Congreso De Uniones Industriales v. Bacardi Corp.

636 F. Supp. 1228, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25362
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 22, 1986
DocketCiv. No. 85-1146CC
StatusPublished

This text of 636 F. Supp. 1228 (Congreso De Uniones Industriales v. Bacardi Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Congreso De Uniones Industriales v. Bacardi Corp., 636 F. Supp. 1228, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25362 (prd 1986).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

CEREZO, District Judge.

This is an action under section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. section 185. Plaintiff, Congreso de Uniones Industriales (Union), seeks to vacate an arbitrator’s decision that the grievance of an employee of defendant Bacardi Corporation was not arbitrable because the employee-union member, Eduardo Quiñones, did not follow the pre-arbitration steps in the collective bargaining agreement within the time periods provided therein. Defendant filed a Motion for Summary Judgment contending that the arbitrator’s decision is not reviewable since it rested mainly on credibility findings and that the Union is litigating this action in bad faith. Plaintiff filed an opposition and crossmotion for summary judgment stating that they were not challenging the arbitrator’s credibility findings, but rather his interpretation of the evidence, namely, the cut-off date for the running of the term the arbitrator found the employee had not complied with and the arbitrator’s failure to make a finding that the Union was notified. Defendant replied that the Union agreed to submit the question of arbitrability and could not now challenge the arbitrator's decision on these grounds, and that the matters now conclusorily stated by the Union were not presented to the arbitrator. Defendant submitted a transcript of the arbitration proceeding, the arbitrator’s decision, part of the collective bargaining agreement relevant to its arguments and certified translations of these documents. Plaintiff only presented an affidavit subscribed by its president.

The record shows that on Thursday, September 6, 1984, after a prolonged strike lasting approximately six months, a collective bargaining agreement between the parties was approved and the strike ended. On that same day and on the days following, the employer began notifying its employees that the strike had ended and that they had to return to work on Monday, September 10, 1984. According to the undisputed testimony of defendant’s Human Resources Director, Mr. José A. Rivera, the notification efforts were made by phone, personally, through announcements in two radio stations and by the Union’s own efforts. The efforts were successful. On the first workday after the strike, only five employees were absent; on the second day, only three, and on the third day, only two [1230]*1230and one of these was excused after calling. It is also undisputed that on September 6, 1984 the employer made a phone call to the number appearing in the employee’s records and that the person who answered the phone, the employee’s mother, was informed of the strike’s termination and the return to work date. The employee did not report to work on the 10th, 11th or 12th of September. On September 12, 1984 the employer sent a letter by certified mail to the employee’s address of record which was received at that address on September 13, 1984. The letter stated that the employee had been absent for three consecutive days without giving the employer any official notification and that if he did not report to work during the next twenty-four hours, the employer “would consider these absences as voluntary resignation and [they would] proceed to withdraw [the employee] from the Bacardi Corporation employee’s list.” On September 24,1984,1 the employee came to the Bacardi plant at around ten in the morning but was told by the security guard at the gate that he could only enter the premises accompanied by a Union representative. The employee went to the Union and, two days later, the Union decided to submit the matter to arbitration since the employer had not accepted the employee’s medical evidence to justify his absence.

On the first day of the arbitration hearing, January 22,1985, the arbitrator agreed to postpone the hearing until March 14, 1985 in order to enable the Union to prepare a defense on the question of whether the grievance was arbitrable, which, as admitted, it was not expecting the employer to raise. When the hearing was resumed, the parties agreed to present the evidence of the entire case together with the arbitrability matter in order to let the arbitrator decide the merits of the grievance, if he found it arbitrable. During the arbitration hearing employee Quiñones testified that he had gone to Illinois on July 10, 1984 while the strike was in progress to attend a sister’s wedding and remained there until September 22, 1984 when he returned to Puerto Rico. He indicated that before leaving Puerto Rico he gave two co-workers a forwarding address in Illinois and asked them to inform him as soon as the strike ended. According to his testimony, on September 8, 1984 he received a telegram from one of these co-workers telling him that the strike had ended and that he had to return to work on Monday, September 10. On September 9, 1984 he placed a long-distance phone call to the co-worker and asked her to tell the employer that he was sick and could not report back to work on that date. On September 13, 1984, Mr. Quiñones received a call from his stepfather in Puerto Rico. He read him the September 12, 1984 letter advising that Quiñones report to work in twenty-four hours or lose his job. Quiñones further testified that on this same date he placed a long-distance call to the Bacardi plant in Puerto Rico and that he told Mr. José A. Rivera, defendant’s Human Resources Director, that he was sick in Illinois and his doctor had recommended that he abstain from traveling. According to Quiñones, Rivera informed him that he was excused and asked him to bring medical evidence when he returned to work. Rivera denied ever receiving any call from Quiñones and stated that the first time they received news of Quiñones’ whereabouts was when the Union representative requested an interview on September 25, 1984 to discuss the reason for his absences.

In deciding that the grievance was not arbitrable — a matter that the parties expressly agreed to submit to the arbitrator — arbitrator José C. Costa placed great emphasis on whether the employee had indeed called the employer on September 13, 1984 and informed of his condition, as claimed. According to the arbitrator’s interpretation of the facts and the collective [1231]*1231bargaining agreement, this determination was crucial because the September 12 letter left no doubt of its termination of employment effects and Article VIII, Section 26, of the collective bargaining agreement required that a written complaint be presented to the Director of Human Resources by the affected employee or the union within five days following the events giving rise to the grievance. The arbitrator’s rejection of the employee’s testimony on the alleged September 13 phone call was not a bare conclusion. The arbitrator specifically referred to a number of inconsistencies and discrepancies in the record and to Quiñones’ testimony. Furthermore, since all of the evidence was presented, the arbitrator also questioned the validity and the reliability of the medical evidence offered by the Union since it did not state that Quiñones could not travel and it was suspiciously “corrected” after arbitration proceedings had begun to include a greater number of days of treatment that would cover the relevant dates of the case. However, the diagnosis stated in the corrected medical certificate was different from the one indicated in the original certificate presented to the employer in September 1984. Regarding the Union’s contention that it was never officially notified of the September 12, 1984 ultimatum letter, a matter also disputed by defendant’s.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
636 F. Supp. 1228, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/congreso-de-uniones-industriales-v-bacardi-corp-prd-1986.