Southern Bakeries, LLC v. NLRB ( 2019 )


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  •                   United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 18-2370
    No. 18-2568
    ___________________________
    Southern Bakeries, LLC
    lllllllllllllllllllllPetitioner/Cross-Respondent
    v.
    National Labor Relations Board
    lllllllllllllllllllllRespondent/Cross-Petitioner
    ___________
    Review of a Decision and Order of the
    National Labor Relations Board
    ____________
    Submitted: April 17, 2019
    Filed: September 11, 2019
    ____________
    Before LOKEN, WOLLMAN, and STRAS, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    LOKEN, Circuit Judge.
    After an evidentiary hearing, a National Labor Relations Board Administrative
    Law Judge (ALJ) determined that Southern Bakeries, LLC, (i) violated Sections
    8(a)(1) and (3) of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) by relying on a prior
    unlawful discipline in disciplining and terminating Lorraine Marks Briggs, and
    designating her “not for rehire”; and (ii) violated Section 8(a)(1) by directing Cheryl
    Muldew not to discuss her discipline with other employees and then telling her she
    was being discharged in part for doing so. See 
    29 U.S.C. § 158
    (a)(1) and (3).
    Southern Bakeries appealed those rulings to the Board, which substantially affirmed
    the ALJ’s decision. Southern Bakeries petitions to set aside the Board’s Decision and
    Order; the General Counsel cross-petitions to enforce the Order. Applying the well-
    established deferential standard of review, we enforce the Board’s Order in part.
    I. Marks Briggs.
    A. Background. Southern Bakeries acquired a commercial bakery in Hope,
    Arkansas in 2005, retaining most employees and recognizing the existing union.
    Beginning in 2009, employees filed three decertification petitions with the Board,
    expressing dissatisfaction with the union. Each time, the union responded with unfair
    labor practice charges, and no election was held. The protracted dispute resulted in
    Southern Bakeries withdrawing recognition of the union in July 2013, and the
    Board’s General Counsel filing a complaint charging Southern Bakeries with
    numerous unfair labor practices. Among the charges was that the company violated
    Sections 8(a)(1) and (3) on May 30, 2013 when it issued a “final written warning and
    suspension” to Marks Briggs, a long-time employee and active union supporter, after
    she left her production line to use the restroom without giving proper notice.
    Marks Biggs testified at a February 2014 hearing attended by Rickey Ledbetter,
    Southern Bakeries’ vice-president and general manager. The ALJ issued his decision
    in July 2014, concluding the General Counsel proved that union animus was a
    substantial or motivating factor in Marks Briggs’s discipline, and that Southern
    Bakeries failed to prove it would have taken the same action even in the absence of
    her protected union activity.1 The ALJ’s proposed remedy included: “Within 14 days
    1
    This format for allocating the burden of proof in § 8(a)(1) and (3) cases was
    adopted by the Board in Wright Line, 
    251 NLRB 1083
     (1980), enforced, 662 F.2d
    -2-
    from the date of the Board’s Order, remove from [Southern Bakeries’] files any
    reference to the unlawful disciplinary investigations, written warning . . . and
    suspension concerning Marks [Briggs and] . . . notify [her] that such discipline will
    not be used against [her] in any way.” Southern Bakeries, LLC, No. 15-CA-101311,
    slip op. at 34, 
    2014 WL 35673206
     at p.25 (N.L.R.B. July 17, 2014).
    Southern Bakeries appealed this ruling to the Board and then to this court. The
    Board upheld this part of the ALJ’s decision, including the above-quoted remedy, in
    August 2016. Southern Bakeries, LLC, 
    364 NLRB No. 64
    , 
    2016 WL 4157598
     at *10
    (2016). We affirmed this portion of the Board’s order in September 2017, concluding
    there was sufficient evidence to support the Board’s conclusion that Marks Briggs’s
    discipline was motivated by union animus. Southern Bakeries, LLC v. N.L.R.B., 
    871 F.3d 811
    , 825 (8th Cir. 2017).
    In October 2015, there was still no recognized union at the Southern Bakeries
    facility. On October 8, the newly hired bread line production manager, Tony Hagood,
    saw Marks Briggs pick up and eat a piece of topping off a loaf of apple bread coming
    down the line. Hagood had advised employees shortly after he was hired that this
    type of “grazing” would no longer be tolerated, as it was contrary to food safety law
    and practice. Hagood submitted a disciplinary action form to the human resources
    department describing Marks Briggs’s violation of this rule. HR manager Eric
    McNiel, newly hired on October 12, consulted with Ledbetter, who informed McNiel
    of Marks Briggs’s 2013 final written warning. The two decided to issue her a “Last
    Chance Agreement,” the functional equivalent of a final written warning. The
    October 16, 2015 Last Chance Agreement stated:
    899 (1st Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 
    455 U.S. 989
     (1982), and upheld by the Supreme
    Court in N.L.R.B. v. Transp. Mgmt. Corp., 
    462 U.S. 393
    , 401-03 (1983). Its use in
    deciding the issue in this case is not disputed.
    -3-
    After a management review of the facts surrounding the incident and
    your previous record for rule violations, your behavior does call for
    immediate discharge; however, management has considered all
    extenuating circumstances, including 24 years of service. Management
    believes a “Last Chance Agreement” is more appropriate.
    In January 2016, Southern Bakeries met with each bread line employee,
    including Marks Briggs, to discuss the tone of interpersonal relationships in the
    workplace; each employee signed a form acknowledging receipt of a copy of facility
    rules and the policy against harassment. On February 8, with the bread line stopped,
    Marks Briggs left her work station without informing a supervisor and walked to a
    wash stand in another area. She walked close by another employee and their
    shoulders bumped. The other employee complained that Marks Briggs bumped her
    on purpose and joked about it when she returned to her work station. Marks Briggs
    claimed the other employee bumped into her. McNiel interviewed the involved
    parties. On February 19, McNiel and Hagood presented Marks Briggs a termination
    notice stating she was being discharged for leaving her work area without permission,
    provoking a fight or creating a hostile or unpleasant workplace, and disobeying a
    supervisor’s instruction (the January 2016 meeting). The notice further stated:
    A review of your work history includes two (2) final warnings “Last
    Chance Agreements” regarding your violation[s] . . . on May 30, 2013
    and . . . on October 16, 2015 . . . . After a management review of the
    facts surrounding the incidents . . . and taking into account the “Last
    Chance Agreements” given to you on May 30, 2013 . . . and October 17,
    2015 . . . your behavior is unacceptable and your employment is
    terminated.
    Hagood wrote “do not rehire” on Marks Briggs’s internal termination document.
    The ALJ concluded that Southern Bakeries violated the NLRA when it
    disciplined Marks Briggs in October 2015 and then discharged her in February 2016:
    -4-
    Both the Last Chance Warning given to Marks Briggs and her
    discharge violate Section 8(a)(3) and (1) because they relied on the prior
    unlawful warning given to her on May 30, 2013, and because [Southern
    Bakeries] failed to establish it would have disciplined her in the same
    way in October 2015 or . . . discharged her absent that reliance.
    With regard to the February 2016 interaction . . . [Southern
    Bakeries] had a reasonable basis for concluding that Marks Briggs
    intended to antagonize [the other employee]. . . . However, the record
    does not show that [Southern Bakeries] had sufficient cause, absent
    reliance on the illegal warning, to discharge Marks Briggs. . . . [T]he
    physical contact between the two was so insignificant that [an employee]
    standing right next to them, did not even notice it.
    *    *   *     *   *
    The record belies [Southern Bakeries’] suggestion that Hagood’s
    notation was an inadvertent error made without discriminatory
    intent. . . . I reject this explanation and find that the “Do Not Rehire”
    notation was discriminatorily motivated.
    On appeal, the Board upheld the ALJ’s decision that Southern Bakeries
    violated Sections 8(a)(3) and (1):
    An employer’s imposition of discipline violates Section 8(a)(3)
    and (1) if it relies on prior discipline that violates Section 8(a)(3) and
    (1), and the employer fails to show it would have issued the same
    discipline even without reliance on the prior unlawful discipline. . . . On
    their face, the October 2015 last chance agreement, the February 2016
    discharge, and the subsequent do-no-rehire notation all partially relied
    on the unlawful May 2013 last chance agreement. . . . [Southern
    Bakeries] failed to prove that it would have issued the same discipline
    even had it not relied on the unlawful May 2013 last chance agreement.
    -5-
    Section 8 (a)(4) of the NLRA provides that it is an unfair labor practice “to discharge
    or otherwise discriminate against an employee because he has filed charges or given
    testimony under this subchapter,” as Marks Briggs did in 2013 and 2014. The Board
    reversed the ALJ’s decision that Southern Bakeries also violated Section 8(a)(4) in
    disciplining Marks Briggs in 2015 and 2016 because “[t]he General Counsel failed
    to make the showing of animus necessary to prove Section 8(a)(4) violations.”
    B. Discussion. “We will enforce the Board’s order as long as the Board
    correctly applied the law, and its findings are supported by substantial evidence, even
    if we might have reached a different decision on de novo review.” Miklin Enters., Inc.
    v. N.L.R.B., 
    861 F.3d 812
    , 826 (8th Cir. 2017) (en banc; quotation omitted). The
    Board concluded that Southern Bakeries violated Sections 8(a)(1) and (3) because it
    relied on an unlawful May 30, 2013 final written warning in imposing last clear
    chance discipline on Marks Briggs in October 2015, discharging her in February
    2016, and marking her not eligible for rehire. There are two serious problems with
    the Board’s legal analysis.
    First, the May 2013 final written warning was not “unlawful” when the events
    in question took place. In the prior unfair labor practice proceedings, the ALJ in July
    2014 declared it unlawful and proposed as a remedy that Southern Bakeries remove
    any reference to this unlawful written warning from its personnel files and notify
    Marks Briggs it will not be used against her “[w]ithin 14 days from the date of the
    Board’s Order. ” Southern Bakeries’ appeal from that decision was pending until the
    Board upheld it in August 2016, and Southern Bakeries’ petition for review was
    pending in this court until September 2017. The Board has broadly asserted that “a
    legitimate basis for discharge or suspension cannot be established by unlawful
    disciplinary warnings.” Dynamics Corp., 
    296 NLRB 1252
    , 1256 (1989), enforced,
    
    928 F.2d 609
     (2d Cir. 1991), cited in N.L.R.B. v. RELCO Locomotives, Inc., 
    734 F.3d 764
    , 787 (8th Cir. 2013). But neither the Board’s opinion nor its brief to this
    court cited a prior case where this principle was applied to “unlawful” discipline that
    -6-
    was still in litigation when the subsequent discipline was imposed. Here, the Board
    faulted new Southern Bakeries managers for taking into account prior discipline that
    should have been “expunged” from its records. But there was no order to expunge
    in October 2015 and February 2016, and the ALJ’s decision that the prior discipline
    violated Section 8(a)(1) or 8(a)(3) was being contested on appeal. It was legal error
    for the ALJ and the Board to base their decision in this case entirely on this factor.
    Second, in applying its per se rule in this case, the Board lost sight of the
    General Counsel’s burden to prove an 8(a)(1) and 8(a)(3) violation. Section 8(a)(3)
    requires proof that the employer disciplined or discharged an employee “to encourage
    or discourage membership in any labor organization.” “To prove discriminatory
    discharge [under the Wright Line framework], the General Counsel must establish
    that the employee was discharged for his union activities or membership -- that but
    for his union activities or membership, he would not have been discharged.”
    Nicholas Alum., LLC v. N.L.R.B., 
    797 F.3d 548
    , 554 (8th Cir. 2015) (quotation
    omitted). “There must be a nexus between the union activity and the discharge.” 
    Id. at 555
     (Melloy, J., concurring). Absent proof of this nexus, the General Counsel fails
    to establish a prima facie case, and the employer need not prove that it would have
    taken the same action even in the absence of the employee’s protected activity. This
    format preserves the employer’s right under the NLRA to suspend or discharge an
    employee “for cause.” 
    29 U.S.C. § 160
    (c); see Transp. Mgmt. Corp., 
    462 U.S. at 401
    .
    This essential principle was satisfied in the “prior unlawful discipline” cases
    on which the Board relied. In Dynamics Corp., because the employer applied a
    progressive discipline system, the subsequent discharges were necessarily based on
    earlier discipline that had unlawfully reflected union animus. 296 NLRB at 254; 
    928 F.2d at 613-14
    . In RELCO, the employee’s discharge was premised on a performance
    review that was discriminatorily “embellished” after his pro-union testimony. 734
    F.3d at 787-88.
    -7-
    By contrast, in this case there was no showing of a nexus between Marks
    Briggs’s protected union activity in 2013 and 2014 and the discipline and discharge
    imposed in late 2015 and early 2016. There was no recognized union, and the Board
    expressly found that the General Counsel “failed to make the showing of animus
    necessary to prove Section 8(a)(4) violations.” Southern Bakeries’ decisionmakers,
    McNiel and Hagood, were new hires in 2015; the General Counsel introduced no
    evidence contradicting their testimony that they were unaware of Marks Briggs’s
    prior involvement in protected union activity. Though Ledbetter made them aware
    of the 2013 final written warning, that warning was relevant prior discipline until the
    Board declared it unlawful. The ALJ acknowledged that Marks Briggs was
    disciplined for employee rule violations, discipline that Southern Bakeries had the
    right to impose unless motivated by union animus. Moreover, the violations were of
    rules proscribing individual employee misconduct, conduct unrelated to collective
    employee actions guaranteed by Section 7 and protected by Section 8(a)(1) even in
    the absence of a recognized union, like the planned collective work stoppage at issue
    in Greater Omaha Packing Co., Inc. v. NLRB, 
    790 F.3d 816
    , 821 (8th Cir. 2015).
    Thus, on this record, we conclude the General Counsel failed to present
    evidence of the nexus between Marks Briggs’s severe discipline and discharge and
    her protected union activity years earlier that was necessary to establish a prima facie
    case that Southern Bakeries violated Sections 8(a)(1) and (3). If such nexus had been
    established with evidence showing that the prior final written warning, though
    relevant, should be disregarded because Southern Bakeries knew it was unlawful, we
    would not question the Board’s decision that Marks Briggs would have received
    “some lesser disciplinary measure” absent reliance on that prior discipline. But
    applying Wright Line, the Board erred in concluding that the prior final written
    warning, standing alone, satisfied the General Counsel’s burden to prove a prima
    facie case of discriminatory discipline. As the Board has not proffered an alternative
    theory or requested a remand, we grant Southern Bakeries’ petition for review in part
    and deny the Board’s cross-petition for enforcement of paragraphs 1(c) and 2(a)-(e)
    -8-
    of its Order. See Multimedia KSDK, Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 
    303 F.3d 896
    , 900 (8th Cir.
    2002) (en banc). We also deny enforcement of paragraph 2(f) unless the Appendix
    attached to the Order is modified so as to end after the second “WE WILL NOT”
    provision.
    II. The Muldew Violation.
    On January 15, 2016, Southern Bakeries employee Cheryl Muldew was
    suspended pending an investigation into a complaint that she threatened another
    employee, and for eating on the production line. On January 19, McNiel gave
    Muldew a last chance agreement; on January 27, she was terminated after allegedly
    threatening the employee who reported the first threat. Muldew filed unfair labor
    practice charges contesting her discipline and discharge. The charges included the
    allegation that McNiel initially told Muldew she was not to discuss her discipline
    with other employees and later told her she was discharged for discussing her
    previous discipline with other employees. The General Counsel’s unfair labor
    practice complaint did not challenge Muldew’s discipline and discharge but did allege
    that Southern Bakeries violated Section 8(a)(1) by telling employees that their
    discipline and company investigations are confidential and that they were being
    discharged for discussing their discipline with other employees.
    At the evidentiary hearing Muldew repeated her allegations that McNiel told
    her not to discuss her discipline and that she was discharged in part for discussing her
    discipline with other employees. McNiel denied those allegations. The evidence
    included a discharge document; the section detailing conduct that resulted in
    Muldew’s termination referenced her discussing a “confidential situation from the
    previous week.” The ALJ found that the “confidential situation” could only refer to
    the January 19 last-clear-chance discipline. The ALJ credited Muldew’s testimony
    regarding what McNiel told her and found that, because McNeil’s confidentiality
    instruction was not part of Southern Bakeries’ fact finding investigation, it was made
    -9-
    without a legitimate and substantial business justification. Based on these findings,
    the ALJ concluded that Southern Bakeries violated Section 8(a)(1) by telling Muldew
    not to discuss her discipline and that she was being discharged in part for doing so.
    On appeal, the Board adopted the ALJ’s findings and conclusion. The Board’s final
    Order directs Southern Bakeries to cease and desist from telling employees they may
    not discuss their discipline with other employees and from telling employees they
    have been disciplined for doing so.
    Section 8(a)(1) of the NLRA provides that it is an unfair labor practice for an
    employer “to interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the exercise of the rights
    guaranteed in [section 7].” The inquiry under § 8(a)(1) is objective, asking “whether,
    considering the entire factual context, the employer’s conduct reasonably tends to
    interfere with the employees’ exercise of their section 7 rights.” Miklin, 861 F.3d at
    828 (quotation omitted). It is “settled Board precedent . . . that employees have a
    protected right to discuss discipline or disciplinary investigations with fellow
    employees.” Inova Health Sys. v. N.L.R.B., 
    795 F.3d 68
    , 85 (D.C. Cir. 2015). Under
    this precedent, “[a]n employer may prohibit such discussion only when a ‘substantial
    and legitimate business justification’ outweighs the ‘infringement on employees’
    rights.’” 
    Id.,
     quoting Caesar’s Palace, 
    336 N.L.R.B. 271
    , 272 (2001).
    On appeal, Southern Bakeries does not challenge the Board’s legal rule, nor
    argue that it presented evidence establishing a “substantial and legitimate business
    justification” for telling Muldew not to discuss her suspension and that she was
    discharged in part for doing so. Rather, Southern Bakeries argues that the Board
    erred in adopting findings that credited “Muldew’s self-serving account of what
    McNiel told her during their meetings,” and disregarded contrary testimony by
    McNiel that “was corroborated by the testimony of at least three disinterested
    employees.”
    -10-
    “The question of credibility of witnesses is primarily one for determination by
    the trier of facts, and findings in this area are reversed only in extraordinary
    circumstances.” Greater Omaha Packing, 790 F.3d at 820 (quotation omitted). “[W]e
    afford great deference to the Board’s credibility determinations, and will not overturn
    them unless they shock the conscience.” Int’l All. of Theatrical Stage Emps. v.
    N.L.R.B., 
    885 F.3d 1123
    , 1127 (8th Cir. 2018) (quotation omitted). Southern
    Bakeries cannot clear this high hurdle. The ALJ’s credibility findings were based on
    a careful review of the testimony, supported by the Muldew discharge document. The
    findings are far from conscience-shocking, and no extraordinary circumstance
    warrants reversing the Board’s order to cease and desist from telling employees not
    to discuss their discipline with other employees, or that they are being disciplined for
    doing so. Accordingly, we enforce sections 1(a) and (b) of the Board’s Order.
    For the forgoing reasons, we grant in part and deny in part Southern Bakeries’
    petition for review and the Board’s cross-petition for enforcement of its Order.
    ______________________________
    -11-