United Food & Commercial Workers, Local 23 v. Mountaineer Park, Inc. , 408 F. App'x 709 ( 2011 )


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  •                              UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 09-2215
    UNITED FOOD AND COMMERCIAL WORKERS, LOCAL 23,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.
    MOUNTAINEER PARK, INCORPORATED,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern
    District of West Virginia, at Wheeling.     Frederick P. Stamp,
    Jr., Senior District Judge. (5:08-cv-00177-FPS)
    Argued:   October 28, 2010                 Decided:   January 26, 2011
    Before MOTZ, AGEE, and WYNN, Circuit Judges.
    Reversed and remanded by unpublished opinion. Judge Agee wrote
    the opinion, in which Judge Motz and Judge Wynn joined.
    ARGUED: Marianne Oliver, GILARDI, COOPER & LOMUPO, Pittsburgh,
    Pennsylvania, for Appellant.      Peter Raymond Rich, SPILMAN,
    THOMAS & BATTLE, PLLC, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for Appellee.
    ON BRIEF: William J. Gagliardino, GILARDI, COOPER & LOMUPO,
    Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Timothy F. Cogan, CASSIDY, MYERS,
    COGAN & VOEGELIN, LC, Wheeling, West Virginia, for Appellant.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    AGEE, Circuit Judge:
    United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 23 (“the Union”)
    appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment in
    favor of Mountaineer Park, Inc. (“MPI”).                      The Union sought to
    compel    MPI   to    arbitrate      two   disputes      under     the    arbitration
    provision of the Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”) 1 between
    the Union and MPI.              In its order granting MPI’s motion for
    summary judgment, the district court held that the disputes were
    not   subject    to    arbitration.            Because   we    conclude     that   the
    parties’ agreement requires arbitration, we reverse the judgment
    of the district court and remand for further proceedings.
    I.
    The resolution of this case revolves around the scope and
    interplay of two sections in the CBA: the arbitration provision
    in Article 12, and the management rights clause in Article 4.
    Under Article 12, the parties agreed to an expansive provision
    to arbitrate “any dispute or disagreement with respect to the
    interpretation       or   any   of   the    provisions        of   this   agreement.”
    (J.A. 22, 48.)
    1
    Although there were two different CBAs in effect during
    the relevant time frame, the pertinent provisions of each are
    the same for purposes of this case.     Accordingly, we simply
    refer to the CBA.
    2
    Article 4, titled “Management Rights” lists certain rights
    retained by MPI, the pertinent provision for our purposes being
    the following:
    ARTICLE 4 – Management Rights: Except as expressly
    modified or restricted by a specific provision of this
    Agreement, Employer reserves the right in accordance
    with its judgment in connection with it’s [sic] VLT
    employees:[2]
    . . .
    (j) Except as otherwise specifically provided herein,
    to exercise all rights it had prior to the signing of
    this Agreement.
    (J.A. 14-15; 40-41.)
    The parties dispute how the foregoing provisions apply to
    determine whether the two separate grievances brought by the
    Union are arbitrable. 3      The first grievance (the “pay grievance”)
    was   filed   by    the   Union   on   behalf   of   several   employees   who
    changed   job      classifications     by   voluntarily   transferring     into
    lower-grade positions.        According to the Union, these employees
    were treated as “new hires” after their transfers and were paid
    the “hiring rates” set forth in subsection 1 of Appendix A to
    the CBA, but without any adjustment for prior increases earned
    under subsection 2.
    2
    The employees whose grievances are at issue are all VLT
    employees.
    3
    The parties and the district court referred                  to     the
    disputes as “grievances” and we will use the same term.
    3
    In    the    second   grievance          (the      “vacation     grievance”),      the
    Union challenged MPI’s decision to “blackout” December 26th as a
    day when no employees were permitted to take vacation, and the
    consequent denial of employees’ requests for vacation on that
    date.
    The    Union    filed      its    complaint        in   the    district    court    to
    compel    arbitration      of    these    grievances          after    MPI    refused    to
    arbitrate.        After the parties filed cross-motions for summary
    judgment,    the     district         court       issued     an    opinion     and   order
    granting    MPI’s    motion      for     summary        judgment      and    denying    the
    Union’s.     In doing so, the district court held that MPI was not
    required to arbitrate either grievance.
    The Union timely appealed.                      This Court has jurisdiction
    under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
    II.
    A.
    We review a district court’s award of summary judgment de
    novo.     French v. Assurance Co. of Am., 
    448 F.3d 693
    , 700 (4th
    Cir. 2006).       “Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no
    genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled
    to judgment as a matter of law.”                   Id.; Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).
    In    AT&T    Technologies,        Inc.       v.    Communications       Workers    of
    America, 
    475 U.S. 643
    (1986), the Supreme Court described four
    4
    basic principles which courts should use to determine whether a
    disputed issue is subject to arbitration.
    The first principle . . . is that arbitration is
    a matter of contract and a party cannot be required to
    submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not
    agreed so to submit. . . .
    The second rule, which follows inexorably from
    the first, is that the question of arbitrability--
    whether a collective-bargaining agreement creates a
    duty for the parties to arbitrate the particular
    grievance--is   undeniably an  issue   for  judicial
    determination. . . .
    The third principle … is that, in deciding
    whether the parties have agreed to submit a particular
    grievance to arbitration, a court is not to rule on
    the   potential   merits   of   the  underlying   claims.
    Whether “arguable” or not, indeed even if it appears
    to the court to be frivolous, the [dispute at issue]
    is to be decided, not by the court asked to order
    arbitration, but as the parties have agreed, by the
    arbitrator.     The courts, therefore, have no business
    weighing the merits of the grievance, considering
    whether there is equity in a particular claim, or
    determining whether there is particular language in
    the written instrument which will support the claim.
    The   agreement   is   to   submit  all   grievances   to
    arbitration, not merely those which the court will
    deem meritorious.
    Finally, it has been established that where the
    contract contains an arbitration clause, there is a
    presumption of arbitrability in the sense that an
    order to arbitrate the particular grievance should not
    be denied unless it may be said with positive
    assurance   that  the   arbitration   clause  is   not
    susceptible of an interpretation that covers the
    asserted dispute.  Doubts should be resolved in favor
    of 
    coverage. 475 U.S. at 648-650
    (internal quotations and citations omitted).
    Additionally, in cases where there is a broad arbitration
    clause   and   an   “absence   of   any   express   provision   excluding   a
    5
    particular      grievance        from      arbitration,       .    .   .    only    the    most
    forceful       evidence    of     a     purpose     to   exclude           the   claim     from
    arbitration can prevail.”                  United Steelworkers of Am. v. Warrior
    & Gulf Navigation Co., 
    363 U.S. 574
    , 584-85 (1960) (“Warrior &
    Gulf”).
    B.
    With regard to the pay grievance, the district court found
    the   following     language          in    subsection    4       of   Appendix      A    to   be
    significant: “It is specifically agreed that the hiring rates
    and   annual      increases       set       forth   in    this         Appendix      ‘A’       are
    minimums, and that the Employer may pay rates and increases in
    excess    of    these     at    its     sole   discretion.”             (J.A.      31.)        The
    district court considered the “at its sole discretion” language
    of “particular importance.”                  (J.A. 87.)       The court also stated
    it read subsection (j) of Article 4, which reserved to MPI “all
    rights” it had prior to signing the CBA, except as otherwise
    specifically provided in the CBA, to weigh against arbitration.
    (J.A. 87.)
    Principally based on the “sole discretion” authority and
    reservation of prior rights, the district court concluded the
    CBA “taken as a whole, clearly and unambiguously shows that the
    parties did not intend to take a grievance such as this to
    arbitration. . . .             The language clearly shows that, as a result
    of the parties’ bargaining, there is no right to retain past
    6
    annual pay increases where an employee voluntarily steps into a
    lower    position.”              (J.A.    88-89.)          Because         MPI    was     paying     the
    employees who voluntarily downbid into lower classifications at
    least the minimum hiring rates set forth in Appendix A, the
    district court concluded the pay grievance was not arbitrable.
    We disagree.              The CBA’s arbitration provision, Article 12,
    covers       “any       dispute          or     disagreement          with       respect      to     the
    interpretation              or    any    of     the    provisions          of    this     agreement.”
    (J.A. 22, 48.)                   Whether the “minimum hourly hiring rates” in
    subsection 1 of Appendix A constitute the full wage basis of the
    downbidding            employees,         so     they      have       no        entitlement        under
    subsection 2, is clearly in dispute.                                  Unless a specific CBA
    provision takes this grievance out of the scope of arbitration,
    then    it    is       up    to    the        arbitrator       to    decide       which     pay    rate
    applies.
    Significantly, there is no express provision in Article 4
    or elsewhere in the CBA that removes the pay grievance from the
    otherwise legitimate reach of the arbitration clause.                                      While MPI
    points repeatedly to the management rights clause as exempting
    certain       disputes            from        arbitration,           that        clause     and      the
    arbitration         clause         do    not     refer     to       each    other.         While     the
    wording of subsection 4 of Appendix A may be relevant to the
    merits    of    the         pay    grievance          (e.g.,    in    answering         whether      the
    subsection         1    pay       rates        are    inclusive        or       exclusive     of     the
    7
    subsection 2 increases), nothing in subsection 4 speaks to the
    arbitrability of a dispute about the terms in Appendix A.                           No
    provision in the CBA excises pay disputes from the agreement to
    arbitrate.
    Nonetheless, MPI contends we should affirm the denial of
    arbitrability     because    it    presented         “forceful    evidence    of    a
    purpose   to    exclude    the    claim       from   arbitration.”      See    AT&T
    
    Techs., 475 U.S. at 650
    (quotations and citation omitted).                         MPI
    contends it has shown such “forceful evidence” through: (1) the
    managements rights clause; (2) the discretion given to MPI in
    Appendix A to pay any rates over the minimum rates set forth
    therein; (3) the absence of any specific clause requiring MPI to
    pay more than the hiring minimums to employees who downbid; and
    (4) MPI’s practice, both before and during the term of the CBA,
    of   paying    persons    going   into    a     different   job    classification
    (such as by demotion, bumping, transfer, downbidding, or other
    reason) at the hiring rate for that classification.
    MPI contends that, taken together, this evidence shows that
    the parties agreed MPI has sole discretion over the issue of pay
    to its employees except as otherwise modified by the agreement.
    Consequently,     MPI    concludes   the       recited   items    constitute       the
    “forceful evidence” necessary to show the parties did not intend
    this dispute to be arbitrable.
    8
    Again, we disagree.               Warrior & Gulf, which was the genesis
    of the “most forceful evidence” language, is instructive here.
    In    that   case,        the    union     sought     to    compel       the   employer     to
    arbitrate      a    grievance          challenging    the    employer’s         decision    to
    contract     out    work        that    had   previously      been       performed   by    its
    
    employees. 363 U.S. at 575
    .           The agreement between the parties
    had a grievance and arbitration provision which governed any
    “differences aris[ing]” between the company and the union “as to
    the meaning and application of the provisions of this Agreement”
    as    well   as     “any        local    trouble      of    any    kind.”      
    Id. at 576
    (quotations omitted).              It further stated, however, that “matters
    which are strictly a function of management shall not be subject
    to arbitration under this section.” 
    Id. (quotations omitted).
    In light of the no-strike clause present in the agreement,
    the   Supreme       Court       determined     that    the    language         “‘strictly    a
    function of management’ must be interpreted as referring only to
    that over which the contract gives management complete control
    and unfettered discretion.” 
    Id. at 584.
                              The Court noted that,
    had    there       been     a     specific     exclusion          from     arbitration      of
    “contracting out” or any collateral agreement making clear that
    contracting out was not a matter for arbitration, the grievance
    would not be arbitrable.                  
    Id. at 584.
            But in the absence of
    such a provision and in the absence of any showing that the
    parties designed the phrase “strictly a function of management”
    9
    to encompass any and all forms of contracting out, the Court
    determined that the dispute was arbitrable.                                 The “exclusion”
    from arbitration of strictly management functions simply was not
    sufficiently “forceful evidence” of an intent to exclude the
    claim from arbitration.              
    Id. at 585.
    Although    the       arbitration         clause      in    Warrior      &    Gulf    was
    arguably broader            than     the    one    at      issue    here,    the     management
    rights clause in that case expressly stated that matters that
    were    strictly        a     function      of     management        were      exempted      from
    arbitration.        In the case at bar, by contrast, the management
    rights clause makes no reference to arbitration, much less any
    restrictions       on       arbitration.           Indeed,        neither    the     management
    rights    clause        nor    the       arbitration        provision       (nor     any    other
    provision of the CBA) expressly excludes any management decision
    from the arbitration provision.
    Moreover, Article 4 is itself limited by other terms in the
    Agreement.         Put      differently,          while     the    CBA   has    a    management
    rights clause, that clause is subject to the other terms in the
    agreement,    including            the     requirement       to    arbitrate        grievances.
    (J.A.    14-15;     40-41)         (language          in    managements        rights      clause
    stating that “Except as expressly modified or restricted by a
    specific     provision          of       this    Agreement,”         management       has     the
    expressed rights).
    10
    Additionally,              the     mere     fact   that    Appendix      A   gives    the
    employer “sole discretion” to pay higher wages than the contract
    rate       is     not    dispositive          on    the   question       of    arbitrability.
    Indeed, the very issue raised in the pay grievance is a dispute
    over       what    is       the   contract       rate,    not     what   the    employer     may
    discretionarily choose to pay beyond that rate.                                Cf. East Coast
    Hockey League v. Prof’l Hockey Players Ass’n, 
    322 F.3d 311
    (4th
    Cir. 2003) (concluding that a dispute was arbitrable despite
    language          in    a    separate        agreement     between       the    parties     that
    management could take certain actions “in its sole discretion”);
    
    id. at 316
        (this      Court       finding     “no     inconsistency      in     the
    president being given the ‘sole discretion’ to make a decision
    and        that        exercise         of    discretion         being    reviewable”        via
    arbitration). 4
    For all of these reasons, we conclude that the record does
    not    disclose          the      “most      forceful     evidence”      showing    that    the
    4
    MPI relies heavily on three Seventh Circuit decisions:
    Local Union 1393 International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
    v. Utilities District of Western Indiana Rural Electric
    Membership   Cooperative,  
    167 F.3d 1181
      (7th  Cir.  1999),
    International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. Logistics Support
    Group, 
    999 F.2d 227
    (7th Cir. 1993), and Local Union No. 483,
    International Brotherhood of Boilermakers v. Shell Oil Co., 
    369 F.2d 526
    , 529 (7th Cir. 1966).    These out of circuit cases are
    not binding on this Court.     In any event, we have considered
    each of them, but all are substantially distinguishable based on
    the facts and language of the contract provisions, none of which
    are similar to those in the case at bar.
    11
    parties      did    not     intend     to    arbitrate        the     pay       grievance.
    Accordingly, the presumption in favor of arbitrability applies
    and the district court erred in determining the pay grievance
    was not arbitrable.
    C.
    Our     analysis      leads      to    a     similar      conclusion        on       the
    arbitrability       of    the   vacation         grievance.         According         to   the
    Union,      the    analysis     turns       on    “the     interplay        between        the
    employees’ rights to take vacation at any time during the year
    and the employer’s right to approve/disapprove selected vacation
    dates.” (Appellant’s Br. at 11-12.)                      The asserted “right” of
    employees     to    take     vacation       at     any   time      during       the    year,
    according to the Union, is based on language in the CBA that
    “[v]acations may be taken between January 1 and December 31 each
    year.” (J.A. 24.)          The Union contends that this provision means
    the   employer     is     prohibited    from      making     any    date    a    “blackout
    date” on which no employees are permitted to take vacation.                                The
    Union therefore argues that the vacation grievance is nothing
    more than a dispute as to the meaning of the terms of the CBA
    and thus must fall to an arbitrator to decide.
    MPI responds that there is unchallenged ‘forceful evidence’
    of a purpose to exclude the vacation selection grievances from
    arbitration.        In particular, MPI contends Section 14.6 of the
    CBA is such forceful evidence because it expressly allows MPI to
    12
    “approve/disapprove selected vacation dates.” (Appellee’s Br. 22
    (quoting J.A. 25, 51).)                  Additionally, MPI argues the CBA has no
    specific contractual restriction on MPI’s right to disapprove
    vacation      on    the      day    after     Christmas,     and     the      Union    cannot
    explain why it negotiated a specific restriction on management’s
    staffing rights with respect to Christmas Day in Section 13.2 of
    the CBA.
    The district court concluded the vacation grievances were
    not arbitrable, but appeared to do so by analyzing the merits of
    the     claim      instead     of        whether    the    dispute      was    subject      to
    arbitration.          As noted in AT&T Technologies, “a court is not to
    rule on the potential merits of the underlying 
    claims.” 475 U.S. at 649
    .       MPI contends, though, that the district court properly
    addressed the merits of the vacation grievance claim, because
    consideration of the substantive merits is sometimes required in
    order    to     rule    on    arbitrability.              While   it    is    occasionally
    necessary for a court to interpret a provision of an agreement
    in order to determine arbitrability,                       see Litton Fin. Printing
    Div. v. NLRB, 
    501 U.S. 190
    , 209 (1991) (“we cannot avoid [our
    duty    to    determine       arbitrability]         because       it   requires       us   to
    interpret a provision of a bargaining agreement”), our caselaw
    consistently        follows        the    Supreme    Court’s      admonition      to    avoid
    reaching the merits of the issue when that is not required to
    determine       the    question          of   arbitrability.       See,       e.g.,    United
    13
    Steel, Paper, & Forestry, Rubber, Mfg., Energy, Allied-Indus. &
    Serv. Workers Int’l Union v. Cont’l Tire N. Am., Inc., 
    568 F.3d 158
    , 165-66 (4th Cir. 2009) (while “courts are permitted some
    latitude to interpret provisions of a bargaining agreement that
    impact the underlying merits of the dispute” when necessary to
    determine arbitrability, “[i]f possible . . . the underlying
    merits should be avoided”); United Food & Commercial Workers
    Union v. Shoppers Food Warehouse Corp., 
    35 F.3d 958
    , 961 (4th
    Cir. 1994).
    Whether       the    vacation   grievance    fails     on   its     merits   is
    immaterial    to    the    determination    of    whether    the   grievance      is
    arbitrable.     See AT&T 
    Techs., 475 U.S. at 649-50
    .                   As with the
    pay grievance, the conflicting interpretations of Article 14 of
    the CBA are a “disagreement with respect to the interpretation .
    . . of the provisions of the agreement.”                  (J.A. 22, 48.)          No
    provision of the CBA takes this dispute out of the presumption
    of arbitration.          Neither do any of MPI’s suggestions rise to the
    level of the “most forceful evidence” to exclude the vacation
    grievance from arbitration.
    MPI    argues,       however,   that   the    district      court    properly
    addressed     the    merits     of   the    claims    because      the     Union’s
    grievances here are “more than ‘frivolous’, they are ‘so totally
    devoid of merit as to amount to a ‘perversion’ of the grievance
    procedure.’” (Appellee’s Br. 10 (quoting Tobacco Workers Int’l
    14
    Union       v.     Lorillard   Corp.,    
    448 F.2d 949
    ,    954   n.10    (4th    Cir.
    1971)).)          Notably, the quoted language is not a holding of this
    Court.
    Instead, the language in Lorillard appears in a footnote in
    which a panel of this Court reiterates the principle that a
    federal court cannot refuse to compel arbitration because it
    finds a claim to be frivolous.                 The footnote then goes on to say
    that “[t]he closest any court has come to stating that the court
    may refuse to compel arbitration if the grievance is without
    merit is the recognition of the possibility that a grievant’s
    claim        be    so    totally   devoid      of   merit     as    to    amount    to   a
    ‘perversion of the grievance procedure.’” 
    Lorillard, 448 F.2d at 954
    n.10. (citations omitted) (quoting one Second Circuit and
    one Fifth Circuit decision).                  This Court continued: “Even if we
    were to accept the notion that the District Court may examine
    the merits to such an extent, this case falls far short of such
    a test.” 
    Id. 5 We
           cannot   conclude     the    Union’s      claim    is     “more    than
    frivolous.”             The vacation grievance turns on interpretation of
    the CBA and the rights of MPI with regard to denying vacation
    5
    MPI points to no other Supreme Court or Fourth Circuit
    authority   holding   that  a   court   may   decline to order
    arbitrability of an otherwise arbitrable grievance because the
    grievance is determined to be “more than frivolous.”
    15
    days or blacking out vacation days altogether.                In short, the
    presumption of arbitrability applies, and no forceful evidence
    has been shown that the parties did not intend to arbitrate such
    a   dispute.   Thus,   the   vacation    grievance     is    subject   to   the
    parties’ agreement to arbitrate, and the district court erred in
    refusing to order arbitration of that dispute.
    III.
    The arbitration clause in the CBA reflected the parties’
    clear intent to arbitrate a broad array of disputes concerning
    the   interpretation    of   the   CBA    and   MPI    has    not   presented
    “forceful evidence” that the parties intended to exclude the
    issues in dispute from the contractual covenant to arbitrate.
    Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed, and
    the case is hereby remanded to the district court for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    16