Southern New England Telephone v. NLRB ( 2015 )


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  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued December 12, 2012             Decided July 10, 2015
    Ordered Held in Abeyance February 19, 2013
    Removed from Abeyance December 8, 2014
    No. 11-1099
    SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE COMPANY,
    PETITIONER
    v.
    NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD,
    RESPONDENT
    COMMUNICATIONS WORKERS OF AMERICA, AFL-CIO,
    INTERVENOR
    Consolidated with 11-1143
    On Petition for Review and Cross-Application for
    Enforcement of an Order of the National Labor Relations
    Board
    George E. O'Brien argued the cause for petitioner. With
    him on the briefs were Thomas P. Dowd and Jason R.
    Stanevich.
    Zachary R. Henige, Attorney, National Labor Relations
    Board, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief
    2
    were John H. Ferguson, Associate General Counsel, Linda
    Dreeben, Deputy Associate General Counsel, and Robert J.
    Englehart, Supervisory Attorney.
    James B. Coppess argued the cause and filed the brief for
    intervenor.
    Before: TATEL and KAVANAUGH, Circuit Judges, and
    SENTELLE, Senior Circuit Judge.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge KAVANAUGH.
    KAVANAUGH, Circuit Judge: Common sense sometimes
    matters in resolving legal disputes. This case is a good
    example. AT&T Connecticut banned employees who interact
    with customers or work in public – including employees who
    enter customers’ homes – from wearing union shirts that said
    “Inmate” on the front and “Prisoner of AT$T” on the back.
    Seems reasonable. No company, at least one that is interested
    in keeping its customers, presumably wants its employees
    walking into people’s homes wearing shirts that say “Inmate”
    and “Prisoner.” But the NLRB ruled in a 2-1 decision that
    AT&T committed an unfair labor practice by barring its
    employees from wearing those shirts. Section 7 of the
    National Labor Relations Act protects the right of employees
    to wear union apparel at work. But under this Court’s
    precedent and Board decisions, there is a “special
    circumstances” exception to that general rule: A company
    may lawfully prohibit its employees from displaying messages
    on the job that the company reasonably believes may harm its
    relationship with its customers or its public image. Put
    simply, it was reasonable for AT&T to believe that the
    “Inmate/Prisoner” shirts may harm AT&T’s relationship with
    its customers or its public image. Therefore, AT&T lawfully
    3
    prohibited its employees here from wearing the shirt. We
    grant AT&T’s petition for review, vacate the Board’s decision
    and order with respect to the “Inmate/Prisoner” shirts, and
    deny the Board’s cross-application for enforcement.1
    ***
    AT&T Connecticut provides telecommunication services
    throughout Connecticut. (We will use AT&T as shorthand to
    refer to AT&T Connecticut.) A union known as the
    Communication Workers of America represents AT&T’s
    employees. As part of a public campaign to put pressure on
    AT&T during contentious contract negotiations, the union
    distributed T-shirts to its members. The shirts were white
    with black lettering. The front of the shirt said “Inmate #” and
    had a black box beneath the lettering. The back of the shirt
    said “Prisoner of AT$T,” with several vertical stripes above
    and below the lettering. The shirt contained no reference to
    the union or to the ongoing labor dispute.
    On two occasions, the union encouraged employees to
    wear the “Inmate/Prisoner” shirt to work, and hundreds of
    employees did so. Each day, AT&T supervisors instructed all
    employees who interacted with customers or worked in public
    to remove the “Inmate/Prisoner” shirt. AT&T issued one-day
    suspensions to 183 employees who did not comply with the
    directive to remove the shirt.
    1
    This case was initially argued in December 2012 and then held
    in abeyance pending resolution of various challenges to the
    constitutionality of certain appointments to the NLRB. Those
    challenges have now been resolved in a way that does not affect this
    case. See Mathew Enterprise, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    771 F.3d 812
     (D.C.
    Cir. 2014).
    4
    Publicly visible employees consist of two groups:
    technicians who install and repair lines at residences and
    businesses, and technicians who work on construction projects
    in public. Those publicly visible employees are subject to
    AT&T’s appearance standards.             AT&T requires those
    employees to present a professional appearance at all times and
    to refrain from wearing clothing with “printing and logos that
    are unprofessional or will jeopardize” the “Company’s
    reputation.” Notwithstanding the appearance guidelines, in
    the years before this incident, several individual AT&T
    employees had worn shirts printed with questionable messages
    and had not been disciplined for doing so. Examples
    included: “Support your local hookers” (with an image of a
    fishing lure); “The liver is evil. It must be punished”; “I’m not
    drunk. I’m just a race fan”; “If I want your opinion . . . . . I’ll
    take the tape off your mouth!”; and “Out Of Beer. Life Is
    Crap.”
    After the suspensions in this case, the union filed an unfair
    labor practice charge. According to the union, AT&T
    infringed on employees’ rights under Section 7 of the National
    Labor Relations Act by disciplining employees who had
    refused to remove their “Inmate/Prisoner” shirts. See 
    29 U.S.C. § 157
    .
    AT&T responded by invoking the “special circumstances”
    doctrine, a limitation on Section 7 long recognized by the
    Supreme Court. See Republic Aviation Corp. v. NLRB, 
    324 U.S. 793
    , 801-03 (1945). Under the “special circumstances”
    doctrine, a company may lawfully ban union messages on
    publicly visible apparel on the job when the company
    reasonably believes the message may harm its relationship
    with its customers or its public image.                See
    5
    Bell-Atlantic-Pennsylvania, Inc., 
    339 NLRB 1084
    , 1086
    (2003).
    In arguing that the “special circumstances” doctrine
    applied here, AT&T explained that it banned only employees
    who interact with customers or work in public from wearing
    the “Inmate/Prisoner” shirt. See Bell-Atlantic-Pennsylvania,
    339 NLRB at 1084-85. AT&T officials testified that the shirts
    could alarm or confuse customers, could cause customers to
    believe that AT&T employees were actually convicts, or could
    harm the company’s public image more generally. AT&T
    was particularly concerned about how the shirts would be
    perceived in Connecticut in light of a recent and widely
    publicized home invasion in Cheshire, Connecticut, in which
    three people were murdered. And AT&T expressed concern
    not only about the specific risk that customers would believe
    the employee was actually a convict, but also about the shirt’s
    potential negative effects on AT&T’s public image more
    generally.
    The administrative law judge decided that AT&T’s
    prohibition of the shirts violated the Act. In a divided
    decision, the National Labor Relations Board affirmed the
    ALJ’s conclusion, finding that the “Inmate/Prisoner” shirt
    “would not have been reasonably mistaken for prison garb”
    and that “the totality of the circumstances would make it clear”
    that a technician wearing the shirt was an AT&T employee
    “and not a convict.” Southern New England Telephone Co.,
    
    356 NLRB No. 118
    , at 1 (2011). Board Member Hayes
    dissented, concluding that the potential for the shirt “to alarm
    customers and thereby damage” AT&T’s “reputation was
    sufficient to justify its regulation.” Id. at 3.
    6
    AT&T has filed a petition for review of the Board’s
    decision. We review the Board’s application of the law to the
    facts for reasonableness. See New York & Presbyterian
    Hospital v. NLRB, 
    649 F.3d 723
    , 729 (D.C. Cir. 2011).
    The “special circumstances” exception to Section 7 is
    designed “to balance the potentially conflicting interests of an
    employee’s right to display union insignia and an employer’s
    right to limit or prohibit such display.” Nordstrom, Inc., 
    264 NLRB 698
    , 700 (1982). “Special circumstances” include
    “protecting the employer’s product” and “maintaining a certain
    employee image.” Guard Publishing Co. v. NLRB, 
    571 F.3d 53
    , 61 (D.C. Cir. 2009).
    The Board has repeatedly recognized that an employer
    that reasonably believes its employees’ union apparel at work
    may damage the employer’s relationship with its customers or
    its public image may invoke the “special circumstances”
    exception. In one such case, employees of a grocery store
    wore union shirts stating “Don’t Cheat About the Meat!”
    Pathmark Stores, Inc., 
    342 NLRB 378
    , 378 (2004). The
    Board ruled that “the slogan reasonably threatened to create
    concern” among “customers about being cheated, raising the
    genuine possibility of harm to the customer relationship.” Id.
    at 379. In another case, a company banned its employees
    from wearing T-shirts depicting employees as squashed
    carcasses      labeled        “Road       Kill.”           See
    Bell-Atlantic-Pennsylvania, 339 NLRB at 1084-85. The
    Board upheld an arbitrator’s conclusion that the ban was
    appropriate because the employer “reasonably could believe
    that observing the shirt would unsettle the public despite the
    absence of explicit disparagement of the [company’s] products
    or service.” Id. at 1085. The Board stated: “An employer’s
    concern about the ‘public image’ presented by the apparel of its
    7
    employees is, therefore, a legitimate component of the ‘special
    circumstances’ standard.” Id. at 1086.
    Similarly, this Court has concluded that “special
    circumstances” may justify an employer’s ban on a shirt that
    mocked a company incentive program.               The incentive
    program was known as “WOW.” The shirts said “I don’t need
    a WOW to do my job.” See Medco Health Solutions of Las
    Vegas, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    701 F.3d 710
    , 712, 716-17 (D.C. Cir.
    2012). This Court criticized the Board’s cursory rejection of
    the company’s “straightforward argument that the message on
    the T-shirt was insulting to the company and would have
    undermined its efforts to attract and retain customers.” 
    Id.
    It is true that the employer bears the burden of
    demonstrating “special circumstances.”             See Guard
    Publishing, 
    571 F.3d at 61
    . But the Board has recognized that
    an employer can meet its burden by demonstrating a
    reasonable belief that the message may damage customer
    relations – even in the absence of evidence of actual harm. In
    Pathmark Stores, for example, the prohibited message created
    a reasonable risk to the customer relationship, and the Board
    did not require the company to present evidence that the shirts
    actually affected customer behavior. See 342 NLRB at 379.
    Likewise, in Medco Health, this Court stated that Board
    precedent did not “require the employer to offer additional
    evidence beyond a relationship between its business and the
    banned message.” 701 F.3d at 717; see also Nordstrom, 264
    NLRB at 701 n.12 (employer “need not await customer
    complaint before it takes legitimate action to protect its
    business”).
    In this case, we conclude that the Board applied the
    “special circumstances” exception in an unreasonable way. In
    8
    particular, the Board found that the “Inmate/Prisoner” shirt
    “would not have been reasonably mistaken for prison garb”
    and thus was not “reasonably likely, under the circumstances,
    to cause fear or alarm” among AT&T’s customers. Southern
    New England, 356 NLRB at 1. As this Court observed in
    Medco Health, however, the Board’s “expertise is surely not at
    its peak in the realm of employer-customer relations.” 701
    F.3d at 717. And here, the appropriate test for “special
    circumstances” is not whether AT&T’s customers would
    confuse the “Inmate/Prisoner” shirt with actual prison garb, but
    whether AT&T could reasonably believe that the message may
    harm its relationship with its customers or its public image.
    To resolve this case, it is enough to ask the question, as
    Member Hayes did in dissent: “What would you think about a
    company that permitted its technicians to wear such shirts
    when making home service calls?” Southern New England,
    356 NLRB at 2.
    Citing our decision in Guard Publishing, the Board
    suggests that AT&T did not enforce its ban on unprofessional
    clothing in an evenhanded way, allowing other questionable
    shirts to be worn while banning the “Inmate/Prisoner” shirt.
    But the other shirts were not nearly as problematic as the one at
    issue here, or at least a reasonable employer could so conclude.
    Moreover, no case holds that a company that on some
    occasions has allowed unprofessional clothing to be worn by
    employees is somehow estopped from prohibiting other
    unprofessional clothing. The ultimate question for the Board
    in any individual case is whether the employer has shown a
    reasonable belief that the particular apparel may harm the
    employer’s relationship with its customers or its public image.
    In short, given the straightforward evidence that AT&T
    introduced of the shirt’s message and the circumstances under
    9
    which customers interact with or can see employees wearing
    the shirt, the Board should have held that “special
    circumstances” applied here.
    ***
    We grant AT&T’s petition for review, vacate the Board’s
    decision and order with respect to the “Inmate/Prisoner” shirts,
    and deny the Board’s cross-application for enforcement.
    So ordered.