The Monarch Machine Tool Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsApr 23, 195298 N.L.R.B. 1243 (N.L.R.B. 1952) Copy Citation THE MONARCH MACHINE TOOL CO. 1243 THE MONARCH MACHINE TOOL Co. and UNITED ELECTRICAL, RADIO'& MACHINE WORKERS OF AMERICA, UE, PETITIONER. Case No. 8-RC-1514. April 23,1952 Decision and Order Upon a petition duly filed under Section 9 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, a hearing was held before John A. Hull, Jr., -hearing officer. The'hearing officer's rulings made at the hearing are free from prejudicial error and are hereby affirmed. Upon the entire record in this case, the Board finds : 1. The Employer is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. 2. The labor organization involved claims to represent employees of the Employer. 3. No 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, for the following reasons:1 The Petitioner seeks to represent a separate unit composed of all methods and standards department employees at the Employer's Sidney, Ohio, plant, excluding all other employees, guards, profes- sional employees, and supervisors as defined in the Act. The Employer contends that methods and standards department employees are a specialized type of managerial or confidential employees, and may not constitute an appropriate unit because they establish methods and standards which govern the work of the production and maintenance employees represented by the Petitioner. The Employer is engaged in the production of metal lathes and other machine tools. As noted above, its production and maintenance employees are now represented by the Petitioner in a separate unit. No union has ever bargained for the employees here sought, or for the other employees. There are 22 employees (15 rate setters, 2 adjusters, a router, and 4 clerical employees) now assigned to the methods and standards depart- ment. Collectively, these employees determine production standards, which are necessary to the Employer's wage incentive plan. The rate 1 The Employer claims that the Petitioner has agreed not to represent these employees by the contract between the Employer and the Petitioner , in effect until May 23, 1953, and that the petition should be dismissed This contention stems from the specific exclusion of the employees sought in the present proceeding from the production and maintenance unit covered by the contract The contract thus does not contain any provisions concerning the terms and conditions of employment of these employees . Afore. over, it contains no promise , express or implied, that the Petitioner will refrain from also seeking to represent these employees We find no merit in the Employer ' s contention Martin Parry Corporation , 95 NLRB 1506. 9S NLRB No. 196 1244 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD setters work almost exclusively from a book of standards, and make no time studies at all.; they compute standards for new production machines from blueprints and engineering figures. Where estab- lished standards are challenged, time studies are made in the plant by the adjusters, who spend about 25 percent of their time in production departments. The router fixes manufacturing schedules for compo- nents of finished products. The clerical employees perform routine filing, typing, and other clerical tasks within the department. The work of the rate setters, adjusters, and the router requires, in varying degree, some exercise of initiative and discretion, as well as a facility with figures and drawings. Their chief function, however, is to provide data for the proper operation of a wage incentive plan applicable to the Employer's production and maintenance employees. They do not formulate management policies, nor do they handle labor relations negotiations or deal with confidential labor relations data. Accordingly, we do not consider them to be either managerial or confidential employees.2 The initiative and discretion required of these employees and the relative complexity of their work, compared with that of the Employer's clerical force, indicates that methods and standards department personnel are technical employees. On the other hand, they have many interests and working conditions in common with the Employer's clerical employees. However, a determination of their status as either technical or clerical employees is not necessary to a resolution of the issues presented in this proceeding. Among the employees in the Employer's office not now represented by any bar- gaining agent are an undisclosed number of draftsmen, designing engineers, and experimental technicians. The Employer denies the technical status of the first two categories, but concedes it to the experimental employees. On this state of the record, it is clear that there are some technical employees now employed by the Employer outside the methods and standards department. There are also many clerical employees who are not included in the unit sought. It appears to us that the interests and duties of the methods and standards department employees are not so clearly distinguishable from those of other technical or clerical employees as to warrant the establishment of a unit limited to the methods and standards depart- ment alone. Our dissenting colleagues, however, urge us to grant separate representation to the proposed unit, on the apparent ground that its members are like time-study employees, who have in some cases been held a functionally coherent and distinct group. We are not satisfied that they are like time-study employees, as only 2 of the 18 nonclerical employees in the methods and standards department 2 Minneapolis-Moline Company, 85 NLRB 597. THE MONARCH MACHINE TOOL CO. 1"245 do time-study work, and even they do it only for about 25 percent of their work day. In addition, to adopt the reasoning of the dissent would commit the Board to examine in detail each job within a group classification, such as technicians, and to sever a part of the group wherever it performs tasks differing from those of the remaining employees. The- only case cited by the dissent which severed time- study employees from other technicals is Westinghouse Electric Corp., 74 NLRB 94 (1947). Since then, however, the Board has firmly established and followed the rule of not creating a unit includ- ing some, but not all, of an employer's technical employees.3 To hold the proposed unit appropriate would require the Board to accord controlling effect to the Petitioner's extent of organization among the unorganized employees at the Employer's plant. Section 9 (c) (5) of the amended Act forbids this result. Accordingly, we find that a unit of methods and standards department employees is inappropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining.4 As the Petitioner has failed to show that the employees sought in this proceeding constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining, we shall dismiss the petition. Order IT Is HEREBY ORDERED that the petition filed herein be, and it hereby is, dismissed. MEMBERS HOUSTON and STYLES, dissenting : We 'do not agree with our colleagues of the majority that to direct an election here would be to give controlling effect to the Petitioner's extent of organization. The employees sought here perform, as a closely knit group, a func- tion which is typical of time-study personnel and is therefore tech- nical in nature .-5 The collective function of these employees, as the majority finds, is to determine production standards' basic to a proper operation of a wage incentive plan for production and maintenance employees. In carrying out this collective responsi- bility the rate setters compute standards for new production machines from blueprints and engineering figures; 6 the adjusters make time studies to justify the standards; and the router fixes the manufac- turing schedules. 8 See, for example, General Motors Corporation , 92 NLRB 1589, 1591. 4 Alpine Metals Manufacturing Company, 95 NLRB 1186; Sperry Gyroscope Company, 94 NLRB 1724. , Florence Stove Lompany, 94 NLRB 1434. Brown & Sharpe Mfg. Co , 87 NLRB 1031. Although the majority avoids making a flat finding that these employees are technical employees, we cannot take seriously their suggestion that they might even be clerical employees. Setting rates for the proper operation of an incentive wage plan is, despite the contrary implication of the majority, an inseparable part of a time-study function. See Brown & Sharpe Mfg. Co. (footnote 5, supra). The 15 rate setters are thus clearly engaged in time-study work. 1246 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Despite the patent functional coherence, identity, and distinctness of these technical employees, the majority would deny them separate representation because there are at this plant other employees in tech- nical classifications. They do not suggest how the mere presence at the plant of draftsmen or other technical employees who perform work totally different from that of the employees involved impairs the identity or feasibility of a unit of these employees. In our opinion, there is no tenable basis for such an exaltation of form over sub- stance. Indeed, it overlooks the Board's express recognition of the distinctness and functional homogeneity of employees similar to those involved here.7 Accordingly, as there is no warrant for dismissing the petition on the basis of Section 9 (c) (5) of the Act, the Board should direct an election in the appropriate unit. 7 Chicago Pneumatic Tool Company , 81 NLRB 584 and cases cited therein. In West- inghouse Electric Corp ., 74 NLRB 94 , the Board commented upon the unit placement of time-study employees as follows : Inasmuch as their duties and interests usually differ we have generally excluded time-study men from units of office and clerical, technical and production employees. (Emphasis supplied.) We perceive no basis for concluding , as apparently does the majority , that the General Motors case ( footnote 3. supra ) has, in effect, overruled these cases. MANHATTAN COIL CORPORATION AND/OR HOLFAST RUBBER COMPANY and DISTRICT LODGE No. 46, INTERNATIONAL . ASSOCIATION OF MA- CHINISTS , AFL, PETITIONER . Case No. 1O-RC-1754. April 23, 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 Paul L. Harper, 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 [Members Houston, Murdock and Styles]. Upon the entire record in this case, the Board finds : 1. The Employer 1 is engaged in commerce within the meaning of the Act. 2. The labor organizations involved claim to represent employees of the Employer. ' The name of the Employer appears as corrected at the hearing. 98 NLRB No. 194. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation