NLRB v. Goodless Brothers ( 1997 )


Menu:
  • UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 96-2068
    NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    GOODLESS ELECTRIC CO., INC.,
    Respondent.
    ON APPLICATION FOR ENFORCEMENT OF AN ORDER OF
    THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD
    Before
    Torruella, Chief Judge,
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
    and Lynch, Circuit Judge.
    Jay M. Presser, with whom Skoler, Abbott & Presser, P.C. was
    on brief for respondent.
    Susan  M.   Pavsner,  Attorney,   with  whom   Frederick  L.
    Feinstein,  General   Counsel,  Linda  Sher,   Associate  General
    Counsel, Aileen  A. Armstrong, Deputy Associate  General Counsel,
    and  Howard  E.  Perlstein,  Deputy  Assistant  General  Counsel,
    National Labor Relations Board, were on brief for petitioner.
    September 5, 1997
    TORRUELLA,  Chief Judge.  In February 1994, Local Union
    TORRUELLA,  Chief Judge.
    No. 7  of the  International Brotherhood  of Electrical  Workers,
    AFL-CIO  ("Union") filed charges  of unfair labor  practices with
    the  National Labor Relations  Board ("NLRB" or  "Board") against
    Defendant-Cross-Petitioner  Goodless  Electric  Co. ("Goodless").
    On March  2, 1995, an  administrative law judge ("ALJ")  issued a
    decision finding no  labor violations and  recommending dismissal
    of the charges.   The NLRB General Counsel appealed to a panel of
    the NLRB, which, on April 30, 1996, reversed certain of the ALJ's
    findings as they relate to the issues relevant to this appeal and
    determined  that Goodless had violated provisions of the National
    Labor Relations Act  ("NLRA" or "Act").  See  Goodless Elec. Co.,
    
    321 N.L.R.B. 64
      (1996).  Before us are the  Board's petition for
    enforcement of its order  and Goodless' petition for reversal  of
    the Board's conclusions  of law.  For the  reasons stated herein,
    we reverse and  deny the Board's petition for  enforcement of its
    order.
    BACKGROUND
    BACKGROUND
    The  background   facts  are   essentially  undisputed.
    Goodless  is   a  construction  industry   employer  engaged   in
    electrical  contracting.   In June  1988, Goodless  agreed  to be
    bound  by an existing collective bargaining agreement between the
    multi-employer   National   Electrical   Contractors  Association
    ("NECA")  and  the  Union.    In July  1990,  Goodless  became  a
    signatory  to  a new  three-year collective  bargaining agreement
    between the  NECA and  the Union.   The agreement  authorized the
    -2-
    NECA to  bargain with the  Union on Goodless' behalf  unless that
    authority  was withdrawn with  150 days' notice  of cancellation.
    The relationship entered  into by Goodless and the  Union at this
    point  constituted a Section  8(f)1 relationship under  the NLRA.
    Under  Section 8(f), a  construction industry employer  may enter
    into a  relationship with a  union whereby the union  bargains on
    behalf of  the employer's employees  prior to a showing  that the
    union has  garnered the support  of a majority of  the employees.
    The  question on which the issues in this appeal hinge relates to
    the circumstances  under which  a Section  8(f) relationship  may
    1  Section 8(f) of the Act, 29 U.S.C.   158(f) (1976), provides:
    It  shall not  be  an  unfair labor  practice
    under subsections (a) and (b) of this section
    for  an  employer  engaged  primarily in  the
    building and construction industry to make an
    agreement covering employees engaged (or who,
    upon their  employment, will  be engaged)  in
    the building and construction industry with a
    labor  organization  of  which  building  and
    construction  employees   are  members   (not
    established, maintained,  or assisted  by any
    action  defined  in  subsection (a)  of  this
    section as an unfair  labor practice) because
    (1)  the   majority  status  of   such  labor
    organization has  not been  established under
    the provisions  of section 159 of  this title
    prior to the making of such agreement, or (2)
    such  agreement requires  as  a condition  of
    employment,   membership   in    such   labor
    organization after the  seventh day following
    the  beginning  of  such  employment  or  the
    effective date of the agreement, whichever is
    later. . .  . Provided, That nothing  in this
    subsection shall set  aside the final proviso
    to  subsection  (a)  (3)   of  this  section:
    Provided  further, That  any agreement  which
    would  be invalid, but for clause (1) of this
    subsection,  shall not be a bar to a petition
    filed pursuant to section 159(c) or 159(e) of
    this title.
    -3-
    become a Section 9(a)2 relationship.   Under Section 9(a), once a
    union  has  become  the  representative  of  a  majority  of  the
    employees  in an  appropriate bargaining  unit,  the employer  is
    required to bargain with the  union as the employees'  bargaining
    representative.  The  NLRB has held that Section  8(f) status may
    change  to Section  9(a)  status  by virtue  of  either a  Board-
    certified election or  as the result of the  employer's voluntary
    recognition  of the union  as the majority  collective bargaining
    agent.   Voluntary recognition  requires the  union's unequivocal
    demand  for, and the  employer's unequivocal grant  of, voluntary
    recognition    as    the   employees'    collective    bargaining
    representative  based on the  union's contemporaneous  showing of
    majority employee support.  See James Julian,  Inc., 
    310 N.L.R.B. 1247
    , 1252 (1993).
    2  Section 9(a), 29 U.S.C.   159(a), provides:
    Representatives  designated  or  selected for
    the purposes of  collective bargaining by the
    majority   of   the  employees   in   a  unit
    appropriate for  such purposes, shall  be the
    exclusive   representatives   of    all   the
    employees in  such unit  for the  purposes of
    collective bargaining in respect to rates  of
    pay,  wages, hours  of  employment, or  other
    conditions of employment:  Provided, That any
    individual employee  or a group  of employees
    shall have the  right at any time  to present
    grievances to their employer and to have such
    grievances adjusted, without the intervention
    of the bargaining  representative, as long as
    the adjustment is  not inconsistent with  the
    terms of a  collective-bargaining contract or
    agreement then in  effect:  Provided further,
    That the  bargaining representative  has been
    given  opportunity  to  be  present  at  such
    adjustment.
    -4-
    On June 18, 1992, Goodless  notified NECA and the Union
    that  NECA was  no  longer authorized  to negotiate  on Goodless'
    behalf  and  that Goodless  did  not intend  to  be bound  by any
    further contractual modifications or obligations beyond the then-
    current agreement's  expiration date  of June  30,  1993.   Thus,
    Goodless indicated that any relationship between Goodless and the
    Union would expire as of June 30, 1993.
    In  July   1992,  a   Union  representative   contacted
    Goodless' president  and indicated  that Goodless  would need  to
    sign a  letter of assent.3  Goodless was  told that the letter of
    assent was  needed in order  for Goodless  to continue  receiving
    "target  money."4   Goodless' president  reviewed  the letter  of
    assent and deleted some language contained in the letter.  He did
    not, however, alter the following language:
    The Employer agrees that if a majority of its
    employees  authorize   the  Local   Union  to
    represent them in  collective bargaining, the
    Employer will  recognize the  Local Union  as
    the NLRA  Section 9(a)  collective bargaining
    agent for all employees performing electrical
    construction work within  the jurisdiction of
    the  Local Union  on all  present  and future
    jobsites.
    Goodless signed the letter of assent on July 15, 1992.
    3   The 1988 NECA  agreement required employer-members to  sign a
    letter of assent to be bound by the NECA agreement.  Goodless did
    not sign a  letter of assent  until 1992; this  is the letter  at
    issue  here.
    4  Target money was financial assistance provided by the Union to
    aid union  employers  in competition  with  non-union  electrical
    contractors.
    -5-
    At a  meeting with  Union representatives  on June  22,
    1993, Goodless' president  again indicated that Goodless  did not
    intend to continue its relationship with the Union after June 30,
    1993.   The Union representatives encouraged Goodless to consider
    changes regarding  service work  that NECA  had accepted  earlier
    that month.  The meeting  ended with the participants agreeing to
    meet on June 25.
    On  June 24, the Union's business agent, Douglas Bodman
    ("Bodman"), held  a meeting of  all Goodless employees.   At this
    meeting, he indicated the progress of negotiations with Goodless.
    After  informing the employees of Goodless'  claim that the Union
    lacked  employee  support,   he  asked  the  employees   to  sign
    authorization cards  as evidence  of their  desire for  continued
    representation.  All employees signed the cards, which stated:
    I  authorize  Local  Union   No.  7  of   the
    International   Brotherhood   of   Electrical
    Workers   to  represent   me  in   collective
    bargaining   with  my   present  and   future
    employers on all present and future  jobsites
    within the jurisdiction  of the Union.   This
    authorization  is  non-expiring,  binding and
    valid until such  time as I submit  a written
    revocation.
    At the second meeting, on June 25, between Goodless and
    the  Union, Goodless  maintained that the  company's relationship
    with the  Union would end  with the expiration of  the agreement.
    In response, Bodman  presented the authorization cards  signed by
    all Goodless  employees.   Goodless' president  tossed the  cards
    back at Bodman,  telling him that  he could "shove them  up [his]
    ass."  Another  Union representative calmed tensions  and secured
    -6-
    from Goodless a six-month extension  of the 1990-1993 contract by
    promising certain terms for Goodless.
    On December  13, Goodless  informed the  Union that  it
    intended   to  withdraw  recognition   of  the  Union   upon  the
    approaching  December  31  expiration  date.    On  December  17,
    Goodless   sent  a  letter  to  all  employees  indicating  these
    intentions  and inviting the employees to discuss the matter with
    Goodless management prior to December 23.
    On  December 21, the  Union responded with  two letters
    reminding Goodless  of the  language contained  in the  letter of
    assent that bound Goodless to  recognize the Union as the Section
    9(a)  collective-bargaining  representative   on  a  showing   of
    majority support and indicating that, the Union  having made such
    a showing at the June 25  meeting, the Union was now the  Section
    9(a) bargaining representative and  Goodless could not  repudiate
    the relationship or negotiate directly with its employees.
    Union Business  Manager Bodman  composed a  form letter
    for the  employees to send  to Goodless in response  to Goodless'
    December 17 letter.   All  but one  Goodless employee  signed and
    submitted this form letter, which stated in relevant part:
    I  intend  to continue  my  employment with
    Goodless Electric and  maintain my membership
    with [the Union].   I expect you  to continue
    to comply with my union contract and maintain
    the current wages and terms and conditions of
    employment.
    If   you  need   to   discuss  any   matter
    concerning wages  or terms and  conditions of
    employment, contact  my Union  Representative
    Douglas Bodman.
    -7-
    On  December   30,  Goodless  announced  new  terms  of
    employment  to  take effect  January  1,  1994.   On  January  1,
    Goodless also  ceased to  recognize the  Union as the  employees'
    collective bargaining agent.
    Because Goodless  was no longer a signatory to the NECA
    agreement,  the apprentices working for Goodless were informed by
    the Joint  Apprentice Training  Committee (JATC)5  on January  6,
    1994,  that  they  would  be  subject  to  termination  from  the
    apprenticeship  program if they  continued to work  for Goodless.
    As a  result, the  apprentices terminated  their employment  with
    Goodless en masse.
    As a  result  of these  unilateral  modifications,  the
    Union filed  charges  of unfair  labor practices  with the  NLRB,
    alleging that the relationship between the Union and Goodless had
    been transformed from a Section 8(f)  relationship into a Section
    9(a) relationship upon the Union's showing of majority support in
    June  1993.   Because the  relationship was  allegedly one  under
    Section  9(a), the  Union argues that  Goodless was  obligated to
    bargain  with it  as the  employees' representative.   The  Union
    contends  that by  withdrawing  recognition of  the Union  as the
    employees' collective bargaining agent  and unilaterally changing
    the terms and conditions of employment, Goodless violated Section
    5   Under  the NECA  collective-bargaining  agreement, the  Joint
    Apprentice  Training  Committee  ran  an  apprenticeship  program
    consisting of three members of the Union and three members of the
    contractors' association.   To be eligible to  train apprentices,
    an  employer had  to "be  signatory  to and  meet the  qualifying
    requirements  as  set forth  in  the  basic labor  agreement  and
    provide the necessary work experience for training."
    -8-
    8(a)(5)6 of  the National  Labor Relations Act.   The  Union also
    insists that  Goodless constructively discharged  the apprentices
    in violation of Section 8(a)(3).7
    6  Section 8(a)(5), 29 U.S.C.   158(a)(5), provides:
    It shall be  an unfair labor practice  for an
    employer --
    (5)  to refuse  to bargain  collectively with
    the representatives of his employees, subject
    to the provisions of  section 159(a) of  this
    title.
    7  Section 8(a)(3), 29 U.S.C.   158(a)(3), provides:
    It shall be  an unfair labor practice  for an
    employer --
    (3) by  discrimination in  regard to  hire or
    tenure of employment or any term or condition
    of  employment  to  encourage  or  discourage
    membership   in   any   labor   organization:
    Provided, That nothing in this subchapter, or
    in any  other statute  of the United  States,
    shall  preclude an  employer  from making  an
    agreement  with  a  labor  organization  (not
    established, maintained,  or assisted  by any
    action  defined  in  this  subsection  as  an
    unfair  labor  practice)   to  require  as  a
    condition of employment membership therein on
    or after  the  thirtieth  day  following  the
    beginning of such employment or the effective
    date  of  such  agreement,  whichever is  the
    later, (i) if such labor organization is  the
    representative of  the employees  as provided
    in section  159(a)  of  this  title,  in  the
    appropriate     collective-bargaining    unit
    covered by such agreement when made, and (ii)
    unless following an election held as provided
    in section  159(e) of  this title  within one
    year  preceding the  effective  date of  such
    agreement,  the  Board shall  have  certified
    that at  least a  majority  of the  employees
    eligible to vote in such  election have voted
    to  rescind  the  authority   of  such  labor
    organization  to  make   such  an  agreement:
    Provided  further,  That  no  employer  shall
    -9-
    The case was first heard  before an ALJ, who determined
    that  the relationship  between  Goodless and  the Union  did not
    change to a  Section 9(a) relationship.  Because the relationship
    remained a Section  8(f) relationship, Goodless remained  free to
    repudiate the relationship at the end of the contractual term and
    thus  its  unilateral  changes to  the  terms  and conditions  of
    employment  did not  violate either  Section  8(a)(3) or  Section
    8(a)(5).
    The NLRB  reversed the  ALJ's opinion  in ruling  that,
    under existing NLRB  case law, the relationship  between Goodless
    and  the Union  changed from  a  Section 8(f)  relationship to  a
    Section  9(a)  relationship  upon  the  Union's  presentation  to
    Goodless of the  employee-signed authorization cards.   The Board
    held that  the letter of assent signed  by Goodless in June 1992,
    in  which  it  stated  that,  should the  Union  garner  majority
    support, Goodless would  recognize the Union as the  Section 9(a)
    employee representative, amounted to a standing promise to extend
    such  recognition  conditioned  only on  the  Union's  showing of
    majority support.  When the Union showed majority support through
    justify   any   discrimination   against   an
    employee   for  nonmembership   in  a   labor
    organization (A) if he has reasonable grounds
    for  believing that  such membership  was not
    available  to the employee  on the same terms
    and conditions generally  applicable to other
    members, or (B) if he has reasonable  grounds
    for believing that  membership was denied  or
    terminated for reasons other than the failure
    of the employee  to tender the periodic  dues
    and the initiation fees uniformly required as
    a   condition  of   acquiring  or   retaining
    membership.
    -10-
    the authorization  cards in  June 1993,  the Board  reasoned, the
    condition  had been  met and  Goodless was  bound by  its earlier
    promise  to  recognize the  Union  as the  Section  9(a) employee
    representative.    The  Board then  found  violations  of Section
    8(a)(3) for  Goodless' withdrawal of recognition of the Union and
    of  Section  8(a)(5)  for  constructive  discharge  of  the  four
    apprentices.  The Board ordered Goodless to cease and desist, and
    also ordered that Goodless:  recognize the Union as the exclusive
    bargaining agent of its  journeymen electricians and apprentices;
    rescind changes  in employment terms  made on and  after December
    31, 1993; and make whole all  employees who worked for it on  and
    after December 31, 1993, for any loss of wages and other benefits
    suffered with interest, make whole any fringe  benefit funds, and
    reimburse employees  for any  losses or  expenses  they may  have
    incurred because of Goodless'  failure to make payments  to those
    funds.   Finding that  the NLRB misapplied  its own  precedent in
    this case, we deny enforcement of its order.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We  determine whether  the  Board's decision  correctly
    applies the  law  and  whether  it is  supported  by  substantial
    evidence on the record.   See Yesterday's Children, Inc. v. NLRB,
    
    115 F.3d 36
    , 44 (1st Cir. 1997); see also  Universal Camera Corp.
    v. NLRB, 
    340 U.S. 474
    ,  488 (1951).  "We must  sustain inferences
    that  the Board  draws  from  the facts  and  its application  of
    statutory standards to those facts and inferences as long as they
    are reasonable."   NLRB  v. Laverdiere's  Enter., 
    933 F.2d 1045
    ,
    -11-
    1050 (1st  Cir. 1991).   The standard  is quite  deferential, and
    does  not allow  us to  displace the  Board's choice  between two
    conflicting views merely  because we may "justifiably have made a
    different  choice  had  the  matter been  before  [us]  de novo."
    Universal Camera Corp., 
    340 U.S. at 488
    .  This standard, however,
    is no rubber stamp:   We must  set aside a  Board decision if  we
    cannot fairly  find that  it is either  supported by  substantial
    evidence in  the record, 
    id.,
      or correctly applies  the relevant
    law, Shaw's  Supermarkets v. NLRB,  
    884 F.2d 34
    , 35-37  (1st Cir.
    1989);  see also  Laverdiere's  Enter., 
    933 F.2d at 1050
      ("The
    courts  of appeals  are  charged  with  'responsibility  for  the
    reasonableness  and fairness  of Labor  Board  decisions,' and  a
    court must set aside Board action when it 'cannot conscientiously
    find that the  evidence supporting that decision  is substantial,
    when viewed  in the light  the record in its  entirety furnishes,
    including the  body of  evidence opposed to  the Board's  view.'"
    (citations  omitted) (quoting Universal Camera Corp., 
    340 U.S. at 488, 490
    )).
    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION
    I.  Statutory structure
    I.  Statutory structure
    Section 9(a), 29 U.S.C.   159(a), of the National Labor
    Relations Act designates the manner  in which a union becomes the
    exclusive bargaining  representative of a  unit of employees.   A
    representative selected by a majority of the employees in a unit,
    to which the  section applies, shall be the  employees' exclusive
    bargaining representative.   See 29 U.S.C.    159(a).  Generally,
    -12-
    it is a violation  of Section 8(a) of the NLRA for an employer to
    treat  a union as the exclusive  bargaining representative of its
    employees prior  to that  union's being designated  as such  by a
    majority of the employees.  See 29 U.S.C.   158(a) & (f).
    The  construction industry,  however,  tends to  employ
    workers for short durations and on  discrete projects, making the
    designation or  selection of  a  union representative  difficult.
    See generally S. Rep. No. 86-187 (1959).   To remedy this problem
    and    allow   construction    workers   collective    bargaining
    representation, Congress enacted  Section 8(f) of the  NLRA.  See
    
    id.
       Section  8(f)  essentially  provides an  exception  to  the
    prohibitions   on   employer   recognition   of  a   non-majority
    representative in the construction industry.  Section 8(f) allows
    a  construction  industry  employer  to  enter  into  a  specific
    agreement of limited duration with a union whereby the union acts
    as the employees'  collective bargaining agent.  See  29 U.S.C.
    158(f).   Employees  are allowed,  however, to  petition for  the
    selection of a different agent as their representative.  
    Id.
    II.  Board precedent
    II.  Board precedent
    Prior  to the Board's decision in  John Deklewa & Sons,
    Inc.,  
    282 N.L.R.B. 1375
      (1987),  Board precedent  held  that a
    Section   8(f)  relationship  could  change  to  a  Section  9(a)
    relationship  under the  "conversion doctrine."   The  conversion
    doctrine required only a  union's showing of majority  support at
    some point during  the relevant period to convert  a Section 8(f)
    relationship  into a Section 9(a) relationship.  "The achievement
    -13-
    of majority  support required  no notice,  no simultaneous  union
    claim of majority, and no assent  by the employer to complete the
    conversion process."   Id.  at 1378.   Upon such  conversion, the
    employer was required under Section  9(a) to recognize the  union
    as the employees' exclusive bargaining agent.   Id. at 1379.  The
    conversion created an irrebuttable presumption of majority status
    for the duration of the agreement.  Id.
    Along  came   Deklewa,  however,  in  which  the  Board
    overturned its  "conversion doctrine," on the ground  that it did
    not serve the  "statutory objectives of employee  free choice and
    labor  relations  stability."   Id.    In  its place,  the  Board
    established four cardinal principles to govern this area:
    (1)    a   collective-bargaining    agreement
    permitted   by   Section    8(f)   shall   be
    enforceable through the mechanisms of Section
    8(a)(5)   and  Section   8(b)(3);  (2)   such
    agreements  will  not bar  the  processing of
    valid   petitions   [for   a  Board-certified
    election] filed pursuant  to Section 9(c) and
    Section   9(e);   (3)  in   processing   such
    petitions, the appropriate unit normally will
    be the single employer's employees covered by
    the agreement; and (4) upon the expiration of
    such  agreements,  the signatory  union  will
    enjoy no presumption  of majority status, and
    either   party   may   repudiate   the   8(f)
    bargaining relationship.
    Id.  at 1377-78.    As  part of  the  new  structure, neither  an
    employer nor  a union who  is a party to  Section 8(f) agreements
    may unilaterally repudiate their  relationship during the express
    period of the agreement.  Id. at 1387.  The Board also determined
    that, at no  time during the  duration of the agreement  does the
    -14-
    union enjoy a  presumption, rebuttable or otherwise,  of majority
    status.  Id.
    Because of the unique situation in which a Section 8(f)
    relationship arises, Board case law  since Deklewa has set  forth
    only two means  by which a union  may obtain Section 9(a)  status
    during the course of a Section 8(f) relationship:  (1) through  a
    Board-certified  election, or (2) through an employer's voluntary
    grant of  recognition of  the union  as the  employees' exclusive
    majority bargaining agent.   Unless and  until a relationship  is
    proved  to  be  otherwise, a  bargaining  relationship  between a
    construction industry employer and a union is presumed to be 8(f)
    rather than 9(a).  See  Comtel Sys. Technology, 
    305 N.L.R.B. 287
    ,
    289 (1991).   The burden of proving a 9(a)  relationship rests on
    the party asserting its  existence.  Casale Indus., 
    311 N.L.R.B. 287
    , 288  (1993).   Because the Board  determined below  that the
    Union  had met  its burden  of proving  that Goodless  granted it
    voluntary recognition, we focus our inquiry on the latter ground.
    The NLRB has held that "a party may prove the existence
    of a  9(a) relationship .  . .  through . .  . a  union's express
    demand for, and an employer's voluntary grant of,  recognition to
    the union as bargaining representative based on a contemporaneous
    showing of union support among a majority of the  employees in an
    appropriate  unit."   J & R  Tile, Inc., 
    291 N.L.R.B. 1034
    , 1036
    (1988).    There  must be  "positive  evidence"  that the  "union
    unequivocally  demanded   recognition  as  the   employees'  9(a)
    -15-
    representative and that the employer unequivocally accepted it as
    such."  
    Id.
    The cases in  which the Board has applied this approach
    fall into two  categories, the first finding that the acts of the
    union  and   the   employer  transformed   their   Section   8(f)
    relationship into  a Section  9(a) relationship,  and the  second
    determining  that the parties failed to meet the requirements for
    such a transformation.  A consistent theme running throughout the
    cases  in the first category  is the requirement  that all of the
    following three parts  of the voluntary recognition  test be met:
    (1) the union must expressly and unequivocally demand recognition
    as the employees'  Section 9(a) representative; (2)  the employer
    must expressly and unequivocally grant the requested recognition;
    and  (3)  that  demand  and   recognition  must  be  based  on  a
    contemporaneous showing that the union enjoys majority support of
    the employers' workforce.
    Board case law emphasizes that the third requirement is
    essential.  In addition to  an actual showing of majority support
    through the  presentation of employee-signed  authorization cards
    to an  employer,  see  Hayman  Electric, 
    214 N.L.R.B. 879
    ,  886
    (1994),  or through an  employer-conducted poll prior  to initial
    recognition,  see  Precision  Piping,  
    284 N.L.R.B. 1110
    ,  1112
    (1987), the  Board has found  as sufficient to satisfy  the third
    requirement  a  union's  claim  of  majority  support  that  went
    unchallenged  by the  employer  for  a period  of  more than  six
    months.  See, e.g., Triple  A Fire Protection, Inc., 312 N.L.R.B.
    -16-
    1088,  1089 (1993)  (declining  to  question  whether  the  union
    actually achieved the majority status  it claimed at the time the
    employer recognized  it when  the challenge  to such status  came
    over four years after the agreement); Casale Indus., 
    311 N.L.R.B. 951
    ,  953  (1993)  (refusing to  permit  employer's  challenge to
    union's majority status arising six years after the union claimed
    to  have  obtained  that  status  and  limiting  the  window  for
    challenge  to  six  months  from  the  time  majority  status  is
    claimed); Golden  West Elec. Co., 
    307 N.L.R.B. 1494
    , 1495 (1992)
    (holding that  employer's act of  reading and signing,  and later
    acknowledging its agreement with, a letter stating that the union
    represented a majority of employees was sufficient showing of the
    union's majority  status to  find a  Section 9(a)  relationship).
    Similarly, the Board found the  third requirement to be met where
    an employer's admission or acknowledgement that the union enjoyed
    majority support among its  employees was given contemporaneously
    with the demand for recognition  and was provided without further
    inquiry into the  union's actual status.  See  Golden West Elec.,
    307  N.L.R.B. at  1495 (relying  on the  employer's admission  of
    majority status  to satisfy the  burden of  showing Section  9(a)
    status).  From this case law it is clear that when a union claims
    it has  attained majority status  and the parties, based  on that
    claim, agree  to a Section  9(a) relationship, the  employer must
    challenge that status  within a  reasonable period  of time  (six
    months), or be bound by its agreement.
    -17-
    The  Board  has  also  held  that  notwithstanding  the
    parties' intention  to enter  into a  Section 9(a)  relationship,
    their relationship is not entitled  to Section 9(a) status if the
    union has not actually achieved majority status prior to the time
    of the demand.   See  Comtel Sys.  Tech., 
    305 N.L.R.B. 287
    ,  289
    (1991)  (determining  no  Section  9(a)  relationship  would   be
    established  unless union made  a showing of  majority support of
    single-unit employer's employees prior  to that employer's  entry
    into  a  multi-employer  bargaining relationship  claimed  to  be
    governed by  Section 9(a)); see also J &  R Tile, 291 N.L.R.B. at
    1037  (declining to find that predecessor  employer and union had
    entered into Section  9(a) relationship where no showing was made
    that the union  had obtained majority support at the  time of the
    parties'  agreement  and  no indication  was  presented  that the
    parties  intended  a  Section 9(a)  relationship);  James Julian,
    Inc.,  310 N.L.R.B. at 1253 (describing the finding regarding the
    predecessor employer  in  J &  R Tile  as based  on  the lack  of
    evidence that "the collective-bargaining agreement was entered on
    the basis  of a demonstrated  showing of the  union's majority").
    Thus,  Board precedent indicates that the  union's demand for and
    the  employer's grant  of recognition  must be  predicated  on at
    least  an  unchallenged  claim,  if  not  an actual  showing,  of
    contemporaneous majority support.8
    8    In   fact,  the  Board's  General  Counsel   has  noted  its
    understanding of Deklewa and progeny as providing that failure to
    show majority support at  the time of the demand  will defeat any
    attempts at  a Section  9(a) relationship.   The  General Counsel
    interpreted Deklewa and progeny as holding that, "to prove that a
    -18-
    Applying these  principles to  the undisputed facts  in
    the  instant appeal, we simply cannot  find that the requirements
    set forth by the Board in Deklewa and subsequent cases  have been
    satisfied.   Quite  simply, the  requirement  that a  demand  and
    recognition be  based on  a contemporaneous  showing of  majority
    support was  never satisfied.   The record  does not  support the
    conclusion that, when the Union presented the letter of assent to
    Goodless in  June 1992,  in which  it allegedly  sought Goodless'
    recognition,  it made a contemporaneous claim of majority support
    on which  Goodless' recognition  of the  union's majority  status
    could be made.9   A showing of  majority support at least  a year
    relationship   in  the  construction  industry  is  a  Section  9
    relationship, there must  be (1) a union demand  to be recognized
    as the Section  9 representative; (2)  an employer acceptance  of
    the union's  demand; and (3) majority status  at the time of such
    demand and  acceptance."  Advice  Ltr. from NLRB Gen.  Counsel to
    Regional Director of  Region 9, Feb. 27, 1989, 
    1989 WL 241614
    , at
    *2  (Feb.  27, 1989).    In  determining  that, under  the  facts
    presented  to it,  no Section  9(a)  relationship could  be found
    because "there  has been no  showing that the Union  represents a
    majority of the employees in the appropriate unit," it noted:
    Even  if the Union does, in fact, represent a
    majority of the Employer's  employees, J &  R
    Tile makes clear that there must  be explicit
    proof  presented  contemporaneously  with the
    Union's demand  and the  Employer's voluntary
    recognition.   Thus, although  the Employer's
    ambiguous  statements  arguably  may indicate
    that  it  believed  the  Union  had  majority
    support, those statements are insufficient to
    confer  9(a)  status upon  the  Union without
    actual demonstration of that majority status.
    
    Id.
    9  In its brief, the Board suggests that Decorative Floors, Inc.,
    
    315 N.L.R.B. 188
    ,  189 (1994),  and Hayman  Electric,  Inc., 
    314 N.L.R.B. 879
    ,  887 n.8  (1994), support  the opposite  conclusion
    regarding  the  requirement  of a  showing  of  majority support.
    -19-
    later can hardly  be considered a showing  made contemporaneously
    with,   and  as  a  prerequisite  to,   the  Union's  demand  for
    recognition.
    Moreover, the cases that presume majority support still
    require  contemporaneity.    The  record  raises  serious  doubts
    regarding whether Goodless  in fact conceded  that the Union  had
    obtained  majority support.   The Board concluded  that Goodless'
    unartful statement  at the  June 25 meeting  was evidence  of its
    recognition of  the union's majority status.   Even assuming that
    the  Board's interpretation of the meaning of Goodless' statement
    is  sound, its case law unmistakably  holds that nevertheless the
    showing  of  majority  status must  be  contemporaneous  with the
    demand and recognition of that  status.  These preconditions to a
    9(a) recognition are clearly lacking here.
    In  arriving at its  conclusion, the Board  relied upon
    principles of contract law.  See Goodless Elec. Co., 321 N.L.R.B.
    at 66.  In discussing Goodless' signing of the letter of  assent,
    the Board suggests  that "the letter  of assent constituted,  for
    the remainder of its term, both a continuing request by the Union
    for 9(a) recognition and a continuing, enforceable promise by the
    Respondent  [Goodless]  to grant  voluntary  recognition on  that
    While the Board  is quite correct that neither  of these opinions
    required that  the union demonstrate  through extrinsic  evidence
    the  existence  of majority  support, they  were not  so required
    because  in  Hayman Electric,  the  union  had  made a  claim  of
    majority  support, which the employer failed to challenge, and in
    Decorative  Floors,  the  employer   had  signed  a   recognition
    agreement explicitly stating that the union had attained majority
    status.  The same is not true here.
    -20-
    basis if  the Union demonstrated majority support."  Id.  On this
    point, we  have noted  that "[t]he prevailing  rule, in  this and
    other  circuits,  provides  that   technical  rules  of  contract
    interpretation  are not necessarily  binding on the  Board in the
    collective bargaining  context, even though  it is free  to apply
    general  contract  principles  so as  to  foster  the established
    federal  labor policy favoring  collective bargaining."   NLRB v.
    Boston Dist.  Council of Carpenters,  
    80 F.3d 662
    , 665  (1st Cir.
    1996).   Furthermore,  it  is  clear  that general  contract  law
    principles cannot  supplant the  requirement of  a federal  labor
    policy  such as  that  embodied in  Section  9(a) requiring  that
    employees  be  represented  by  an  organization  approved  by  a
    majority of employees.
    In  the unique circumstances surrounding a Section 8(f)
    relationship  between a  construction  industry  employer  and  a
    union,  for ten  years  the  Board has  followed  a specific  and
    discrete  two-option   rule  for   the  transformation   of  that
    relationship into  a Section 9(a) relationship.   Under the plain
    terms of that rule, a  finding in favor of Goodless is  required.
    We cannot accept the Board's  departure from its own precedent in
    this  case  in   the  absence  of  some  cogent  explanation,  an
    explanation   that  has  not  been  forthcoming.10    See  Shaw's
    Supermarkets, Inc.,  
    884 F.2d at 35
     ("Although the Board  is not
    permanently bound by  its precedent,  when it  wishes to  deviate
    10  Indeed, the Board does not acknowledge that its decision is a
    departure from past precedent.
    -21-
    from well-established precedent  as significantly as it  has done
    here,  it   must,  at  least,   explain  the   reasons  for   its
    deviation.").11   Under Board precedent, the parties maintained a
    Section 8(f) relationship  because no contemporaneous showing  of
    majority support  accompanied the  Union's demand   to  Goodless.
    Thus, Goodless  did not  violate Section  8(a)(5) by  repudiating
    that  relationship  or  by unilaterally  changing  the  terms and
    conditions of employment under the circumstances of this appeal.
    As  a  final  matter,  the  Board's  finding  that  the
    apprentices  were  constructively   discharged  rested  upon  its
    conclusion  that  Goodless committed  unfair  labor  practices by
    repudiating  its relationship with the Union, and by unilaterally
    implementing changes in  the terms and conditions  of employment.
    Because we do  not agree with  that finding, we cannot  enforce a
    ruling predicated upon it.   We therefore deny enforcement of the
    Board's finding that  Goodless violated Sections 8(a)(3)  and (1)
    by constructively discharging the apprentices.
    CONCLUSION
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse and remand to the
    reverse     remand
    National Labor Relations Board for proceedings in accordance with
    this opinion.
    11   As a  secondary matter,  we do  not think  that the  Union's
    demand,  let alone  Goodless'  recognition, could  be  considered
    "unequivocal"   when  it  was  subject  to  a  contingency  whose
    fulfillment had no temporal limitations.  Indeed, the contingency
    may  never have  been met.    Without any  reasonable, temporally
    limiting principles, we cannot affirm the Board's conclusion that
    a demand and  recognition may be properly  considered unequivocal
    when subject to a contingency whose fulfillment may never occur.
    -22-
    Costs to respondent.
    -23-