Dylan 140 LLC v. Figueroa

982 F.3d 851
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 10, 2020
Docket20-461
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 982 F.3d 851 (Dylan 140 LLC v. Figueroa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dylan 140 LLC v. Figueroa, 982 F.3d 851 (2d Cir. 2020).

Opinion

20-461 Dylan 140 LLC v. Figueroa

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

August Term 2020

(Argued: October 28, 2020 Decided: December 10, 2020)

No. 20-461-cv

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DYLAN 140 LLC

Plaintiff-Appellant,

-v.-

HECTOR J. FIGUEROA, AS TRUSTEE AND THE TRUSTEES OF THE BUILDING SERVICE 32BJ HEALTH FUND, BUILDING SERVICE 32BJ PENSION FUND, THOMAS SHORTMAN TRAINING SCHOLARSHIP AND SAFETY FUND, BUILDING SERVICE 32BJ LEGAL SERVICES FUND, BUILDING SERVICES 32BJ SUPPLEMENTAL RETIREMENT & SAVINGS FUND

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: LIVINGSTON, Chief Judge, KEARSE and LYNCH, Circuit Judges.

Plaintiff Dylan 140 LLC (“Dylan”) brought an action in district court seeking a declaration of its rights and obligations under the terms of a collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”). Defendants moved to dismiss, asserting that Dylan was required to resolve the alleged dispute in pending arbitration. The district court agreed, converting the motion to dismiss into a motion to compel arbitration, granting the motion, and dismissing Dylan’s complaint without prejudice. On appeal, Dylan argues that the district court misinterpreted the terms of the CBA and erred in dismissing its

1 complaint. We disagree. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.

FOR PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT: NETANEL NEWBERGER (Joseph M. Labuda, on the brief), Milman Labuda Law Group PLLC, Lake Success, New York.

FOR DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES IRA A. STURM, Raab, Sturm & Ganchrow, LLP, Fort Lee, New Jersey.

DEBRA ANN LIVINGSTON, Chief Judge:

Plaintiff-Appellant Dylan 140 LLC (“Dylan”) appeals from a January 8, 2020

judgment of the district court compelling arbitration and dismissing Dylan’s declaratory

judgment action without prejudice. Dylan, the owner and operator of a residential

rental apartment building in New York City, is a party to a multi-employer collective

bargaining agreement (“CBA”) with the Service Employees International Union, Local

32BJ (“Union”) and the Realty Advisory Board on Labor Relations (“RAB”). Under the

terms of the CBA, Dylan is required to make contributions to employee benefit funds for

eligible employees. The core dispute between Dylan and the trustees of the benefit

funds (referred to by the parties and herein as the “Funds”), as Defendants-Appellees, is

whether Dylan owes money in unpaid contributions for one of Dylan’s part-time

employees. The district court held that Dylan is required to resolve that dispute in

arbitration with the Funds, converting the Funds’ motion to dismiss into a motion to

2 compel arbitration, granting that motion, and dismissing Dylan’s complaint without

prejudice. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM.

BACKGROUND

I. Factual Background 1

Dylan is a New York corporation that owns and operates a residential rental

apartment building located at 140 West 86th Street, New York, New York. Dylan is a

party to a CBA with the Union that requires it to make monetary contributions to various

Funds for eligible employees under the terms of the CBA. The Funds are jointly

administered, multi-employer, labor-management trust funds established by the CBA,

that use employer contributions to provide health insurance, pre-paid legal services,

training, and other benefits to eligible employees.

In 2018, the Funds, pursuant to a trust agreement incorporated into the CBA, hired

a third party to conduct an audit of Dylan’s fund contributions. The audit determined

that Dylan owed unpaid contributions for employee Julio Rodriguez. Rodriguez was a

part-time worker at the building, performing Union work as a porter two days a week

and non-Union work as a painter three days a week. In January 2019, the Funds sent a

letter notifying Dylan that it owed $110,872.68 in unpaid fund payments.

1 The factual background presented here is derived from the parties’ filings and evidence before the district court in considering the converted motion to compel arbitration. “App’x” refers to the joint appendix, Dkt. No. 58.

3 II. Procedural History

In April 2019, Dylan brought an action in the Southern District of New York

seeking declaratory relief under the Employment Retirement Income Security Act

(“ERISA”) and the Labor Management Relations Act (“LMRA”) (also known as the “Taft-

Hartley Act”) in the effect of a declaration that it was not required to pay benefit fund

contributions for Rodriguez. Dylan claimed that while the CBA requires it to contribute

to the Funds for certain employees—those who work more than two days a week or

twenty hours in a Union job—it was not required to make those contributions for

Rodriguez, who worked only two days per week for sixteen hours total in a Union job,

and thus was not covered by the CBA.

The Funds moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil

Procedure 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6), or in the alternative, to stay court proceedings pending

the resolution of arbitration, in addition to “any other relief . . . deemed appropriate.”

The Funds had already commenced arbitration almost a month prior to the time that

Dylan filed its declaratory judgment action. The parties dispute whether the Funds sent

adequate notice to Dylan of its intention to arbitrate. Regardless, Dylan concedes that it

did ultimately receive the Funds’ amended notice sent on April 5, 2019, four days after

Dylan filed its declaratory judgment action in court.

The Funds argued before the district court that because they had initiated

arbitration proceedings against Dylan, Dylan was required to arbitrate. The Funds

4 pointed to two provisions of the CBA that they claimed supported this requirement.

The first provision, Article X, Section F, Paragraph 1, provides that the Funds may, as

third-party beneficiaries of the CBA, bring either legal action or initiate arbitration if

Dylan fails to make required payments to the funds. The second provision, Article VI,

Paragraph 1, states that an arbitrator has “the power to decide all differences arising

between the parties to [the CBA] . . . including such issues as may be initiated by the

Trustees of the Funds.” App’x at 68. Read together, Dylan—as a party to the CBA—

was required to arbitrate where, as here, the Funds had initiated arbitration.

Dylan disputed the Funds’ reading of the CBA, claiming that it was only required,

under Article VI, to arbitrate disputes arising “between the parties” to the CBA. App’x at

68 (emphasis added). Only Dylan, the Union, and the RAB were parties to the CBA.

Moreover, because Article X of the CBA permits the Funds to bring either arbitration

proceedings or suits in court, “the same must be true for Dylan.” App’x at 41.

Therefore, Dylan argued that it had a right to have its case heard in court.

On review of the parties’ claims, Magistrate Judge Freeman issued a Report and

Recommendation to the district court, recommending that the court convert the Funds’

motion to dismiss into a motion to compel arbitration and dismiss Dylan’s declaratory

judgment action without prejudice. Examining the terms of the CBA, the magistrate

judge stated that the Funds, as third-party beneficiaries to the agreement, were clearly

authorized to pursue arbitration against Dylan under Article X of the CBA. The

5 magistrate judge further concluded that Article VI of the CBA, which requires parties to

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