Delmas Conley v. NLRB ( 2008 )


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    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 08a0130p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
    -
    DELMAS CONLEY, doing business as Conley
    Petitioner/Cross-Respondent, -
    Trucking,
    -
    -
    Nos. 07-1399/1529
    ,
    v.                                         >
    -
    -
    Respondent/Cross-Petitioner. -
    NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD,
    -
    N
    On Petition for Review and Cross-Application for Enforcement
    of an Order of the National Labor Relations Board.
    Nos. 9-CA-42562; 9-CA-42437.
    Argued: January 31, 2008
    Decided and Filed: March 31, 2008
    Before: DAUGHTREY and McKEAGUE, Circuit Judges; GWIN, District Judge.*
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: R. Alan Lemons, MILLER, SEARL & FITCH, Portsmouth, Ohio, for Petitioner.
    Jeffrey Horowitz, NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
    ON BRIEF: R. Alan Lemons, MILLER, SEARL & FITCH, Portsmouth, Ohio, for Petitioner.
    Jeffrey Horowitz, Linda Dreeben, Meredith L. Jason, NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD,
    Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    PER CURIAM. Delmas Conley, doing business as Conley Trucking, petitions for review
    of a decision of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) that affirmed an administrative law
    judge’s ruling that the petitioner had engaged in various unfair labor practices. The Board has also
    filed an application with the court seeking enforcement of that decision.
    In an opinion that was adopted in all substantive respects by the NLRB, the administrative
    law judge concluded that Conley Trucking violated provisions of the National Labor Relations Act,
    *
    The Honorable James S. Gwin, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Ohio, sitting by
    designation.
    1
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                    Conley v. NLRB                                            Page 2
    29 U.S.C. §§ 151 - 169. Specifically, the administrative law judge determined that the company
    violated the Act by discharging an employee who supported unionization, by creating the impression
    that employees’ union activities were being monitored, and by threatening various adverse
    consequences if unionization of the company were to occur. Before this court, Conley Trucking
    asserts that two of the five unfair labor practices found by the Board cannot be sustained because
    the administrative law judge improperly relied upon hearsay evidence in reaching those conclusions
    and that, without consideration of the hearsay, substantial evidence does not exist in the record to
    support the Board’s decision. For the reasons discussed below, however, we conclude that there is
    substantial evidence to support the Board’s decision and, therefore, grant the request for enforcement
    of its administrative order against Conley Trucking and deny the company’s petition for review.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    This appellate proceeding has its genesis in an unsuccessful effort by the General Truck
    Drivers and Helpers Union Local # 92, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, to organize drivers
    at Conley Trucking, a sole proprietorship in Portsmouth, Ohio, owned by Delmas Conley and run
    primarily by Conley’s sons, R.J. and Rodney. Conley Trucking does not dispute that its drivers
    “haul and deliver gravel, sand, salt, and stone in dump trucks for customers” and that the company
    is subject to the requirements of the National Labor Relations Act.
    Some time during the summer months of 2005, R.J. Conley observed union pamphlets in the
    company parking lot and informed his father of that fact. Additionally, R.J. “heard employees
    talking about a Union around the workplace” and “probably” disclosed that information to his father
    as well. Nevertheless, no overt efforts at unionization of the Conley Trucking drivers occurred until
    October 2005, when Teamsters organizer Rick Kepler met at an area restaurant with drivers Jeremy
    Thompson, Ata Thunderdance, Roger Rosenogle, and Dan Gulliver. A second meeting organized
    by Kepler convened at a Lucasville fast-food establishment on Sunday, October 23, 2005, and was
    attended by Thompson, Thunderdance, Rosenogle, Gulliver, Tim Gilbert, and Steve Delabar. At
    that second meeting, each of the Conley Trucking employees present signed a union card indicating
    a desire to be represented by the Teamsters in workplace negotiations.
    Jeremy Thompson subsequently signed two different affidavits that were prepared by an
    NLRB agent. In a November 16, 2005, affidavit, Thompson claimed:
    The following Wednesday [after the October 23 meeting with Kepler] I was at the
    office at Conley. There were 3 or 4 other drivers standing around that I don’t
    normally talk to. I don’t know their names. It was about 4:30 or 5:00 p.m. R.J.
    Conley came over. We talked about everyday business. Conley then said[,] “I heard
    something today.” I said[,] “What’s that?” He said[,] “I heard you, Tim Gilbert, and
    Steve Del[a]bar were trying to get a union in here.” I said Del[a]bar and Gilbert had
    nothing to do with it. That was the end of the conversation.
    The day after Thompson’s exchange with R.J. Conley, Tim Gilbert was informed that his
    wife had suffered a possible stroke and had been transported to the emergency room, although she
    was subsequently discharged after refusing recommended procedures. Consequently, Gilbert
    informed Rodney Holden, a dispatcher and scheduler for Conley Trucking, that he would not be able
    to work the following day because of the need to take his wife to the family doctor for a follow-up
    visit. On that Friday, October 28, 2005, Gilbert drove his wife to her physician, who, after
    examining test results, commented that Gilbert’s wife should be taken immediately to the emergency
    room for a spinal tap and additional care that could not be provided in an office setting. Once
    Gilbert’s wife was readmitted to the hospital, Gilbert and his daughter drove to Conley Trucking so
    that Gilbert could receive his weekly paycheck. Gilbert was handed an envelope by Holden, an
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                    Conley v. NLRB                                                 Page 3
    envelope that Gilbert discovered contained not only his paycheck but also a notice that he had been
    terminated from his employment due to his “Absenteeism/Tardiness.”
    According to one of the affidavits provided by Thompson, anti-union comments continued
    to be made by Conley Trucking management officials after Gilbert’s termination. For example,
    Thompson stated in one affidavit:
    About 1 week to 1.5 weeks after Gilbert was fired I was at the shop. About 4 or 5
    other drivers were there. Roger Rosenogle was there. Dave Jordan, a mechanic was
    there. The others I am not sure of. It was after work at 5 or 5:30 p.m. R.J. Conley
    told us he couldn’t talk about it but he can legally say that he can sell his trucks if he
    so chooses. He said he can’t afford to pay the big wage that the Union was
    promising us. He said his company didn’t generate that kind of money. He said if
    they could get a union in there and it would benefit the guys they would gladly do
    it, but they couldn’t afford it. I think R.J. started talking after one of the employees
    asked him about it. He said if we wanted a union, it would be our choice and we
    could vote on it and he didn’t have any say in it. We didn’t reply to this. I recall that
    R.J. said we would make $7-8 per hour if the union came in because they went in the
    hole last year with fuel costs being high.
    Furthermore, Thompson later claimed in another affidavit:
    About late October or early November 2005, I was loading my work truck at the
    dock when Delmas Conley approached me. It was about 8:30 or 9:00 a.m. No one
    else was present, but Dan Conley was getting loaded in the general area. Conley told
    me that he wanted to have an “off the record” conversation about the Union. I told
    him that it would be off the record. Delmas asked me if I had a tape recorder on me
    and I opened my coat to show him that I did not. Delmas said that he would fight the
    Union and would shut the company down. He said that if we stopped right now, no
    one would lose their jobs, but if it didn’t stop right now, we would all lose our jobs.
    Delmas said that he would shut the company down if we unionized. He said he
    would use scab labor. . . . Delmas said that the Union was good years ago, but was
    not worth a fuck now. Delmas said that he would fire anyone he wanted and that he
    owned the company and could do anything he wanted anytime and that no one short
    of the President of the United States could tell him otherwise. Delmas said that if the
    Union won, he would bargain us down to minimum wage and lock us out and use
    scab labor. Delmas said that the Union had hurt Conley and had set him back 10
    years.
    Other testimony damaging to Conley Trucking came from R.J. Conley, who admitted to
    numerous other comments made by him or by his father in the weeks after the news of potential
    unionization of the company’s drivers came to light. For example, R.J. testified that he remembered
    telling Ata Thunderdance and other drivers “that if a Union comes in, ‘we start from zero and have
    to bargain everything.’” He further admitted that, at a December 23, 2005, meeting, Delmas Conley
    expressed his desire that the company stay non-union, “that he would not like outside people telling
    him how to run his business,” “that if employees want to work for a Union trucking company . . .
    they [could] go somewhere else rather than Unionize his facility,” “that if employees wanted more
    control over the business that they could buy and drive their own trucks rather than Unionize,” and
    that he would sell them a truck, or even the entire business, rather than have them vote for union
    representation.
    Having been informed of these comments and events, the Board’s general counsel filed
    charges, and eventually a complaint, against Conley Trucking, alleging the unlawful termination of
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                    Conley v. NLRB                                           Page 4
    Tim Gilbert in retaliation for his union activity, the unlawful creation of an impression of
    surveillance of employees’ union activities, and improper efforts to coerce the workers not to vote
    for the union. Although Conley Trucking officials admitted to making many of the statements that
    the general counsel alleged were in violation of the Act, they countered the allegation of retaliatory
    termination of Gilbert with testimony indicating that Gilbert was far from a model employee and that
    he was fired, not for union activities, but for numerous transgressions of workplace rules, for
    excessive absenteeism, and for substandard work performance.
    In particular, R.J. Conley testified that Gilbert had shown up for work on March 9, 2005, too
    intoxicated to drive after being found asleep in his own car in the company parking lot with a beer
    can between his legs. Even so, on that occasion, Gilbert was not suspended by his employers and
    received only a written warning. Additionally, the company asserted that Gilbert was the only driver
    who had been involved in multiple accidents during the relevant time period, jackknifing a company
    truck on July 11, 2005, causing approximately $1000 in damage, backing his truck into the truck of
    Steve Delabar in September 2005, causing another $1,200 - $1,300 in damage, and backing his truck
    into another truck driven by Charlie Floyd. Also, R.J. Conley testified that Gilbert was once seen
    parked in a rest area for an extended period of time with other Conley Trucking drivers, rather than
    returning with an additional load prior to quitting work for the day. Conley Trucking management
    also alleged before the administrative law judge that Gilbert had more missed loads than any other
    driver for the period between November 1, 2004, and December 31, 2005, and that Gilbert was
    chronically late for work and missed more days of work than the number to which he was entitled.
    Finally, the company contends that Gilbert failed to show up for work on Saturday, October 15,
    2005, a designated mandatory workday, instead opting to remain home to cut firewood for the
    winter.
    In response to the company’s arguments that Gilbert was terminated solely for his
    substandard work record, the Board’s general counsel adduced testimony that the company failed
    to discipline Gilbert for any of the alleged workplace infractions at the time they were committed,
    other than the one occasion on which he reported for work while intoxicated. Furthermore,
    testimony established that even though many other drivers had less-than-stellar attendance records,
    that even though other drivers also missed an inordinate number of work loads, and that even though
    other drivers were involved in accidents resulting in greater vehicle repair costs to the company, no
    other driver had been terminated by the management of the company before Gilbert’s dismissal.
    The general counsel also attempted to introduce testimony from Jeremy Thompson to
    substantiate that the Conleys were aware of Gilbert’s pro-union activities shortly before the
    termination decision was made. In contravention of the information Thompson had previously
    provided in affidavits, however, once he was sworn at the administrative hearing, he denied that
    anybody from Conley management ever said anything to him about the union. When confronted
    with his prior affidavit clearly stating that R.J. Conley had indeed mentioned that he knew that
    “[Thompson,] Tim Gilbert and Steve Delabar were trying to bring a Union into his workplace,”
    Thompson acknowledged the inconsistency but explained that when offering information for the
    affidavit, he “was upset, . . . under the influence also and . . . was angry, so [he] may have
    exaggerated the points a little bit.”
    At the close of the hearing, the administrative law judge recognized that the Thompson
    affidavits offered by the Board’s general counsel constituted hearsay to the extent that the
    information contained in those affidavits was offered to prove the truth of the matters asserted and
    not merely to impeach the credibility of the witness’s testimony. Nevertheless, because “hearsay
    evidence is admissible [at Board proceedings] if ‘rationally probative in force and if corroborated
    by something more than the slightest amount of other evidence,’” the administrative law judge
    determined that the affidavits should be admitted as substantive evidence to be evaluated and
    weighed in the same manner as other non-hearsay testimony. Delmas Conley d/b/a Conley
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                    Conley v. NLRB                                              Page 5
    Trucking, 349 NLRB No. 30, 
    2007 WL 324557
    , at *5 (Jan. 31, 2007) (quoting Dauman Pallet, Inc.,
    
    314 N.L.R.B. 185
    , 186 (1994)). In so ruling, the administrative law judge explained the rationale for
    his decision as follows:
    [W]hile mindful that Board proceedings are to follow the F[ederal] R[ules of]
    E[vidence] “so far as practical,” in my view federal labor policy concerns would
    render decidedly impractical adherence to an evidentiary rule that precluded the
    administrative law judge from having discretion to substantively consider these
    pretrial affidavits.
    One of the chief concerns that motivated the modern trend to allow the substantive
    use of some prior witness statements, as reflected in FRE 801(d), was concern about
    witness intimidation – i.e., witnesses who could be intimidated or were otherwise
    vulnerable to pressure with the result that their prior statements were a more reliable
    guide to the fact finder than their testimony in the courtroom. According to the
    Congressional subcommittee considering enactment of the rules of evidence
    proposed by the Supreme Court, support for the Supreme Court’s proposal to permit
    an even broader substantive use of prior inconsistent statements than Congress
    ultimately adopted in the FRE was “based largely on the need to counteract the effect
    of witness intimidation.” The Notes of the Advisory Committee reviewing the rules
    of evidence proposed by the Supreme Court opined that the Court’s proposed Rule
    801(d)(1)(A) “provides a party with desirable protection against the ‘turncoat’
    witness who changes his story on the stand and deprives the party calling him of
    evidence essential to his case.”
    * * * * *
    [T]he concern with witness intimidation that prompted the modern movement toward
    permitting the substantive use of some prior inconsistent statements in federal court
    is even more acute in the arena of Board litigation. It is precisely because of the
    “peculiar character of labor litigation” with its reliance on witnesses “especially
    likely to be inhibited by fear” that, as a matter of effectuating federal labor policy,
    administrative law judges should have the discretion to consider sworn pretrial
    affidavits as substantive evidence. For when a witness testifies in marked
    contradiction to his pretrial statement, and particularly where in the opinion of the
    administrative law judge that testimony reeks of untruthfulness, and further, where,
    as here, the employer has met with and discussed the contents of the employee’s
    pretrial statements with the employee, the ability of the judge to consider
    substantively the witnesses pretrial statements becomes an important tool in the
    search for truth and an antidote to the threat to Board enforcement proceedings posed
    by witness intimidation.
    
    Id. at **6-8
    (some citations, some internal quotation marks, and footnotes omitted).
    Even though the administrative law judge ultimately accepted Thompson’s affidavits as
    substantive evidence, he also made clear that such admission “is not tantamount to crediting the
    claims in the affidavits over all other evidence. Rather, . . . the assertions in the affidavits must be
    considered with and against the record evidence as a whole, including, . . . the denial of the
    allegations by witnesses aligned with Conley Trucking.” 
    Id. at *9.
    In doing so, the administrative
    law judge concluded that “Thompson’s testimony at the hearing was thoroughly untruthful.” 
    Id. at *4.
    Nevertheless, he refused to view all contrary evidence as necessarily credible and worthy of
    belief; instead, the administrative law judge required corroboration of the allegations made in
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                   Conley v. NLRB                                            Page 6
    Thompson’s affidavits before allowing those statements to serve as substantive evidence made
    against Conley Trucking.
    As a result, the administrative law judge recommended dismissal of some charges brought
    against the trucking company and found violations of the Act in other circumstances. On one hand,
    the administrative law judge concluded that Conley Trucking violated the Act in the following
    instances:
    1) by creating the impression that the company was conducting surveillance of the
    employees’ union activity;
    2) by threatening the employees on or about November 3, 2005, that any bargaining
    with the union would “start from zero”;
    3) by encouraging union supporters on December 23, 2005, to leave their
    employment with Conley Trucking;
    4) by threatening on December 23, 2005, to sell the company’s trucks, and even the
    company itself, if the employees voted for the union; and
    5) by discharging Tim Gilbert in retaliation for his support of the union.
    On the other hand, however, the administrative law judge dismissed charges against Conley
    Trucking that:
    1) R.J. Conley stated in early November 2005 that the company could sell its trucks
    if the workers unionized;
    2) R.J. Conley told the employees that he would change their method of pay should
    they vote for a union;
    3) Delmas Conley threatened on October 25, 2005, that he would sell his trucks
    and/or his business in case of a pro-union vote; and
    4) Delmas Conley stated in late October or early November 2005 that he would close
    his business before allowing unionization, that employees would lose their jobs
    unless they ceased unionization efforts, and that unionization would result in a pay
    decrease.
    A three-member panel of the Board adopted the administrative law judge’s recommended
    order with only two minor, non-substantive modifications. Conley Trucking then petitioned this
    court for review of that administrative decision and the NLRB filed a cross-application for
    enforcement of the Board’s order.
    DISCUSSION
    Pursuant to the express language of section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C.
    § 157, employees are guaranteed the right to organize and to bargain collectively for their mutual
    aid or protection. Moreover, section 8 of the Act makes it an unfair labor practice for an employer
    to interfere with those rights or to discourage membership in any labor organization “by
    discrimination in regard to hire or tenure of employment or any term or condition of employment.”
    29 U.S.C. §§ 158(a)(1) and (3). See also Opportunity Homes, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    101 F.3d 1515
    , 1518
    (6th Cir. 1996), overruled on other grounds as recognized in NLRB v. Webcor Packaging, Inc., 
    118 F.3d 1115
    (6th Cir. 1997).
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                          Conley v. NLRB                                                     Page 7
    The threshold test for determining whether an employment decision constitutes an unfair
    labor practice is whether the decision at issue was motivated by anti-union animus. See NLRB v.
    Cook Family Foods, Ltd., 
    47 F.3d 809
    , 816 (6th Cir. 1995). The Board bears the initial burden of
    showing, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the employer’s decision was motivated by the
    employee’s exercise of rights protected by the Act. See NLRB v. Transp. Mgmt. Corp., 
    462 U.S. 393
    , 401 (1983), overruled on other grounds, Dir., Office of Workers’ Comp. Programs v.
    Greenwich Collieries, 
    512 U.S. 267
    (1994); Cook Family Foods, 
    Ltd., 47 F.3d at 816
    . If such a
    showing is made, the burden of persuasion “shifts to the employer to demonstrate by a
    preponderance of the evidence that it would have made the same decision regardless of the fact that
    the employees engaged in protected activity.” Ishikawa Gasket Am., Inc. v. NLRB, 
    354 F.3d 534
    ,
    537 (6th Cir. 2004) (citing NLRB v. Gen. Fabrications Corp., 
    222 F.3d 218
    , 226 (6th Cir. 2000)).
    This court then reviews de novo any legal conclusions made by the Board. See 3750 Orange
    Place Ltd. P’ship v. NLRB, 
    333 F.3d 646
    , 654 (6th Cir. 2003). We will uphold the Board’s findings
    of fact, however, if supported by substantial evidence on the record. See 29 U.S.C. §§ 160(e) and
    (f). “Substantial evidence” has been defined as such evidence as is “adequate, in a reasonable mind,
    to uphold the [Board’s] decision.” Gen. Fabrications 
    Corp., 222 F.3d at 225
    . “Deference to the
    Board’s factual findings is particularly appropriate where the ‘record is fraught with conflicting
    testimony and essential credibility determinations have been made.’” Tony Scott Trucking, Inc. v.
    NLRB, 
    821 F.2d 312
    , 315 (6th Cir. 1987) (quoting NLRB v. Nueva Eng’g, Inc., 
    761 F.2d 961
    , 965
    (4th Cir. 1985)).
    In its request for relief, Conley Trucking asks “that the Board’s decision be vacated in its
    entirety and the complaint of the General Counsel be dismissed.” As noted by the Board and by
    general counsel, however, Conley Trucking failed to present proper objections before the Board to
    some of the administrative law judge’s conclusions and recommendations. Indeed, the company’s
    exceptions to the administrative law judge’s finding “that [it] violated Sec. 8(a)(1) of the Act by
    threatening employees that bargaining with the Union would start from zero” fail “to allege with any
    degree of particularity . . . the error it contends the judge committed, or on what grounds it believes
    the judge’s decision as to this violation should be overturned.” Delmas Conley d/b/a Conley
    Trucking, 
    2007 WL 324557
    , at *1 n. 2. Consequently, absent “extraordinary circumstances,” which
    are not present in this matter, such an objection that is not properly “urged before the1Board, its
    member, agent, or agency, shall [not] be considered by the court.” 29 U.S.C. § 160(e).
    Furthermore, Conley Trucking does not argue in its appellate brief against the validity of the
    Board’s rulings regarding two other findings by the administrative law judge that were affirmed by
    the Board. Any challenges to those rulings have thus been waived. See McPherson v. Kelsey, 
    125 F.3d 989
    , 995 (6th Cir. 1997) (“[I]ssues adverted to in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by
    some effort at developed argumentation, are deemed waived.”) Moreover, Conley Trucking,
    through its agents, conceded at the administrative hearing that those offending, anti-union comments
    had indeed been made.
    Specifically, R.J. Conley admitted during his hearing testimony that his father “invited union
    supporters to leave their employment with Conley Trucking” by stating “that if employees want to
    work for a Union trucking company that he preferred that they go work somewhere else rather than
    Unionize his facility.” As noted by the administrative law judge:
    1
    The Board’s general counsel also filed “no exceptions to the judge’s dismissal of allegations that the
    Respondent violated Sec. 8(a)(1) by threatening to sell its trucks and to reduce its employees’ pay, and by threatening
    job loss and plant closure in late October and early November 2005.” Delmas Conley d/b/a Conley Trucking, 
    2007 WL 324557
    , at *1 n.2.
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                    Conley v. NLRB                                             Page 8
    It is well settled that an employer’s invitation to an employee to quit in response to
    their exercise of protected concerted activity is coercive, because it conveys to
    employees that support for their union or engaging in other concerted activities and
    their continued employment are not compatible, and implicitly threaten discharge of
    the employees involved.
    Delmas Conley d/b/a Conley Trucking, 
    2007 WL 324557
    , at *18 (quoting McDaniel Ford, Inc., 
    322 N.L.R.B. 956
    , 956 n.1, 962 (1997)).
    R.J. Conley also confirmed during his testimony that his father told company employees that
    if they “wanted more control over the business . . . they could buy and drive their own trucks instead
    of Unionize,” and “added that he would sell them a truck and would, in fact, sell them his entire
    business.” In addition, Delmas Conley himself admitted at the administrative hearing that he made
    comments to the employees about “outsiders running [the] company” and that he would sell his
    trucks and his business to the workers if they desired. As the administrative law judge and Board
    concluded, “This was not a business offer. Conley was telling employees that in retaliation for their
    desire to unionize he was willing to radically alter the employer-employee relationship. . . . The
    threat of reprisal for union activity in the comment is manifest and violative of Section 8(a)(1) [of
    the Act].”
    As a result of admissions by Conley Trucking of various anti-union comments, the failure
    of the company to argue in its brief that certain conclusions made by the administrative law judge
    were erroneous, and the decisions of Conley Trucking and the Board’s general counsel not to file
    proper exceptions to other determinations made by the administrative law judge, only two rulings
    by the Board remain for our review. Both of those holdings – that Conley Trucking improperly
    created the impression of surveillance of employees’ union activity and that Conley Trucking
    improperly discharged Timothy Gilbert for engaging in activities in support of union representation
    – rely upon information contained in affidavits executed by Jeremy Thompson, affidavits that
    Thompson later repudiated in large part during his hearing testimony. Thus, the administrative law
    judge’s and Board’s resolution of those questions may be upheld only if we determine that the
    admission of the recanted affidavits as substantive evidence was indeed proper.
    Before this court, both parties apparently concede that the information contained in
    Thompson’s two affidavits, if offered to prove the truth of the matters asserted therein, constituted
    hearsay evidence. Conley Trucking and the Board’s general counsel disagree, however, over
    whether such hearsay should be admissible as substantive evidence to be evaluated by the
    administrative law judge and the Board itself.
    Pursuant to the Federal Rules of Evidence, “hearsay,” defined as “a statement, other than one
    made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth
    of the matter asserted,” Fed. R. Evid. 801(c), is not generally admissible in federal courts. See Fed.
    R. Evid. 802. Nevertheless, administrative hearings, like the proceeding before the administrative
    law judge in this labor dispute, are not necessarily bound by the same evidentiary strictures as are
    federal district courts. Indeed, the express language of 29 U.S.C. § 160(b) provides that such agency
    proceedings shall, only “so far as practicable, be conducted in accordance with the rules of evidence
    applicable in the district courts of the United States . . . .” (Emphasis added.)
    In this case, the only direct evidence of Conley Trucking’s knowledge of Timothy Gilbert’s
    association with the union organizing effort came from Jeremy Thompson’s affidavits discussing
    Thompson’s conversations with R.J. Conley only days after a union organizing meeting and only
    shortly before Conley terminated Gilbert’s employment with the company. Because admission of
    those affidavits as substantive evidence, especially in the face of Thompson’s later disavowal of
    statements made within the affidavits, would give the impression that the company was tracking its
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                     Conley v. NLRB                                             Page 9
    employees’ union activities and that the company fired Gilbert because of his perceived leadership
    role in the organizing effort, Conley Trucking now urges us to hold that strict adherence to federal
    evidentiary rules is required in all but the most limited circumstances.
    The decision of the administrative law judge, however, relied upon numerous federal court
    decisions and prior Board rulings that, in turn, cited other decisions that have permitted admission
    of hearsay as substantive evidence of violations of federal labor laws. In doing so, the
    administrative law judge emphasized that Congress’s insertion of the language “so far as
    practicable” into the National Labor Relations Act demonstrated that some deviation from the
    Federal Rules of Evidence was envisioned and was deemed necessary by the legislative drafters in
    order to effectuate federal labor policy. In its appellate brief, however, Conley Trucking argues that
    the precedents upon which the administrative law judge relied are extremely limited in their
    application. Consequently, argues Conley Trucking, hearsay has been admitted as substantive
    evidence of labor law violations only in instances involving: (1) application of state evidentiary
    rules rather than the Federal Rules of Evidence, see, e.g., Starlite Mfg. Co., 
    172 N.L.R.B. 68
    (1968);
    (2) stipulations by the parties that the hearsay evidence is admissible, see, e.g., In re El Mirador, 
    340 N.L.R.B. 715
    (2003); (3) a failure by a party to object to the admissibility of the evidence, see, e.g.,
    Alvin J. Bart and Co., 
    236 N.L.R.B. 242
    (1978), enforcement denied, NLRB v. Alvin J. Bart and Co.,
    
    598 F.2d 1267
    (2d Cir. 1979); Bay Refrigeration Corp., 
    322 N.L.R.B. 1045
    (1997); (4) affidavits
    prepared by agents of the subject companies such that the evidence is considered an admission of
    the party pursuant to Rule 801(d)(2)(A) of the Federal Rules of Evidence, see, e.g., Alvin J. Bart and
    Co.; Bay Refrigeration Corp.; or (5) testimony that was subject to cross-examination in a prior trial
    or that was sworn to before a grand jury, see, e.g., DeSisto v. United States, 
    329 F.2d 929
    (2d Cir.
    1964).
    Conley Trucking’s argument in this regard is, however, unpersuasive. The fact that prior
    decisions allowing hearsay testimony as substantive evidence have, to-date, fallen into neat
    pigeonholes does not mean that other scenarios are not possible or legally supportable. This court,
    for instance, has stated broadly that administrative law judges are “not obliged to strictly adhere to
    the Federal Rules of Evidence.” 3750 Orange Place Ltd. 
    P’ship, 333 F.3d at 666
    . Similarly, the
    Seventh Circuit, discussing the relevant provision of 29 U.S.C. § 160(b), recognized that “[t]he
    Board is not bound absolutely to apply the Federal Rules of Evidence under this provision, and it
    may, where appropriate, fashion its own particular rule of evidence – for example, where a rule will
    facilitate the bargaining process.” NLRB v. Augusta Bakery Corp., 
    957 F.2d 1467
    , 1479 (7th Cir.
    1992).
    Whether the scenario presented in this appeal tracks exactly the factual and legal patterns of
    prior cases in which the admission of hearsay evidence has been allowed is thus of little import.
    Instead, the more germane inquiry is whether the relaxation of the Federal Rules of Evidence by the
    administrative law judge was reasonable under the circumstances and limited in its application to
    the practicalities of this situation. Here, the administrative law judge’s first-hand observations of
    Jeremy Thompson’s demeanor raised a concern that the company, wielding superior economic
    power, had intimidated Thompson at a time when, as an employee, he was still dependent upon the
    company for his livelihood. The judge clearly found that, without adoption of a relaxed evidentiary
    rule to permit a more complete picture of the situation faced by Conley Trucking’s workers, there
    was a distinct possibility that company officials would succeed in suppressing evidence otherwise
    available for consideration in determining whether an unfair labor practice had occurred.
    To counteract that undesirable possibility, the administrative law judge fashioned a workable
    rule permitted by the governing statutes that met the challenge presented to him. He noted that
    Thompson, at the time he gave the statements contained in his affidavits, was given the opportunity
    to review those comments for accuracy and was asked to vouch for their truthfulness. Nevertheless,
    even though the statements were given by Thompson in relaxed, non-coercive atmospheres, the
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                    Conley v. NLRB                                          Page 10
    administrative law judge refused to accept uncritically every statement made in the affidavits. To
    the contrary, the fact-finder scoured the administrative record for testimony that supported and
    contradicted the affiant’s assertions and required some corroboration, however slight, for the out-of-
    court statements before crediting their substance.
    We conclude that the compromise reached by the administrative law judge represents an
    exemplary application of – and respect for – the federal rules of evidence “so far as practicable.”
    The administrative law judge’s evidentiary ruling in this matter clearly does not signal a rejection
    of traditional evidentiary guidelines and an era of carte blanche admission of heretofore
    inadmissible testimony. Rather, in line with the principles espoused in section 160(b) of title 29 of
    the United States Code, the decision recognizes the need to examine the unique circumstances of
    each dispute before the administrative body to determine whether some flexibility in the standards
    governing admissibility of evidence would enhance or upset the delicate balance to be struck
    between furtherance of general guiding principles and maintenance of recognizable, applicable rules.
    Section 160(b) vests within the Board the authority to deviate from the Federal Rules of
    Evidence when the agency believes it is not practicable both to adhere to such rules and to protect
    workers’ rights. Thus, even without citation to another court ruling or administrative decision whose
    factual scenario approximates that found in this proceeding, the administrative law judge’s concern
    for protection of witnesses from employer intimidation justified the admission as substantive
    evidence of those portions of Thompson’s affidavits for which some additional corroboration could
    be found in the administrative record. The administrative law judge summarized it best in
    explaining:
    Where an allegation in the complaint is supported solely by a statement in
    Thompson’s affidavit, and the record is devoid of any corroboration that supports the
    likelihood of the truth of the statement, then I have determined that allegation fails
    due to a lack of sufficient evidence, without regard to credibility resolutions. Where
    there is some form of corroboration then I will consider whether to credit or discredit
    the various competing testimony as is the traditional practice. Although the extra
    “burden” this places on the General Counsel may not be warranted in every case
    where pretrial statements are considered substantively, in this case I believe that it
    provides an important brake on the use of Thompson’s pretrial statements as a sole
    source of support for a finding of a violation of the Act by [Conley Trucking].
    Delmas Conley d/b/a Conley Trucking, 
    2007 WL 324557
    , at *10 (citations and footnote omitted).
    We reject the evidentiary challenge to the administrative law judge’s hearsay ruling and turn to the
    merits of his decision.
    As noted above, two of the administrative law judge’s findings now at issue relied upon
    evidence contained in the two affidavits executed by Thompson but later repudiated by him when
    testifying at the hearing. In the first such finding, the administrative law judge concluded that
    Conley Trucking improperly “created the impression of surveillance of employees’ union activities”
    when R.J. Conley informed Thompson that he was aware that Thompson, Gilbert, and Steve Delabar
    “were trying to get a union in here.” Because Thompson was not aware of the identity of any other
    individuals who might have heard R.J. Conley’s comment, the suspect affidavit testimony provides
    the most substantial evidence in support of the unfair labor practice charge, even though Teamster
    organizer Rick Kepler corroborated the claim by stating that Thompson related that same story to
    him even before Gilbert was fired by the company. When R.J. Conley himself denied that he ever
    initiated any conversation with employees about unions, however, the administrative law judge was
    faced with conflicting testimony that he was charged with reconciling or discrediting in part.
    Because the administrative law judge was in a much better position to evaluate the credibility of the
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                    Conley v. NLRB                                          Page 11
    contradictory witnesses than we are, “[d]eference to the Board’s factual findings is particularly
    appropriate.” Tony Scott Trucking, 
    Inc., 821 F.2d at 315
    .
    In this instance, the administrative law judge credited the testimony in Thompson’s affidavits
    and in Kepler’s hearing testimony that R.J. Conley did indeed give Thompson the impression that
    the company’s management was conducting surveillance on the employees interested in
    unionization. Even though another fact-finder might well have concluded otherwise by giving
    greater credence to the testimony of other witnesses, substantial evidence still exists in the record
    as a whole to support the Board’s resolution of this issue. See 29 U.S.C. §§ 160(e) and (f).
    Conley Trucking also challenges the Board’s conclusion that Timothy Gilbert was
    discharged for his union support rather than for his suspect work record. Again, however,
    substantial evidence adduced before the administrative law judge supports that decision, especially
    once R.J. Conley’s knowledge of Gilbert’s union sympathies can be established through admission
    of Thompson’s affidavits.
    “Firing an employee because he has engaged in union activity is an unfair labor practice
    under sections 8(a)(1) and 8(a)(3) of the [Act].” Ctr. Constr. Co. v. NLRB, 
    482 F.3d 425
    , 435 (6th
    Cir. 2007). Again, in order to establish such an unfair labor practice, the Board’s general counsel
    must first prove a prima facie case of discrimination by showing that: “(1) the employee was
    engaged in protected activity; (2) the employer knew of the protected activity; and (3) the
    employee’s protected activity motivated the adverse treatment.” 
    Id. (citing Temp-Masters,
    Inc. v.
    NLRB, 
    460 F.3d 684
    , 689 (6th Cir. 2006)). Upon establishment of that prima facie case as
    enunciated in Wright Line, 
    251 N.L.R.B. 1083
    (1980), and approved in Transportation Management
    Corp., “the burden of persuasion switches to the employer to prove that it would have made the
    same employment decision regardless of the employee’s union activity,” unless the employer’s
    proffered justification for the employment decision is determined to be pretextual. Ctr. Constr. 
    Co., 482 F.3d at 435
    . In such a situation, “the Board is not obligated to consider whether the employer
    would have taken the same decision regardless of the employee’s union activity.” 
    Id. at 436.
            In this case, Conley Trucking asserts, as documented by its own “Termination Report,” that
    Gilbert was fired for “Absenteeism/Tardiness.” After examining all testimony and documentary
    evidence, however, the administrative law judge concluded that such a justification was merely a
    thinly-veiled pretext for prohibited discrimination. As explained by the administrative law judge
    in his written decision:
    Had Respondent terminated Gilbert, as reflected in the termination report, simply for
    absenteeism, it would have had the virtue of being consistent with Respondent’s
    demonstrated apathy towards other aspects of Gilbert’s performance for months
    before the discharge. But it would have had the vice (in addition to being
    inconsistent with Respondent’s position at trial) of being a particularly unconvincing
    explanation of Respondent’s decision to take action against Gilbert. [N]umerous
    other employees had absenteeism records worse than Gilbert’s and yet were not
    discharged. Absenteeism was rife among employees. Indeed, Gilbert was not even
    among the employees to receive the attendance warning letter developed by
    Respondent to encourage employees prone to absenteeism “to do a little better.”
    Attendance was not a plausible reason for Gilbert’s discharge. That is why as part
    of the investigation and in preparation for trial in this case Respondent culled its
    managers’ memory for incidents and shortcomings that could offer a post hoc and
    legitimate rationale for Gilbert’s discharge. In short, Respondent developed a
    pretext. And even these incidents are suspect. . . . I do not accept the claim that
    Gilbert did not work the mandatory Saturday. That R.J. Conley would claim that this
    Nos. 07-1399/1529                   Conley v. NLRB                                          Page 12
    was a basis for Gilbert’s discharge when the evidence showed that he actually did not
    know whether Gilbert worked that day speaks volumes about the validity of
    Respondent’s explanation for the discharge offered at trial. I also do not accept that
    Gilbert had a truck accident with an employee named Floyd, or if he did that it had
    anything to do with Gilbert’s discharge. It is true that Gilbert missed more loads
    than any other employee, but Respondent did not have documentation developed at
    the time of Gilbert’s discharge to know this with any precision. I recognize that
    Respondent’s managers would have a good feel for which employees miss a lot of
    loads and no doubt were aware of Gilbert's failings in that regard. But I don’t see
    how they could readily distinguish Gilbert in this regard from, for instance,
    Thompson, who in fact missed only three less loads than Gilbert. As far as the
    record reveals, Thompson was never disciplined or threatened with discharge due to
    missed loads and neither was Gilbert.
    What we are left with is that Gilbert was not a stellar employee, who, with his
    drinking incident, two driving mishaps, poor (but not as bad as many others)
    attendance, and an abysmal record of missed loads worked steadily without incident
    until the employer learned (and unlawful[ly] discussed with Thompson) that Gilbert
    was involved with union activities. Only then was he fired, ostensibly for
    absenteeism, later expanded to encompass any and all other shortcomings, real or
    invented for litigation. The Act protects both stellar and poor employees, and those
    in between, from unlawfully motivated discharge. The salient truth is that Gilbert’s
    many failings as an employee did not endanger his job until the employer discovered
    Gilbert’s union activity. Then he was quickly fired on specious grounds.
    I find that Respondent’s stated reasons at the hearing for discharging Gilbert are
    pretextual and an attempt to disguise the fact that antiunion animus was the true
    motivation for the discharge. This conclusion not only adds further weight to
    General Counsel’s case but pretermits the need to perform the second part of the
    Wright Line analysis. Respondent’s discharge of Gilbert violated the Act as alleged.
    Delmas Conley d/b/a Conley Trucking, 
    2007 WL 324557
    , at **26-27. Again, because the
    administrative law judge was able to point to and credit substantial evidence in the record that
    supported the conclusion that Gilbert was terminated as a result of his perceived union sympathies,
    Conley Trucking’s challenge to this ruling is also without merit.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set out above, we DENY the petition for review filed by Delmas Conley,
    d/b/a/ Conley Trucking, and GRANT the Board’s application for enforcement of its decision.