Champion Intl Corp v. United Paperworkers

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 23, 1999
Docket98-1148
StatusPublished

This text of Champion Intl Corp v. United Paperworkers (Champion Intl Corp v. United Paperworkers) 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
Champion Intl Corp v. United Paperworkers, (4th Cir. 1999).

Opinion

PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

CHAMPION INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v. No. 98-1148 UNITED PAPERWORKERS INTERNATIONAL UNION, AFL-CIO; UNITED PAPERWORKERS INTERNATIONAL UNION, LOCAL 507, Defendants-Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, at Asheville. Max O. Cogburn, Magistrate Judge. (CA-96-280-1-C)

Argued: October 28, 1998

Decided: February 23, 1999

Before NIEMEYER and MICHAEL, Circuit Judges, and BOYLE, Chief United States District Judge for the Eastern District of North Carolina, sitting by designation.

_________________________________________________________________

Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion, in which Judge Michael and Chief Judge Boyle joined.

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COUNSEL

ARGUED: Gregory Phillip McGuire, HAYNSWORTH, BALDWIN, JOHNSON & GREAVES, Greensboro, North Carolina, for Appel- lant. Joyce Murphy Brooks, Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellees. OPINION

NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:

As a result of a general reduction in force implemented by Cham- pion International Corporation at its Canton Mill facility in Canton, North Carolina, 17 employees, whose "general utility" crew positions had been eliminated, filed a grievance alleging the impairment or abrogation of job bidding rights given them under their collective bar- gaining agreement. The arbitrator misinterpreted the grievance and issued an award under a separate and special plant-modernization agreement negotiated by Champion and the Union to compensate only those employees whose positions were eliminated by the earlier shutdown of a specific paper-making machine at the plant.

On appeal from the district court's affirmance of the award, we conclude that although the grievants' claim remains arbitrable, any remedy must derive from the collective bargaining agreement and not from the special plant-modernization agreement. Accordingly, we vacate the award and remand to enable the grievants to commence a new arbitration of their grievance if they so choose.

I

In 1991, Champion International Corporation, a paper manufac- turer, undertook to modernize its Canton Mill facility. The modern- ization project involved permanently shutting down"No. 14 Machine" and opening up a new, smaller pulp mill. At the time of its decision, Champion was party to a collective bargaining agreement with the United Paperworkers International Union, AFL-CIO, and its affiliated Local 507 (hereafter collectively, the"Union"). Accord- ingly, Champion negotiated with the Union a specific agreement to address the procedures for compensating those hourly employees at the Canton Mill whose positions would be eliminated as a direct result of the modernization project. This agreement, executed on Sep- tember 19, 1991, was known as "Policy 683."

Policy 683, which was to be in effect only until December 31, 1993, authorized either severance pay or stabilization bonuses to

2 workers whose jobs were directly affected by the modernization proj- ect. The severance pay provisions entitled employees to receive a lump sum severance payment equal to three weeks' pay plus one week's pay for each year of service and one additional week's pay for each year of service over 15 years. By receiving a severance payment, the employee agreed to waive all "recall and/or bumping rights" under the collective bargaining agreement. Policy 683 also provided for sta- bilization bonuses as an "incentive to keep people in the old manufac- turing facility" -- a way to maintain the productivity of the soon-to- be retired No. 14 Machine by retaining the employees who operated it until the new mill was ready. Without the monetary inducement of the stabilization bonus, employees would likely bid out for other jobs within the mill. In effect, the bonus compensated employees for delaying exercise of their job bidding rights under the collective bar- gaining agreement. The stabilization bonuses ranged from $1,000 to $10,000, depending on how long the employee remained at work on No. 14 Machine.

Specific procedures for making claims for payment under Policy 683 and for reviewing denials of claims were set out in the Policy. Policy 683 provided that all claims were to be made to an administra- tor and that appeals from denials of claims could be taken internally. It also provided that if an employee were denied a claim "in whole or in part," the employee could "seek assistance from the United States Department of Labor, or such employee [could] file suit in state or federal court." Policy 683 did not mention arbitration.

A year after Policy 683 was executed, Champion undertook an independent, across-the-board reduction in workforce in response to the deteriorating overall financial condition of the Canton Mill facil- ity. Again, Champion negotiated an agreement with the Union to implement the reduction in force. This agreement provided for sever- ance payments to employees who elected to be severed and a proce- dure for filling the vacancies created by those elections through the "normal posting and [job] bidding process." The agreement did not, however, provide for any kind of stabilization bonus comparable to those provided for in Policy 683.

As a result of the general reduction in force, the entire "general utility" workgroup was notified in February 1994 that their positions

3 were to be eliminated in June 1994. The 17 employees in that group then filed a grievance against Champion under the collective bargain- ing agreement, claiming that because they did not learn soon enough of the elimination of their workgroup, they lost job bidding rights. In their grievance, they stated:

Company representatives admittedly knew that the Gen. Util. crew would be eliminated in June '94. By not sharing this info., and deliberately covering up the matter, crew employees were not given the right to explore alternative avenues of employment within the mill. (Job bidding). Request displacement compensation equal to #14 for each crew member $7,000. We request total of $119,000.00.

Although these 17 employees alluded in their grievance to compensa- tion "equal to #14 for each crew member $7,000" (emphasis added), it is undisputed that these 17 employees were not terminated by the shutdown of Machine No. 14 and therefore were not identified in Pol- icy 683 as those who were entitled to compensation as a direct result of modernization.

These employees' grievance was denied at each step of Champi- on's internal grievance procedure provided by the collective bargain- ing agreement and then was submitted to final, binding arbitration in May 1996. The arbitrator to whom the matter was assigned undertook to decide the following two issues:

[Is] the Grievants' claim for Stabilization Bonus payments under Severance Plan No. 683 substantively arbitrable?

Whether the Company violated the Collective Bargaining Agreement by withholding the Stabilization Bonus pay- ments provided in Severance Plan No. 683 to the utility crew employees in the Paper and Board department?

In rendering an award for the 17 employees, the arbitrator concluded that "the Grievants' claim for stabilization bonus payment is arbitra- ble" and that Champion "violated the Agreement by withholding the Stabilization Bonus payments provided in Severance Plan No. 683 to the utility crew employees in the Paper and Board department."

4 Seeking review of the award in the courts, Champion filed this action under § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §

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