Burden v. Trustees of the Health and Retirement Funds of United Mine Workers of America

816 F.2d 671
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 1987
Docket671
StatusUnpublished

This text of 816 F.2d 671 (Burden v. Trustees of the Health and Retirement Funds of United Mine Workers of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burden v. Trustees of the Health and Retirement Funds of United Mine Workers of America, 816 F.2d 671 (4th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

816 F.2d 671
Unpublished Disposition

NOTICE: Fourth Circuit I.O.P. 36.6 states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Fourth Circuit.

John BURDEN, President of Local Union 1470, District 28 of
United Mine Workers of America and members of
Local Union 1470, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
TRUSTEES OF the HEALTH AND RETIREMENT FUNDS OF UNITED MINE
WORKERS OF AMERICA, Defendants-Appellants.

No. 86-3064.

United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.

Argued Jan. 6, 1987.
Decided April 13, 1987.

Before RUSSELL, Circuit Judge, and BUTZNER, Senior Circuit Judge, and SENTELLE, United States District Judge for the Western District of North Carolina, sitting by designation.

Israel Goldowitz, Assistant General Counsel, United Mine Workers of America Health and Retirement Funds (Gerald E. Cole, Jr., Acting General Counsel; Thomas S. Gigot, Associate Counsel; Stuart B. Campbell, Jr.; Campbell, Young & Crewe, on brief), for appellants.

Louis Dene, for appellees.

PER CURIAM:

This is an appeal by the Trustees of the Health and Retirement Funds of the United Mine Workers of America (Trustees) from the district court's ruling that the Trustees had arbitrarily denied pension accrual benefits under the United Mine Workers of America ("UMWA") 1974 Pension Plan to the appellees for their periods of employment with the Clinchfield Coal Company prior to October 1966. The nineteen appellees are active and retired coal industry employees who, at various times beginning in the 1950's and 1960's, worked for Clinchfiled as either coal samplers, weighmen, or laboratory technicians. The appellees are participants in the 1974 Pension Plan, established by the UMWA and coal industry employers pursuant to the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement of 1974. The 1974 Wage Agreement is the successor to similar collective bargaining wage agreements first signed by Clinchfield and the UMWA in 1945 and continually thereafter.

The 1974 Plan provides that a participant shall receive credit for periods where the participant worked "as an employee in a job classified in the then existing bituminous coal wage agreement." Article IV (emphasis added). Although the 1971 Wage Agreement and subsequent agreements specify all covered job classifications, wage agreements prior to 1971 did not. Instead, earlier wage agreements contained a clause describing in general terms the types of work covered by and exempted from the collective bargaining agreements. The clause provided in part:

It is the intention of this Agreement to reserve to management and except from this Agreement an adequate force of supervisory employees to effectively conduct the safe and efficient operation of the mines and at the same time, to provide against the abuse of such exemptions by excepting more such employees than are reasonably required for that purpose.

Coal Inspectors and Weigh Bosses at mines where men are paid by the ton, Watchmen, Clerks, Engineering and Technical forces of the operator, working at or from a District or local mine office, are exempt from this agreement.

All other employees working in or about the mines shall be included in this Agreement except essential supervisors in fact such as: Mine foremen, Assistant Mine Foremen who, in the usual performance of their duties, may make examinations for gas as prescribed by law, and such other supervisors as are in charge of any class of labor inside or outside of the mines and who perform no production work. (Emphasis added).

The Trustees, in recognition of some claim of ambiguity in pre-1971 wage agreements regarding job classifications, and pursuant to their authority under Article VIII(B)(1) of the 1974 Pension Plan to promulgate binding rules and regulations to implement the Trust, adopted Interpretive Regulation 147 to clarify the terms "classified job" and "classified employment" as used in the Pension Plans. The regulation provides:

CLASSIFIED EMPLOYMENT

Q: As used in the Pension Plans, what do "classified job" and "classified employment" mean?

A: The terms "classified job" and "classified employment" normally refer to employment which is listed or classified as bargaining-unit work under the pertinent national and/or district Coal Wage Agreement. Lists of jobs classified under the 1971 and 1974 Agreements are included as Appendices to the Agreements. Prior to 1971, job classifications were not set forth in the national agreement, and there has been some slight variations in bargaining or classified jobs from one area to another in the nation. When there is a question as to whether one of these positions was or was not classified at the time and place in question, it is Fund practice to consult the UMWA District and the employers involved for information on whether the job was bargaining-unit work.

Thus, under the 1974 Pension Plan and interpretive regulation, the question of pension credit for pre-1971 employment depends upon whether the employment involved bargaining unit work.

Prior to 1966, the appellees, unlike most of Clinchfield's employees, were not members of the collective bargaining unit represented by the UMWA and their duties did not involve "bargaining unit work." Hence, they were exempted from the UMWA wage agreements. Accordingly, they received lower salaries or hourly wages than members of the bargaining unit and received benefit coverage under a plan for employees exempted from the wage agreements. In 1966, however, UMWA District 28 organized Local 1470 for the express purpose of representing Clinchfield's coal samplers, weighmen, and laboratory technicians, thereby bringing them within the bargaining unit covered by the UMWA contract. Thus, in 1966 the plaintiffs became eligible to earn pension benefits pursuant to the operative wage agreement covering members of the bargaining unit.

In 1979 the appellees requested that the Trustees determine whether members of Local 1970 were eligible to receive benefit accrual credit for their pre-1966 employment. The Trustees held that while the appellees would receive credit for vesting purposes they would not receive credit for purposes of determining the amount of their pension benefits because they were not members of the bargaining unit covered by the UMWA wage agreements prior to 1966 and hence, were not "classified employees" under the terms of the 1974 Pension Plan. Upon reconsideration at the request of the appellees the Trustees sustained their decision. In 1984, the appellees brought an action in the district court seeking a declaratory judgment as to their eligibility for pre-1966 benefit accrual credit.

The district court agreed with the Trustees that the appellees' jobs were not within a UMWA bargaining unit prior to 1966 but held that the bargaining unit requirement for classification was inconsistent with the language of the applicable wage agreement and unlawful as requiring union membership. The court, therefore, found the Trustees' decision "contrary to the established law and ...

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