Cummings v. John Morrell & Company

36 F.3d 499, 147 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2342, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 26563
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 23, 1994
Docket93-5285
StatusPublished

This text of 36 F.3d 499 (Cummings v. John Morrell & Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cummings v. John Morrell & Company, 36 F.3d 499, 147 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2342, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 26563 (6th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

36 F.3d 499

147 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2342, 63 USLW 2244,
129 Lab.Cas. P 11,198

Ernest Leon CUMMINGS, et al., Plaintiffs,
v.
JOHN MORRELL & COMPANY, et al., Defendants/Cross-Defendants/Appellees,
United Food and Commercial Workers International Union,
AFL/CIO-CLC; United Food and Commercial Workers
Local 242, Defendants/Cross-Plaintiffs/Appellants.

No. 93-5285.

United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.

Argued April 29, 1994.
Decided Sept. 23, 1994.

George A. Joseph (argued and briefed), Kirkland & Ellis, Chicago, IL, for defendants-appellees.

Mark Allen, Agee, Allen, Godwin, Morris & Laurenzi, Memphis, TN, Harry Huge, Shea & Gould, Annette M. Capretta, Steven K. Hoffman (argued and briefed), Molly S. McUsic, Donovan, Leisure, Rogdvin Huge & Shiller, Richard B. Roesel, Washington, DC, for defendants-appellants.

Before: GUY and NELSON, Circuit Judges; and QUIST, District Judge.*

DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by a labor union from a summary judgment in favor of an employer that had been charged by the union with breach of a collective bargaining agreement. The union's claim was brought under Sec. 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 185, a statute that has no explicit limitations period.

The question that we must decide is whether, as the union contends, the timeliness of the claim should be determined by reference to a state statute of limitations for cases analogous to this one, or whether, as the district court (Dowd, J.) determined on the strength of DelCostello v. Int'l Brotherhood of Teamsters, 462 U.S. 151, 103 S.Ct. 2281, 76 L.Ed.2d 476 (1983), the timeliness of the claim should be determined by reference to the most closely analogous federal statute of limitations. We agree with the district court's answer to this question, and we shall affirm the summary judgment.

* On July 12, 1979, John Morrell & Co., the defendant/cross-defendant in this case, entered into a collective bargaining agreement with the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, the defendant/cross-plaintiff. The agreement, which covered a three-year period beginning September 1, 1979, set forth terms and conditions of employment for UFCW members who worked at eleven Morrell meatpacking and distribution facilities. Among the facilities subject to the agreement were the John Morrell plant at Memphis, Tennessee, and the Rodeo Meats plant at Arkansas City, Kansas. Approximately 600 workers were employed at Memphis, and some 800 were employed at Arkansas City.

The collective bargaining agreement set an average base wage of $10.69 per hour plus periodic cost-of-living increases. The agreement also guaranteed the employees specified paid holidays and vacations, medical coverage, pensions, and life insurance. Including the value of benefits, the package was worth an average of approximately $17 per hour for each employee.

Section 10 of the collective bargaining agreement, entitled "Management Rights," provided as follows:

"The Management of the plant and direction of the working force, including the right to hire, suspend or discharge for just cause, to assign to jobs, to transfer Employees within the plant, to increase and decrease the working force, to determine products to be handled, produced or manufactured, to establish schedules of production and the methods, processes and means of products or handling, is vested exclusively in the Company, provided this will not be used for the purpose of discrimination against any Employee or to avoid any of the provisions of this Agreement, or any local agreement." (Emphasis supplied.)

The agreement set forth procedures to be followed in the event Morrell decided to close any of its plants. Before a plant closed, Morrell was required to give the union six months' notice and to provide severance pay and other benefits to the affected employees. The agreement required the payment of such benefits only in the event the plant closing was "permanent." A plant closing was considered "permanent" if, at the time the company closed the facility, it had no expectation of reopening it within two years.

In 1981 the management of Morrell sought wage concessions from the union prior to the expiration of the 1979 collective bargaining agreement. When that demand was refused, the union charges, Morrell hatched a plan to achieve by subterfuge what it had been unable to achieve by negotiation. The essence of the plan, according to the union, was to close the Memphis and Arkansas City plants temporarily, terminate the employment of the bargaining-unit people who worked there, and later reopen the facilities under unilaterally-imposed terms and conditions outside the bounds of the collective bargaining agreement.

Pursuant to this plan, the union claims, Morrell closed the Arkansas City plant on June 19, 1982, and the Memphis plant on July 31, 1982, dismissing the unionized employees at those facilities. Morrell told the union and its employees that the closing was "permanent," and the employees were paid the severance benefits required under the collective bargaining agreement.

On March 23, 1983, Morrell reopened the Arkansas City meatpacking facility under the name "Ark City Packing Company"; in its new incarnation the Arkansas City facility offered an average base wage of $5.50 an hour and employed 200 workers. Morrell contended that the reopened Arkansas City factory was a "new plant," and that the wage rate set forth in the 1979 collective bargaining agreement no longer applied; moreover, Morrell claimed, the UFCW no longer represented the workers at the factory.

The union filed unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board in response to the reopening of the Arkansas City plant. The NLRB conducted an investigation and informed the union of its intent to file a complaint against Morrell; shortly thereafter, at the NLRB's urging, Morrell and the union executed contracts covering both the Arkansas City plant and the Memphis plant, which Morrell had reopened in September 1983 as a putative "new plant."

On September 21, 1983, a class of former employees at the Arkansas City plant filed a hybrid breach of contact/breach of duty of fair representation suit against Morrell and the union. In that suit, Aguinaga, et al. v. John Morrell & Company, et al., No. 83-1858 (D. Kan.), the plaintiffs charged Morrell with having broken the 1979 collective bargaining agreement by closing and then reopening the Arkansas City plant, and they charged the UFCW with having violated its duty of fairly representing the employees by agreeing to let Morrell reopen the Arkansas City plant without its being subject to the 1979 collective bargaining agreement.1

A virtually identical hybrid Sec. 301/fair representation lawsuit was filed against Morrell and the union by former employees of the Memphis plant on January 25, 1984. This appeal is part of that proceeding.

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36 F.3d 499, 147 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2342, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 26563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cummings-v-john-morrell-company-ca6-1994.