INTERN U. OF ELEC. WKRS. v. Westinghouse Elec.

455 F. Supp. 392
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 12, 1978
DocketCiv. A. No. 76-720
StatusPublished

This text of 455 F. Supp. 392 (INTERN U. OF ELEC. WKRS. v. Westinghouse Elec.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
INTERN U. OF ELEC. WKRS. v. Westinghouse Elec., 455 F. Supp. 392 (W.D. Pa. 1978).

Opinion

455 F.Supp. 392 (1978)

INTERNATIONAL UNION OF ELECTRICAL WORKERS et al.
v.
WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC CORP.

Civ. A. No. 76-720.

United States District Court, W. D. Pennsylvania.

August 12, 1978.

*393 Ronald L. Gilardi, Pittsburgh, Pa., for plaintiffs.

Leonard L. Scheinholtz, Pittsburgh, Pa., for defendant.

*394 OPINION, FINDINGS OF FACT, DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

KNOX, District Judge.

Plaintiffs being labor organizations representing employees at various Westinghouse Electric Corporation plants have brought this suit on behalf of certain members to enforce certain awards of arbitrators. The awards were made in connection with grievances resulting from terminations for disciplinary reasons. The agreement revolves around the words "without loss of seniority" as contained in the awards. The court makes the following

FINDINGS OF FACT

(1) The plaintiffs are labor organizations and represent various employees throughout the United States.

(2) Westinghouse Electric Corporation (hereinafter referred to as the defendant) is an employer and employs numerous individual members of the plaintiff labor organizations.

(3) At all times pertinent to this suit, the plaintiffs and the defendant were parties to a national collective bargaining agreement dated June 16, 1978.

(4) The plaintiffs, in order to coordinate and administer their collective bargaining relationship with the defendant, have established the IUE-Westinghouse Conference Board.

(5) The IUE-Westinghouse Conference Board, through its elected delegates and full time officers, negotiates with the defendant and processes grievances that arise under national collective bargaining agreements.

(6) The national collective bargaining agreement that was in effect at all times pertinent to this suit and which is dated June 16, 1973, contains, in Section XIV-A, a grievance and arbitration procedure which culminates in final and binding arbitration.

(7) Prior to the collective bargaining agreement of 1973, as described above and, in fact, prior to 1963, the plaintiffs and defendant did not consistently define or apply seniority or service credits.

(8) During the course of negotiations for a national collective bargaining agreement in 1963, the defendant proposed that seniority should, for all purposes and at all locations, be uniformly defined and applied.

(9) In 1963, the plaintiffs and defendant did agree that, for all purposes and at all locations, seniority would be uniformly defined and applied.

(10) On or about September 20, 1973, an individual member of plaintiff Local 777, Devota Person, was discharged by the defendant.

(11) On or about September 29, 1972, the plaintiff Local filed a grievance on behalf of Devota Person.

(12) The Devota Person grievance was submitted to final and binding arbitration and on November 2, 1973, Arbitrator Jerome Klein issued his opinion and award.

(13) Arbitrator Jerome Klein's award, in pertinent parts provides:

I. It is the Award of the Arbitrator that Person's discharge was not for just cause.
II. It is the further Award of the Arbitrator that Person was guilty of very serious misconduct on September 20, 1972, justifying a very severe disciplinary penalty.
III. It is the further Award of the Arbitrator that Person be restored to his former job without back pay but without loss of seniority or other similar rights.

(14) On or about November 11, 1973, the defendant reinstated Devota Person to his former position.

(15) Devota Person, however, from September 20, 1972 to November 11, 1973 — that is from the date of discharge to the date of reinstatement — was not credited with service or seniority

(16) In September 1974, an individual member of plaintiff Local 410, Thelma Kane, was discharged by the defendant.

(17) On or about September 9, 1974, the plaintiff Local filed a grievance on behalf of Thelma Kane.

*395 (18) The Thelma Kane grievance was submitted to final and binding arbitration and on January 21, 1976, Arbitrator Lewis Gill issued an opinion and award.

(19) Arbitrator Lewis Gill's award, in pertinent parts, provides:

"The discharges of Thelma Kane and Helan Kolodiski are set aside in favor of reinstatement without back pay. They shall be offered reinstatement without loss of seniority or other rights and privileges (but without back pay), effective immediately in the case of Kane . ."

(20) On or about February 3, 1976, the defendant reinstated Thelma Kane to her former position.

(21) Thelma Kane, however, from September 1974 to February 3, 1976 — that is from the date of her discharge to the date of her reinstatement — was not credited with service or seniority.

(22) On or about January 27, 1975, an individual member of plaintiff Local 601, Leroy Bostick, was discharged by the defendant.

(23) The plaintiff Local filed a grievance on behalf of Leroy Bostick.

(24) The Leroy Bostick grievance was submitted to final and binding arbitration and on June 1, 1976, Arbitrator Clair Duff issued his opinion and award.

(25) Arbitrator Clair Duff's award, in pertinent parts, provides:

". . . but the company shall be under no obligation to reimburse him for wages or any other benefits he has lost in the interim."

(26) On or about June 10, 1976, the defendant reinstated Leroy Bostick to his former position.

(27) Leroy Bostick, however, from January 27, 1975 to June 10, 1976 — that is from the date of his discharge to the date of his reinstatement — was not credited with service or seniority.

(28) As stated, Thelma Kane, Devota Person and Leroy Bostick were not credited with service or seniority from the dates of their discharges to the dates of their reinstatements and all three individuals have suffered harm since seniority is used to determine eligibility for certain contractual benefits, rights and privileges.

(29) The defendant, in not crediting Devota Person, Thelma Kane, and Leroy Bostick with service or seniority from the dates of their discharges to the dates of their reinstatement, has been inconsistent since, in most discharge cases surveyed from 1966 to Devota Person case (1973), the defendant has credited other grievants with service from the date of a grievant's discharge to the date of a grievant's reinstatement when an arbitrator has reinstated the grievant "without loss of seniority".

(30) The defendant, in not crediting Devota Person, Thelma Kane and Leroy Bostick with service as described above, has been inconsistent since the defendant concedes that in arbitration cases in which it is determined that a discharge was not for just cause and that a grievant is to be "made whole", an arbitrator would have the authority to credit a grievant with service from the date of the discharge to the date of the grievant's reinstatement.

(31) Seniority, for all purposes, is defined in Section XII of the Collective Bargaining Agreement of June 16, 1973.

(32) Section XII of the aforesaid Agreement uses the terms "seniority", "credited service" and "accumulated length of service" synonymously.

(33) The defendant has not shown by past practice that reinstatement "without loss of seniority" has meant that a grievant would be denied seniority from the date of the discharge to the date of reinstatement.

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