes it is a snake.
The Court fails, as did the Court of Appeals, to explain why a
50-mile limit is acceptable, while 50-plus would not be so, and
hence sanctions a widening of the work preservation exception that
completely swallows the rules of §§ 8(e) and
8(b)(4)(b).
It is argued that the current Rules represent a collectively
bargained compromise as to the ILA's asserted right to strip and
stuff all containers (or at least all owned or leased by the
shipping companies) at the pier, but the fact that an agreement
Page 447 U. S. 529
was collectively bargained cannot save it if its object is to
violate the law. As the Board decreed, that part of the Rules which
attempts to regulate, through the economic pressure of fines on the
shipping companies, the loading and unloading of land
transportation away from the pier is invalid under §§
8(e) and 8(b)(4)(B) of the NLRA.
The Board's findings are supported by substantial evidence on
the record considered as a whole,
cf. Pipefitters, 429
U.S. at
429 U. S. 531,
and accordingly I would reverse the judgment of the Court of
Appeals and remand with directions to enforce the Board's
orders.
[
Footnote 2/1]
This is thus far from a classic case of "labor" versus
"management." Here, one segment of labor seeks to take work away
from another segment, and to impose a "featherbedding" fine on
employers as an enforcement device.
[
Footnote 2/2]
It is natural, of course, for individuals -- and unions -- to
want to "preserve" work which by long practice has been "theirs."
But there must be a balancing of this urge with the need for
innovation and change in methods that spell progress and reduce
consumer cost. In the complaints of the ILA, one hears the echoes
of the complaints of stablekeepers and harness manufacturers when
the automobile first gained wide acceptance. With practices such as
those held permissible in this case, innovation and change in the
utilization of modern machinery, methods, and labor will be
retarded. Obsolete machinery and obsolete methods will tend to be
used because industry will not be anxious to risk investment
capital on labor-saving, cost-reducing methods and mechanisms if,
by doing so, it must pay in tribute for the privilege a penalty
that offsets the savings.
[
Footnote 2/3]
That courts opinion recites:
"It is not difficult to imagine a party unhappy with this courts
decision today subjecting that decision to the following exercise
in
reductio ad absurdum: Under the court's ruling, cannot
longshoremen literally chase containers around the country,
demanding the right to stuff and strip them? There is a short
answer: No. Our decision does not radiate beyond the Rules on
Containers, which are restricted in terms to a 50-mile area around
each port."
198 U.S.App.D.C. 157, 177, n. 177, 613 F.2d 890, 910, n. 177
(1979).
[
Footnote 2/4]
Even under the current Rules, the 50-mile point is not strictly
the limit. If a consolidator or trucker operating within the
50-mile limit relocates or opens new operations outside the limit,
the parties to the Rules may decide nonetheless that the sanctions
of the Rules are to apply.
See Rule 7(a) of the 1974 Rules
on Containers, reprinted in the Court's appendix,
ante at
447 U. S.
518.