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Hertz Corp. v. NLRB, 95-3621 (1997)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit Number: 95-3621 Visitors: 15
Filed: Jan. 28, 1997
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: Opinions of the United 1997 Decisions States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit 1-28-1997 Hertz Corp. v. NLRB Precedential or Non-Precedential: Docket 95-3621 Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1997 Recommended Citation "Hertz Corp. v. NLRB" (1997). 1997 Decisions. Paper 19. http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1997/19 This decision is brought to you for free and open access by the Opinions of the United States Court of A
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                                                                                                                           Opinions of the United
1997 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
                                                                                                                              for the Third Circuit


1-28-1997

Hertz Corp. v. NLRB
Precedential or Non-Precedential:

Docket 95-3621




Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1997

Recommended Citation
"Hertz Corp. v. NLRB" (1997). 1997 Decisions. Paper 19.
http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1997/19


This decision is brought to you for free and open access by the Opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit at Villanova
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                          UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                               FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT



                                         No. 95-3621



                                  HERTZ CORPORATION,

                                                                     Petitioner
                                               v.

                         NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD,

                                                                     Respondent.




                   On Petition for Review of an Order of the National Labor
                     Relations Board , United States Department of Labor
                                   (NLRB No. 5-CA-23956)



                                     Argued June 11, 1996

              Before: SCIRICA and ROTH, Circuit Judges
                       and RESTANI1, Judge, U.S. Court of International Trade

                               (Opinion Filed January 28, 1997)




Frank B. Shuster, Esq. (Argued)

   1
   Honorable Jane A. Restani, United States Judge for the United States Court of International
Trade, sitting by designation.
Costangy, Brooks & Smith, LLC
230 Peachtree Street, N.W.
Suite 2400
Atlanta, GA 30303

               Attorney for Petitioner

Peter Winkler, Esq.
Supervisory Attorney
Vincent J. Falvo, Jr., Esq. (Argued)
Frederick L. Feinstein, Esq.
General Counsel
Linda Sher, Esq.
Associate General Counsel
Aileen A. Armstrong, Esq.
Deputy Associate General Counsel
National Labor Relations Board
1099 14th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20570-0001

               Attorneys for National Labor Relations Board



                                   OPINION OF THE COURT




ROTH, Circuit Judge:

               Pursuant to the National Labor Relations Act ("NLRA"), an employer has an

obligation to provide a labor union with information that the union needs in order to perform its

collective bargaining obligations. In this case, Teamsters Local 922 sought information about

job applicants from the Hertz Corporation in connection with the Union's investigation into

possible discriminatory hiring practices at Hertz. Hertz refused to provide Local 922 with the

information. A National Labor Relations Board ("NLRB") panel ruled that Local 922 was

entitled to job applicant data and ordered Hertz to provide the Union with all of the information




                                                                                                    3
that the Union requested. Hertz appeals the order.

               Hertz argues that the NLRB's order is over broad and that the Union is not entitled

to the information that it seeks because it failed to communicate to Hertz a reasonable basis for

its request. Our precedent establishes that before an employer is required to provide a union with

information about individuals who are not members of the bargaining unit, the union must

communicate a reasonable basis for its suspicion that the employer is discriminating. Because

we conclude that the Union failed to communicate such information to Hertz, we will reverse the

NLRB's order and remand the case to the NLRB to dismiss the Union's complaint.

               The National Labor Relations Board had jurisdiction of this case pursuant to 29

U.S.C. § 160(a). Because Hertz transacts business within the jurisdiction of this court, we have

subject matter jurisdiction over the final order of the Board pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 160(f).

                                                  I
               Hertz appeals a National Labor Relations Board order requiring Hertz to provide

Teamsters Local 922 with information about job applicants in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan

area. See Hertz v. Teamsters Local Union 922, 
319 N.L.R.B. 597
(1995). The order, which

reversed an earlier ruling by an administrative law judge ("ALJ"), see Hertz v. Teamsters Local

Union 922, No. 5-CA-23956 (Oct. 13, 1994), reprinted in 
319 N.L.R.B. 601
(appendix to NLRB

decision) (hereinafter ALJ decision), requires Hertz to provide Local 922 with the name, race,

national origin, and gender of any job applicant who would have been covered by the labor

agreement between Hertz and Local 922 if the applicant had been hired by Hertz. The order

covers individuals who applied as early as March 1990 for any of the following positions: rental

representative, reservationist, office clerical worker, courtesy bus driver, shuttler, combination

worker, and vehicle service attendant ("VSA").

               Hertz and the Union have a collective bargaining agreement. The agreement

requires Hertz periodically to send the Union a list of bargaining unit employees broken down by




                                                                                                     4
job title. The list includes the name, seniority, and date of hire of each employee. When Local

922's president and business manager, Edward Kornegay, received one of these lists in the

autumn of 1992, he became concerned about the individuals hired for the VSA position. From

his inspection of the list, Kornegay noted that a number of the VSAs hired in 1992 appeared to be

"foreign nationals." Kornegay's impression was based upon his observation that many of the

surnames on the list were not "typically American."

                Kornegay knew that there was "a large pool of unemployed unskilled or

semiskilled young Afro-American men living in Washington, D.C." who might be interested in

the VSA positions. 
Hertz, 319 N.L.R.B. at 597
. Based upon his observations concerning the

VSA list, Kornegay became concerned that Hertz might be intentionally discriminating against

African-American job applicants by hiring foreign nationals instead of African-Americans. At

about the time he reviewed the list, Kornegay also received telephone calls from members of the

bargaining unit who worked at Hertz. These individuals said that Hertz appeared to be hiring

only foreign nationals. In subsequent visits to various Hertz facilities, Kornegay observed that

the company appeared to be employing greater numbers of individuals who appeared to him to be

foreign nationals. Despite his concerns, Kornegay did not conduct any further investigation of

Hertz's hiring practices during his visits.

                In late 1992 or early 1993, Kornegay met with Michael Kovalcik, Hertz Manager

of the Baltimore-Washington "pool." Kornegay says that he raised his concerns about the VSA

list in this meeting and requested the applications of everyone who had applied for a position

with the bargaining unit during the period in question. Kovalcik agrees that Kornegay asked for

information about persons who had applied for bargaining unit positions, but, according to

Kovalcik, Kornegay did not mention foreign-sounding names or possible discrimination by

Hertz. Kovalcik testified that Kornegay asked instead for a list of the names and addresses of job

applicants so that he could forward the list to a Teamster's committee involved in union




                                                                                                   5
enrollment.2 Kovalcik said that he would get back to Kornegay but did not do so.

               In March 1993, Kornegay met with Kovalcik and Hertz's Vice President for the

Mid-Atlantic Region, Joseph Happe. Kornegay testified that he again requested information

about applicants and reiterated his concerns about discrimination. Kovalcik and Happe stated

that Kornegay requested the names and addresses of job applicants and reiterated that he wanted

the list for the Teamsters' committee on union enrollment. According to Kovalcik and Happe,

Kornegay mentioned neither discrimination in hiring nor his suspicions concerning the names on

the hiring list. Happe testified that Kornegay made a subsequent request for the list by telephone

and that Happe denied Kornegay's request. Happe testified that Kornegay said again that he

sought the list for Teamster purposes and that Kornegay did not mention discrimination.

               When these preliminary conversations proved fruitless, an exchange of

correspondence ensued. On April 30, 1993, Kornegay sent a letter to Kovalcik that read in

pertinent part as follows:
                As a follow up to the Union's previous request, the Union is again requesting a list
                of all applicants for employment in the Washington Metro area who, if employed,
                would have been covered by the Labor Agreement between the Hertz Corporation
                and Local 922 for the period March 1990 to present. Such list to the extent it can
                be determined, should distinguish the applicant by race, National origin, and sex
                gender.

               As I explained earlier, this information is needed for the Union to assure that we
               are in compliance with Federal and State law and to assure that the provision
               referencing Non-Discrimination of the labor Agreement [sic] is beeing [sic] fully
               complied with.



   2
     Although Kornegay and Hertz offer conflicting accounts of this meeting and subsequent
meetings, the ALJ credited Hertz's account of the meetings. According to the ALJ, "Kornegay's
testimony, more so than either Kovalcik's or [Hertz Vice President] Happe's suggests that his
memory can be spotty and that on occasion Kornegay is willing to shade the truth." ALJ 
decision, 319 N.L.R.B. at 603
. The NLRB sustained the ALJ's credibility determination. 
Hertz, 319 N.L.R.B. at 597
n.1.




                                                                                                    6
Ohio App. at 209
. The ALJ noted that this request did not ask for applicant addresses and that it was

therefore unlikely that the Union intended to use this information for enrollment purposes. ALJ

decision, 319 N.L.R.B. at 603
.

               Kovalcik responded to Kornegay on May 5, 1993, that "as you were informed in

March, we do not feel that we are required to provide you with that information which you

requested." App. at 210. On June 9, 1993, the Union's attorney sent a letter to Kovalcik that read

in part:
As Mr. Kornegay has explained, the Union wants this information to determine whether the
             Company is in compliance with the collective bargaining agreement and relevant
             law.

               By this letter, I renew Mr. Kornegay's request and further ask that, in addition to
               the information already requested for each applicant, you also indicate (1) the date
               on which the applicant applied for employment, (2) the applicant's color, (3)
               whether the applicant was hired, and (4) if the applicant was hired, the date on
               which he or she was hired.


App. at 212.

             Hertz responded to this letter on July 9, 1993, with its legal conclusion that:
[A] showing must be made by the Union as to the relevancy of its request for applicant
             information. Certainly, the mere assertion by the Union that the information is
             needed to determine whether the Company is in compliance with the Collective
             Bargaining Agreement does not automatically trigger entitlement to applicant
             equal employment data.

                                         * * * * * *

IBT Local 922 has not alleged that Hertz has engaged in discriminatory hiring practices. In fact,
              the Union has not alleged any breach of the Collective Bargaining agreement. If
              that is not the case and you wish to correct the record in that regard, I would
              appreciate hearing from you.


App. at 214-15. In a letter dated August 6, 1993, the Union's attorney replied that "Local 922 is

requesting the information because it [sic] investigating allegations that Hertz may have

discriminated against certain protected classes of applicants in making hiring decisions for



                                                                                                    7
positions under the Agreement." App. at 216. Hertz did not provide the requested information to

Local 922.

               In an attempt to obtain the applicant information, the Union brought this action

before the NLRB pursuant to NLRA §§ 8(a)(5) and (1). See 29 U.S.C. §§ 158(a)(5) and (1). The

Union argued that Hertz violated the Act by withholding the information that the Union had

requested in its letters. After a hearing at which Kornegay, Kovalcik, and Happe all testified, the

ALJ determined that Local 922 was not entitled to the list of job applicants. He therefore

recommended that the Union's complaint be dismissed.

               The ALJ determined that the Union had no rational basis for believing that Hertz

might be discriminating against African-Americans in any position except for the VSA position.

ALJ 
decision, 319 N.L.R.B. at 605
. The ALJ did conclude that further inquiry by Kornegay

about the VSA position would have been justified. He based this determination upon the phone

calls that Kornegay had received, Kornegay's interpretation of the last names on the seniority

lists, and the fact that the universe of likely applicants for the VSA positions included a high

percentage of African-Americans.3 
Id. The ALJ
decided, however, that Hertz was under no obligation to surrender the

list of VSA applicants to the Union. Although the ALJ found that Local 922 had a rational basis

for believing that Hertz was discriminating against African-Americans who applied for the VSA

position, he concluded that the Union never adequately communicated to Hertz its factual basis

for this belief. 
Id. at 606
(citing United States Postal Svc. v. N.L.R.B., 
308 N.L.R.B. 1305

   3
      The seniority list for the VSA position included the following names: Phung, Ayubi,
Mangialai, Chhun, Riaz, Telila, Baig, and Ashraf. The list for the rental representative position
included the names Adawi, Towne, Mohammed, Shammir, and Bhaskar. The courtesy bus driver
list included the names Stewart, Smith, Dobbins, and Rusnak. The General Counsel did not seek
to introduce into the record seniority lists pertaining to other bargaining unit positions. ALJ
decision, 319 N.L.R.B. at 602
.




                                                                                                   8
(1992)). The ALJ determined that, until Kornegay testified at the hearing, the Union had never

communicated to Hertz the facts that caused Kornegay to believe that Hertz might be

discriminating in its hiring of VSAs. 
Id. Moreover, Hertz
provided evidence during the administrative proceedings to

demonstrate that over half of the Hertz VSAs in the bargaining unit were African-American. 
Id. at 604.
The ALJ found that, given the number of African-Americans employed in the VSA

position, Hertz was not on notice of the reason for the Union's concern about discrimination. 
Id. at 606
(citing Brazos Electric Power Cooperative, 
241 N.L.R.B. 1016
, 1018 (1979)).4 Hertz's

managers credibly testified that they did not know before the administrative hearing why the

Union was concerned about Hertz's hiring practices, despite the fact that Hertz had specifically

inquired into the basis for the Union's concern in its July 9 letter. 
Id. On appeal,
the NLRB overturned the ALJ's decision. An NLRB panel found that

pursuant to the collective-bargaining agreement, the Union demonstrated a sufficient basis for its

request for information and gave adequate notice that it was requesting the information in order

to fulfill its representative functions.
The Union by its three letters advised the Respondent that the purpose of its information request
                  was its investigation of allegations concerning whether the Respondent was
                  discriminating in hiring for unit positions in violation of the nondiscrimination
                  clause of the collective-bargaining agreement. Under these circumstances, and in
                  light of the fact that the Respondent was a party to this collective-bargaining
                  agreement, we find that the Union provided the Respondent with an adequate
                  basis of knowing that the information request was related to the Union's
                  collective-bargaining duties.


Hertz, 319 N.L.R.B. at 599
.
               The NLRB also held that the Union had a basis to inquire about positions other

   4
    According to the facts presented in the ALJ opinion, Hertz employed 49 VSAs during the
relevant time period. Of those 49 VSAs, the racial composition was as follows: 27 African-
American, 11 White, 8 Asian American, and 3 Hispanic.




                                                                                                   9
than the VSA position. The panel based this conclusion on Kornegay's inspection of the hiring

lists, the phone calls that Kornegay received, and Kornegay's observations during his visits to

Hertz. The panel made clear that "it is not necessary, as the [ALJ] seems to suggest, that the

Union demonstrate actual instances of discrimination based on gender, race, and national origin,

directed against employees from each of the unit job classifications before the Respondent must

supply the requested information." 
Id. The NLRB
ordered Hertz to provide the Union with all of

the information that it requested in its April 30, May 5, and June 9 letters. 
Id. at 600.
This ruling

would require Hertz to provide information about the race, national origin, and gender of all

applicants for any of the positions in the bargaining unit within the time frame specified by Local

922.

                                                 II
               Hertz challenges the NLRB decision on two grounds. First, Hertz asserts that the

Union did not possess information sufficiently probative of discrimination to justify a request for

information relative to all of the job classifications covered by the collective bargaining

agreement. Second, Hertz argues that the Union never communicated to Hertz a factual basis for

its charges of discrimination sufficient to compel Hertz to supply the Union with the applicant

information.

               We review the NLRB decision to determine whether it is supported by substantial

evidence given the record as a whole and whether it is in accordance with applicable law.

Universal Camera Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
340 U.S. 474
(1951).

               An employer's duty to provide information to a union derives from its duty to

bargain with its employees. Under subsection 8(a)(5) of the NLRA, it is considered an unfair

labor practice for an employer to refuse to bargain with the employees' representative. 29 U.S.C.

§ 158(a)(5). This obligation to bargain entails an obligation to "confer in good faith with respect

to wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment . . .." 29 U.S.C. § 158(d);




                                                                                                  
10 N.L.R.B. v
. United States Postal Service, 
18 F.3d 1089
, 1096 (3d Cir. 1994).

                 It is well settled that an employer, on request, must provide a union with

information that is relevant and necessary for the union to perform its bargaining obligations.

See, e.g., N.L.R.B. v. Acme Industrial Co., 
385 U.S. 432
, 435-36 (1967). Although hiring

practices do not apply directly to employees, discriminatory hiring practices potentially have a

direct effect on the workplace. Postal 
Service, 18 F.3d at 1099
; East Dayton Tool and Die Co.,

239 N.L.R.B. 141
, 142 (1978) (citing Tanner Motor Livery, Ltd., 
148 N.L.R.B. 1402
, 1404

(1964)). Therefore, a hiring practice may be a mandatory subject of collective bargaining when

the union has an "objective basis for believing [the practice] to be discriminatory." Postal

Service, 18 F.3d at 1099
; East 
Dayton, 239 N.L.R.B. at 142
; see also Star Tribune v. Newspaper

Guild of the Twin Cities, 
295 N.L.R.B. 543
, 548 n.17, 549 (1989).

                 As a general rule, the duty to bargain over hiring practices "arises only when the

union has made a demand and has communicated information to the employer indicating that it

has an objective basis for alleging discrimination." Postal 
Service, 18 F.3d at 1100
. First, the

union must show that it has a rational basis for believing that the hiring practice at issue may

discriminate. 
Id. at 1101.
Second, the union must make known to the employer its "reasonable

basis" for believing that there is discrimination in hiring. 
Id. at 1100.
"[O]nly after an employer

has had an opportunity to consider the basis for a union's information or bargaining demand can

the employer violate the NLRA by rejecting the demand." 
Id. at 1102
n.7. The "relevant

evidence is that which has been communicated to the employer as of the time of the refusal to

bargain . . .." 
Id. III Based
upon the employee lists, the phone calls received by Kornegay, and

Kornegay's personal observations, the ALJ concluded that the Union had a reasonable basis to

believe that Hertz was discriminating in hiring for the VSA position. The ALJ ruled, however,




                                                                                                      11
that the Union had not, prior to the hearing, communicated this information to Hertz. The NLRB

panel issued a much broader ruling. The panel concluded that
based on Kornegay's examination of the list of vehicle service attendants, the contemporaneous
               calls he received from employees regarding new hires, and his subsequent visits to
               the Respondent's facilities, as well as the nondiscrimination clause in the
               collective-bargaining agreement . . . the Union had an adequate basis for seeking
               information relevant to an investigation of all possible discriminatory hiring
               practices in all unit classifications.


Hertz, 319 N.L.R.B. at 599
(emphasis added). Since we resolve this appeal on legal grounds,

our holding does not address the factual issue of whether there is sufficient evidence in the record

to support the NLRB's sweeping order.

               Because the NLRB has failed to apply the legal standard mandated by our

precedent, we need not dwell on these factual ambiguities. The NLRA does not require an

employer to divulge information relating to individuals who are not part of the bargaining unit

until the union has communicated to the employer a reasonable factual basis for its belief that the

employer is discriminating. "[O]nly after an employer has had an opportunity to consider the

basis for a union's information or bargaining demand can the employer violate the NLRA by

rejecting the demand." Postal 
Service, 18 F.3d at 1102
n.7. The only evidence of discrimination
relevant to our consideration of the Union's demand for applicant information is the evidence that

the Union had communicated to Hertz at the time of Hertz's refusal to bargain. 
Id. The Board
appears to rely on two facts to support its ruling that the Union

satisfactorily communicated to Hertz its reasons for requesting the applicant data. First, Hertz

and the Union had entered into a collective bargaining agreement that prohibited direct or

indirect discrimination on the basis, inter alia, of race or national origin. See 
Hertz, 319 N.L.R.B. at 597
(quoting text of nondiscrimination agreement). Second, the Union made clear in

its letters that pursuant to its obligations under the collective-bargaining agreement, it was

investigating allegations of discrimination. The NLRB therefore concluded that "the Union




                                                                                                   12
provided the Respondent with an adequate basis of knowing that the information request was

related to the Union's collective-bargaining duties."

               As the ALJ found, these communications did not satisfy our requirement that the

Union communicate the basis for its bargaining demand. Postal 
Service, 18 F.3d at 1102
n.7.

The Union was obliged to do more than state the reason and/or authority for its request for

information. The Union was required to apprise Hertz of facts tending to support its suspicion

that Hertz might be discriminating. 
Id. There is
no evidence in the record that any of the Union's

oral or written communications fulfilled this obligation. One letter from the Union noted that the

Union sought the information "because it [was] investigating allegations that Hertz may have

discriminated against certain protected classes of applicants in making hiring decisions for

positions under the Agreement." This vaguely worded explanation for the request referenced no

facts that would have supported an objective basis for the Union's concerns.

               We stress that the Union did not need to demonstrate actual discrimination in

order to obtain information about allegedly discriminatory hiring practices. It needed only to

communicate some reasonable basis for its suspicion that the employer might be engaging in

discrimination. Despite a request from Hertz for more information, see App. at 214-15, Local

922 failed to satisfy this minimal obligation.

               In some situations, a union's reason for suspecting that discrimination is occurring

will be readily apparent. When it is clear that the employer should have known the reason for the

union's request for information, a specific communication of the facts underlying the request may

be unnecessary. As the ALJ noted in this case, however, two of Hertz's managers testified

credibly that they had no idea why the Union believed that Hertz's hiring practices might be

discriminatory until they arrived at the administrative hearing. The employment charts published

in the ALJ opinion demonstrate that a significant portion of the VSA workforce was comprised

of African-Americans. Although this fact does not rule out the possibility of discrimination, it




                                                                                                   13
does support Hertz's assertion that it could not readily determine the factual basis of the Union's

claim.

               Information pertaining to individuals who are not members of a union bargaining

unit is not available to a union on demand. A union must communicate facts that reasonably

support its suspicion of discrimination in hiring. Because Local 922 failed to do so in this case,

we will grant Hertz’s petition for review, reverse the NLRB panel decision, and remand the case

to the NLRB to dismiss the Union's complaint.




                                                                                                  14

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