Courier-Citizen Company v. Boston Electrotypers Union No. 11, International Printing & Graphic Communications Union of North America

702 F.2d 273, 112 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3122, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 29664
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 1983
Docket82-1181
StatusPublished
Cited by98 cases

This text of 702 F.2d 273 (Courier-Citizen Company v. Boston Electrotypers Union No. 11, International Printing & Graphic Communications Union of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Courier-Citizen Company v. Boston Electrotypers Union No. 11, International Printing & Graphic Communications Union of North America, 702 F.2d 273, 112 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3122, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 29664 (1st Cir. 1983).

Opinion

LEVIN H. CAMPBELL, Circuit Judge.

Courier-Citizen Company (the “Company”) brought suit under section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185 (1976) to vacate an arbitration award in favor of the Boston Electrotypers Union No. 11 (the “Union”). The Union counterclaimed for enforcement. The United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts refused to vacate and entered judgment enforcing the award. The Company appeals.

I.

In May 1975, after installing labor-saving technology at its plant in Lowell, Massachusetts, the Company laid off several journeymen electrotypers represented by the Union. It was agreed the layoffs should be in reverse order of seniority, but there was disagreement as to how to compute seniority. Grievances involving that question went to arbitration before Robert Stutz.

Shortly after the layoffs, the Company hired one of the laid off journeymen, Richard Grant, to fill a vacant non-unit laborer’s position. Grant was junior among the laid-off journeymen, and the Union grieved 1 his hiring as a laborer, asserting that the collective bargaining agreement required the Company to offer vacant laborers’ positions to laid-off journeymen in order of the journeymen’s unit seniority. At the arbitration of this grievance before Professor Hogan, the parties framed the issues as follows:

1. Is the matter arbitrable?

2. Did the Company violate the contract by placing Richard Grant in a laborer’s job on June 23,1975? If so, what shall be the remedy?

On February 12, 1976 Professor Hogan made an initial finding (Hogan I). Holding the matter- to be arbitrable, Hogan sustained the Union’s claim that the laborer’s job should have gone to the senior journeyman on layoff status, not to the more junior Grant. 2 Hogan, however, did not yet know who was the most senior journeyman as all issues pertaining to bargaining unit seniority had not yet been resolved by arbitrator Stutz. Hogan accordingly did not direct the Company to recall a particular individual nor did he make a back pay award. Instead, he ordered the Company to “offer that Laborer’s job to the senior journeyman who was on layoff status on [June 23,1975], including in this determination the effect, if any, of the Stutz award.” Hogan also ordered that the senior journeyman “be made whole for the difference between what he would have received had he been on the job instead of Richard Grant (at Grant’s hourly *276 rate) and such monies, if any, earned by him elsewhere during the hours Grant was on the job.” Finally, Hogan retained jurisdiction “to resolve any unresolved disputes between the parties on the selection and/or backpay questions.” The Company did not then object to Hogan’s retention of jurisdiction.

Six months later, &h July 26, 1976, arbitrator Stutz resolved the relevant seniority issue in a ruling that identified Gerald Kennedy as the senior journeyman on layoff status at the time the Company had recalled Richard Grant. 3

The Union thereupon insisted that the Company offer the laborer’s job and back pay to Kennedy. The Company refused. It contended (as it had before Hogan) that the contract provision requiring it to fill vacant laborer positions with laid-off journeymen was illegal, and it noted that it had filed a charge to this effect with the National Labor Relations Board. 4 In September 1976 the Union asked Professor Hogan to reopen the arbitration under the provision in Hogan I retaining jurisdiction. The Company strenuously objected and notified Hogan that it would not participate in the hearing.

Hogan proceeded nonetheless. After conducting an ex parte hearing, he rendered a decision on March 3, 1977 (Hogan II), awarding $7,600 in back pay to Gerald Kennedy. 5 This amount equaled the wages Kennedy would have earned between June 23,1975 (the date of Grant’s improper recall as a laborer) and April 26, 1976 (the date Kennedy accepted a position with the Den-nison Manufacturing Company in mitigation of his losses). Kennedy had obtained the position with Dennison, a company with which the Courier-Citizen Company had no relationship, when Dennison requested the Union to refer an available member to fill a vacant position. Adhering to its policy of allocating benefits according to seniority, the Union referred Kennedy to fill the job at Dennison. In Hogan II the arbitrator also ordered the Company to pay $7,600 to a second laid-off journeyman — Thomas Sparks. This amount corresponded to the amount Kennedy earned at Dennison from April 26, 1976 to January 31,1977, the date Kennedy was placed in the laborer’s job. The award to Sparks rested on the premise that the Company’s failure to reinstate Kennedy promptly precluded Sparks’s referral to Dennison as the next most senior journeyman.

II.

We consider first the Company’s argument, rejected by the Regional Direction of the Board, see note 4, supra, that the contract provision requiring laid-off journeymen to be hired for vacant laborers’ positions, see note 2, supra, violates the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 151 et seq. (the “Act”). 6 Two facts are *277 central to the Company’s argument. First, the Union was certified as the exclusive collective bargaining representative of the journeymen, but it had no right to represent the Company’s laborer employees. Second, the collective bargaining agreement that the Union negotiated with the Company on behalf of the journeymen contained a union security clause requiring newly hired journeymen to join the Union within 30 days of the commencement of employment. This clause ensured, as a practical matter, that journeymen laid off by the Company would all be members of the Union. Thus, the disputed recall provision is said to require the Company to fill non-unit laborer’s jobs with members of the journeyman printers’ local before considering non-union applicants.

The Company now argues that, by placing its members in laborers’ jobs, the Union has illegally extended its representational rights beyond the bargaining unit it has been certified to represent. This supposed attempt to represent non-unit employees is said to amount to a failure to bargain in good faith, in violation of section 8(b)(3) of the Act. See Sperry Systems Management Division v. NLRB, 492 F.2d 63, 68 (2d Cir.), cert, denied, 419 U.S. 831, 95 S.Ct. 55, 42 L.Ed.2d 57 (1974). In Sperry, the Union sought to compel the employer to pay the higher wages and benefits, and to observe certain job security rules found in the Union’s New York collective bargaining agreement, to technicians employed at a non-unit plant in California. The Second Circuit ruled that the Union’s activities amounted to a sub rosa attempt to become the

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702 F.2d 273, 112 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3122, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 29664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courier-citizen-company-v-boston-electrotypers-union-no-11-international-ca1-1983.