City of Lewiston v. Lewiston Firefighters Ass'n, IAG, Local No. 785

629 A.2d 50, 1993 Me. LEXIS 226
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 30, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 629 A.2d 50 (City of Lewiston v. Lewiston Firefighters Ass'n, IAG, Local No. 785) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Lewiston v. Lewiston Firefighters Ass'n, IAG, Local No. 785, 629 A.2d 50, 1993 Me. LEXIS 226 (Me. 1993).

Opinion

WATHEN, Chief Justice.

Plaintiff City of Lewiston (the City) appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court (Androscoggin County, Delahanty, C.J.) affirming an arbitrator’s award in favor of defendant Lewiston Firefighters Association, IAF, Local #785 (the Union), the bargaining agent for firefighters employed by the Lewiston Fire Department. On appeal the City argues that the arbitrator exceeded his authority by impermissibly modifying the collective bargaining agreement, and violated public policy by requiring it to agree to minimum manning levels that are unrelated to workload or safety. We disagree and affirm the judgment.

The City and the Union were parties to a collective bargaining agreement (the Agreement) effective from July 1, 1989 until June 30, 1991. Articles 6.4 and 9.3 of the Agreement obligate the City to maintain three shifts, or platoons, of firefighters, and to maintain a minimum of three firefighters per operational vehicle. 1 Article 9.3 reserves to the City the right to determine the number of operational vehicles. Prior to the time this dispute arose, the City routinely had seven vehicles in operation. Accordingly, the City typically scheduled twenty-three or twenty-four firefighters to work each shift, twenty-one of whom were assigned to a specific vehicle, and the rest of whom were R-Men. The R-Men are spare firefighters who are used to fill vacancies on a shift and are not regularly assigned to a vehicle.

The City had promulgated a detailed policy entitled “Duty Roster Procedure” which set out the procedure for filling vacancies when there were not enough R-Men to fill a shift of twenty-one firefighters (i.e., three per vehicle). Pursuant to this procedure, if a vehicle was temporarily out of service, its crew of three firefighters were not used to fill vacancies on other vehicles. The members of the crew were assigned instead to be the fourth or fifth firefighter on operational vehicles. Any vacancies on operational vehicles that could not be filled by R-Men were filled by off-duty firefighters who were called in to work at overtime rates of pay.

The procedure was implemented sometime before 1980 and has been the subject of two previous arbitration decisions. The first such decision was rendered by Robert Barlow in 1980 (Barlow Award). Arbitrator Barlow found that the overtime result *52 ing from the procedure was a protected benefit, and that a change in the procedure constituted a denial of overtime in violation of Article 34 of the applicable collective bargaining agreement that protected past practices.

In the next round of bargaining, the City sought to revise Article 34 and Article 6.4 to make the overtime benefit arising from the contested procedure discretionary. In a 1982 arbitration decision authored by Milton Nadworny (Nadworny Award), the interest arbitration panel rejected the City’s proposed textual changes, but did make minor revisions to both Articles of the applicable bargaining agreement. 2

On January 30, Í991, the City implemented a new written policy impacting procedures for filling duty rosters when trucks were temporarily out of service. Under the new policy, the City reassigned firefighters from out-of-serviee vehicles to fill vacancies in other three-man crews when there were not enough available R-Men. Previously, pursuant to the Duty Roster Procedure and Article 6.4 of the Agreement, these vacancies had been filled by off-duty firefighters at overtime rates of pay. In July 1991, the City further revised its procedure by adopting a policy of placing a functioning vehicle temporarily out of service in order to use its crew to replace absent firefighters whenever the number of absent firefighters exceeded the number of R-Men available for a shift. The new procedure was designed to reduce overtime.

Grievances were filed and ultimately were submitted to arbitration pursuant to the Agreement. The arbitrator issued his award in favor of the Union. The award provided that the City’s new procedure for filling the duty roster violated the Agreement because it was contrary to a past practice protected under Article 34, 3 and impermissibly affected overtime, a benefit provided by the Agreement and recognized by the Barlow Award. The City’s motion to vacate the award was denied by the Superior Court, and this appeal followed. 4

An arbitrator has “no authority to add to, subtract from or modify the collective bargaining agreement.” 26 M.R.S.A. § 970 (1988). The Superior Court may vacate an arbitration award where “the arbitrators exceeded their powers.” 14 M.R.S.A. § 5938(1)(C) (1980); see also 26 M.R.S.A. § 968(4) (1988) (The Superior Court may vacate an arbitration award “[wjhere the arbitrators exceeded their powers or so imperfectly executed them that a mutual, final and definite award upon the subject matter submitted was not made.”). The standard for determining whether an award exceeds an arbitrator’s power, however, is an extremely narrow one. Granger Northern, Inc. v. Cianchette, 572 A.2d 136, 139 (Me.1990). We will uphold an arbitrator’s award if any rational construction of the Agreement could support the award. Maine State Employees Ass’n v. Maine Dep’t of Defense, 436 A.2d 394, 397 (Me.1981).

A court may not substitute its judgment for that of the arbitrator. It is the arbitrator’s construction of a contract that is bargained for, and only when there is a manifest disregard of the contract or the award contravenes public policy will we *53 disturb the award. The mere fact that an arbitrator commits an error of law does not mean that he has exceeded his authority.

Dep’t of Transp. v. Maine State Employees Ass’n, 606 A.2d 775, 777 (Me.1992) (citations omitted). The burden of proving that the arbitrator exceeded his authority rests on the City as the party attacking the award. Maine State Employees Ass’n v. Maine Dep’t of Defense, 436 A.2d at 397.

The City first argues that the arbitrator unlawfully modified the Agreement by finding a “right to overtime” not provided in the Agreement, that he exceeded his authority by allowing a past practice to control over Articles 6.4 and 9.3 of the Agreement, that he impermissibly limited the City’s express contractual right to determine the number of vehicles in operation, and that he impermissibly imposed a minimum staffing requirement on the City that is unrelated to the number of operating vehicles. We disagree. The arbitrator concluded that the Duty Roster Procedure constitutes a protected overtime benefit under Articles 6.4 and 34 of the Agreement. He determined that the City could not unilaterally defeat those benefits by temporarily parking vehicles after a shift commenced. We conclude that the award does not result from a manifestly erroneous interpretation of the Agreement.

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629 A.2d 50, 1993 Me. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lewiston-v-lewiston-firefighters-assn-iag-local-no-785-me-1993.