District Council No. 16 of the International Union of Painters & Allied Trades, Glaziers, Architectural Metal & Glass Workers, L

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 10, 2007
Docket05-16258
StatusPublished

This text of District Council No. 16 of the International Union of Painters & Allied Trades, Glaziers, Architectural Metal & Glass Workers, L (District Council No. 16 of the International Union of Painters & Allied Trades, Glaziers, Architectural Metal & Glass Workers, L) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District Council No. 16 of the International Union of Painters & Allied Trades, Glaziers, Architectural Metal & Glass Workers, L, (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

DISTRICT COUNCIL NO. 16 OF THE  No. 05-16258 INTERNATIONAL UNION OF PAINTERS & ALLIED TRADES, GLAZIERS, D.C. No. ARCHITECTURAL METAL & GLASS CV-04-01219-VRW WORKERS, LOCAL 1621, Plaintiff-Appellant,  ORDER AMENDING v. OPINION AND AMENDED B & B GLASS, INC., OPINION Defendant-Appellee.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California Vaughn R. Walker, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted June 13, 2007—San Francisco, California

Filed August 16, 2007 Amended December 11, 2007

Before: Mary M. Schroeder, William C. Canby, Jr. and M. Margaret McKeown, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Schroeder

16261 16264 DISTRICT COUNCIL NO. 16 v. B & B GLASS

COUNSEL

David A. Rosenfeld and Emily P. Rich, Weinberg, Roger & Rosenfeld, Alameda, California, for the plaintiff-appellant.

Charles S. Birenbuam, Joan B. Tucker Fife, and Robert Spa- gat, Winston & Strawn, LLP, San Francisco, California, for the defendant-appellee.

ORDER

The opinion filed on August 16, 2007 is hereby amended as follows. On page 9950, the first full paragraph is deleted and the following paragraph is substituted:

Section 8(e) of the NLRA “generally prohibits those collective-bargaining agreements which require employers to cease doing business with any other person.” Manganaro, 321 N.L.R.B. at 163. The Supreme Court has held that certain agreements between employers and labor organizations whose aim is to preserve the jobs of covered employees are not within the prohibitions of § 8(e). Nat’l Woodwork Mf’rs Ass’n v. NLRB, 386 U.S. 612, 646 (1967). Only where a work pres- ervation provision is “ ‘tactically calculated’ ” to further union objectives other than preservation of bargaining unit DISTRICT COUNCIL NO. 16 v. B & B GLASS 16265 work is § 8(e) violated. NLRB v. Int’l Longshoremen’s Ass’n AFL-CIO, 447 U.S. 490, 504-05 (1980) (quoting Nat’l Wood- work, 386 U.S. at 644) (provisions designed to achieve objec- tives other than preservation of bargaining unit work constitute “secondary” activity and, therefore, are unlawful).

On page 9952, in the first paragraph, the following lan- guage is deleted:

Because the only employees covered by the Texas CBA are members of Local 53, the district court determined that only the employees of Local 53 are protected by the clause.

Substitute the following language:

Because the only employees covered by the Texas CBA are employees represented by Local 53, the district court deter- mined that only employees represented by Local 53 are pro- tected by the clause.

The mandate shall issue forthwith. No petitions shall be entertained.

OPINION

SCHROEDER, Circuit Judge:

This construction industry labor litigation involves the interplay between the use of standard “work preservation” and “out-of-area” clauses in collective bargaining agreements and the strong federal policy favoring arbitration. The clauses at issue in this litigation appear in a collective bargaining agree- ment signed by a Texas corporation, but a different company in California performed the challenged work. The California union seeking arbitration did not sign an agreement with the company doing the work. We conclude, as did the district 16266 DISTRICT COUNCIL NO. 16 v. B & B GLASS court, that because the plaintiff union has no agreement with the employer that it seeks to take to arbitration, and it cannot show that the employer against whom it filed its claim con- trols the company doing the work in California, the employer is entitled to judgment. We therefore affirm.

Background

Plaintiff-Appellant is District Council No. 16 of the Inter- national Union of Painters and Allied Trades, Glaziers, Archi- tectural Metal and Glass Workers, Local 1621 (“Local 1621” or the “union”). It is located in Northern California and is sig- natory to a collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) with contractors in Santa Clara County. The union filed this action in the Northern District of California in 2004 against Defendant-Appellee B&B Glass, Inc., a Texas corporation (“BBTX”). The union seeks to compel BBTX to arbitrate the union’s claim that another corporation, B&B Glass, Incorpo- rated, an Arizona company (“BBAZ”), violated the Texas agreement BBTX signed with Local 1621’s Texas counter- part, Painters and Glaziers Local Union No. 53 (“Local 53”). The California dispute concerned work BBAZ was doing at San Jose State University in Santa Clara County.

BBTX appeared specially to contest the district court’s per- sonal jurisdiction over it, asserting that it was not doing the work in California and therefore was not present in the state. In support of its assertion, BBTX provided declarations that the persons controlling BBTX had no control over BBAZ’s business decisions. Without producing additional evidence, Local 1621 countered that, because BBTX and BBAZ had a majority of shareholders in common, BBTX exercised suffi- cient management control over BBAZ that the court should compel arbitration of the dispute between Local 1621 and BBTX.

In granting BBTX’s motion to dismiss, the district court relied on the following undisputed facts. BBAZ was formed DISTRICT COUNCIL NO. 16 v. B & B GLASS 16267 in 1973 as an Arizona corporation by Robert and Barbara Buckholz. Their son, Bryan Buckholz, purchased the com- pany in 1983. He now owns a 25% interest in BBAZ, with the other 75% being owned by Rick Churchill, Bernie Hagerman, and John Collier, equally. BBAZ conducts most of its busi- ness in Arizona, with some in California, Utah and New Mex- ico. It does not hire employees who are unionized. Bryan Buckholz incorporated BBTX under the laws of Texas in 1998, and he subsequently sold his entire interest in BBTX to Rick Churchill, Bernie Hagerman, and John Collier. BBTX is a union shop.

BBAZ and BBTX do not compete for projects, contracts, subcontracts or bids. The companies do not share business offices, phone numbers, mailing addresses, business licenses, employees, supervisors, managers, payrolls, workers compen- sation policies, tax identification numbers, state unemploy- ment numbers, tax records, corporate records or bank accounts. Importantly, each company has a different “Opera- tion Manager”—the person responsible for bidding on and negotiating work contracts for the company.

In March 2002, Rick Churchill, the Operation Manager of BBTX, signed the Texas CBA. In July 2002, Plaintiff Local 1621 entered into a CBA with various employers in fourteen Northern California counties, including Santa Clara County, in which San Jose State University is located. BBAZ began its work at San Jose State in July 2003.

In March 2004, this dispute arose between BBTX and Local 1621. Local 1621 claimed that BBAZ’s work in Cali- fornia violated the Texas CBA. The terms of the Texas CBA, if applicable to the California work, would bind BBAZ, through BBTX, to adhere to the terms of the California CBA. The California CBA provides that any dispute between the parties is to be resolved through a grievance procedure, the final step of which is binding arbitration. On March 26, 2004, Local 1621 filed its petition to compel arbitration with BBTX 16268 DISTRICT COUNCIL NO. 16 v. B & B GLASS in the Northern District of California. Local 1621 contends that the California CBA applies to BBAZ’s California work through the Texas CBA, because BBTX’s three owners also own a majority of shares of BBAZ. Therefore, Local 1621 contends, BBAZ’s work is the out-of-area work of BBTX.

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