Fire Fighters Union, Local 1186 v. City of Vallejo

526 P.2d 971, 12 Cal. 3d 608, 116 Cal. Rptr. 507, 1974 Cal. LEXIS 249, 87 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2453
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1974
DocketS.F. 23098
StatusPublished
Cited by141 cases

This text of 526 P.2d 971 (Fire Fighters Union, Local 1186 v. City of Vallejo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fire Fighters Union, Local 1186 v. City of Vallejo, 526 P.2d 971, 12 Cal. 3d 608, 116 Cal. Rptr. 507, 1974 Cal. LEXIS 249, 87 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2453 (Cal. 1974).

Opinion

Opinion

TOBRINER, J.

In this case of first impression we must delineate the function of the court in interpreting a provision for arbitration in a city charter affecting public employees. Specifically we are asked, prior to the arbitration proceeding itself, to reconcile clauses which substantively overlap: a provision that grants city employees the right to bargain on “wages, hours and working conditions” but withholds that right as to matters involving the “merits, necessity or organization of any governmental service.” As we shall explain, our attempt now to define the issues of arbitration so that they assume the shape of rigid categories would be to reach premature judgments without benefit of the factual foundations of an arbitral record and to impede the arbitration process itself. We therefore largely leave to the arbitrators the moulding and resolution of the issues, subject to the proviso that neither party may be bound by a decision in excess of the arbitrators’ jurisdiction.

In 1971, during negotiations between representatives of the City of Vallejo and the Fire Fighters Union as to the terms.of a new contract, the parties failed to agree on 28 issues. Pursuant to the process prescribed in the city charter, they submitted the disputed matters to mediation and fact finding. When these procedures failed to effect a resolution, the city agreed to submit 24 of the issues to arbitration but contended that four other issues, namely “Personnel Reduction,” “Vacancies and Promotions,” “Schedule of Hours,” and “Constant Manning Procedure,” involved the “merits, necessity or organization” of the fire fighting service and did not come under the arbitrable provisions. The city refused to accept the recommendations of the fact finding panel with respect to these issues or to submit them to arbitration.

On December 22, 1971, prior to the scheduled hearing before the board *612 of arbitrators, the Fire Fighters Union filed a complaint in the Solano Superior Court seeking mandate to compel the city to submit the four disputed issues to arbitratión. The court found for the union on all the issues, stating: “[T]he evidence introduced here supports findings that the issues ‘Reduction of Personnel,’ ‘Vacancies and Promotions,’ ‘Schedule of Hours’ and ‘Constant Manning Procedures,’ are related to ‘wages, hours and conditions of employment’ .... [W]hile the issues might also apply to the exclusionary language ‘but not on matters involving the merits, necessity or organization of any service or activity provided by law,’ to so hold would be to defeat the overriding purpose of the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act and section 809 of the Vallejo charter, namely to provide peace and harmony with the city’s public safety employees. The court cannot engage in judicial legislation and write into the Vallejo charter words or meaning that are not there.” The court therefore ordered that a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the city to proceed to arbitration on the disputed issues. 1 The city appeals.

The present controversy therefore involves an interpretation of the Vallejo City Charter provisions which govern public employee contract negotiations. The-provisions for multi-level resolution of disputes at issue were drafted by a board of freeholders for incorporation in a new city charter in response to a strike by city police and fire fighters in July of 1969. These proposals, with the exception of a provision for final binding arbitration, were accepted by the city council and embodied in section 809 of the city charter. Section 809 sets up a “system of collective negotiating” and provides that city employees shall have the right to “negotiate on matters of wages, hours and working conditions,- but not on matters involving the merits, necessity, or organization of any service or activity provided by law. . . .” The section further provides that if the parties cannot reach agreement, they must submit successively to mediation and fact finding. 2

*613 The arbitration provisions rejected by the city council were submitted to the citizens of Vallejo in a referendum in 1970 and approved. The electorate added to the city charter section 810 which provides that if representatives of the city and its employees do not reách agreement after the report of the fact finding committee under section 809, the issues upon which they fail to agree shall be submitted to binding arbitration. 3

*614 The scope of bargaining provision in the Vallejo City Charter in large measure parallels that set out in the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (Gov. Code, §§ 3500-3510). 4 Government Code section 3504 reads: “The scope of representation shall include all matters relating to employment conditions and employer-employee relations, including, but not limited to, wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment, except, however, that the scope of representation shall not include consideration of the merits, necessity, or organization of any service or activity provided by law or executive order.” Therefore, interpretation of the scope of bargaining language in the Vallejo charter necessarily bears upon the meaning of the same language in the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act. 5

In the instant case, as we have stated, we are called upon to render a preliminary decision as to the scope of the arbitration. The arbitration process, however, is an ongoing one in which normally an arbitrator, rather than a court, will narrow and define the issues, rejecting those matters over which he cannot properly exercise jurisdiction because they fall exclusively within the rights of management. As Professor Grodin has observed: “. . . collective bargaining and issues arbitration are together a dynamic process, in which the ppsitions of the parties and their interaction with the arbitrator is in a state .of constant flux. Proposals get modified and non-negotiable positions become negotiable as the parties sort out their priorities, develop *615 understanding of the implications of their positions, and perceive alternative solutions which they may not previously have considered. To determine what is arbitrable and what is not against this changing context is a bit like trying a balancing act in the middle of a rushing torrent.” (Grodin, California Public Employee Bargaining Revisited: The MMB Act in the Appellate Courts (1974) Cal. Pub. Employee Rel. No. 21, p. 17.)

Toa large extent the rendition of the definitions involved in this case will be welded by the facts developed in arbitration itself. We put the proposition in these words in Butchers’ Union Local 229 v. Cudahy Packing Co. (1967) 66 Cal.2d 925, 938 [59 Cal.Rptr. 713, 428 P.2d 849]: “Because arbitration substitutes for economic warfare the peaceful adjudication of disputes, and because controversy takes on ephemeral shapes and unforeseeable forms, courts do not congeal arbitration provisions into fixed molds but give them dynamic sweep.” We therefore must be careful not to restrict unduly the scope

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Bluebook (online)
526 P.2d 971, 12 Cal. 3d 608, 116 Cal. Rptr. 507, 1974 Cal. LEXIS 249, 87 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fire-fighters-union-local-1186-v-city-of-vallejo-cal-1974.