Duluth, Missabe & v. Locomotive Engineers

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 30, 2001
Docket00-3564
StatusPublished

This text of Duluth, Missabe & v. Locomotive Engineers (Duluth, Missabe & v. Locomotive Engineers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duluth, Missabe & v. Locomotive Engineers, (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 00-3564 ___________

Duluth, Missabe & Iron Range * Railway Company, Inc., * * Appellee, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * District of Minnesota. International Brotherhood of * Locomotive Engineers, AFL-CIO * 000-101 * * Appellant. * ___________

Submitted: June 14, 2001

Filed: August 30, 2001 ___________

Before MURPHY, HEANEY and BEAM, Circuit Judges. ___________

HEANEY, Circuit Judge.

This case involves a labor dispute between the Duluth, Missabe and Iron Range Railway Company (“DM&IR”) and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers (“Union”). The dispute was submitted to Public Law Board No. 5764 (“Board”) under the Railway Labor Act (RLA), 45 U.S.C. §§ 151-163, 181-188. The arbitrator ruled in favor of the Union. DM&IR then asked the district court to set aside the award on the ground that it was in excess of the board’s jurisdiction. The district court granted DM&IR’s motion. We reverse and remand to the district court with directions to remand to the Board.

I. BACKGROUND

DM&IR and the Union are parties to a labor agreement that defines the circumstances in which an engineer becomes eligible for “road overtime pay.” The current dispute was initiated in 1994 when the Union filed claims with DM&IR on behalf of individual engineers alleging that they were entitled to receiving overtime pay by virtue of Article IV, Section 2(c) of the 1986 National Agreement entered into by the Union and most of the nation’s railroads--including DM&IR--in 1986. DM&IR denied the claims on the grounds that no overtime pay was due under the parties’ labor agreements. It took the position that the national agreement did not intend to modify the rules and parties respecting the computation of overtime that had been in place on DM&IR since 1923. It asserted that neither the Union nor any individual engineer had submitted a claim disputing DM&IR’s practice, or otherwise objected to it from 1986 until 1994, and that it reversed its course in the latter year. The parties were unable to resolve the dispute and submitted it to arbitration before the Board, a three-person arbitration panel created by the parties under the RLA. Gil Vernon was the board’s neutral member and chairman. The Board, over the dissent of the DM&IR member, ruled in favor of the Union:

It is the opinion of the Board that regardless of the past operation of the locally negotiated Rule 7, it was clearly modified by the nationally negotiated Article IV. The Parties bought into national handling, and they agreed that language agreed to there controlled all related prior agreements. The relevant portion of the agreement in this regard read as follows:

“APPENDIX “A,” 1986 NATIONAL AGREEMENT

-2- “Section “NINETEENTH”

“NINETEENTH: This Agreement (together with Exhibits A, B, C, D, and E affixed hereto) embodies the entire agreement and understanding between the parties and supersedes all prior agreements and understandings relevant to the subject matter hereof. No amendments, waivers, or -modifications [sic] to this Agreement are to be effective unless executed by the parties [sic] duly accredited representatives in a writing referring to this Agreement.

(Appellant’s Add. at 3 (emphasis added).) The Board awarded the individual engineers the sum of $73,631.52, concluding DM&IR had breached the 1986 agreement.

The Union now concedes that there is no “Section Nineteenth” in the 1986 agreement, and DM&IR argues that the arbitration award should be set aside for this reason. Nevertheless, in January of 1998, DM&IR and the Union reached an agreement under which DM&IR paid the individual engineers the sum of $73,631.52, but has refused to pay those engineers pursuant to the award for future overtime miles. Instead, it moved to vacate the award on the grounds that the award exceeded the scope of the arbitrator’s jurisdiction because its validity depended on the nonexistent Section Nineteenth.

The magistrate to whom the matter was referred agreed that the Vernon Award should be set aside for the reasons advanced by DM&IR:

Indisputably, the Award of PLB 5764 makes clear that, in the view of the neutral Arbitrator, and of the BLE representative, Section NINETEENTH was the applicable provision of the 1986 National Agreement, and its provision dispositively determined that Rule 7 was clearly modified by the nationally negotiated Article IV. ...

-3- The Award’s commentary, on the uniform application of a National Agreement, is directly derived from the Board’s erroneous belief that the 1986 National Agreement contained a provision--Section NINETEENTH- -in which the parties agreed that the language agreed to there controlled all related prior agreements. ...

[The Award] is so diminished, by reliance upon a contractual provision which is unquestionably inapposite, [that] the Award may not properly stand.

(Magistrate’s Report and Recommendation at 18, 22, 23-24 (internal quotations omitted).)

The district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendation and entered judgment vacating and setting aside the arbitration award. This appeal followed.

II. DISCUSSION

Judicial review of a labor-arbitration decision . . . is very limited. Courts are not authorized to review the arbitrator’s decision on the merits despite allegations that the decision rests on factual errors or misinterprets the parties’ agreement. . . . [T]he fact that “a court is convinced [the arbitrator] committed serious error does not suffice to overturn [the arbitrator’s] decision.”

Major League Baseball Players Ass’n v. Garvey, 121 S. Ct. 1724, 1728 (2001) (per curiam) (quoting Eastern Associated Coal Corp. v. United Mine Workers, 531 U.S. 57, 62 (2000); see Air Line Pilots Ass’n, Int’l v. United Air Lines Corp., 874 F.2d 439, 443 (8th Cir. 1989) (noting “excruciatingly narrow” scope of review). DM&IR argues that the award does not draw its essence from the parties labor agreements because it was based on Section Nineteenth. The Union counters that the arbitrator’s decision was not dependent on the nonexistent provision and drew its essence from the agreement and

-4- that the award should be upheld. It also argues that because the settlement agreement between the parties carried out the arbitration award the issue as to whether it should be enforced in the future is moot. We agree with DM&IR that the dispute is not moot – the parties simply agreed to the dollar amount DM&IR had to pay to comply with the Vernon Award and paid that sum. Its compliance, however, did not moot its action contesting the future application of the award. See Tungseth v. Mutual of Omaha Ins. Co., 43 F.3d 406, 409 (8th Cir. 1994).

It is quite clear that DM&IR benefitted from the 1986 National Agreement, as the wage rates for its employees were reduced. On the other hand, the Union gained by the new overtime system prescribed in the 1986 National Agreement. Moreover, when we read the arbitration agreement in its entirety, we are unable to discern whether the arbitrator would have reached the same result had he not erroneously concluded that Section Nineteenth was a part of the 1986 National Agreement. That task must be left to the arbitrator.

III. CONCLUSION

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