Brock Industrial Services, LLC v. Laborers' International Union ( 2019 )


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  •                              In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688
    BROCK INDUSTRIAL SERVICES, LLC,
    Plaintiff-Appellant/
    Cross-Appellee,
    v.
    LABORERS’ INTERNATIONAL UNION
    OF NORTH AMERICA CONSTRUCTION
    & GENERAL LABORERS LOCAL 100,
    Defendant-Appellee/
    Cross-Appellant.
    ____________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Illinois.
    No. 16-CV-780-NJR-DGW — Nancy J. Rosenstengel, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED APRIL 11, 2018 — DECIDED APRIL 8, 2019
    ____________________
    Before BAUER, SYKES, and BARRETT, Circuit Judges.
    SYKES, Circuit Judge. Brock Industrial Services, LLC, is an
    Illinois-based provider of industrial services, including
    scaffolding, painting, insulation, and shoring. In January
    2                                     Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688
    2016 it entered into a labor agreement with Local 100 of the
    Laborers’ International Union 1 (“the Laborers Union” or
    “the Laborers”). The agreement requires arbitration of
    grievances and establishes a bipartite arbitration procedure
    for resolving most disputes. But work-jurisdiction dis-
    putes—disputes over whether the Laborers or another union
    is entitled to perform work—are instead subject to a tripar-
    tite arbitration procedure involving the company and the
    contending unions.
    Sometime prior to signing the agreement, Brock hired the
    Laborers to perform scaffolding work at a chemical plant.
    On the day after the agreement became effective, Brock
    informed the Laborers Union that it was reassigning the
    work to the International Brotherhood of Carpenters (“the
    Carpenters Union” or “the Carpenters”). Invoking the
    bipartite arbitration procedure, the Laborers Union filed a
    grievance with the Grievance Review Subcommittee of the
    National Maintenance Agreement Policy Committee (“the
    Subcommittee”). Brock responded that the grievance in-
    volved a work-jurisdiction dispute subject to tripartite
    arbitration and therefore the Subcommittee lacked authority
    to arbitrate the matter. The Subcommittee disagreed and
    sustained the grievance.
    Brock filed suit under section 301 of the Labor Manage-
    ment Relations Act, 
    29 U.S.C. § 185
    , seeking to vacate the
    Subcommittee’s decision. The Laborers Union responded
    with a request to enforce the decision. After a flurry of
    motions on both sides, the district judge determined that the
    1 Formally, the Laborers’ International Union of North America
    Construction & General Laborers Local 100.
    Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688                                         3
    Subcommittee had authority to resolve the dispute and
    issued an order enforcing its decision. Brock appealed.
    Under the mistaken impression that the judge had denied
    the motion to enforce, the Laborers Union also appealed.
    We reverse. At bottom, this grievance concerns which of
    two unions was entitled to perform the scaffolding work at
    the chemical plant. That’s a jurisdictional dispute, and the
    labor agreement calls for tripartite arbitration of jurisdiction-
    al disputes. Accordingly, the Subcommittee had no authority
    over the matter and its decision must be vacated.
    I. Background
    Brock and the Laborers Union entered into a labor
    agreement effective January 7, 2016. The agreement pro-
    vides: “Except for jurisdictional disputes and those involv-
    ing general wage rates, all disputes and grievances arising
    out of work performed under this [a]greement … shall be
    resolved” through the procedures outlined in Article VI.
    Article VI requires Brock and the Laborers to submit unre-
    solved grievances to the Subcommittee for arbitration. We
    refer to this grievance process as bipartite arbitration.
    Article I of the agreement provides a separate procedure
    for resolving work-jurisdiction disputes. A work-jurisdiction
    dispute is “a dispute between two or more groups of em-
    ployees over which is entitled to do certain work for an
    employer.” Hutter Constr. Co. v. Int’l Union of Operating
    Eng’rs, Local 139, 
    862 F.2d 641
    , 644 (7th Cir. 1988) (quotation
    marks omitted). Under Article I of the labor contract, unre-
    solved work-jurisdiction disputes must be submitted to a
    Permanent Umpire. Because this process typically involves
    4                                      Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688
    three parties—the employer plus the two competing un-
    ions—we refer to it as tripartite arbitration.
    Prior to signing the agreement, Brock assigned several
    Laborers to construct scaffolding at the Afton Chemical
    Plant. On January 8, 2016—the day after the operative labor
    agreement became effective—Brock notified the Laborers
    Union that its services were no longer required because the
    project was assigned to the Carpenters Union. On January 11
    the Laborers Union sent a letter to the National Maintenance
    Agreement Policy Committee claiming that Brock violated
    the agreement when it reassigned the work to the Carpen-
    ters. On January 21 the Laborers notified the Carpenters
    Union of a work-jurisdiction dispute between the unions
    over the project.
    Invoking the bipartite arbitration procedure specified in
    Article VI, the Laborers filed a grievance with the Subcom-
    mittee complaining that Brock violated the agreement by
    terminating the Laborers and assigning work to the Carpen-
    ters. The grievance requested reinstatement and backpay as
    a remedy. Brock responded that the Subcommittee had no
    arbitral authority over the grievance because it constituted a
    work-jurisdiction dispute and requested that the grievance
    be dismissed or denied.
    The Subcommittee denied Brock’s request and sustained
    the grievance, finding that Brock violated Article I, Section 5
    of the labor contract. That provisions states: “During the
    existence of the [a]greement, there shall be no strikes, lock-
    outs, work stoppages, or picketing arising out of any juris-
    dictional dispute. Work will continue as originally assigned,
    pending resolution of the dispute.” The Subcommittee
    Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688                                      5
    determined that Brock violated this section by making “a
    change of assignment.”
    Brock brought this suit under section 301 seeking to va-
    cate the arbitral award as void because the grievance consti-
    tuted a jurisdictional dispute and thus was outside the
    Subcommittee’s arbitral authority. A bevy of motions fol-
    lowed. The Laborers moved to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6)
    of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; Brock moved to
    vacate the award; the Laborers moved to “dismiss” the
    motion to vacate on timeliness grounds; and the Laborers
    moved to enforce the award.
    The judge denied all four motions. She acknowledged
    that the Subcommittee lacked arbitral authority if the griev-
    ance concerned a jurisdictional dispute. She concluded,
    however, that if the grievance concerned both a jurisdictional
    dispute and a wrongful-termination claim, then the Sub-
    committee could properly adjudicate the latter dispute. But a
    material issue of fact—namely, whether the Laborers were
    ever assigned the project to begin with—prevented the judge
    from resolving the case at that time.
    Brock sought reconsideration, and the Laborers moved
    for summary judgment. The judge denied reconsideration
    and entered summary judgment for the Laborers Union,
    ruling that Brock had indeed assigned the scaffolding work
    to the Laborers and the Subcommittee’s decision is enforcea-
    ble. Both sides appealed.
    II. Discussion
    We review a summary judgment de novo. Hooper v. Proc-
    tor Health Care Inc., 
    804 F.3d 846
    , 849 (7th Cir. 2015). We
    begin by addressing the Laborers’ cross-appeal, which seeks
    6                                      Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688
    review of the judge’s initial order denying the motion to
    enforce the arbitral award. The cross-appeal rests on the
    mistaken assumption that the judge never issued an order
    enforcing the award. But the summary-judgment order
    clearly states that the “award is enforceable as a matter of
    law.” Because the Laborers prevailed, we dismiss the cross-
    appeal.
    With that out of the way, we turn to the main event:
    Brock’s argument that the Subcommittee lacked the authori-
    ty to arbitrate the grievance because it raised a work-
    jurisdiction dispute. “[A]rbitration 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.” AT&T Techs.,
    Inc. v. Commc’ns Workers of Am., 
    475 U.S. 643
    , 648 (1986)
    (quotation marks omitted). “[T]he question of arbitrability—
    whether a collective-bargaining agreement creates a duty for
    the parties to arbitrate the particular grievance—is undenia-
    bly an issue for judicial determination.” 
    Id. at 649
    .
    By signing the agreement, Brock agreed to submit some
    disputes—but not all—to arbitration by the Subcommittee.
    Article VI of the agreement creates a bipartite arbitration
    procedure and vests the Subcommittee with arbitral authori-
    ty. Subject to two exceptions, the bilateral procedure applies
    to “all disputes and grievances arising out of work per-
    formed under [the] [a]greement involving the meaning or
    interpretation of any provision in [the] [a]greement.” Juris-
    dictional disputes are one of the exceptions. Article I creates
    a separate, tripartite arbitration procedure to resolve work-
    jurisdiction disputes and vests arbitral authority in the
    Permanent Umpire rather than the Subcommittee. Accord-
    Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688                                        7
    ingly, the Subcommittee exceeded its authority if the griev-
    ance raised a work-jurisdiction dispute.
    The gravamen of the grievance is work jurisdiction. The
    grievance and its supporting documents all complain that
    Brock improperly assigned work to the Carpenters instead
    of the Laborers. The Grievance Form Fact Sheet demanded
    that Brock “make proper assignment of work to the Labor-
    ers’ Union,” “reinstate the Laborers,” and compensate
    workers for “lost wages and benefits.” Indeed, the Subcom-
    mittee sustained the grievance because Brock “made a
    change of assignment.” In other words, the Laborers com-
    plained (and the Subcommittee found) that Brock assigned
    work to the wrong union. That’s the definition of a jurisdic-
    tional dispute. The Subcommittee therefore had no authority
    to arbitrate the grievance. The contract required tripartite
    arbitration in which the competing unions and the employer
    could be heard.
    Our previous decisions amply support this conclusion. In
    Local 416, Sheet Metal Workers International Ass’n v. Helgesteel
    Corp., 
    507 F.2d 1053
     (7th Cir. 1974), Helgesteel Corporation
    (a contractor) and the Sheet Metal Workers were parties to a
    labor contract that provided for tripartite arbitration of
    jurisdictional disputes in Article XI and bipartite arbitration
    for almost all others in Article X. 
    Id.
     at 1054–56. A dispute
    arose when Helgesteel reassigned work to an Ironworkers’
    union. The Sheet Metal Workers filed a grievance under
    Article X complaining about this reassignment; the arbitrator
    sustained the grievance and awarded damages. When
    Helgesteel refused to pay, the Sheet Metal Workers filed suit
    in federal court to enforce the award. Helgesteel told the
    Ironworkers it would likely need to give the work back to
    8                                       Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688
    the Sheet Metal Workers, so the Ironworkers filed their own
    grievance, which the arbitrator sustained. 
    Id.
     The Ironwork-
    ers then filed suit in federal court seeking to compel the
    Sheet Metal Workers and Helgesteel to submit the entire
    controversy to tripartite arbitration. 
    Id. at 1055
    .
    We held that the entire controversy constituted a jurisdic-
    tional dispute requiring tripartite arbitration. 
    Id. at 1057
    . The
    Sheet Metal Workers insisted that the agreement permitted
    them to seek damages under the bipartite process of
    Article X even if tripartite arbitration was also required
    under Article XI. 
    Id. at 1058
    . We rejected that argument,
    explaining that such an interpretation of the contract “would
    allow inconsistent final arbitration awards; the national joint
    board may say that the work should be assigned to the
    ironworkers while the local joint board has awarded damag-
    es to the sheet metal workers.” 
    Id.
    Likewise, in William Charles Construction Co. v Teamsters
    Local Union 627, 
    827 F.3d 672
     (7th Cir. 2016), we confronted a
    similar agreement featuring bifurcated arbitration proce-
    dures. The William Charles Construction Company per-
    formed work on a highway expansion for the State of
    Illinois. 
    Id. at 674
    . During construction, a dispute broke out
    between the Teamsters and the International Union of
    Operating Engineers Local 649 over who was entitled to
    operate the trucks required for the excavation work. The
    Teamsters initiated tripartite arbitration, arguing that the
    work had been improperly assigned to the engineers. The
    arbitrator ruled in the Teamsters’ favor but awarded no
    backpay or damages. 
    Id.
     The Teamsters then filed a second
    grievance under bipartite arbitration, complaining again of
    the improper assignment but this time seeking damages. 
    Id.
    Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688                                         9
    at 676. The second arbitrator also sided with the Teamsters
    and awarded lost wages and benefits. 
    Id. at 677
    . The compa-
    ny filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment that the second
    award was void. 
    Id.
     We agreed that the second grievance
    was not arbitrable because it was jurisdictional in nature and
    therefore not subject to bipartite arbitration. 
    Id.
    So too here. The Laborers Union complains that Brock
    improperly reassigned the project to another union, so the
    grievance must be resolved in tripartite arbitration. Allow-
    ing the Laborers to seek damages through bipartite arbitra-
    tion could produce “inconsistent final arbitration awards,”
    Helgesteel, 
    507 F.2d at 1058
    , so the Subcommittee lacked
    authority and its award must be vacated.
    This conclusion accords with the reasoning of cases in
    which we declined to find a jurisdictional dispute reserved
    for tripartite arbitration. For instance, in Hutter v. Local 139,
    
    862 F.2d 641
    , Hutter (a general contractor) had a labor
    agreement with the International Union of Operating Engi-
    neers (“the Operators” or “the Operators Union”). 
    Id. at 642
    .
    The agreement gave the Operators exclusive jurisdiction
    over most forklift jobs in Wisconsin; it also provided that
    work could be subcontracted only to signatories to the
    agreement. When Hutter was awarded work on a prison
    contract in Oshkosh, it subcontracted the masonry work to
    BDI, which was not a signatory to the agreement. BDI
    thereafter assigned forklift duties to the Wisconsin Laborers
    District Council and Laborers Local Union No. 1086 rather
    than the Operators. The Operators Union submitted a griev-
    ance to bipartite arbitration, complaining that Hutter had
    improperly subcontracted the work to a nonsignatory. 
    Id.
    10                                      Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688
    The arbitrator agreed and ordered backpay, and the Opera-
    tors filed suit in federal court to enforce the award. 
    Id. at 643
    .
    Hutter argued that the Operators’ grievance was really a
    “disguised jurisdictional dispute” subject to tripartite arbi-
    tration and that the bipartite arbitration award should be
    vacated. 
    Id.
     We disagreed, concluding that the subcontracting
    grievance “was a distinct non-jurisdictional claim” because it
    did not turn on who was ultimately assigned the work. 
    Id. at 644
    . For example, BDI could have assigned the work to the
    Operators, and in that case there would have been no juris-
    dictional dispute even though Hutter violated the subcon-
    tracting provision. 
    Id.
     Because the subcontracting dispute
    was nonjurisdictional, the arbitrator had the authority to
    resolve the grievance under the bipartite procedure. 
    Id. at 645
    .
    Although Hutter held that the dispute in question was
    nonjurisdictional, its reasoning supports the opposite con-
    clusion here. We emphasized in Hutter that the subcontract-
    ing grievance “arose independently” of the work
    assignment; its validity was “not dependent upon the identi-
    ty of the party that ultimately performed the forklift work.”
    
    Id. at 644
    . In contrast, here the Laborers’ grievance is entirely
    dependent on the work assignment. Under the reasoning in
    Hutter, the Laborers’ grievance is really just a “disguised
    jurisdictional dispute.” 
    Id. at 643
    .
    Our conclusion finds additional support in Miron Con-
    struction Co. v. International Union of Operating Engineers,
    Local 139, 
    44 F.3d 558
     (7th Cir. 1995). The facts there are
    strikingly similar to those in Hutter. Miron (a general con-
    tractor) signed a labor agreement granting the Operators
    Union exclusive jurisdiction over forklift jobs in Wisconsin
    Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688                                      11
    and stipulated that work could be subcontracted only to
    signatories to the agreement. 
    Id.
     A dispute arose when
    Miron twice subcontracted work to nonsignatories, each of
    which assigned forklifting work to the Wisconsin Laborers
    District Council. 
    Id. at 561
    . The Operators filed grievances
    under the bipartite procedure complaining that Miron had
    violated the subcontracting provision. The Laborers District
    Council filed its own grievances to resolve the proper work
    assignment and threatened to strike. This threat got the
    NLRB involved, which held a § 10(k) hearing to resolve the
    jurisdictional dispute. The Board eventually awarded the
    first project to the Laborers District Council. Id.
    Miron filed a complaint in federal court seeking tripartite
    arbitration. Id. at 561–62. We affirmed the district court’s
    denial of that relief. While the Laborers’ grievance concerned
    work jurisdiction, the Operators’ grievance alleged only a
    subcontracting violation. And under Hutter a subcontracting
    dispute is distinct and independent of a jurisdictional dis-
    pute. Id. In a subcontracting grievance, “[t]he identity of the
    employees who ultimately perform the work is irrelevant.”
    Id. at 566 (citing Hutter, 
    862 F.2d at 644
    ). A subcontracting
    grievance does not conflict with a work-jurisdiction award
    so long as there is no “demand that the subcontractor reas-
    sign the work … . Since the subcontractor has complete
    control over which union actually performs the work,
    maintenance of an action against the general contractor
    cannot be viewed as a veiled attempt to force a reassignment
    of the work.” 
    Id.
    Miron too is factually distinguishable from this case,
    though like Hutter its reasoning supports our conclusion. In
    Miron we focused on whether the bipartite proceeding could
    12                                     Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688
    generate an award that conflicts with the resolution of a
    jurisdictional dispute. A bipartite arbitration award is valid
    so long as the grievance “cannot be viewed as a veiled
    attempt to force a reassignment of the work.” 
    Id.
     Here the
    Laborers explicitly attempted to force reassignment—the
    union demanded that Brock “make [a] proper assignment of
    work [back] to the Laborers’ Union.”
    One case cuts in the opposite direction. In Alberici–Eby v.
    Local 520, International Union of Operating Engineers, 
    992 F.2d 727
     (7th Cir. 1993), we affirmed awards entered in bipartite
    arbitration for improper work assignment. Alberici–Eby (a
    general contractor) hired six unions to construct a lock on
    the Mississippi River in Illinois. 
    Id. at 728
    . The unions made
    competing claims to each part of the work, and Alberici–Eby
    did its best to divide the work fairly. 
    Id. at 729
    . After the
    project was completed, two unions—the Engineers and the
    Laborers—filed separate grievances under their respective
    collective-bargaining agreements alleging that Alberici–Eby
    had improperly assigned their work to other unions.
    Alberici–Eby responded that the grievances raised jurisdic-
    tional disputes, so the arbitrators had no authority to hear
    them. 
    Id.
     One arbitrator heard the Engineers’ grievance and
    decided in their favor, and a second arbitrator heard the
    Laborers’ grievance and refused to stay the proceeding.
    Alberici–Eby then filed suit in federal court asking that the
    judge set aside the first arbitrator’s award, stay the proceed-
    ing before the second arbitrator, and require any unions
    seeking relief to submit to multiparty arbitration to settle the
    jurisdictional dispute. 
    Id.
    We denied Alberici–Eby’s request. We first noted that
    Alberici–Eby failed to timely invoke the multiparty arbitra-
    Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688                                       13
    tion mechanism even though it “was on notice that it faced
    the strong possibility of conflicting arbitral awards.” 
    Id. at 730
    . We then determined that the first arbitrator had authori-
    ty to resolve the Engineers’ grievance. 
    Id. at 733
    . The relevant
    labor agreement created a separate arbitration process for
    jurisdictional disputes, but we noted that the agreement
    “[did] not tell us whether the subject of the grievance … was
    or was not a jurisdictional dispute.” 
    Id.
     However, the agree-
    ment provided that “any difference or dispute arising out of
    the interpretation or application of any of the provisions
    contained in th[e] [a]greement” was to be decided by an
    arbitrator. 
    Id.
     The agreement further provided that the
    Engineers had exclusive jurisdiction over the relevant work,
    so we concluded that the dispute “ar[ose] out of the interpre-
    tation or application of the [agreement].” 
    Id.
     We also refused
    to stay the proceedings before the second arbitrator, again
    emphasizing that Alberici–Eby failed to timely invoke
    multiparty arbitration, so it “would be manifestly unjust to
    deny the Laborers an opportunity to be heard by way of
    bipartite arbitration.” 
    Id. at 734
    .
    Alberici–Eby is hard to reconcile with Helgesteel, Hutter,
    Miron, and William Charles. The grievances concerned work-
    assignment disputes, but we permitted bipartite arbitration
    to proceed. We based our decision in part on the language in
    the agreement between Alberici–Eby and the Engineers, but
    that language cannot be meaningfully distinguished from
    virtually identical language in Helgesteel. Compare Alberici–
    Eby, 
    992 F.2d at 733
     (providing for bipartite arbitration over
    “any difference or dispute arising out of the interpretation or
    application of any of the provisions contained in th[e]
    [a]greement”) with Helgesteel, 
    507 F.2d at 1055
     (providing for
    bipartite arbitration over any “[g]rievance of the [e]mployer
    14                                     Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688
    or the [u]nion[] arising out of interpretation or enforcement
    of th[e] [a]greement”).
    Because Alberici–Eby is an obvious outlier, we limit the
    case to its peculiar facts. We emphasized there that the
    contractor waited too long to request multiparty arbitration.
    That defeated the purpose of the multiparty arbitration
    process, “which was carefully designed to produce a speedy
    resolution of jurisdictional disputes in order to permit work
    to be properly allocated before that work is performed.”
    Alberici–Eby, 
    992 F.2d at 731
    . The mistake was inexcusable in
    light of “the strong possibility of conflicting arbitral awards”
    when the unions filed their separate grievances. 
    Id. at 730
    .
    Moreover, the project had already been completed. As a
    consequence the multiparty arbitration would have done
    little good: “[T]he work ha[d] already been performed,” and
    the multiparty procedure had “no authority to award dam-
    ages for misassigned work.” 
    Id.
     at 730 n.2. We specifically
    highlighted these facts when we refused to stay arbitration
    of the Laborers’ grievance. 
    Id. at 734
     (“In … light of Alberici–
    Eby’s failure to move in a timely fashion to achieve multi-
    party arbitration (assuming that such was available), it
    would be manifestly unjust to deny the Laborers an oppor-
    tunity to be heard by way of bipartite arbitration.”). None of
    these circumstances are present here. The Laborers Union
    notified the Carpenters of the work-jurisdiction dispute ten
    days after it filed its bipartite grievance. And Brock chal-
    lenged the propriety of bipartite arbitration at the earliest
    opportunity.
    The district judge offered two reasons to affirm the arbi-
    tral award but neither holds up under the caselaw we’ve just
    surveyed. First, the judge reasoned that because several
    Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688                                      15
    Laborers were already working on the project, removing
    those workers from the job gave rise to a wrongful-
    termination claim distinct from the jurisdictional dispute.
    Not so. The Laborers were terminated because the work was
    assigned to the Carpenters; a finding of wrongful termina-
    tion necessarily implies that the work was misassigned. That
    puts this grievance squarely on the work-jurisdiction side of
    the line. As such, it was subject to tripartite arbitration.
    Second, the judge held that the grievance arose out of
    Article I, Section 5, which provides a separate contractual
    basis for bipartite arbitrability. The provision in question
    states: “During the existence of the [a]greement, there shall
    be no strikes, lockouts, work stoppages, or picketing arising
    out of any jurisdictional dispute. Work will continue as
    originally assigned, pending resolution of the dispute.”
    Grievances arising under this provision are indeed sub-
    ject to bipartite arbitration. Like the subcontracting provi-
    sions in Hutter and Miron, a dispute under this provision can
    be separately arbitrated without interfering with a jurisdic-
    tional dispute. Suppose for a moment that the Laborers and
    the Carpenters submitted a jurisdictional dispute to tripartite
    arbitration, and to pressure Brock into taking its side, the
    Laborers Union called a strike, prompting Brock to file a
    grievance under Section 5. It would be completely consistent
    for one arbitrator to award the work assignment to the
    Laborers and another to sanction the Laborers for initiating a
    strike. Neither award would call the other into question.
    But bipartite arbitration was not appropriate just because
    the Laborers labeled the grievance as one arising under
    Section 5. We look instead to the substance of the grievance.
    And in substance, this grievance is a work-jurisdiction
    16                                     Nos. 17-2597 & 17-2688
    dispute. As such, it was subject to tripartite arbitration, and
    the Subcommittee lacked arbitral authority.
    REVERSED; CROSS-APPEAL DISMISSED.