Association Fire Ftr v. City Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (2-7-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 7, 2002
DocketNo. 78970.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Association Fire Ftr v. City Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (2-7-2002) (Association Fire Ftr v. City Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (2-7-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Association Fire Ftr v. City Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (2-7-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
This is an appeal from an order of Judge Anthony O. Calabrese vacating the decision of Arbitrator Edward J. O'Connell that denied a grievance filed by the Association of Cleveland Fire Fighters, Local 93 of the International Association of Fire Fighters ("Union"), that sought to end the appellant City of Cleveland's ("City's") practice of "arrowing" fire fighters into work shifts. The City also claims it was error for the judge to order it to cease arrowing and set a hearing to determine compensation for affected employees. We affirm that part of the judgment vacating the arbitrator's ruling, but reverse the part that orders affirmative relief.

From the record we glean the following: in 1977 the parties agreed to a collective bargaining agreement ("CBA") that contained an ARTICLE titled "Hours of Duty." Under that contract, fire fighters not assigned to a normal eight-hour day are assigned to one of three twenty-four hour shifts designated A, B, and C:

* * * the normal work week shall consist of one (1) twenty-four (24) consecutive hour shift, followed by forty-eight (48) consecutive hours off work with an additional twenty-four (24) consecutive hours off work once every three (3) weeks so that no person shall average more than forty-eight (48) hours per week within the said three (3) week period.

In 1988, fire fighters on this schedule were given an extra twenty-four hour shift off work every ninth week in order to bring the final average to forty hours per week over each nine week period. The single day off every third week is known as a "special day," while the day off every ninth week is known as a "cycle day."

The City had utilized a similar schedule prior to the first CBA and, since the 1960's, had employed the practice of "arrowing" to balance manpower across shifts. A fire fighter who is "arrowed" is relieved of his duty to work his scheduled work day and required to work on an off-day at regular pay. For example, an "arrowed" A shift fire fighter would be assigned for one day to fill a "Special Day" or "Cycle Day" vacancy on a B or C shift, which meant that he had only twenty-four hours off between work days instead of forty-eight hours, and increased the preceding or subsequent off-work period from forty-eight to seventy-two hours. The term "arrowing" apparently was derived from the practice of documenting that assignment to a different shift by erasing his A shift place on the company's master calendar and pointing an arrow to show whether he was scheduled to work instead either the day before or the day after.

Under R.C. Chapter 4117, the Union's CBA is renegotiated every three years, and the 1989 agreement contained new language, in an ARTICLE titled "Seniority":

Firefighters [sic] in a Unit * * * shall pick shifts, special days, and cycle days in their Unit, and Battalion Chiefs, Company Officers and Rovers shall pick shifts, special days and cycle days according to past practice, prior to selection of vacations and personal days. All selections shall be by rank and seniority and shall be chosen by December 15 for the following year.

All vacation selections shall be by rank and seniority and shall be chosen by January 30 of the vacation year.

A shift selection within the Union [sic] or Battalion may be changed by a Company, Unit Commander or Battalion Commander where a discipline or morale problem must be solved, or for efficient operation of the Unit or Battalion.

This language has continued in all remaining versions of the CBA, although the Union has attempted to amend it. The CBA prohibits both strikes and lockouts, and requires the parties to reach agreement or submit impasse terms to a panel of arbitrators, who are required to select, without modification, one of the parties' submitted terms. In 1992 the Union proposed deletion of the paragraph allowing a shift commander to change shifts, and the addition of language providing that the fire fighters' shift selections could not be changed without written permission of the affected employee. The City rejected the proposal, and the Union did not seek "impasse arbitration."

In both 1995 and 1998, the Union proposed additional language requiring advance notice of the "arrowed" shift changes and premium pay for affected members, but the City again rejected the changes and the Union again declined to force final arbitration. In 1999 the Union filed a grievance alleging that arrowing violated the "hours of duty" provisions of its CBA, and the grievance was submitted to the arbitrator.

He denied the grievance on the basis that the 1989 shift change language authorized arrowing, and that the Union understood it in that context because of its attempts to amend the language in subsequent contract negotiations. Alternatively, he found that arrowing was a binding part of the CBA as an enforceable past practice because it had been utilized since the 1960's without challenge, and had been the subject of contract negotiations in which the Union had unsuccessfully tried to "bargain it out." He rejected the Union's claims that the current grievance was a response to an increase in incidents of arrowing, and found that the evidence did not "establish any highly unusual increase in the incidence or scope of arrowing."

The Union appealed the decision to the Common Pleas Court, and both it and the City moved for summary judgment. Without opinion, the judge denied the City's motion, vacated the arbitrator's award, ordered the practice of arrowing to cease, and scheduled a hearing on the Union's request for compensation for instances of arrowing.

The City's appeal, initially dismissed for lack of a final appealable order, was then certified under Civ.R. 54(B).

The first of the City's assignments of error states:

I. THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR AND EXCEEDED ITS STATUTORY AUTHORITY UNDER [R.C.] 2711.10 IN GRANTING THE APPELLEE'S MOTION TO VACATE THE UNDERLYING ARBITRATION AWARD WHERE THE ARBITRATOR'S DECISION DREW ITS ESSENCE FROM THE TERMS OF THE PARTIES' COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT AND WAS NOT OTHERWISE ARBITRARY, CAPRICIOUS, OR UNLAWFUL.

Because the judge's order essentially granted summary judgment to the Union, we review the decision de novo, using the same standard as a trial judge.1 In this case we must apply the same deference to the arbitrator's decision that the judge is statutorily bound to afford.2 R.C. 2711.10(D) allows vacation of an arbitrator's ruling if the arbitrator has exceeded his authority. The arbitrator's decision exceeds his authority if:

(1) it conflicts with express terms of the agreement; (2) it imposes additional requirements not expressly provided for in the agreement; (3) it is not rationally supported by or derived from the agreement; or (4) it is based on "general considerations of fairness and equity" instead of the exact terms of the agreement.3

Most recently the Ohio Supreme Court has held that "courts are limited to determining whether an arbitration award is unlawful, arbitrary, or capricious and whether the award draws its essence from the CBA."4

Under ARTICLE XII, GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE, Step 4, of the CBA:

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Bluebook (online)
Association Fire Ftr v. City Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (2-7-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/association-fire-ftr-v-city-cleveland-unpublished-decision-2-7-2002-ohioctapp-2002.