Lineback, Rik v. Spurlino Materials ( 2008 )


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  •                              In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 07-3925
    R IK L INEBACK, Regional Director of
    the Twenty-Fifth Region of the National
    Labor Relations Board, for and on
    behalf of the N ATIONAL L ABOR
    R ELATIONS B OARD ,
    Petitioner-Appellee,
    v.
    S PURLINO M ATERIALS, LLC,
    Respondent-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
    No. 07 C 599—David F. Hamilton, Chief Judge.
    A RGUED JUNE 6, 2008—D ECIDED O CTOBER 8, 2008
    Before B AUER, R IPPLE and M ANION, Circuit Judges.
    R IPPLE, Circuit Judge. The Coal, Ice, Building Material,
    Supply Drivers, Riggers, Heavy Haulers, Warehousemen
    and Helpers, Local No. 716 (“the Union”) filed charges
    with the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) against
    employer Spurlino Materials, LLC (“Spurlino”), alleging
    that Spurlino had committed multiple violations of the
    2                                                  No. 07-3925
    federal labor laws. On March 21, 2007, the NLRB’s General
    Counsel consolidated the charges against Spurlino and
    issued a formal complaint.
    On May 11, 2007, the NLRB’s Regional Director filed a
    section 10(j) petition in the district court, seeking a prelimi-
    nary injunction pending adjudication of the charges by
    the NLRB. See 
    29 U.S.C. § 160
    (j). The district court held a
    hearing on the petition and, on November 8, entered an
    order enjoining Spurlino from engaging in a number of
    unfair labor practices. For the reasons set forth in this
    opinion, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I
    BACKGROUND
    A. Facts
    Spurlino, a full-service construction materials supplier,
    produces and sells ready-mix concrete. In November 2005,
    Spurlino acquired from another company, American
    Concrete Co., three ready-mix concrete plants in the
    Indianapolis area. Spurlino hired all or nearly all of the
    employees who had been working for American Concrete
    at each of these locations, and it maintained the seniority
    lists that had been put in place by American Concrete.
    After the acquisition, Spurlino employees Ron Eversole,
    Gary Stevenson,1 Matt Bales and others contacted the
    1
    Stevenson is no longer employed by the company. The
    General Counsel alleged, and the ALJ subsequently found, that
    (continued...)
    No. 07-3925                                                 3
    Union. The Union petitioned the Board for a union repre-
    sentation election. Thereafter, Eversole, Stevenson and
    Bales led the unionization effort at Spurlino; they solicited
    union authorization cards from employees and spoke
    to employees about the Union.
    1. Spurlino’s Efforts to Undermine the Union
    Prior to the election, Spurlino management allegedly
    campaigned heavily to discourage its employees from
    voting for union representation. Spurlino managers,
    including manager Gary Matney, allegedly met individu-
    ally with drivers to warn them that, if they voted for the
    Union, things were going to get “ugly” at the company.
    ALJ Tr. at 516. Multiple employees testified that Matney
    had informed them that Spurlino successfully had
    avoided unionization in the past and that, if the em-
    ployees voted for the Union, the company would drag out
    the contract negotiations and pay any fines that it might
    incur. ALJ Tr. at 411-12, 600, 667. Spurlino’s human
    resources manager also allegedly encouraged employees
    to vote against the Union.
    On January 13, 2006, employees at Spurlino’s Indianapo-
    lis plants voted in a secret ballot election conducted by the
    NLRB. Despite the efforts of the company to persuade
    1
    (...continued)
    Stevenson’s discharge was in violation of the labor laws;
    however, these allegations were not included in the Director’s
    petition for injunctive relief. Therefore, we do not consider
    them here.
    4                                                No. 07-3925
    them otherwise, a majority of the employees voted to be
    represented by the Union. Soon thereafter, Matney alleg-
    edly told an employee that the workers would not be
    receiving a wage and benefit increase that Spurlino had
    planned to implement because the employees had voted
    for the Union. ALJ Tr. at 516, 577-78. Matney also
    allegedly warned employees that things would be getting
    much worse at the company.
    After the election, the NLRB certified the Union as the
    employees’ exclusive collective bargaining representative.2
    Spurlino and the Union accordingly began negotiations
    over their first labor contract in February 2006. Although
    the Union and the company held thirteen bargaining
    sessions between February 2006 and January 2007, the
    negotiations made little progress, and, on the record
    before us, the parties still have been unable to reach an
    agreement. The Union contends that this lack of progress
    is the result of an attempt by Spurlino to drag out negotia-
    tions, consistent with its earlier threats.
    Meanwhile, attendance at Union meetings by Spurlino
    employees has declined significantly, from 12-15 employ-
    ees in February 2006, to 2-4 employees by mid-2007.
    According to testimony from employees, fears of being
    seen at Union meetings and frustration with the lack of
    2
    There are approximately 35 employees in the bargaining unit.
    Approximately 15 of these employees are drivers who work
    from Spurlino’s Kentucky Avenue facility. Eversole, Stevenson
    and Bales served as the Union’s employee bargaining com-
    mittee members.
    No. 07-3925                                               5
    progress on a contract have caused this decline in atten-
    dance.
    2. Spurlino’s Discrimination Against Union Organizers
    Spurlino’s alleged efforts to undermine the Union did not
    end with the election. The charges in this case involve
    allegations of discrimination against Union leaders and
    refusal to bargain with the Union over changes in terms
    and conditions of employment, specifically in the method
    that Spurlino uses to assign work to its ready-mix concrete
    truck drivers.
    Spurlino ordinarily dispatches its concrete truck drivers
    based on their position on a call list, which is ordered
    according to seniority. For example, at all relevant times,
    Union leader Ron Eversole has been first on Spurlino’s
    call list because he is the most senior driver at the Ken-
    tucky Avenue facility. Because of his position on the call
    list, Eversole is dispatched first on any given work day.
    The dispatcher then moves down the call list until all
    drivers scheduled to work that day have been dispatched
    at least once. After drivers deliver their first loads of
    the day and return to the facility, they are dispatched to
    other jobs on a first-back, first-out basis.
    In December 2005, Spurlino was awarded a large
    contract to provide ready-mix concrete for the construc-
    tion of a new football stadium for the Indianapolis Colts.
    Construction work on the stadium project was covered
    by a labor agreement, the Project Labor Agreement for
    Work Stabilization for Stadium and Convention Center
    6                                                No. 07-3925
    Expansion Construction (“PLA”), which was negotiated
    by the numerous contractors and unions involved in the
    project. As a condition of receiving the contract for the
    stadium project, Spurlino was required to become a party
    to the PLA and to abide by its terms when performing
    work on the stadium.
    The PLA required companies contracted to work on the
    stadium project to pay wages and benefits greater than
    those that Spurlino generally paid. In compliance with the
    PLA, Spurlino paid its drivers a higher wage and more
    generous benefits for work performed on the stadium
    project than for the same work performed for other
    Spurlino customers; therefore, the drivers generally
    preferred to be dispatched to work on the stadium pro-
    ject. Spurlino’s method for assigning drivers to the stadium
    project thus determined who would benefit from the
    higher wages provided under the PLA.
    Spurlino initially serviced the stadium project by deliver-
    ing concrete from its Kentucky Avenue plant, which is
    four or five miles away from the stadium. The Union
    requested that Spurlino dispatch drivers to the stadium
    project by seniority, according to the call list. Spurlino
    argued before both the ALJ and the district court that it
    simply integrated the stadium project dispatches into its
    regular seniority-based call list—if the stadium project
    dispatch was the first dispatch, then it went to Eversole, if
    it was the second it went to Mooney, and so on. Neverthe-
    less, Spurlino also maintained the position that the
    PLA governing the stadium project itself required that
    No. 07-3925                                                      7
    seniority would play no role for purposes of the project.3
    According to the Union, Spurlino allegedly manipulated
    its dispatches to the stadium project in an effort to
    punish Union leaders Eversole, Stevenson and Bales for
    their Union activities. Specifically, the Director alleged that
    Spurlino disregarded its usual “first-back, first-out” policy
    and dispatched other drivers to the stadium project out
    of order so that Eversole, Stevenson and Bales would not
    receive these valuable assignments. Spurlino, on the
    other hand, denies that it manipulated the dispatching
    during this time period.
    As the stadium project began to require greater volumes
    of concrete, Spurlino decided to build a temporary and
    3
    The PLA stated:
    2.3. . . . This Agreement (including the applicable bargaining
    agreements listed in Attachment C, and successor agree-
    ments thereto) represents the complete understanding of
    the Parties with respect to the issues covered hereunder. The
    provisions of this Agreement shall control the construction
    of this Project and take precedence over and supersede
    provisions of all the Unions’ collective bargaining agree-
    ments, national, area, or local, which conflict with the terms
    of this Agreement. However, the national, area, and local
    collective bargaining agreements will govern all issues not
    addressed in this Agreement.
    ....
    3.12. Individual seniority will not be recognized or applied
    to employees working on this Project.
    R.19, Joint Ex. 4 at 12.
    8                                              No. 07-3925
    portable concrete plant on the stadium property. The
    portable plant was dedicated to providing concrete for
    the stadium project only, and it operated only on days
    that the stadium project had large daily demands for
    concrete. Again, because the drivers providing services for
    the stadium project received higher wages and benefits
    under the PLA, the portable plant was a highly desirable
    work assignment. Accordingly, the method of selecting
    employees who would work at that plant was important
    to the employees, and the Union requested that the porta-
    ble plant drivers be selected by seniority. Spurlino
    declined to do so, citing the PLA.
    Spurlino initially sought volunteers from the Kentucky
    Avenue plant to work at the portable plant. Spurlino
    managers informed the drivers that, if there were more
    volunteers than positions available, then selection would
    be based on the drivers’ skills, qualifications and past
    performance. These considerations included performance
    on a driver test, attendance records, timeliness, truck
    cleanliness and overall attitude. Unlike Spurlino’s usual
    practice, seniority would be used only to distinguish
    between two otherwise equally qualified candidates.
    Spurlino also allegedly informed the drivers that anyone
    assigned to the portable plant would lose his seniority
    at the Kentucky Avenue plant, even when the portable
    plant was not in operation and he returned to the
    Kentucky Avenue plant.
    Despite the significant wage increase and benefits for
    those drivers assigned to the portable plant, Bales did not
    volunteer for one of these positions. He stated that he
    No. 07-3925                                               9
    declined to seek a position there because the employees
    were told that they would lose their seniority at the
    Kentucky Avenue facility if they transferred to the
    portable plant. Eversole testified that he applied for a
    portable plant position, but that Spurlino filled the
    position without acknowledging his application.
    Stevenson applied for one of the positions at the portable
    plant. He, like the other volunteering drivers, was asked to
    take a driving test on a rear-loading truck—the type
    of truck that Spurlino wished to use at the portable
    plant—to assist Spurlino in determining who had the
    necessary skills, qualifications and past performance to
    work at the portable plant. Terry Mooney refused to take
    the driving test and had no prior experience driving
    rear-loading trucks. Eric Kiefer also had no experience
    with rear-loading trucks, and, during the driving test, he
    broke the brakes on the truck. Stevenson, on the other
    hand, performed well on the driving test and was high on
    the seniority list.
    On June 7, 2006, Spurlino announced that the portable
    plant drivers would be Mooney, Kiefer and two other
    employees, Thomerson and Penatello, who had worked
    for Spurlino less than two months before they were
    selected as portable plant drivers. Despite Stevenson’s
    seniority and his high score on the driving test, Spurlino
    did not assign him to the portable plant. According to
    Spurlino, the four selected drivers had better overall
    performance scores than the other drivers who had ap-
    plied, referring to a thirteen-factor performance review
    card completed by the company during the selection
    process.
    10                                              No. 07-3925
    Soon thereafter, one of the original portable plant drivers
    resigned from the company. Spurlino asked both Eversole
    and Bales if they wished to replace him as a driver at the
    portable plant. Both testified that they declined the posi-
    tion when Spurlino’s management again told them that
    they would lose their seniority status on the Kentucky
    Avenue call list upon their return.
    Around this time, Spurlino allegedly decided to create
    a new position of “alternate/backup” driver at the portable
    plant; however, it did not post this position or inform
    the Union. Instead, it approached drivers individually
    for the position and informed them that these alter-
    nate/backup drivers would be allowed to keep their
    places on the Kentucky Avenue call list because they
    were merely alternates. Spurlino selected three drivers to
    be alternate/backup drivers. One of these drivers had
    been employed at Spurlino less than two months before
    being given the job at the portable plant. Spurlino never
    offered Union leaders Eversole and Bales the alternate/
    backup driver position, allegedly because they already had
    declined an offer to work at the portable plant.
    The portable plant remained in operation from June 2006
    until February 2007. Once demand for high daily volumes
    of concrete dwindled at the stadium, however, Spurlino
    closed the portable plant. Despite its initial proclamations
    otherwise, after Spurlino closed the portable plant, it
    reassigned the portable plant drivers to the Kentucky
    Avenue facility and fully restored their previous seniority
    there. The Director alleges that the company initially
    misinformed the drivers that they would lose their senior-
    ity so that the Union leaders, who were all high on the
    No. 07-3925                                             11
    seniority list, would be discouraged from applying for a
    portable plant position.
    B. Administrative and District Court Proceedings
    In August 2006, the Union filed a series of charges
    against Spurlino, alleging unfair labor practices. These
    charges were consolidated by the General Counsel into a
    formal NLRB complaint. The complaint included allega-
    tions that the company had: (1) unlawfully discriminated
    against Eversole, Bales and Stevenson because of their
    union activities; (2) changed pre-existing policies of
    assigning work based on seniority without bargaining
    with the Union; and (3) unilaterally implemented an
    evaluation procedure for purposes of assigning certain
    work without bargaining with the Union.
    The Board’s ALJ conducted a hearing on these charges
    from April 24, 2007 to April 27, 2007, and then it declared
    a recess until July 10, 2007. On May 11, 2007, the Board’s
    Regional Director filed a section 10(j) petition in the
    district court, requesting injunctive relief pending the
    final decision of the Board. The ALJ then decided to
    accelerate the conclusion of the administrative hearing,
    and it heard evidence on May 30 and 31, 2007. Accordingly,
    the Regional Director requested that the hearing on the
    preliminary injunction in the district court be postponed
    until June so that the district court could consider the
    findings of the ALJ.
    The district court conducted a hearing on June 22, 2007,
    to hear evidence on the need for injunctive relief beyond
    that presented at the administrative hearing. On November
    12                                               No. 07-3925
    8, 2007, the district court concluded that the testimony,
    arguments and briefs presented in the district court, as
    well as the record in the administrative proceeding,
    weighed in favor of granting injunctive relief. Specifically,
    the court noted that:
    [T]he Director has shown a sufficient likelihood that
    Spurlino engaged in at least several of the charged
    unfair labor practices in violation of federal labor law.
    The Director has introduced substantial evidence that
    the company acted intentionally to punish publically
    the principal union organizers for their activities and
    to modify terms and conditions of employment unilat-
    erally. The effect and intent have been to show all
    employees in the bargaining unit that the newly-
    elected union could not deliver any improvement
    in wages and working conditions.
    R.30 at 2.
    The district court further concluded that preliminary
    injunctive relief under section 10(j) was “ ‘just and proper’
    because the company’s actions have had substantial effects
    in discouraging union activity and demoralizing the
    unionized employees.” 
    Id. at 3
    . Accordingly, on November
    8, 2007, the court entered an order enjoining Spurlino from:
    (1) retaliating, through discriminatory job assignments
    or otherwise, against leaders and members of the
    [Union], based upon those persons’ union membership,
    support, activity, or affiliation;
    (2) acting unilaterally to change terms and conditions
    of employment for those Spurlino Materials employees
    in the bargaining unit represented by the union;
    No. 07-3925                                             13
    (3) failing and refusing to bargain in good faith with
    the union over a collective bargaining agreement; and
    (4) in any like manner interfering with, restraining, or
    coercing employees’ exercise of their rights under
    Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act, 
    29 U.S.C. § 157
    , pending final resolution of the unfair labor
    practice charges now pending against Spurlino Materi-
    als, LLC based on activity in the company’s
    Indianapolis-area facilities.
    R.31 at 1-2. On December 4, 2007, Spurlino timely ap-
    pealed.
    On December 17, 2007, the ALJ issued a decision in the
    underlying case. He concluded that Spurlino had violated
    section 8(a)(3) by discriminating against Eversole, Bales
    and Stevenson in job assignments at the portable plant.
    He also found that Spurlino had violated section 8(a)(5)
    because it unilaterally established unit positions, and the
    selection criteria used to staff them, without bargaining
    with the Union. An appeal of this decision currently is
    pending before the NLRB.
    II
    DISCUSSION
    A. The Decision to Grant Injunctive Relief
    Section 10(j) of the National Labor Relations Act
    (“NLRA”) authorizes a district court to order injunctive
    relief pending the NLRB’s final disposition of an unfair
    labor practices claim if such relief would be “just and
    14                                                  No. 07-3925
    proper.” 
    29 U.S.C. § 160
    (j). The court looks to the same
    factors to which it looks in other contexts when deciding
    whether to grant injunctive relief: “the lack of an adequate
    remedy at law, the balance of potential harms posed by
    the denial or grant of interim relief, the public interest,
    and the petitioner’s likelihood of success on the merits of
    its complaint.” Bloedorn v. Francisco Foods, Inc., 
    276 F.3d 270
    ,
    286 (7th Cir. 2001) (citing Kinney v. Pioneer Press, 
    881 F.2d 485
    , 490 & n.3, 493 (7th Cir. 1989)); see also NLRB v. Elec-
    tro-Voice, Inc., 
    83 F.3d 1559
    , 1566 (7th Cir. 1996), cert. denied,
    
    519 U.S. 1055
     (1997). The Regional Director is entitled
    to interim relief when:
    (1) the Director has no adequate remedy at law;
    (2) the labor effort would face irreparable harm with-
    out interim relief, and the prospect of that harm
    outweighs any harm posed to the employer by the
    proposed injunction;
    (3) “public harm” would occur in the absence of
    interim relief;
    (4) the Director has a reasonable likelihood of prevail-
    ing on the merits of his complaint.
    Bloedorn, 
    276 F.3d at 286
    . The Director bears the burden of
    establishing the first, third and fourth of these circum-
    stances by a preponderance of the evidence. 
    Id.
     The
    second prong is evaluated on a sliding scale: The better
    the Director’s case on the merits, the less its burden to
    prove that the harm in delay would be irreparable, and
    vice versa. 
    Id. at 286-87
    .
    We review the district court’s decision to grant interim
    injunctive relief under section 10(j) for an abuse of discre-
    No. 07-3925                                                15
    tion. Bloedorn, 
    276 F.3d at 286
    ; Electro-Voice, 
    83 F.3d at 1566
    . We examine the district court’s decision only to
    ensure that it does not “depend[] on faulty legal premises,
    clearly erroneous factual findings, or improper applica-
    tion of the criteria governing preliminary injunctive
    relief.” Electro-Voice, 
    83 F.3d at 1566
     (quoting Kinney, 
    881 F.2d at 493
    ).
    1. Adequate Remedies at Law
    As we noted in Bloedorn, “[s]ection 10(j) relief is an
    extraordinary remedy . . . reserved for ‘those situations in
    which the effective enforcement of the NLRA is threatened
    by the delays inherent in the NLRB dispute resolution
    process.’ ” 
    276 F.3d at 297
     (quoting Szabo v. P*I*E Nation-
    wide, Inc., 
    878 F.2d 207
    , 209 (7th Cir. 1989)). We first
    consider whether the district court clearly erred when it
    determined that the rights of the employees under the
    NLRA would suffer irreparable harm from the passage
    of time between the filing of charges and the resolution of
    the complaint by the NLRB. Id.; see also Roland Mach. Co. v.
    Dresser Indus., Inc., 
    749 F.2d 380
    , 386 (7th Cir. 1984) (“Only
    if [the employees] will suffer irreparable harm in the
    interim—that is, harm that cannot be prevented or fully
    rectified by the final judgment after trial—can [they] get
    a preliminary injunction.”).
    The process of NLRB resolution has long been recognized
    as extraordinarily slow—indeed, the purpose of section
    10(j) was to prevent employers from taking advantage
    of this significant passage of time in their efforts to quash
    16                                                 No. 07-3925
    union support in the interim. See NLRB v. P*I*E Nationwide,
    Inc., 
    894 F.2d 887
    , 891 (7th Cir. 1990); Szabo, 878 F.2d at 209-
    10; Kinney, 
    881 F.2d at 493-94
    . The longer that an
    employer is able to chill union participation or avoid
    bargaining with a union, the less likely it is that the union
    will be able to organize and to represent employees
    effectively once the NLRB issues its final order. See
    Bloedorn, 
    276 F.3d at 299
    ; see also Electro-Voice, 
    83 F.3d at 1573
    ; Schaub v. W. Mich. Plumbing & Heating, Inc., 
    250 F.3d 962
    , 971 (6th Cir. 2001) (noting the significant effects of
    chill on the ability of a union to organize). This risk is
    particularly true in cases involving fledgling unions, where
    the passage of time is especially critical. See Arlook v. S.
    Lichtenberg & Co., Inc., 
    952 F.2d 367
    , 373 (11th Cir. 1992).
    Here, the district court, noting the precipitous decline
    in Union participation, credited the testimony of many
    Spurlino employees who stated that they were hesitant to
    attend Union meetings because they feared discrimina-
    tion. If Spurlino is allowed to proceed in its quest to defeat
    the Union before it becomes established, the court found,
    then merely requiring the company to pay its employees
    damages after the fact will not remedy the adverse
    impact to the Union and the employees in the interim
    period.
    Spurlino contends that immediate injunctive relief is
    unnecessary in this case. In support, it notes that the
    Regional Director filed a motion to postpone for a few
    weeks the district court’s hearing on the preliminary
    injunction, which, in Spurlino’s view, shows that the need
    for injunctive relief is not urgent. See Schaub v. Detroit
    No. 07-3925                                                 17
    Newspaper Agency, 
    154 F.3d 276
    , 280 (6th Cir. 1998) (holding
    that the Director’s 18-month delay in filing a petition
    for injunction showed that interim relief was unnecessary);
    but see Gottfried v. Frankel, 
    818 F.2d 485
    , 495 (6th Cir. 1987)
    (holding that delay is a factor that may be considered, but
    it is not particularly probative; the question is whether
    interim relief is necessary to restore the parties to the
    status quo). Spurlino also contends that evidence in the
    record shows that the Union is not in precipitous decline,
    and it suggests that any reduction in attendance at Union
    meetings is because the meetings are held on Friday
    evenings, a popular time for other activities.
    Spurlino’s arguments, however, show only that there
    may be an alternative view of the evidence presented to
    the district court; they do not establish that the district
    court’s view of the evidence was clearly erroneous. After
    a review of the record, we must conclude that the
    district court did not clearly err when it found that an
    award of damages in future years would be an inade-
    quate remedy in this case.
    2. Balance of Harms
    For the same reasons that the district court concluded
    that the Director has no adequate remedy at law, it also
    concluded that the employees are likely to suffer sub-
    stantial and irreparable harm if Spurlino is allowed to
    continue its effort to subvert the Union until the case is
    resolved by the NLRB. As we noted in Electro-Voice:
    The deprivation to employees from the delay in bar-
    gaining and the diminution of union support is im-
    18                                               No. 07-3925
    measurable. That loss, combined with the likelihood
    that the Board’s ability to rectify the harm is diminish-
    ing with time, equals a sufficient demonstration of
    irreparable harm to the collective bargaining process.
    
    83 F.3d at 1573
    .
    Spurlino first contends that the Director cannot show a
    likelihood of irreparable harm during the interim period
    because the actions about which the employees complain
    largely involved assignments to the portable plant, which
    is no longer in operation. The district court disagreed,
    however, and noted that Spurlino continues to make
    daily decisions about other work assignments and the
    terms and conditions of employment. The court concluded
    that the Director had presented evidence of Spurlino’s
    clear hostility toward the Union, as well as a pattern of
    discrimination against employees active in the Union. It
    found that there was a substantial risk that Spurlino would
    continue its efforts to undermine the Union while the
    dispute was pending before the NLRB, and that irreparable
    harm was likely to result. After a review of the record, we
    cannot say that the district court’s view of the evidence
    was clearly erroneous.
    Spurlino next contends that an injunction would present
    a risk of substantial and irreparable harm to the company
    because it would subject it to contempt proceedings upon
    any further allegations of labor law violations. Although
    an injunction certainly would restrict Spurlino’s ability to
    engage in unfair labor practices, as well as perhaps
    subject it to an increased risk of unwarranted contempt
    proceedings, Spurlino does not explain why this potential
    No. 07-3925                                                 19
    harm would be irreparable. Furthermore, even if the com-
    pany were at risk of irreparable harm, Spurlino makes
    no effort to weigh this risk against the risk of harm to the
    Union.
    Additionally, the strength of the Director’s case on the
    merits affects a court’s assessment of the relative harms
    posed by the grant or denial of injunctive relief: The
    greater a party’s prospects of prevailing on the merits,
    the less compelling a showing of irreparable harm is
    required. Bloedorn, 
    276 F.3d at 286-87
    ; Electro-Voice, 
    83 F.3d at 1568
    . As we discuss below, the district court’s conclu-
    sion that the Regional Director has a high likelihood of
    success on the merits is supported by the record; accord-
    ingly, he need not make an extremely strong showing of
    irreparable harm in order to warrant granting interim
    relief.
    3. Public Interest
    The district court concluded that granting preliminary
    injunctive relief here was in the public interest. As we
    noted in Electro-Voice, “[t]he public interest is furthered, in
    part, by ensuring that an unfair labor practice will not
    succeed because the Board takes too long to investigate
    and adjudicate the charge.” 
    83 F.3d at 1574
     (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). Spurlino presented
    no evidence of public harm to challenge the district court’s
    decision. Accordingly, we conclude that the district court
    correctly determined preliminary injunctive relief in this
    case to be in the public interest.
    20                                                   No. 07-3925
    4. Likelihood of Success on the Merits
    We have held that, “in evaluating the likelihood of
    success, it is not the district court’s responsibility, nor is it
    ours, to rule on the merits of the Director’s complaint”;
    deciding the merits of the case is the sole province of the
    Board. Bloedorn, 
    276 F.3d at 287
    . Our inquiry is confined
    to the likelihood that the Director will prevail before the
    Board. 
    Id.
     “For our purposes, we must decide whether the
    Director has a better than negligible chance of success:
    whether the Director has ‘some chance’ of succeeding on
    the merits.” Electro-Voice, 
    83 F.3d at 1568
    . In evaluating
    this likelihood, “given the Board’s expertise in matters
    of labor relations, we must be ‘hospitable’ to the General
    Counsel’s view of the law.” Bloedorn, 
    276 F.3d at 287
    (citation omitted). We also must give some measure of
    deference to the view of the ALJ, 
    id. at 288
    ,4 as well as our
    traditional deference to the findings of the district court.
    On this appeal, we are asked only to determine whether
    the district court clearly erred when it concluded that
    the Regional Director’s evidence was sufficient to
    establish a “better than negligible” chance of success on
    the merits. Electro-Voice, 
    83 F.3d at 1570
    .
    4
    The ALJ’s opinion certainly is relevant to the propriety of
    section 10(j) relief. Evaluating the Director’s likelihood of
    success calls for a predictive judgment about how the NLRB
    is likely to rule. The ALJ is the NLRB’s first-level decisionmaker,
    and, “[h]aving presided over the merits hearing, the ALJ’s
    factual and legal determinations supply a useful benchmark
    against which the Director’s prospects of success may be
    weighed.” Bloedorn v. Francisco Foods, Inc., 
    276 F.3d 270
    , 288
    (7th Cir. 2001).
    No. 07-3925                                               21
    The district court considered the entire record, including
    the testimony of Union supporters, employees either
    neutral or against the Union and management. It con-
    cluded that the Director had made a strong showing of a
    likelihood of success on the merits on the retalia-
    tion/discrimination charge. It also concluded that the
    Director had made a strong showing of likelihood of
    success on the merits of the charge that Spurlino made
    unilateral changes in the terms and conditions of employ-
    ment without bargaining over those issues. Finally, the
    court concluded that the Director had made “at least a
    substantial showing” that Spurlino had not been bargain-
    ing in good faith. R.30 at 23.
    Spurlino’s main contention is that the PLA that gov-
    erned the stadium project superceded any obligations
    that the company might have had to bargain with the
    Union or to respect its employees’ seniority; the company
    also contends that the PLA provided it with the right to
    assign the stadium project work to whomever it pleased.
    In support of its contention, Spurlino points to section 3.12
    of the PLA, which states: “Individual seniority will not be
    recognized or applied to employees working on the
    Project.” R.19, Joint Ex. 4, at 12.
    The district court, however, considered this argument
    and concluded that “Spurlino’s position misinterprets the
    PLA.” R.30 at 18. In the view of the district court, the PLA
    provision barring individual seniority meant only that
    there would be no effort to recognize seniority as
    between employees of different employers working at the
    stadium site. Such a provision was sensible, it noted,
    22                                              No. 07-3925
    considering that managing the large stadium project
    likely would be nearly impossible if individual seniority
    had to be recognized among different employers. The
    court concluded that the many major unions whose
    members worked on the stadium had not surrendered all
    of their employees’ internal seniority rights by signing on
    to the PLA. 
    Id.
     It noted that other provisions of the agree-
    ment specified that, unless there was a specific conflict
    between the PLA and existing collective bargaining
    agreements, the collective bargaining agreements would
    remain in effect.
    The ALJ took the same view as the district court. He also
    concluded that, even if Spurlino had no obligation to
    assign the most senior drivers to the portable plant, the
    company’s treatment of the portable plant drivers’ overall
    seniority still violated section 8(a)(5) because an em-
    ployee’s work at the stadium project adversely affected
    the terms and conditions of the rest of his employment
    with the company (i.e., he was moved to the bottom of the
    Kentucky Avenue seniority list). Accordingly, we cannot
    say that the district court’s interpretation of the PLA
    was unreasonable.
    In sum, we conclude that the district court properly
    considered the relevant factors when deciding whether
    to issue a preliminary injunction. Spurlino failed to show
    that the court relied upon an error of law or a clearly
    erroneous interpretation of the evidence in the record.
    Therefore, we hold that the district court did not abuse its
    discretion when it granted the Director’s motion for
    interim injunctive relief under section 10(j).
    No. 07-3925                                               23
    B. Scope of the Injunction
    Although we review the decision to grant injunctive
    relief for an abuse of discretion, “whether the terms of an
    injunction fulfill the mandates of Rule 65(d) is a question
    of law that we review without deference.” See Int’l Rectifier
    Corp. v. Ixys Corp., 
    383 F.3d 1312
    , 1315 (Fed. Cir. 2004).
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(d) requires that
    injunctions be stated specifically and “describe in reason-
    able detail—and not by referring to the complaint or other
    document—the act or acts restrained or required.” Injunc-
    tions that “merely instruct the enjoined party not to
    violate a statute” generally are overbroad, increasing “the
    likelihood of unwarranted contempt proceedings for
    acts unlike or unrelated to those originally judged unlaw-
    ful.” Ixys, 
    383 F.3d at 1315
    .
    As the Supreme Court has explained:
    A federal court has broad power to restrain acts which
    are of the same type or class as unlawful acts which
    the court has found to have been committed or whose
    commission in the future unless enjoined, may fairly
    be anticipated from the defendant’s conduct in the
    past. But the mere fact that a court has found that a
    defendant has committed an act in violation of a
    statute does not justify an injunction broadly to obey
    the statute and thus subject the defendant to con-
    tempt proceedings if he shall at any time in the future
    commit some new violation unlike and unrelated to
    that with which he was originally charged.
    ....
    24                                                No. 07-3925
    To justify an order restraining other violations it must
    appear that they bear some resemblance to that which
    the employer has committed or that danger of their
    commission in the future is to be anticipated from
    the course of his conduct in the past.
    NLRB v. Express Pub. Co., 
    312 U.S. 426
    , 435-37 (1941).
    Spurlino objects to paragraph 1 of the injunction because
    it bars retaliation against all members of the Union,
    “through discriminatory job assignments or otherwise.” R.31
    at 1. The complaint, it notes, merely alleged that Spurlino
    had discriminated against Union leaders Eversole, Bales
    and Stevenson—not all the other members of the Union.
    Spurlino contends that the district court had no reason to
    believe that it was likely to retaliate against others. It also
    submits that the court’s use of “otherwise” is vague and
    overbroad. Similarly, Spurlino objects to paragraph 2 of the
    injunction because it enjoins all unilateral actions to
    change the terms and conditions of employment, although
    the only allegations of unilateral action in the complaint
    involved the portable plant. Spurlino submits that there
    is no evidence that the company has taken or will take
    other unilateral actions, and the court’s prohibition
    against all unilateral action therefore is overbroad.
    In our view, the district court reasonably found a contin-
    uous and deliberate effort on the part of Spurlino to
    undermine the Union organization effort. Accordingly, it
    concluded that there was a likelihood that the company
    would act further to thwart the Union’s efforts; it also
    found that Spurlino was likely to refuse to negotiate with
    the Union on the terms and conditions of employment
    No. 07-3925                                                  25
    in the future. Given these specific findings, supported by
    evidence in the record, paragraphs 1 and 2 do not exceed
    the scope of the court’s authority to enjoin similar actions
    by the company. See Express, 
    312 U.S. at 435
     (“A federal
    court has broad power to restrain acts which are of the
    same type or class as unlawful acts which the court has
    found to have been committed or whose commission in
    the future unless enjoined, may fairly be anticipated
    from the defendant’s conduct in the past.”).
    Spurlino also objects to paragraph 3 of the injunction on
    the ground that it is overbroad. Although the Director’s
    petition for an injunction included no allegations of a
    general refusal to bargain, the district court found that
    Spurlino had refused to bargain in good faith throughout
    the eighteen months of contract negotiations with the
    Union: Therefore, it enjoined the company from “failing
    and refusing to bargain in good faith over a collective
    bargaining agreement.” R.31 at 2. Spurlino contends that
    the injunction against a general failure to bargain was
    unwarranted because it was broader than the specific
    charges in the complaint.
    The cases upon which Spurlino relies are not controlling.
    Spurlino invites our attention to Gottfried v. Frankel, 
    818 F.2d 485
     (6th Cir. 1987), which vacated a part of an injunc-
    tion that prohibited the employer from failing to bargain
    because no failure-to-bargain section 8(a)(5) claim was
    alleged. The court there emphasized, however, that the
    parties had stipulated that this was not a “refusal to
    bargain” case, and the district court had characterized all
    of the allegations as violations of sections 8(a)(1) or (3), and
    26                                               No. 07-3925
    not section 8(a)(5). Id.; see also Gaddy v. Abex Corp., 
    884 F.2d 312
    , 318 (7th Cir. 1989) (holding that an injunction
    against retaliation was improper because there never
    was any allegation of retaliation by the defendants). Here,
    on the other hand, the Director did allege a violation of
    section 8(a)(5). See R.1 at 6. He also introduced evidence
    that the company intentionally had been dragging out
    negotiations and undermining Union support within the
    company. The district court concluded from this evidence
    that there had been a pattern of refusal to bargain on the
    part of the company and that further refusals were likely:
    Keeping in mind this court’s limited role, for present
    purposes, the court finds that the weight of evidence
    tends to favor the Board’s position on this question.
    Eversole and Bales have no incentive to drag out the
    bargaining. Spurlino’s conduct in making unilateral
    changes without bargaining over them, and the sub-
    stantial evidence of a broader campaign to undermine
    the union by means both fair and foul, together per-
    suade the court that Spurlino appears not to be bar-
    gaining in good faith.
    R.30 at 21. The district court determined that this element
    of the injunction was necessary “to remedy the company’s
    long strategy of delay and obstruction of the union’s
    ability to represent its members effectively.” Id. at 28.
    Therefore, its injunction against similar refusals to
    bargain collectively was within its discretion. The Director
    brought a claim regarding a specific instance of
    Spurlino’s refusal to bargain, and the district court rea-
    sonably determined that similar refusals were likely.
    No. 07-3925                                                      27
    “[H]aving found in this case that respondent has refused
    to bargain,” Express, 
    312 U.S. at 432
    , the district court acted
    within its authority when it enjoined generally additional
    refusals to bargain. See also 
    id. at 435
    ; NLRB v. Mayrath Co.,
    
    319 F.2d 424
    , 428 (7th Cir. 1963).
    Finally, Spurlino contends that paragraph 4 of the
    injunction is overbroad because it enjoins the company
    from “in any like manner interfering with, restraining, or
    coercing employees’ exercise of their rights under Section
    7 of the [NLRA].” R.31 at 2. Spurlino contends that this
    generalized provision is strikingly similar to the order,
    struck down by the Supreme Court in Express, which
    enjoined the company from “in any manner interfering
    with, restraining, or coercing its employees in the exercise
    of their rights . . . as guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act.”
    
    312 U.S. at 430
    .5
    5
    See also NLRB v. Ampex Corp., 
    442 F.2d 82
    , 86-87 (7th Cir. 1971)
    (striking as overbroad an order that prevented the company
    from acting “in any other manner” to violate the Act); NLRB v.
    Elliott-Williams Co., 
    345 F.2d 460
    , 464-65 (7th Cir. 1965) (striking
    down as overbroad a portion of an order that enjoined an
    employer from “in any other manner” interfering with its
    employees’ organizational and bargaining rights); NLRB v.
    Thompson Ramo Woolridge, Inc., 
    305 F.2d 807
    , 810-11 (7th Cir.
    1962) (refusing to enforce an order that prohibited violations
    of the statute “in any other manner”); NLRB v. J.I. Case Co., 
    134 F.2d 70
    , 73 (7th Cir. 1943) (refusing to enforce an order restrain-
    ing violations of the act “in any manner”); NLRB v. Stone, 
    125 F.2d 752
    , 757 (7th Cir. 1942) (similarly striking down an injunc-
    tion prohibiting violations “in any other manner”).
    28                                             No. 07-3925
    The provision at issue in this case, at first blush, does
    appear strikingly similar to the injunction found to be
    overbroad in Express; nevertheless, there is one important
    distinction. The order struck down in Express prohibited
    the company from “in any manner” violating the Act,
    
    312 U.S. at 430
    ; the district court’s order in this case,
    however, is conditioned by the words “in any like manner.”
    R.31 at 2. Although the Supreme Court rejected broad
    injunctions simply “to obey the statute,” it expressly
    noted that, when an employer is found to have violated
    the labor laws, district courts maintained broad authority
    to restrain employers from committing “other related
    unlawful acts.” Express, 
    312 U.S. at 435-36
    .
    In NLRB v. Mutual Maintenance Service Co., Inc., 
    632 F.2d 33
    , 37 n.5 (7th Cir. 1980), we enforced an order of the
    NLRB that prevented the employer from, “in any like
    manner, interfering with, restraining or coercing its
    employees in the exercise of the rights under Section 7 of
    the Act.” Although we did not address specifically
    whether this provision was overbroad, we did note with
    approval the fact that the NLRB’s final order had substi-
    tuted the “narrower language” of “in any like manner” for
    the ALJ’s recommended “any other manner.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis
    added). Similarly, in Electromation, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    35 F.3d 1148
    , 1155 (7th Cir. 1994), we enforced an order with
    almost identical language to the order in this case. There,
    the Board’s order required the company to: “(1) cease
    and desist from dominating, assisting, or otherwise
    supporting the action committees and in any like manner
    interfering with, restraining, or coercing employees in
    No. 07-3925                                                29
    the exercise of their Section 7 rights.” Id.; see also NLRB v.
    H.P.&T. Inc., 
    947 F.2d 945
     (6th Cir. 1991); NLRB v. Aquatech,
    Inc., 
    926 F.2d 538
    , 539 (6th Cir. 1991) (enforcing similar
    orders).
    The injunction at issue here prohibits only those actions
    similar to the violations already committed by Spurlino;
    it does not encompass unrelated violations of the NLRA. It
    is therefore supported by our case law. Accordingly, we
    must hold that the injunction issued in this case is suffi-
    ciently specific to survive scrutiny under Federal Rule
    of Civil Procedure 65(d) and the standard set forth in
    Express.
    Conclusion
    For the reasons explained in this opinion, we affirm
    the judgment of the district court.
    A FFIRMED
    30                                             No. 07-3925
    M ANION, Circuit Judge, concurring. I write separately
    simply to reiterate that the third paragraph of the injunc-
    tion does not enjoin any refusals to bargain, but, as the
    court holds, supra at 26, only those refusals to bargain
    that are similar to those alleged by the Director and found
    by the district court. The Director alleged in its petition
    that Spurlino created the positions of portable batch plant
    driver and back-up portable batch plant driver without
    giving prior notice to the Union and without affording
    the Union an opportunity to bargain with Spurlino over
    those positions. Pet. for Inj. 5-6. Notably, the Director
    did not allege that Spurlino was engaging in overall bad-
    faith bargaining. With that in mind, I join the court’s
    opinion in full.
    10-8-08
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 07-3925

Judges: Ripple

Filed Date: 10/8/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/24/2015

Authorities (17)

National Labor Relations Board v. Express Publishing Co. , 61 S. Ct. 693 ( 1941 )

william-c-schaub-regional-director-of-the-seventh-region-of-the-national , 154 F.3d 276 ( 1998 )

electromation-incorporated-petitioner-cross-respondent-v-national-labor , 35 F.3d 1148 ( 1994 )

bernard-gottfried-regional-director-of-the-seventh-region-of-the-national , 818 F.2d 485 ( 1987 )

philip-e-bloedorn-regional-director-of-region-30-of-the-national-labor , 276 F.3d 270 ( 2001 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Stone , 125 F.2d 752 ( 1942 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Elliott-Williams Co., Inc. , 345 F.2d 460 ( 1965 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Aquatech, Inc. , 926 F.2d 538 ( 1991 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Thompson Ramo Wooldridge, ... , 305 F.2d 807 ( 1962 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Mayrath Company , 319 F.2d 424 ( 1963 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Ampex Corporation , 442 F.2d 82 ( 1971 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Mutual Maintenance ... , 632 F.2d 33 ( 1980 )

National Labor Relations Board v. Electro-Voice, ... , 83 F.3d 1559 ( 1996 )

Elizabeth Kinney, Regional Director of the Thirteenth ... , 881 F.2d 485 ( 1989 )

Carolyn Gaddy v. Abex Corporation and Miguel Solis , 884 F.2d 312 ( 1989 )

International Rectifier Corporation v. Ixys Corporation , 383 F.3d 1312 ( 2004 )

William C. Schaub, Jr. v. West Michigan Plumbing & Heating, ... , 250 F.3d 962 ( 2001 )

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