Bolton & HayDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsJul 24, 1952100 N.L.R.B. 361 (N.L.R.B. 1952) Copy Citation BOLTON & HAY 361 J. B. SPEICHER , L. M. BOLTON , L. R. BOLTON , E. B. McKASSON, J. B. MCMILLEN , AND JAMES SPEICHER , JR., CO-PARTNERS , D/B/A BOLTON & HAY; J . B. SPEICHER , L. M. BOLTON , L. R. BOLTON , E. B. McKAS- SON, J . B. MCMILLEN, JAMES SPEICHER , JR., AND ART E.-GORDON, CO- PARTNERS , D/B/A BOLTON & HAY RESTAURANT, 212 4TH ST., DES MOINES, IOWA ; J. B. SPEICHER , L. M. BOLTON, L. R. BOLTON, E. B•. MCKASSON , J. B. MCMILLEN, JAMES SPEICHER , JR., AND HENRY SILLMAN , CO-PARTNERS, D/B/A BOLTON & HAY RESTAURANT , 116 6TH AVE., DES MOINES, IOWA; J. B. SPEICHER , L. M. BOLTON, L. R. BOLTON, E. B. McKASSON , J. B. MCMILLEN , JAMES SPEICHER, JR., AND MELVIN N. LAWSON, CO -PARTNERS , D/B/A BOLTON & HAY RES- TAURANT, 416 E. 6TH ST., DES MOINES , IOWA; J . B. SPEICHER, L. M. BOLTON, L. R. BOLTON , E. B. MOKASSON , J. B. MCMILLEN, JAMES SPEICHER , JR., AND GLEN DUNBAR , CO-PARTNERS , D/B/A BOLTON & HAY RESTAURANT, 415 5TH ST ., DES MOINES , IOWA ; J. B. SPEICHER, L. M. BOLTON , L. R. BOLTON, E. B. McKASSON , J. B. MCMILLEN, JAMES SPEICHER , JR., AND ALBERT L. FLEMMING , CO-PARTNERS, D/B/A BOLTON & HAY RESTAURANT , 607 GRAND, DES MOINES , IOWA; J. B. SPEICHER , L. M. BOLTON , L. R. BOLTON , E. B. McKASSON, J. B. MCMILLEN , JAMES SPEICHER , JR., AND DON WARNER, CO-PARTNERS, D/B/A BOLTON & HAY RESTAURANT, 417 7TH ST., DES MOINES, IOWA; J. B. SPEICIIER , L. M. BOLTON , L. R. BOLTON , E. B. McKASSON, J. B. MCMILLEN , JAMES SPEICHER , JR., AND KENNETH WENDELL, CO- PARTNERS D/B/A BOLTON & HAY RESTAURANT , 823 LOCUST, DES MOINES, IOWA and LOCAL 247 , HOTEL, RESTAURANT EMPLOYEES AND BARTENDERS INTERNATIONAL ALLIANCE , A. F. OF L., PETITIONER. Case No. 18-RC-1378 . July 24,1952 Decision and Direction of Election Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before Clarence A . Meter, hearing officer. The hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3 (b) of the Act, the Board has delegated its powers in connection with this case to a three-member panel [Chairman Herzog and Members Houston and Murdock]. Upon the entire record in this case , the Board finds : 1. Bolton & Hay is a partnership consisting of six men, one of whom, J. B. Speicher , acts as managing partner. The partnership of Bolton & Hay is itself a partner in seven separate partnerships, each of which does business under the name Bolton & Hay Restaurant. 100 NLRB No. 60 362 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Each of these seven partnerships is exclusively engaged in the opera= tion of one of the seven restaurants in Des Moines in which the employees sought to be represented by the Petitioner-work. Bolton & Hay has a two-thirds interest in each of the restaurant partnerships; the remaining one-third interest is held in each instance by an indi- vidual partner who acts as manager of the restaurant. Each manager receives a salary from the partnership of which he is a member as well as a one-third interest in its profits.' Each manager renders a daily report to the managing partner of Bolton & Hay reflecting all transactions for the day. Bolton & Hay does all the bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing for the restaurants, charging each restaurant $50 a month for the service. Although each restaurant partnership has its own bank account, no manager has ever drawn on such an account. All checks, including those for rent and for the manager's salary, are signed by Speicher or by his assistant, who is also one of the partners of Bolton & Hay. Cancelled checks are not sent to the restaurant manager, but to Bolton & Hay. The employees in the restaurants are paid in cash. Bolton & Hay lists all of them as its employees on income tax withholding statements and social security tax returns, although each manager does the actual hiring and discharging of employees in the restaurant he manages. Each manager selects the daily menu for his particular restaurant which is then mimeographed in the offices of Bolton & Hay. Bolton & Hay discusses from time to time with each manager any proposed changes in the type of food served or in pricing policy. Bolton & Hay sells at wholesale, restaurant and hotel equipment. It also maintains a commissary which carries meat, butter, coffee, and the products of a bakery which it operates on its premises, but none of these food supplies are sold to any restaurants or commercial cus- tomers 2 other than the Bolton & Hay restaurants. Although the managers testified that they were free to purchase elsewhere items carried by Bolton & Hay, the record establishes that in practice they seldom do so.3 ' None of the restaurant managers is a member of Bolton & Hay nor has any financial interest in any of the restaurant partnerships other than the one in which he is a partner. 2 It appears that the managers and some other individuals , not identified in the record, make some purchases at the commissary for domestic consumption. ' Although one of the managers testified that he bought some of his meat elsewhere, most of the managers testified that they bought from outside sources items carried by Bolton & Hay only when supplies ran short during the day Milk and some other dairy products are purchased by Bolton & Hay from a local dairy and delivered directly to the restaurants by Bolton & Hay in its own trucks . Bread is delivered directly by an outside company which receives payment from Bolton & Hay which in turn debits the running accounts of the individual restaurants as it does on items which it furnishes directly to them. BOLTON & HAY 363 Under a contract with the United States Army, signed by Speicher, Bolton & Hay restaurants are obligated to serve meals to inductees on presentation of meal tickets. During 1951 Bolton & Hay received at least $67,000 under this contract and credited each restaurant in proportion to the number of meal tickets turned in by it. In these circumstances, we find that Bolton & Hay and the seven restaurant partnerships constitute, contrary to their contention, a single employer within the meaning of Section 2 (2) of the Act 4 During 1951 the Employer made purchases outside the State of Iowa valued at $301,915.50, and sales to customers outside the State valued at $31,082.90. We find that the Employer is engaged in com- merce within the meaning of the Act and that, on the basis of the out- flow and of the services rendered to the Armed Forces which substan- tially affect national defense, it will effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction b 2. The labor organization involved claims to represent certain em- ployees of the Employer. 3. A question affecting commerce exists concerning the representa- tion of employees of the Employer within the meaning of Section 9 (c) (1) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. 4. The Petitioner seeks to represent a unit comprising all the non- clerical employees in the restaurants of the Employer. These em- ployees, numbering about 120, are all located in one city and are all engaged in similar types of work which is not performed by any other employees of the Employer. As there is nothing in the record detract- ing from their apparent mutuality of interest, we.find that they may appropriately be represented in a single unit. Accordingly, we find that all waiters and waitresses, counter men and women, bus boys and girls, cooks, and other kitchen help employed in the Bolton & Hay Restaurants in Des Moines, Iowa, excluding man- agers, cashiers, and all supervisors as defined in the Act, constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b). [Text of Direction of Election omitted from publication in this volume.] 4 Hollow Tree Lumber Company, 98 NLRB 493 ; Florida Jafra Steel Co. et al, 94 NLRB 386 " Stanislaus implement f Hardware Co. Ltd, 91 NLRB 618 ; Westport Moving of Storage Company , 91 NLRB 902 . Our jurisdiction is not derived from the Fair Labor Standards Act, so the Employer's assertion that the Administrator of that Act has ruled that service establishments such as restaurants are not subject to its provisions is, there- fore , immaterial . We have hitherto asserted jurisdiction over restaurants . Childs Company, et al, 88 NLRB 720; Mil-Bur Inc. d/b/a Howard Johnson, 94 NLRB 1161. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation