INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FIRE FIGHTERS, LOCAL 46 v. City of Everett
This text of 6 P.3d 50 (INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FIRE FIGHTERS, LOCAL 46 v. City of Everett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FIRE FIGHTERS, LOCAL 46, an unincorporated voluntary association, Curt Rider and Tim Key, Appellants,
v.
CITY OF EVERETT, a municipal corporation, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.
James Henry Webster, Lynn Denise Weir, Webster, Mrak & Blumberg, Seattle, for Appellants.
Paul Edgar Smith, Charles Nisbet Eberhardt, Perkins Coie, Bellevue, for Respondent.
AGID, C.J.
When the City of Everett suspended two of its employees without pay as a disciplinary measure, the employees and their labor union, International Association of Fire Fighters, Local 46, challenged the suspensions as a violation of the collective bargaining agreement between the City and Local 46. The Union submitted the dispute to arbitration, during which legal counsel represented only Local 46, not the employees. Because the arbitrator's final ruling required the City to reimburse the employees for lost wages, Local 46 claims it is entitled to attorney fees under RCW 49.48.030, which provides that reasonable attorney fees "shall be assessed" against an employer "[i]n any action in which any person is successful in recovering judgment for wages or salary owed to him...." We hold that RCW 49.48.030 permits Local 46's request and reverse the trial court's decision not to award fees.
FACTS
Local 46 members Curt Rider and Tim Key are a captain and a fire fighter respectively in the City of Everett's fire department. In June 1997, the City suspended them for a 24-hour shift without pay for *51 disciplinary reasons.[1] Local 46, Rider, and Key later challenged the suspensions as a violation of the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between Local 46 and the City, and Local 46 submitted the dispute to arbitration under the CBA's grievance procedure.[2] Legal counsel represented Local 46 at the arbitration, but Rider and Key did not retain their own attorneys. The arbitrator ruled that the suspensions violated the CBA and awarded back pay to Rider and Key. When Local 46 later asked the City to pay the attorney fees it incurred in challenging the suspensions, the City refused. Local 46, Rider, and Key sued the City for fees, and both sides moved for summary judgment. The trial court denied the plaintiffs' motion and granted the City's. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
RCW 49.48.030 reads:
In any action in which any person is successful in recovering judgment for wages or salary owed to him, reasonable attorney's fees, in an amount to be determined by the court, shall be assessed against said employer or former employer....
The issue is whether this section allows a labor union to recoup attorney fees when the employees it represents recover wages in a proceeding in which only the union has counsel.[3] We hold that although RCW 49.48.030 is ambiguous on this issue, labor arbitration principles, together with the purposes of this provision, indicate that the Legislature intended to provide reimbursement to unions for fees under these circumstances.[4]
RCW 49.48.030 is susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation and is therefore ambiguous.[5] On the one hand, the Legislature's word choice indicates it was concerned primarily with assessing attorney fees against an employer whenever someone recovers wages from that employer, rather than with who in fact incurs the costs of legal representation. For example, the provision declares that fees "shall be assessed" against the employer, rather than specifying who should be reimbursed. Further, the statute requires only that "any action" occur in which "any person" recovers wages "owed to him." It does not require that an employee initiate the action; nor does it preclude recovery of attorney fees when a representative body like a labor union incurs the expense of those fees. On the other hand, however, the Legislature's use of the word "person" could be read to preclude recovery by an organization like a union.
But labor arbitration principles indicate that the Legislature contemplated that unions would be entitled to recover attorney fees under RCW 49.48.030, at least under these circumstances. As the parties agreed at oral argument, their CBA permits only Local 46, not individual employees, to submit a grievance to arbitration.[6] This is a common *52 bargaining agreement term. Thus, because unions are typically the exclusive entity entitled to bring employee grievances to arbitration, the Legislature must have intended that unions could recover attorney fees under RCW 49.48.030. If it had not, it would have limited fee recipients in the statute rather than making fees available in "any action."
Our reading is consonant with our holding that RCW 49.48.030 is a remedial statute that should be liberally construed to effect its purpose.[7] Remedial statutes often authorize attorney fees "to provide incentives for aggrieved employees to assert their statutory rights...."[8] Where, as here, the union controls access to the grievance system, this purpose is furthered by requiring employers to reimburse a union when it incurs attorney fees in the course of recovering wages for an employee.
Local 46 relies heavily on our decision in Department of Labor & Industries v. Overnite Transportation Co.[9] to support its attorney fees claim. In Overnite, the Department of Labor and Industries (DLI) represented a group of employees contending their employer, Overnite, had failed to pay overtime compensation to them as required under the Washington Minimum Wage Act.[10] Overnite disagreed on numerous grounds. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of DLI, ordered Overnite to pay the employees' overtime back wages due, and granted attorney fees to DLI based on three statutory provisions: RCW 49.52.070, 49.46.090(2) and the section at issue here, 49.48.030. When Overnite appealed, this court affirmed the trial court's grant of summary judgment and upheld the attorney fees award under RCW 49.52.070, which provides:[11]
Any employer ... who shall violate any of the provisions of subdivisions (1) and (2) of RCW
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6 P.3d 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-association-of-fire-fighters-local-46-v-city-of-everett-washctapp-2000.