Crosby v. Sunmark Industries

528 F. Supp. 724, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16486
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 29, 1981
DocketCiv. A. No. 80-2617-MC
StatusPublished

This text of 528 F. Supp. 724 (Crosby v. Sunmark Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crosby v. Sunmark Industries, 528 F. Supp. 724, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16486 (D. Mass. 1981).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER GRANTING MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

McNAUGHT, District Judge.

This action came on to be heard on defendant Sunmark Industries’ (Sunmark) motion for summary judgment under Rule 56(c) F.R.Civ.P. Relief is sought under Section 301 of the Labor-Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185.

A complaint was filed in the District Court of East Boston, and the action was then removed to this court. The plaintiff claims that military pay differential benefits, disability pay, and contractual reemployment rights have been withheld unfairly and arbitrarily in violation of his employ[725]*725ment contract. He asserts that he has exhausted administrative alternatives prior to commencing this action.

We look to the pleadings, including the complaint, the deposition of the plaintiff (marked as Exhibit A), submitted with the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, and particularly to the collective bargaining agreement (marked as Exhibit E) which provided the plaintiff with contractual remedies.

Mr. Crosby was first employed by the defendant corporation as a truck driver in August of 1977, at defendant’s Revere terminal (Exhibit A, p. 5). On May 11,1979 he was notified that he would be laid off effective May 19, 1979 (Exhibit A at p. 37). On May 16, 1979 he complained that by reason of an injury to his back he had to leave work. He did not come back to work on or before May 19, 1979 (Exhibit A, pp. 43, 44). He was paid through May 18, 1979.

We now back up to the month of April, 1979 when, it is agreed, Crosby sought information from Sunmark concerning military pay differential benefits. On April 24, 1979, Joseph A. Vasapollo, Customer Service Representative of the defendant, following a conversation with Crosby, outlined benefits which would be received by Crosby from Sunmark if he was inducted into the armed forces. Mr. Vasapollo wrote in part: “Details for this benefit can be found on pages B-16 and B-17 in your Blue Benefits Handbook”. (Exhibit C). The plaintiff applied for enlistment in the United States Marine Corps on May 2, 1979 and was scheduled for induction on May 16, 1979. He was to leave for “boot camp” at 8:00 A.M. on May 17, 1979 (Exhibit J). To repeat, it was on May 11th that he was informed that he would be laid off May 19th, and it was on May 16th, the day before his scheduled departure for “boot camp” and three days before the proposed layoff, that he says he slipped in gasoline while pulling a filling hose at work (Exhibit A, p. 43). “I was loading two products. One of the elbows was leaking on the ground, and I am pulling the two loading arms like a son of a gun. As I am ready to hook up the pump, I slipped on the gas when I stretched in a weird way, and my back started bothering me.” This was an aggravation of a prior back injury. He was hospitalized as a result of this episode (Exhibit A, p. 44). Subsequent to the injury the plaintiff was paid workmen’s compensation benefits by Royal Globe Insurance. Plaintiff was inducted into the service on November 2, 1979.

The military leave benefits mentioned by Mr. Vasapollo in the letter of April 24, 1979 (Exhibit B) were described by Mr. Vasapollo in general terms. He wrote to Mr. Crosby that: “Details for this benefit can be found on pages B-16 and B-17 in your Blue Benefits Handbook”. Those pages became Exhibit C to the defendant’s motion. Sometime in late May or early June, according both to plaintiff’s and defendant’s memoranda, the plaintiff met with Frank Lailer, a representative of the Employees’ Association, and with Ray Robitaille, the defendant’s terminal manager in Revere, to discuss his eligibility for company-provided military leave benefits. He was told (Exhibit A, pp. 14 and 17) by Robitaille: “I can’t tell you you can or you cannot get benefits. You are going to have to pursue that to Burton”. (Mary Burton, Human Resources Manager). On August 15, 1979, the plaintiff and Mr. Lailer met with Ms. Burton who told plaintiff that he would be eligible if he was inducted into the service prior to the effective date of his layoff (May 19th). Mr. Lailer responded that because of the injuries sustained by Crosby while still employed by defendant as a permanent full-time employee, he could not be inducted. (Exhibit A, p. 18). The plaintiff attempted thereafter to contact Mary Burton by telephone, and on October 26, 1979 she told him that although he would receive workmen’s compensation because the injury was job-related, he would not be qualified for military leave of absence benefits (Exhibit A, p. 20).

According to his deposition, between October 26 and November 2, 1979, the plaintiff met with a union representative named Kelly and Mr. Kelly wrote a letter to a Mr. Harry Smith, Benefits Coordinator of the [726]*726defendant in Philadelphia. He said that he received an answer “and they referred everything back to Framingham” (Exhibit A, p. 28). Next, he said that: “I remember Frank or Jack (Lailer or Kelly) said, ‘Let’s take the first step and do what the book says’ ”. This he interpreted as following the advice by Sun to follow up on denied benefits. Counsel argued at the hearing on this motion that this was the procedure for appealing denials such as the oral denial by Mary Burton, and he referred to' the Benefits Handbook (Exhibit F), page 1-5. It is provided therein that when a claim for benefits under a Sun benefit plan is denied in whole or in part, a written explanation would be provided by either Sun or an insurance company. An adverse decision was to be appealed within 60 days of the date of receiving the denial notice.

Counsel for the defendant distinguishes between the defendant’s benefit program consisting of benefit policies (leaves of absence, holidays and paid absences) and benefit plans (disability, retirement and income continuation). He urges that the plaintiff and the two union representatives (assuming the truth of the contents of the deposition) made an incorrect assumption that the procedure for review of a denial of benefits under a benefit plan applied to a denial under a benefit policy. A search of Exhibit F reveals nothing therein requiring that a denial of benefits under the military leave of absence policy be in writing. Plaintiff, by his counsel, at the hearing conceded the validity of the distinction. He argued that the union representatives told the plaintiff of what they believed to be the “correct method” and that they erred in that regard. He went on to argue that error on the part of the union representatives was the equivalent of a wrongful refusal to process a grievance, which, said he, is a breach of the duty of fair representation.

On August 8, 1980, the plaintiff’s attorney sent a claim letter to Mary Burton who sent a return letter in September, denying the benefits requested.

At the hearing on this motion, the plaintiff, therefore, conceded that he did not follow the grievance procedure which is set forth in Article XIII of the collective bargaining agreement which provides for a military leave of absence and informs the reader that any requests for information in this area may be made by employees or by the Employees’ Association to the company. In addition, under Article V of the Agreement, any employee may start the mechanism for presentation of a grievance within ten days of the event complained of to the Transport Supervisor or his designated alternate. If that fails, a written grievance to the Area Transport Manager or his designee may be made within ten days after the decision in the first step.

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Bluebook (online)
528 F. Supp. 724, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosby-v-sunmark-industries-mad-1981.