Loby's CafeteriaDownload PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsAug 18, 1971192 N.L.R.B. 752 (N.L.R.B. 1971) Copy Citation 752 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Charlena Lobianco, d/b/a Loby's Cafeteria and Hotel & Restaurant Employees and Bartender 's Union, Local i47, AFL-CIO. Case 26 -CA--3827 August 18, 1971 DECISION AND ORDER By CHAIRMAN MILLER AND M$MBERS FANNING AND KENNEDY On April 30, 1971, Trial Examiner Herbert Silber- man issued his, Decision in the above-entitled proceeding, finding that General Counsel had not sustained the burden of proving by a preponderance of the' evidence that Respondent violated Section 8(a)(1), (3), and (4) of the Act as alleged and recommending that the complaint be dismissed in its entirety, as set forth in the attached Trial Examine'r's Decision. Thereafter, General Counsel filed excep- tions to the Trial Examiner's Decision with support- ing brief, and the Respondent file cross-exceptions with supporting brief and answering brief. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(b) of the National, Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations..Board has delegated its power in connection with this case to a three-member panel. The Board has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner made at .the hearing ' and finds that no prejudicial error was committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. The Board has considered the Trial Examiner's Decision, the exceptions, cross-excep- tions, 'and briefs, and the entire record'in the case, and hereby adopts the findings, conclusions,' and recommendations of the Trial Examiner. ORDER Pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended, the National Labor Relations Board adopts as its Order the recommend- ed Order of the Trial Examiner and hereby orders that the complaint be dismissed in its entirety. 1 The General Counsel has excepted to certain 'credibility findings made by the Trial Examiner. It is the Board 's established policy not to overrule a Trial Examiner's resolutions with respect to credibility unless the clear , preponderance of all of the relevant evidence convinces us that the resolutions were incorrect. Standard Dry Wall Products, Inc., 91 NLRB 544, enfd. 188 F.2d 362 (C.A. 3). We have carefully examined the record and find no basis for reversing his findings. TRIAL EXAMINER'S DECISION STATEMENT OF THE CASE HERBERT SILBERMAN, Trial Examiner : Upon a charge and an amended charge, respectively, filed on October 13, 1970, and January 4, 1971 , by Hotel & Restaurant Employees and Bartenders Union, Local 847 , AFL-CIO, herein called the Union, a' complaint dated January 5, 1971, was issued alleging that the Respondent . Charlena Lobianco, an individual, d/b/a Loby's Cafeteria, has engaged in and is engaging in conduct constituting unfair labor , practices within the meaning of Section 8(a)(1), (3), and (4) of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended. In substance, the complaint alleges that the Respondent `on October 9, 1970, unlawfully discharged Carzester Smith because she gave testimony , in a prior Board proceeding and because she had joined or assisted the Union and, by reason of said discharge and other conduct set forth in the complaint, Respondent also has interfered with , restrained, and coerced employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed by Section 7 of the Act . Respondent filed an answer to the complaint generally denying that it had engaged in the alleged unfair labor practices . A hearing in these proceed- ings was held in Memphis, Tennessee, on March 2 and 24, 1970. Subsequent i to the hearing, General Counsel and Respondent ' filed briefs which have been ` considered. Upon the entire record in this case and from my observation of the witnesses and their' demeanor, I make the following: FwDINGs OF FACT 1. THE BUSINESS OF RESPONDENT Charlena Lobianco, who' is doing business under the trade name and style of Loby's Cafeteria, operates a food concession service at the Defense Depot located in Memphis, Tennessee. The Defense Depot is a major field activity of the Defense Supply Agency of'the United States Department of Defense. The Defense Supply Agency is charged with the mission of providing services and supplies of 'common usage to the military forces. The Depot involved in these proceedings receives , stores, and ships to units of the Armed Forces supplies, including clothing, medical supplies, bridge construction equipment, and other types of equipment. The facility occupies 640 acres and employs in excess of 2,300 civilians and 35 military personnel. Charlena Lobianco, pursuant to the terms of a concession agreement, operates three full service cafeterias and a large number of vending "machines at the Depot. Except for an officers' club, there are no other eating facilities within the confines of the Depot nor are there other eating' facilities in the area 'adjacent to the Depot adequate to provide food service for the employees at the Depot should Respondent's operations be discontinued. Respondent's,gross receipts from the business she conducts at the Depot during the period of 12 months immediately 192 NLRB No. 109 LOBY'S CAFETERIA preceding the hearing herein were $175,176. I find that Respondent is engaged in commerce within the meaning of Section 2(6) andt_(7) of the Act and that it will effectuate the policies of the Act to assert jurisdiction in these proceedings.' II. THE LABOR ORGANIZATION INVOLVED The Union is a labor organization within the meaning of Section 2(5) of the Act. III. THE ALLEGED UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A threshold question raised by-Respondent is whether the Depot is a joint employer with herself of the persons who are employed in the operation of her food concession service. The principal basis for this contention stems from a provision of the concession agreement which reads as follows: "That if, in the opinion of FUND, the conduct of any employee, servant or,agent of CONCESSIONAIRE in and about the premises covered by this Agreement interferes with 'proper service, at the request of FUND such employee, servant or agent will be removed." Despite this provision in the concession agreement the evidence shows that the Depot in fact exercises no authority over Respondent's employees.-During the past 15 years on only one occasion, which occurred about 12 years ago, did the Depot request a concessionaire to remove an employee and in that case the reason was related to discrimination in violation of the Civil Rights law and was not related to the employee's performance of his duties. I find no merit to Respondent's argument that the Depot is a joint employer with Respondent of Respondent's employees. Carzester Smith has been a longtime employee at the Depot having worked for Respondent and Respondent's predecessors for about 18 years. Respondent did not begin operating the food concession at the Depot until about February 20, 1970. Only a month later on March 27, 1970, Smith was discharged. Smith had been employed as a pastry cook and otherwise to assist in Respondent's operations by doing short-order cooking during meal periods and performing other tasks. Unfair labor practice charges were filed with respect to Smith's discharge on March 27, 1970. In the proceedings instituted in conse- quence thereof it was found that Smith's discharge was unlawfully discriminatory and her reinstatement was ordered.2 Smith returned to work for Respondent on September 14, 1970. Smith testified that about September 30, 1970, she complained to a Mr. Walpole, a representative of the National Labor Relations Board, that since her reinstate- ment she was being harassed by Mrs. Lobianco.3 The harassment, according to Smith, took the form of com- plaints from Mrs. Lobianco about her baking, complaints from Mrs. Lobianco that she was too slow in doing her work, and irritatingly close supervision when on one occasion Mrs. Lobianco spent a protracted period sitting on a stool watching her bake. ' Charlena Lobianco, an Individual, d/b/a Loby's Cafeteria, 187 NLRB No. 54. 2 Charlena Lobianco, etc., supra. 3 Smith testified that no employee who worked with her at the Depot 753 According to Smith, 'The next morning (after she spoke to Walpole) when I got back in there, Mrs. Lobianco told me . . . `Don't you go around here reporting me.' .. . This is my job.' ... .You don't report me to nobody.' And she got this stool I usually sit the mixer on to mix the rolls up, and she say, `Don't put that pot, that mixer on the stool. I am going to -sit on this stool this morning.' She got that stool and she snatched it to the side of the wall and she sat on it, and crossed her legs and sat on it, and told me she would sit there as long as she wanted to and watch me, bcause that was her job there, and I dare not report her to nobody." 4 According to Smith's further testimony, from that day forward until she was discharged, Mrs. Lobianco "was on 'me every day ... about something, just tell me every day after that, tell me she was going to terminate me because my work wasn't pleasing." Finally, Smith was discharged on October 9, 1970. The explanation given to her by Mrs. Lobianco for her discharge was that her work was unsatisfactory and that customers had been complaining about her baking. -Mrs. Lobianco testified that she never spoke to Smith about Smith's alleged complaint to Walpole and further testified that neither Walpole nor any other representative of the National Labor Relations Board had informed her that Smith had complained to them. She further testified that after Smith's reinstatement she found that Smith's baking was unsatisfactory. She also testified that she had received numerous complaints from customers about the poor quality of the baked products, on one occasion, 2 days before she discharged Smith, she had had to throw out an entire tray of bread pudding because it was not edible and James Dolan, the post restaurant officer at the Depot, had directed her to discontinue serving biscuits baked on the premises because they were unsatisfactory. In addition, Lobianco testified that Smith was so slow at the short order counter that Smith had to be relieved of such duties. Lobianco denied that she had spent any more time observing Smith at work than any other cook, According to Lobianco, it is her practice to spend considerable time watching all the cooks, but she did not single out Smith for any special attention. Smith was aware of Mrs. Lobianco's complaints. According to Smith, Lobianco on various occasions had criticized her because she was too slow at the short order grill, because the biscuits she had baked did not rise, because she once left her section of the kitchen area in a mess, and because the cobblers she had baked were unsatisfactory. Smith also testified that Lobianco ultimate- ly directed her to discontinue baking cobblers and biscuits and confirmed Lohianco's testimony that the latter threw out a tray of bread pudding allegedly because it was inedible. Respondent called several witnesses, including Dolan, who corroborated Mrs. Lobianco's testimony. General Counsel also called corroborating witnesses, seven of whom testified that they ate Mrs. Smith's baked products knew that she bad complained to a Board agent. 4 Smith testified that this was the only occasion that Mrs, Lobianco sat on a stool and watched her work. 754 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD and found ` them good . Two of these witnesses, Mamie Owens and Mattie Laurie Goss, testified that Lobianco nagged Smith unduly. More specifically, Goss testified that Lobianco quarreled with Smith more than with any other employee and that one day Lobianco sat on a stool about 3 or 4 feet from Smith. Goss was unable to give any other meaningful examples of the alleged nagging. Owens described the nagging by explaining, that Lobianco in a not mild tone of voice would ask Smith, "[W]hat were you doing, what are you going to do with that, how many eggs did you use, or something like that." Owens also testified that one morning Lobianco "sat on that stool ... and she would leave, and she would come around, and she would stand over us and she would watch us, and once or twice she followed me to the icebox . . . -she wouldn't just constantly stay on the stool around there with her (Smith). She would come around and be around there with us, standing and watching awhile, and then she would back around and take a seat around there." Thus, according to Owens, on the occasion that Lobianco spent considerable time observing Smith in the kitchen Lobianco did not' limit her observations to Smith alone but extended them to,-,all the cooks. The principal conflict in testimony in, this case is between Lobianco and Smith concerning Lobianco's alleged re- marks quoted, above. of the two, I am of the opinion that Mrs. Lobianco was the more reliable witness and I therefore credit her testimony. The testimony of Owens and Goss does , not demonstrate undue harassment of Smith. Mrs. Lobianco is a high strung individual who, the evidence shows, tends to raise her voice when talking to and particularly when criticizing her employees . However, there is no proof that she unfairly or unnecessarily or more often than with others raised her voice to Smith . As to the alleged cause of discharge, I recognize the difficulty of proving that the quality of Smith' s baking was either good or bad. However, Respondent produced reasonably con- vincing corroboration for her contention that Smith's baking was unsatisfactory. Upon consideration of all the evidence I find that General Counsel has not sustained the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence the violations of the Act alleged in the complaint and I shall therefore recommend that the complaint be dismissed. CONCLUSION OF LAW Respondent has not violated Section 8(axl), (3), and (4) of the Act as alleged in the complaint. Upon the foregoing findings of fact, conclusion of law, and the entire record , and pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Act, I hereby' issue 'the !following " recommended: ORDER The complaint is dismissed in its entirety. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation