Cumberland Times v. Teamsters Local 453 ( 1998 )


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  • UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    CUMBERLAND TIMES-NEWS
    DIVISION OF THOMSON NEWSPAPERS,
    INCORPORATED,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    No. 97-1517
    v.
    TEAMSTERS LOCAL UNION NO. 453,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
    William M. Nickerson, District Judge.
    (CA-96-2428)
    Argued: December 1, 1997
    Decided: January 13, 1998
    Before ERVIN and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges, and
    WILSON, Chief United States District Judge
    for the Western District of Virginia,
    sitting by designation.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: James Anthony Prozzi, JACKSON, LEWIS, SCHNITZ-
    LER & KRUPMAN, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for Appellant. Hugh
    J. Beins, Sr., BEINS, BODLEY, AXELROD & KRAFT, P.C., Wash-
    ington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Jonathan G. Axelrod,
    BEINS, BODLEY, AXELROD & KRAFT, P.C., Washington, D.C.,
    for Appellee.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit. See
    Local Rule 36(c).
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    PER CURIAM:
    Cumberland Times-News Division of Thomson Newspapers, Inc.
    (the Company) appeals the district court's grant of summary judg-
    ment in favor of Teamsters Local Union No. 453 (the Union). The
    district court enforced an arbitration award in favor of the Union, in
    particular Union member Rodger Lancaster, concluding that the arbi-
    trator's award drew its essence from the December 1994 Collective
    Bargaining Agreement (the CBA) between the Company and the
    Union.1 For reasons that follow, we affirm.
    I
    Rodger Lancaster began part-time employment with the Company
    in 1974, which turned into full-time employment in 1981. In Septem-
    ber 1987, he was laid off from his full-time position as a newspaper
    delivery person. Lancaster filed a grievance contending that the Com-
    pany had violated the CBA by using independent contractors to per-
    form bargaining unit work.
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 Over the years, the Company and the Union have entered into succes-
    sive CBAs, the most recent being the December 31, 1994 CBA which
    expired on December 31, 1997. The parties agree that the provisions of
    the CBAs in effect prior to the December 1994 CBA are the same in all
    material respects as the CBA entered into in December 1994. For pur-
    poses of clarity, all references to the CBA are references to the Decem-
    ber 1994 CBA.
    2
    On August 27, 1988, Lancaster, who had evidently been working
    part-time to deliver Sunday newspapers for the Company, was laid off
    from his part-time position. He filed another grievance contending
    again that bargaining unit work was being improperly assigned to
    independent contractors.
    Pursuant to the CBA, Lancaster's grievances proceeded to arbitra-
    tion. After a hearing, Arbitrator Thomas E. Bracken concluded that
    the Company did not violate the CBA when it laid off Lancaster from
    his full-time position in September 1987 because the layoff was rea-
    sonable and in good faith. However, Arbitrator Bracken concluded
    that the Company did not act reasonably and in good faith when it
    laid off Lancaster from his part-time position in August 1988.
    Accordingly, Arbitrator Bracken ordered that Lancaster receive back
    pay and reinstatement.
    After Arbitrator Bracken's decision, the Company and the Union
    entered into a settlement agreement, dated June 14, 1990 (the June
    1990 Settlement Agreement). In exchange for Lancaster's part-time
    position and seniority rights, the Company gave Lancaster $2,000 and
    agreed "that in the event a vacancy occur[red] in the Teamsters' bar-
    gaining unit one offer of employment [would] be made to Mr. Lan-
    caster prior to the hiring of any person not then employed by the
    Times-News." (J.A. 30).
    In July 1995, two Union drivers retired. Following the retirement
    of these drivers, the Company rearranged some of the delivery routes
    and engaged additional independent contractors. Following the Com-
    pany's refusal to rehire Lancaster, the Union filed the grievance at
    issue in this case. A hearing was held on April 2, 1996 before Arbitra-
    tor Robert E. Nagle, who issued a decision on July 6, 1996. Arbitrator
    Nagle concluded that the obligation to offer employment to Lancaster
    created by the June 1990 Settlement Agreement was triggered when
    the Company engaged independent contractors following the retire-
    ment of two Union employees. As an award, Arbitrator Nagle ordered
    that Lancaster be reinstated and given back pay. To prevent the offer
    of reinstatement from being defeated by future subcontracting, Arbi-
    trator Nagle also ordered that Lancaster could not"be laid off as a
    result of the subcontracting of bargaining unit work." (J.A. 50).
    3
    The Company then brought this action in the United States District
    Court for the District of Maryland seeking to vacate the labor arbitra-
    tion award pursuant to § 301 of the Labor-Management Relations Act
    of 1947. See 29 U.S.C. § 185 et seq. The Union cross-claimed to
    enforce the arbitration award, and for prejudgment interest and attor-
    ney's fees.
    The case was resolved by the district court on cross-motions for
    summary judgment. On March 26, 1997, the district court granted the
    Union's motion for summary judgment and denied the Company's
    motion for summary judgment. The district court enforced Arbitrator
    Nagle's award and awarded prejudgment interest, but it denied the
    request for attorney's fees. On April 17, 1997, the Company filed a
    timely notice of appeal.
    II
    An arbitration award may not be overturned unless the award "vio-
    lates well-settled and prevailing public policy, fails to draw its
    essence from the collective bargaining agreement or reflects the arbi-
    trator's own notions of right and wrong." Mountaineer Gas Co. v. Oil
    Chem. & Atomic Workers, 
    76 F.3d 606
    , 608 (4th Cir.), cert. denied,
    
    117 S. Ct. 80
     (1996). Our review is limited to determining "whether
    the arbitrator did his job--not whether he did it well, correctly, or rea-
    sonably, but simply whether he did it." Id. In making this assessment,
    we examine: "(1) the arbitrator's role as defined by the CBA;
    (2) whether the award ignored the plain language of the CBA; and
    (3) whether the arbitrator's discretion in formulating the award com-
    ported with the essence of the CBA's proscribed limits." Id.
    The Company contends that Arbitrator Nagle exceeded his author-
    ity when he ordered that Lancaster could not "be laid off as a result
    of the subcontracting of bargaining unit work." (J.A. 50).2 In support
    of its position, the Company cites two provisions of the CBA. The
    first is Article XX which provides that certain employees other than
    Lancaster "shall remain as employees for the remainder of their work-
    ing lives unless vacating [their employment] through retirement, res-
    _________________________________________________________________
    2 The Company concedes that Arbitrator Nagle had the authority to
    order reinstatement and back pay.
    4
    ignation, permanent disability, death or discharge for cause." (J.A.
    28). The second is Article V, § 3 which provides:
    The arbitrator shall not have the authority to amend or mod-
    ify this Agreement or establish new terms or conditions
    under this Agreement. The arbitrator shall determine any
    questions of arbitrability. In the event the position of the
    Union is sustained, the aggrieved party shall be entitled to
    all the benefits of this Agreement which would have accrued
    to him had there been no grievance.
    (J.A. 16).
    With respect to Article XX of the CBA, the Company argues that
    the remedial guarantee against future subcontracting given to Lancas-
    ter is the same afforded to the employees covered by Article XX of
    the CBA and, therefore, Arbitrator Nagle created a new term and con-
    dition of employment for Lancaster in violation of the CBA. This
    argument has no merit. Arbitrator Nagle's award does not put Lancas-
    ter on par with the employees covered by Article XX of the CBA, as
    Lancaster does not have a position guaranteed for life. Clearly, Lan-
    caster could be laid off if the Company consolidated his delivery
    route with routes handled by existing employees.
    The Company's stronger position lies in Article V,§ 3 of the CBA
    which states that if "the position of the Union is sustained, the
    aggrieved party shall be entitled to all the benefits of this Agreement
    which would have accrued to him had there been no grievance." Id.
    According to the Company, the guarantee which was set forth in
    Arbitrator Nagle's decision gave Lancaster a greater benefit, namely,
    unlimited insulation against the effects of subcontracting. At first
    blush, this argument carries force in that, arguably, the CBA intimates
    that the arbitrator can only grant relief that the employee would have
    been entitled to had there been no grievance. However, the Compa-
    ny's argument founders when this provision of the CBA is considered
    in conjunction with the June 1990 Settlement Agreement, which is
    properly construed as a rider to the CBA, and may in fact modify it.
    See, e.g., Davis v. Bell Atlantic-West Virginia, Inc., 
    110 F.3d 245
    , 249
    (4th Cir. 1997) (recognizing that settlement agreements entered into
    5
    following a grievance procedure initiated pursuant to the CBA may
    modify the CBA and are fairly characterized as riders to the CBA).3
    Following Arbitrator Bracken's decision ordering Lancaster to be
    reinstated, the June 1990 Settlement Agreement was procured through
    a deliberative process. In exchange for Lancaster's job and seniority
    rights, the Company gave Lancaster $2,000 and agreed, in the event
    a vacancy arose in the bargaining unit, to offer Lancaster a position
    prior to the hiring of any person not employed by the Company. Once
    a vacancy arose in the bargaining unit and the position was being per-
    formed by an independent contractor, the duty to hire Lancaster was
    triggered and the terms of the June 1990 Settlement Agreement
    breached.
    The question then is simply the appropriate remedy. In this case,
    Arbitrator Nagle selected a remedy to prevent the Company from
    reneging on its promise to rehire Lancaster and to prevent the very
    harm that caused Lancaster to grieve in the first place. In essence,
    Arbitrator Nagle was protecting Lancaster from being hired on day
    one and then, on day two, being laid off as a result of subcontracting.
    In our view, this prospective remedy was authorized by the June 1990
    Settlement Agreement, which itself contained a prospective agree-
    ment, and the CBA. Because Arbitrator Nagle's decision drew its
    essence from the CBA, the district court correctly granted summary
    judgment to the Union.4
    III
    For the reasons stated herein, the judgment of the district court is
    affirmed.
    AFFIRMED
    _________________________________________________________________
    3 Notably, Article V, § 4 of the CBA provides that a "mutual settlement
    of the grievance pursuant to the procedure set forth herein will be final
    and binding on all parties and the employees involved." (J.A. 16).
    4 For the reasons stated by the district court, we affirm the award of
    prejudgment interest and the denial of attorney's fees. We also note that
    the Company conceded at oral argument that if we held in favor of the
    Union, Lancaster's right and protection against future subcontracting sur-
    vives the expiration of the December 1994 CBA and any subsequent
    CBAs unless the parties specifically contract away Lancaster's rights.
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 97-1517

Filed Date: 1/13/1998

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014