Hill v. Staten Island Zoological Society, Inc.

147 F.3d 209, 158 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2709, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 13234, 1998 WL 334142
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 1998
DocketDocket No. 96-9254
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 147 F.3d 209 (Hill v. Staten Island Zoological Society, Inc.) 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
Hill v. Staten Island Zoological Society, Inc., 147 F.3d 209, 158 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2709, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 13234, 1998 WL 334142 (2d Cir. 1998).

Opinion

FEINBERG, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiffs Stanley Hill, as Executive Director of District Council 37, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO, and George Psaltis, as President of its affiliated Local 1665 (together, the Union) appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Shir a A. Scheind-lin, J., entered in September 1996. The order denied the Union’s motion to confirm an arbitrator’s award made pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement (the Agreement) between the Union and defendants Staten Island Zoological Society, Inc. and its president John D. Kearney (together, the Society). The district court’s order also granted the Society’s cross-motion to vacate the award. The arbitrator found that the Society had not proven an alleged pattern of theft by Psaltis and that there was not “just cause” for his discharge, but that the Society had proven an “irregular purchase” by Psal-tis justifying a 30-day suspension. The basis of the district court’s decision to vacate the award was that the arbitrator had no authority to substitute a different penalty for the one imposed by the Society. For the reasons stated below, we reverse.

I. Background

A. Facts

Psaltis was employed by the Society for 24 years as a maintenance worker, and served as President of the local union. In 1991, Society Director Gattullo warned Psaltis that he suspected Psaltis was billing the Society for gasoline for his personal use, and told him that any employee caught stealing would be discharged. In January 1995, Gattullo received a phone call from Kris Reiman, the owner of a hardware store with which the Society had an account. Reiman told Gattul-lo that Psaltis had charged three cans of “weld-crete” bonding compound to the Society’s account, but that Psaltis had actually taken only two cans of weld-crete and some items for his personal use (apparently worth about $23.) Also in January 1995, Psaltis’s [211]*211ex-girlfriend Rose Edwards came to Gattullo with a drill and pictures of other property which she alleged had been stolen from the Society by Psaltis and stored in Psaltis’s basement. Shortly thereafter, Gattullo gave Psaltis a week to resign. Receiving no response, Gattullo discharged Psaltis.

The Union initiated a grievance under the Agreement. Gattullo refused to reinstate Psaltis, and the Union submitted the grievance to arbitration. Article 10 of the Agreement described the procedure for adjusting

[a] grievance or complaint of an employee involving the interpretation of or compliance with this Agreement, which shall include disciplinary action without just cause....

Article 11 provided for submitting an unresolved grievance to an arbitrator whose decision “shall be final and conclusively binding.” The Agreement also contained a “management’s rights clause” in Article 8, which provided, among other things, that

[t]he Union and the employees agree that the right to operate and manage the affairs of the Society, and the right to select and direct the working forces ... are vested exclusively in the Society. These rights include ... [the rights] to employ, assign, promote, discipline, discharge, lay off, transfer and retire the employees ----

(emphasis added). Finally, Article 11 provided that “[t]he arbitrator shall be bound by the specific terms of this Agreement and he shall not have authority to change or modify the express terms ... of this Agreement.”

B. Arbitration Proceeding

Arbitrator Barbara Zausner Tener held three hearings in the summer of 1995. On the first hearing day, after the attorneys for the parties had made opening statements, the arbitrator said:

Let’s make sure we have the issue framed. Number one is, is the grievance arbitrable and if so, was there just cause for the discharge?

The arbitrator issued her written award on December 12, 1995. At the outset, her opinion stated:

ISSUE
Is the grievance arbitrable?
Did the Employer have cause to dismiss
George Psaltis?
If not, what shall be the remedy?

The arbitrator found the grievance arbitra-ble, and neither party challenges that holding on appeal.

On the merits, the arbitrator found in a thorough opinion that the Society had failed to prove “the bulk of the charges” against Psaltis and ordered that Psaltis be reinstated with backpay, except for a 30-day period. As to the 1991 allegations of gasoline theft, the arbitrator found there had been no formal disciplinary action at the time and there was no proof now, and noted that the warning to Psaltis in 1991 was not evidence of later thefts. With regard to the 1995 charge by Psaltis’s former girlfriend Edwards, the arbitrator found that it could not be determined that Psaltis had stolen the drill or items in his basement. The arbitrator found that the testimony of Edwards was completely unreliable because of clear signs that Edwards “had an ax to grind” with Psaltis, e.g., Edwards’s daughter-in-law testified that she heard Edwards threaten to “get George” and that Edwards admitted having lied about Psaltis at the hearings. The arbitrator found that even as to those items from Psaltis’s basement that could be identified as Society property, credible witnesses had testified some items were given to Psaltis, and there was evidence that the Society allowed employees to borrow property but insufficient evidence that it enforced an alleged policy requiring advance permission for such loans. As to the 1995 weld-erete transaction, although the arbitrator found that Psaltis’s testimony had been “evasive and contradictory,” and raised “questions about his honesty,” she concluded that “proof of a pattern of theft is not established through [this] incident.” She ultimately held that “[i]n light of the ... prior warning [in 1991] about irregular purchases, it would be reasonable to impose a thirty calendar day suspension----”

C. District Court Proceeding

The Society refused to reinstate Psaltis, and the Union petitioned in state court to [212]*212confirm the arbitrator’s award. The Society removed the case to the district court. The district judge held that the arbitrator had authority to decide only whether there was cause to discipline and, once that was shown, the form or degree of discipline was in the Society’s discretion, i.e., the arbitrator’s finding that Psaltis had handled the weld-crete transaction dishonestly “implicitly recognizes” that there was just cause for any discipline the employer chose to impose. The judge also held that the Agreement was silent as to the arbitrator's authority to modify a disciplinary penalty and that if the arbitrator had this authority “it is likely that this would be explicitly stated in the Agreement.” Finally, the judge said that there was a “discrepancy regarding exactly what the arbitrator believed her authority to be under the Agreement.” Accordingly, the district court refused to confirm the arbitrator’s award, and vacated it. This appeal followed.

II. Standard of Review

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147 F.3d 209, 158 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2709, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 13234, 1998 WL 334142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-staten-island-zoological-society-inc-ca2-1998.