Communication Workers of America, Afl-Cio, Etc. v. Us West Direct

847 F.2d 1475, 128 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2698, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 7618, 1988 WL 56391
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1988
Docket86-1685
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 847 F.2d 1475 (Communication Workers of America, Afl-Cio, Etc. v. Us West Direct) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Communication Workers of America, Afl-Cio, Etc. v. Us West Direct, 847 F.2d 1475, 128 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2698, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 7618, 1988 WL 56391 (10th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

TIMBERS, Circuit Judge.

US West Direct (“US West”) appeals from a summary judgment entered April 24, 1986 in the District of Colorado, Sherman G. Finesilver, Chief Judge, holding that US West was compelled to arbitrate, pursuant to an arbitration clause in the collective bargaining agreement, a union grievance asserting failure to recognize certain groups of employees as covered under the agreement.

*1476 On appeal, US West claims that the union grievance raises a question of representation which should be decided by the National Labor Relations Board (the “NLRB” or the “Board”). We disagree.

We find the union grievance to be limited to those employees performing accounting functions. We hold that the dispute on its face as to those employees is governed by the contract, since the arbitrator first would have to determine whether the group of employees in question fell within the definition of “employees” in the agreement. In view of the strong federal policy favoring arbitration, the fact that representational matters are touched upon does not preempt the right to arbitrate under the agreement.

We affirm.

I.

We shall summarize only those facts believed necessary to an understanding of the issues raised on appeal.

Appellee Communication Workers of America, AFL-CIO (“CWA”) is the union representative of certain employees of appellant US West. Prior to January 1,1984, CWA represented all of the directory clerical employees of the Yellow Pages Department of Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co. (“Mountain Bell”), part of American Telephone and Telegraph Co. (“AT & T”), as a result of two certification elections held in 1974 and 1982.

After these elections, those employees were included in the company-wide bargaining unit and were covered by the same agreement as the represented employees who performed accounting functions for the Yellow Pages Department. Some employee groups specifically were excluded from representation.

Since AT & T was required to divest, CWA and AT & T executed a pre-divesti-ture agreement. The Amended Memorandum of Agreement dated March 26, 1982, as supplemented August 21,1983, was “intended to set forth the rights and obligations of employees in the Bell System who are presently represented by CWA and who are transferred as a part of their work group or organization in connection with any corporate reorganization of the Bell System....”

“Employees” covered by the agreement are defined in Article 1, section 1.1, of the agreement which provides in relevant part:

“Employees, for purposes of this ... [agreement] shall include those whose titles are included on the list of job title classifications in the geographical locations contained in Appendix A ... who were within the units represented by the Union at the time of entry into the within agreement or who thereafter hold such job title classifications in such geographic locations within the represented unit.”

The arbitration clause, Article 6, section 6.2, of the agreement, provides in relevant part:

"Grievances subject to the provisions of this Article 6 shall be limited to the following:
(a) Grievances arising out of or resulting from the application or interpretation of the provisions of this Agreement.”

After the divestiture of AT & T on January 1, 1984, the US West subsidiary was formed which took over producing the yellow page directories. Some represented employees of Mountain Bell were transferred to US West. Initially US West continued to have its accounting functions performed by represented employees of Mountain Bell. At some point, however, US West decided to perform its own accounting functions and hired its own employees. US West treated these employees as non-unionized.

According to CWA, although those employees were placed in work groups and job title classifications covered by the collective bargaining agreement, US West refused to apply the bargaining agreement to them. US West asserts that those employees previously did not exist within the Yellow Pages Department and are not functional groups included in CWA’s existing NLRB unit certifications.

*1477 On April 22,1985, CWA filed a grievance asserting that US West failed to recognize all non-management employees in job titles covered by the collective bargaining agreement. US West also did not apply the agreement to employees involved in national yellow page sales, financial planning, certain payroll clerks, promotions, sales results, delivery, information center, planning and marketing, and corporate staff. US West asserts that historically the parties have excluded these groups from unit representation elections and from the CWA bargaining unit. At oral argument CWA conceded that the agreement did not cover the yellow page sales group which it had failed to represent after the 1982 certification election. CWA asserted that it did not intend to include this group in the grievance. CWA did not rebut or even discuss the other groups US West claimed historically were excluded from representation. Indeed, CWA limited the factual description in its brief to a discussion of those employees performing accounting functions. Therefore, despite the broad language CWA used in its initial grievance— failure to recognize all non-management employees — we hold that the instant dispute is limited to those employees performing accounting functions. See infra note 2.

On May 20, 1985, the grievance was processed in accordance with the procedure established by the agreement. US West claimed that the dispute involved a recogni-tional question and that the NLRB — not an arbitrator — was the proper forum before which to resolve the dispute. After US West denied CWA’s request to submit the grievance to arbitration, CWA commenced the instant action on August 26, 1985 pursuant to § 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 (“LMRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 185(a) (1982), to compel arbitration of the dispute pursuant to the arbitration clause of the agreement.

Both parties moved for summary judgment. US West raised the same claims it asserted in opposing the grievance procedure — that the dispute in essence was concerned with recognition of a group of employees which was an issue for the NLRB to decide. In a judgment entered April 24, 1986, the court granted CWA’s motion for summary judgment to compel arbitration, based on the strong federal policy favoring arbitration and on the limited scope of judicial review which bars consideration of the merits of the dispute. From that judgment, US West has taken the instant appeal.

II.

The essential issue before us is whether the district court correctly held that US West must arbitrate the union grievance. We affirm.

While it did not address a disputed issue analogous to that in the instant case, the Supreme Court, in AT & T Tech., Inc. v. Communication Workers, 475 U.S. 643

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847 F.2d 1475, 128 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2698, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 7618, 1988 WL 56391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/communication-workers-of-america-afl-cio-etc-v-us-west-direct-ca10-1988.