Terry Barlow v. American Can Company ( 1999 )


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  •                       United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 98-2094
    ___________
    Terry E. Barlow, et al.,             *
    *
    Plaintiffs - Appellants,       *
    *
    v.                             * Appeal from the United States
    * District Court for the
    American National Can Company;       * Eastern District of Missouri.
    United Steelworkers of America,      *
    Local Union No. 3628,                *
    *
    Defendants - Appellees.        *
    ___________
    Submitted: December 16, 1998
    Filed: May 5, 1999
    ___________
    Before BEAM, FLOYD R. GIBSON, and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    LOKEN, Circuit Judge.
    In September 1995, American National Can Company (“ANC”) permanently
    closed its Gateway plant in Pevely, Missouri, and transferred Terry E. Barlow and
    other employees to its plant in St. Louis. In November 1995, many St. Louis Plant
    employees, including Barlow, were laid off as part of a reduction in force. In February
    1997, Barlow and others commenced this action against ANC for breach of collectively
    bargained agreements, and against a union, Steelworkers Local No. 3628 (“Local
    3628"), for breach of its duty of fair representation. Plaintiffs allege they were entitled
    to 104 weeks of supplemental unemployment benefits after the layoffs, instead of the 53
    weeks of benefits ANC paid. The district court1 dismissed the action as time-barred, and
    plaintiffs appeal. Reviewing the grant of summary judgment de novo and the evidence in
    the light most favorable to plaintiffs, we affirm. See Schuver v. MidAmerican Energy
    Co., 
    154 F.3d 795
    , 799-800 (8th Cir. 1998) (standard of review).
    1. The Legal Setting. Plaintiffs’ breach-of-contract claim against ANC arises under
    § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185. To recover against an
    employer under § 301 for breach of a collectively bargained agreement, employees must
    first prove that their union breached its duty of fair representation. See Vaca v. Sipes, 
    386 U.S. 171
    , 186 (1967). This “hybrid” § 301/fair representation action is governed by the
    six month statute of limitations found in § 10(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29
    U.S.C. § 160(b). See DelCostello v. International Bhd. of Teamsters, 
    462 U.S. 151
    , 169-
    72 (1983).
    Because the union’s breach of duty is a necessary element of a § 301 claim against the
    employer, the employee’s claims against both typically accrue, for statute of limitations
    purposes, when the union’s breach of duty injures the employee. See Gustafson v.
    Cornelius Co., 
    724 F.2d 75
    , 79 & n.9 (8th Cir. 1983). For example, in the common case
    where a union is accused of mishandling an employee’s legitimate grievance, or of
    refusing to take the grievance to arbitration, the six-month limitation period begins to run
    against the employer and the union when the grievance is rejected, or when the union
    decides not to pursue it. See Livingstone v. Schnuck Market, Inc., 
    950 F.2d 579
    , 583 (8th
    Cir. 1991); Tripp v. Angelica Corp., 
    921 F.2d 794
    , 795 (8th Cir. 1990); Butler v. Local
    Union 823, Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters, 
    514 F.2d 442
    , 449 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    423 U.S. 924
    (1975). Thus, the statute of limitations issue in this
    1
    The HONORABLE GEORGE F. GUNN, JR., United States District Judge for
    the Eastern District of Missouri, who to our great regret passed away after issuing his
    decision in this case.
    -2-
    case requires careful analysis of the alleged breach of Local 3628's duty of fair
    representation to the plaintiffs.
    2. The Factual Setting. The supplemental unemployment (“SUB”) benefits in question
    were mandated by a Supplemental Unemployment Benefits Agreement entered into by
    ANC and Local 3628's parent union, the United Steelworkers of America (the “USWA”),
    and incorporated by reference in Article 23 of their “Master” collective bargaining
    agreement. Section 2 of the SUB Agreement governed the duration of SUB benefits.
    Under § 2.4(b), which is not a model of clarity, laid-off employees who were eligible for
    pension benefits were entitled to 104 weeks of SUB benefits, except they were limited to
    53 weeks of SUB benefits if (i) there was a “permanent plant shutdown,” or (ii) they were
    “eligible for 70/75 or Rule-of-65 retirement” and were advised by ANC that “return to
    active employment is unlikely.” At the time in question, all the plaintiffs in this uncertified
    class action were thirty-year ANC employees eligible for pension benefits. Thus, § 2.4(b)
    seems to provide that if plaintiffs were laid off from the permanently shut down Gateway
    Plant, they were entitled to 53 weeks of SUB benefits; but if they were laid off from the
    St. Louis Plant, which was not permanently shut down, they might be eligible for up to
    104 weeks of SUB benefits.
    A 1978 “Accretion Agreement” between ANC, Local 3628, and the USWA governed
    employees, such as plaintiffs, who transferred from the St. Louis Plant to the new
    Gateway Plant. Section F of that Agreement provided: “in the event an employee with
    ten (10) or more years of accredited service is laid off from either plant, such employee
    shall be placed in the other plant provided the employee has the requisite seniority.”
    When ANC closed the Gateway Plant in September 1995, it invoked Section F in
    transferring plaintiffs to the St. Louis Plant. Steelworkers Local 8795, representing
    Gateway Plant employees, filed a grievance, arguing that “the Master Agreement takes
    precedence over the Accretion Agreement” and therefore Gateway
    -3-
    employees “should not have been transferred” and were entitled to Master Agreement
    plant closing benefits.
    The St. Louis Plant layoffs occurred in November 1995, while this grievance was
    pending. At a December 1995 meeting, ANC and the union provided affected
    employees written estimates of the SUB benefits they would receive. The estimate
    provided plaintiff Barlow stated in part:
    PENSION
    You are eligible for a Rule of 70/75 Pension effective December 1,
    1996. . . . You must apply for this pension benefit. Benefits will not
    automatically start. Please apply approximately 90 days prior to the date
    benefits are to begin.
    *    *   *     *   *
    SUPPLEMENTAL UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFIT
    You are eligible for 53 weeks of Guaranteed SUB.
    Neither Barlow nor any other plaintiff asked Local 3628 to file a grievance challenging
    ANC’s tentative December 1995 SUB benefits determinations. ANC and Local 3628
    argue that plaintiffs’ claims are time-barred because the six-month statute of limitations
    commenced running with these determinations, as the National Labor Relations Board
    concluded in dismissing plaintiffs’ subsequent unfair labor practice charges. But there
    had been no conceivable breach of the duty of fair representation by Local 3628 at this
    point in the process. Thus, if plaintiffs’ claims were barred at this time, it was because
    they failed to exhaust contract remedies -- an issue not addressed by the district court --
    not because the claims were time-barred.
    -4-
    Moving on in this sequence of events, in January 1996, Local 3628 filed a
    grievance reciting that ANC was treating all Gateway employees “as plant closing
    employees,” and protesting that “no employee from Gateway should have been
    transferred to St. Louis [in a manner that] displaced anyone from the St. Louis plant.”
    As a remedy, Local 3628 urged that Gateway Plant employees be permitted to exercise
    an option to receive Master Agreement plant closing benefits. On February 12, 1996,
    ANC and the USWA entered into a written settlement of “all issues regarding
    application of the ‘Accretion Agreement’ . . . to the Gateway plant closing and the St.
    Louis restructuring.” Though it did not explicitly resolve SUB benefits duration issues,
    that agreement addressed pension and SUB benefit eligibility for Gateway Plant
    employees who had transferred to the St. Louis Plant and been laid off:
    1. Those employees of the Gateway facility who are currently on layoff,
    affected by the shutdown of that facility, whether having worked at St.
    Louis or not, subsequent to the closing of the Gateway plant on
    September 3, 1995, have the option pursuant to the . . . Pension
    Agreement between [ANC] and the [USWA] to retire from [ANC],
    pursuant to the eligibility requirements contained in that document, or,
    alternatively if they so desire, remain in their current layoff status,
    collecting benefits for which they may otherwise be eligible, for instance,
    SUB, and exercise their pension options to which [they are] eligible in
    accordance with the provisions of the Agreement.
    On February 16, 1996, Local 3628 held a meeting at which representatives from the
    USWA explained to union members “their decision on the accretion agreement, and
    how it ha[d] been applied to the St. Louis plant.” At least one plaintiff was recorded
    as having attended this meeting.
    3. The Statute of Limitations for Plaintiffs Other Than Terry Barlow.
    Plaintiffs’ complaint alleges that Local 3628 “decided to show favoritism” to St. Louis
    Plant employees who had not been transferred from the Gateway Plant by “secur[ing]
    -5-
    for these workers . . . the full 104 weeks of supplemental employment benefits.” On
    appeal, plaintiffs expand on this theory by contending that Local 3628's bias against
    plaintiffs was revealed in its January 1996 grievance, which protested the transfer of laid-
    off Gateway employees to the St. Louis Plant, and in the February 1996 grievance
    settlement with ANC “pursuant to which Plaintiffs are apparently considered victims of
    a plant closing and not a layoff.” This is a claim for class-wide relief, premised on the
    notion that Local 3628 “sold out” the interests of Gateway Plant employees who were
    transferred to the St. Louis Plant under the Accretion Agreement.2
    As the district court recognized, the difficulty with this claim is that it accrued when
    Local 3628 (represented by the USWA) entered into the grievance settlement agreement
    in February 1996. “[A]n employee’s cause of action accrues when the grievance
    procedure is exhausted or otherwise breaks down to the employee’s disadvantage.” Cook
    v. Columbian Chem. Co., 
    997 F.2d 1239
    , 1241 (8th Cir. 1993) (internal quotation
    omitted). The settlement agreement purported to resolve “all issues regarding application
    of the ‘Accretion Agreement’ . . . to the Gateway plant closing and the St. Louis
    restructuring.” Plaintiffs argue they did not know the significance of the agreement
    because it settled a grievance not filed on their behalf and failed to disclose they would
    receive only 53 weeks of SUB benefits. But plaintiffs were members (or former
    members) of Local 8795 and Local 3628. They were charged with knowledge that their
    local unions had filed grievances to clarify their rights in a complex situation, and it is
    undisputed the local unions made an effort to explain the
    2
    It is interesting and perhaps ironic that the Gateway employees’ union, Local
    8795, filed a grievance objecting to their transfer to the St. Louis Plant. But it was filed
    before the St. Louis Plant layoffs presented transferred Gateway employees a chance
    to be paid more weeks of SUB benefits by reason of the transfers. The record does not
    reveal whether Local 8795 adhered to its initial position after the St. Louis Plant
    layoffs. This dilemma may be one reason the USWA as parent union stepped in to
    negotiate a settlement with ANC. We note that plaintiffs have accused only Local 3628
    of breaching the duty of fair representation.
    -6-
    settlement to their members. If plaintiffs believed that Local 3628 had negotiated a
    settlement contrary to the interests of plaintiffs as a class, it was incumbent upon them to
    challenge the settlement with a § 301/fair representation lawsuit filed within six months
    of that agreement. If plaintiffs instead concluded that the prior grievances had been
    settled in a manner that left uncertain the rights of Gateway Plant employees as a class to
    SUB benefits, it was incumbent upon plaintiffs to initiate a new collective grievance to
    clarify those rights. So far as the record on appeal reveals, with the exception of Terry
    Barlow no plaintiff requested Local 3628 to initiate such a grievance. Therefore, the
    claims of all plaintiffs other than Barlow are time-barred because they were not filed
    within six months of the February 1996 settlement agreement.3
    4. Plaintiff Terry Barlow. Plaintiff Barlow’s individual situation presents a more
    complex statute of limitations issue. When Barlow was told in December 1995 he would
    be paid 53 weeks of SUB benefits, he complained. ANC and Local 8795 representatives
    told him to contact ANC in Chicago. Barlow alleges that he did so and got no response
    until May 1996 (long after the February grievance settlement), when Al Ekl of ANC orally
    informed Barlow he was entitled to 104 weeks of SUB benefits. Then in July, Barlow
    “heard from some other guys” that ANC would limit his SUB benefits to 53 weeks
    “because we were considered to have been the victims of a plant closing.” Barlow
    contacted Ekl again and was referred to an ANC labor relations specialist. He was finally
    advised in a September 4, 1996, ANC letter that he would only be paid 53 weeks of SUB
    benefits. Barlow promptly wrote the USWA,
    3
    Plaintiffs suggest in their briefs, without presenting the issue, that the doctrines
    of equitable estoppel and equitable tolling should apply to extend the six-month statute
    of limitations. We disagree. There is no evidence of “positive misconduct” by Local
    3628 or ANC that was deliberately designed to lead plaintiffs not to challenge, within
    the statute of limitations period, either the settlement agreement, or the position taken
    by Local 3628 regarding the transfer of Gateway Plant employees. Skyberg v. United
    Food & Commercial Workers Int’l Union, 
    5 F.3d 297
    , 302 (8th Cir. 1993).
    -7-
    demanding that it file a grievance in his behalf for an additional 51 weeks of SUB
    benefits. Counsel for the USWA formally responded on January 16, 1997, informing
    Barlow he had received all the SUB benefits to which he was entitled and the Union
    would therefore do nothing further in his behalf. Barlow argues that the six-month statute
    of limitations did not begin to run until this January 16, 1997, union response, in which
    case his lawsuit was timely filed on February 28, 1997.
    As we have explained, the February 1996 grievance settlement purported to resolve
    class-wide issues regarding the transfer of Gateway employees to St. Louis and the
    subsequent layoffs. However, that agreement did not address more specific questions
    regarding the duration of SUB benefits to particular employees. For example, ANC’s
    September 4 letter to Barlow explained:
    According to your age, service, and the permanent plant shutdown of the Gateway
    facility, you are eligible for a Rule 70/75 retirement effective December 1, 1996.
    Therefore you are not eligible for any SUB benefits on or after December 1, 1996.
    This is in accordance with the [February 1996] agreement between the [USWA] and
    [ANC] regarding the application of the “Accretion Agreement” to the Gateway plant
    closing and the St. Louis restructuring.
    This determination may have been “in accordance with” the February settlement, but that
    would not be apparent to an individual employee from the face of the settlement
    agreement. From December 1995 to January 1997, Barlow bombarded ANC and the
    unions with complaints urging that they clarify his right to 104 weeks of SUB benefits.
    Those complaints met with buck-passing, delays, and inconsistent responses from ANC
    and union representatives before ANC finally issued its negative September 1996
    determination of his individual claim. Viewing the case from this narrow focus, the
    union’s alleged breach of duty occurred when the USWA refused to file a grievance
    challenging that determination. And because an aggrieved employee must exhaust or
    -8-
    attempt to exhaust non-futile contract remedies before filing a § 301/fair representation
    lawsuit, that breach of duty should be deemed to occur, for statute of limitations purposes,
    when the USWA responded to Barlow’s request that it file a grievance, at least at the
    summary judgment stage when we must view the record in the light most favorable to
    Barlow. All this supports his contention that the statute of limitations was tolled or did
    not commence running as to his individual claim until the USWA’s January 1997
    response.
    There is nonetheless a fatal flaw in this theory of Barlow’s individual claim -- it was not
    pleaded. Barlow alleged that Local 3628 breached its duty of fair representation by
    discriminatorily seeking more SUB benefits for St. Louis Plant employees who had not
    been transferred in from the Gateway Plant. But ANC denied Barlow’s individual claim
    based upon its interpretation of the interplay between the Accretion Agreement, the SUB
    Agreement, and the Pension Agreement. Barlow addressed his complaint against that
    determination to the USWA, not Local 3628, and counsel for the parent union sent him
    a lengthy response agreeing with ANC’s interpretation of those agreements and explaining
    why that interpretation resulted in his SUB benefits terminating on December 1, 1996,
    while the SUB benefits of those continuously employed at the St. Louis Plant continued
    for another year. There is nothing in the record linking that response to plaintiffs’
    allegations of a breach of duty by Local 3628. Thus, while Barlow might have had an
    individual § 301/fair representation claim that was not time-barred in February 1997, such
    a claim was not made a part of this lawsuit. Accordingly, the district court properly
    granted Local 3628's motion for summary judgment.
    Finally, plaintiffs argue that their claims against ANC remain viable because “[t]he
    District Court did not enter any judgment on the claims against the company.” We
    disagree. The district court entered judgment on February 4, 1998 “in favor of defendants
    and against plaintiffs.” The court subsequently refused to accept for filing
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    ANC’s motion for summary judgment. In these circumstances, it is clear the court
    “intended its decision to be final” as to both defendants. Goodwin v. United States, 
    67 F.3d 149
    , 151 (8th Cir. 1995).
    The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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