Air Line Pilots v. Midwest Express

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 2002
Docket01-1992
StatusPublished

This text of Air Line Pilots v. Midwest Express (Air Line Pilots v. Midwest Express) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Air Line Pilots v. Midwest Express, (7th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 01-1992

Air Line Pilots Association, International, and Craig A. Moffatt,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

Midwest Express Airlines, Inc.,

Defendant-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 00 C 718--Thomas J. Curran, Judge.

Argued November 2, 2001--Decided February 6, 2002

Before Posner, Ripple, and Evans, Circuit Judges.

Posner, Circuit Judge. This appeal by a pilot and his union from a grant of summary judgment to his former employer presents questions concerning arbitration and contract law. Midwest first fired Moffatt in 1999 because he failed a proficiency test. Represented by the union (ALPA), which had an informal arrangement with Midwest, Moffatt invoked Midwest’s grievance procedure. The grievance was settled by an agreement, signed by Midwest, Moffatt, and the union, reinstating Moffatt and giving him one last chance to demonstrate his proficiency. The agreement provided that if Moffatt "fails any part of the above training or proficiency check ride, his employment will be terminated immediately, without recourse to filing of a grievance, request for resolution letter, claim, lawsuit or any other liti gation."

Several months later, Midwest and the union entered into their first collective bargaining agreement. It provides multiple opportunities for crew members to retake proficiency tests; states that it "shall supersede and take precedence over all agreements, supplemental agreements, amendments and similar related documents executed between [Midwest] and [ALPA] prior to the signing of this Agreement"; and contains both an integration clause and an arbitration clause. The arbitration clause requires arbitration of all "disputes between any employee covered by this Agreement and the Company growing out of grievances or out of interpretation or application of any of the terms of this Agreement."

Shortly afterward, Moffatt again failed a proficiency check and was fired pursuant to the "last chance" settlement agreement. The union filed a grievance with Midwest, claiming that the firing violated the "multiple opportunities" clause of the collective bargaining agreement. Midwest denied the grievance and asserted that it was not arbitrable, precipitating this suit by Moffatt and the union under the Railway Labor Act to compel arbitration. 45 U.S.C. sec. 153 First (p). The district judge dismissed the suit on the ground that the "last chance" agreement had not been superseded by the collective bargaining agreement and therefore the parties had not agreed to submit Moffatt’s grievance to arbitration.

The question whether a dispute is arbitrable is usually for the court asked to order arbitration to decide. LittonFinancial Printing Division v. NLRB, 501 U.S. 190, 208 (1991); AT & T Technologies, Inc. v. Communications Workers of America, 475 U.S. 643, 649, 651 (1986); Local 744, International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. Hinckley & Schmitt, Inc., 76 F.3d 162, 163 (7th Cir. 1996). (We say "usually" rather than "al ways" because the parties to a contract can if they wish assign the determination of the arbitrability of a dispute to an arbitrator--but then the question whether they have done that is for the court. First Options of Chicago, Inc. v. Kaplan, 514 U.S. 938, 943 (1995); Miller v. Flume, 139 F.3d 1130, 1133-34 (7th Cir. 1998); U.S. Postal Service v. American Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO, 204 F.3d 523, 527 n. 1 (4th Cir. 2000).) The answer here should have been easy. The collective bargaining agreement between Midwest and ALPA contains an arbitration clause applicable to disputes arising from grievances based on the interpretation or application of the agreement, and the grievance that Moffatt wants to arbitrate is based on an interpretation of the "multiple opportunities" provision of the agreement and also on an interpretation of the agreement as having superseded the earlier settlement agreement with its "last chance" language. No more is required to establish the arbitrability of the dispute. It is true but irrelevant that if the collective bargaining agreement does not supersede the settlement agreement, Moffatt’s grievance lacks merit. Merit is for the arbitrators to decide, not the court. They must interpret the collective bargaining agreement to determine whether the "multiple opportunities" provision is applicable to Moffatt.

Granted, if that provision is inapplicable to Moffatt because the settlement agreement survived the making of the collective bargaining agreement and so barred him from filing a grievance, then the arbitration clause is also inapplicable to him. But when an arbitration clause is so broadly worded that it encompasses disputes over the scope or validity of the contract in which it is embedded, issues of the contract’s scope or validity are for the arbitrators. This is true, the Supreme Court has held, even when the party opposing arbitration is prepared to prove that the contract containing the arbitration clause (as distinct from the clause itself) was procured by fraud. Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co., 388 U.S. 395, 403-04 (1967); see also Sphere Drake Ins. Ltd. v. All American Ins. Co., 256 F.3d 587, 590-91 (7th Cir. 2001). The arbitration clause in the collective bargaining agreement between Midwest and ALPA states that all issues concerning the interpretation and application of the agreement are for the arbitrators to decide, including therefore the applicability of the agreement to Moffatt’s dispute with Midwest. Cara’s Notions, Inc. v. Hallmark Cards, Inc., 140 F.3d 566, 567, 569 (4th Cir. 1998); Beck v. Reliance Steel Products Co., 860 F.2d 576, 579-80 (3d Cir. 1988); Employees Protective Ass’n v. Norfolk & Western Ry., 571 F.2d 185, 193 (4th Cir. 1977). Were this not the rule, the scope of arbitration would be unduly curtailed; for even when arbitration is the parties’ chosen method of resolving contractual disputes, the position adopted by the district judge would require judges, not arbitrators, to resolve disputes over contractual provisions other than the arbitration clause itself (the clause that judges must interpret in order to perform their function of determining whether the dispute is arbitrable).

Disputes over the meaning of a written contract are ordinarily resolved by reference to the meaning of the contract as it would be gathered by a reader competent in English (if the contract is in English) and reasonably endowed with common sense. This "literalist" approach is desirable because it gives contracting parties the security of knowing that their contract will be interpreted in the event of a legal dispute to mean what it says, rather than being interpreted to mean what a judge or jury, perhaps misled by self-serving testimony by one of the parties, might think it should have said. Literalism has its pitfalls.

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