Ayanna Wright and American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 62, Local 4009, AFL-CIO v. City of Gary, Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 2012
Docket45A04-1107-PL-362
StatusPublished

This text of Ayanna Wright and American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 62, Local 4009, AFL-CIO v. City of Gary, Indiana (Ayanna Wright and American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 62, Local 4009, AFL-CIO v. City of Gary, Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Ayanna Wright and American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 62, Local 4009, AFL-CIO v. City of Gary, Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

WILLIAM R. GROTH SUSAN M. SEVERTSON Fillenwarth Dennerline Groth & Towe, LLP Law Office of Susan M. Severtson Indianapolis, Indiana Munster, Indiana

BONNIE C. COLEMAN Hodges & Davis, P.C. Merrillville, Indiana FILED Mar 15 2012, 9:30 am

IN THE CLERK COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court

AYANNA WRIGHT and AMERICAN ) FEDERATION OF STATE, COUNTY, AND ) MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES, COUNCIL 62, ) LOCAL 4009, AFL-CIO, ) ) Appellants-Respondents, ) ) vs. ) No. 45A04-1107-PL-362 ) CITY OF GARY, INDIANA, ) ) Appellee-Petitioner. )

APPEAL FROM THE LAKE SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Jeffery J. Dywan, Special Judge Cause No. 45D11-1007-PL-62

March 15, 2012

OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION

BARTEAU, Senior Judge STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Following an arbitration award in favor of Appellants Ayanna Wright and the

American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 62, Local

4009, AFL-CIO (“AFSCME Local 4009” or, collectively with Wright, “the Union”),

Appellee City of Gary, Indiana (“the City”), petitioned the trial court to vacate the award.

The Union counterclaimed for enforcement of the award. Both parties moved for

summary judgment. After a hearing, the trial court granted the City’s motion for

summary judgment and denied the Union’s motion for summary judgment, vacating the

arbitrator’s award. Concluding that the arbitrator did not exceed his powers by issuing

the award to the Union, we reverse and remand.

ISSUE

The Union raises two issues, which we consolidate and restate as: whether the

trial court erred by granting the City’s motion for summary judgment and denying the

Union’s motion for summary judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The City and AFSCME Local 4009 are parties to a collective bargaining

agreement (“CBA”). In setting forth which employees are covered by the CBA, Section

1.1 states, “The Employer recognizes the Union as the sole and exclusive collective

bargaining representative of employees not represented by another union. Excluded from

the bargaining unit are . . . confidential employee[s] as defined in Gary City Ordinance

6243.” Appellants’ App. p. 3. Gary City Ordinance 6243, in turn, defines a confidential

employee as “an employee whose unrestricted access to confidential personnel files or

2 whose functional responsibilities or knowledge in connection with the issues involved in

dealings between the employer and its employees would make his membership in an

employee organization incompatible with his official duties.” Appellee’s App. p. 86.

The CBA further states, “This agreement is applicable to the employees of the City of

Gary, Gary Park Department, and Gary Health Department, as noted in the job

classifications in Schedule A who are members of the unit described in Section 1.1.”

Appellants’ App. p. 3. Schedule A of the CBA lists the position of administrative

assistant to the Gary Fire Civil Service Commission (“GFCSC”) as a covered

classification. See id. at 23.

The CBA’s grievance procedure is “the exclusive method for resolution of

disputes between an employee or [AFSCME Local 4009] and the Employer of all claims

of breach and/or violation of the Agreement and applicable Personnel Rules.” Id. at 8.

The CBA further states that AFSCME Local 4009 may refer the grievance to arbitration

if it is not settled in accordance with the grievance procedure. Under an express

provision of the CBA, “[t]he arbitrator shall have no right to amend, nullify, ignore, add

to, or subtract from the provisions of this Agreement.” Id. at 10. According to the CBA,

the arbitrator’s decision is binding on both parties.

On December 10, 2008, the City informed Wright, a City employee as well as the

president of AFSCME Local 4009, that her City position was being eliminated due to

economic circumstances. The CBA sets forth a “bumping” process in the event of

workforce reductions, in which an employee whose position is being eliminated may

replace an employee with lower seniority. A seniority list is to be provided to AFSCME

3 Local 4009’s president every six months, and an employee’s standing on the list will be

final unless challenged within thirty days after the list is posted on AFSCME Local

4009’s bulletin boards.

The City’s human resources director, Shirley Walls, gave AFSCME Local 4009 a

seniority list on December 12, 2008. As the City’s human resources director, Walls was

also the custodian of the City’s employee personnel records. Walls certified the seniority

list as true to the best of her knowledge. The list indicated Wright’s hire date as

November 1, 1994. The list indicated the hire date of Pamela Oliver, the GFCSC’s

administrative assistant, as June 26, 1995. On December 18, 2008, Wright elected to

bump into Oliver’s position. At the instruction of the City’s human resources

department, the GFCSC’s chairman, Dwight Gardner, interviewed Wright on December

30, 2008. Gardner determined that she was fully qualified for the GFCSC’s

administrative assistant position.

Walls spoke with Wright and followed up that conversation with a letter, dated

December 30, 2008, which indicated that Wright could not bump into the GFCSC’s

administrative assistant position:

[T]he City’s position is that the Administrative Assistant position for the Fire Commission is non union. Notwithstanding that the position is listed in the bargaining unit contract, after a thorough review, it is determined that the duties are of an administrative and confidential nature.

Appellee’s App. p. 100. At a January 2, 2009 meeting, the GFCSC voted unanimously to

retain Oliver because she had been a good employee.

4 Wright declined an invitation to bump into another position. The Union filed a

grievance on her behalf, which requested that Wright be permitted to bump into the

GFCSC’s administrative assistant position. The City denied the grievance. The Union

and the City subsequently submitted the matter to arbitration pursuant to the CBA. In

December 2009, an evidentiary hearing was held before Arbitrator Edward P. Archer. At

the outset of the hearing, the parties stipulated that the issue to be decided was whether

the City violated the CBA by denying Wright’s request to bump into the GFCSC’s

administrative assistant position, and if so, what should be the remedy. During opening

statements, the City asserted that the GFCSC “is semi autonomous to the Civil City,” id.

at 18, the GFCSC did not sign the CBA, and the CBA has no effect on the GFCSC’s

At the hearing, the City contended for the first time that Oliver’s hire date on the

seniority list was incorrect and that her correct hire date was earlier than Wright’s. Oliver

testified that she has been a member of AFSCME Local 4009 since October 2003.1 She

also stated that she had never seen nor asked to see any prior seniority lists. The

GFCSC’s attorney, Clyde Compton, testified that Gary City Ordinance 5882 provides

that the GFCSC is to select its own administrative assistant. He also stated that the files

maintained by the GFCSC’s administrative assistant relate to the City’s firefighters.

Gardner testified that the City’s firefighters are represented by the Professional

Firefighters Association and not an AFSCME local.

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Ayanna Wright and American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 62, Local 4009, AFL-CIO v. City of Gary, Indiana, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayanna-wright-and-american-federation-of-state-cou-indctapp-2012.