International Chemical Workers Union Council v. RJF International Corp.

99 F. App'x 634
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 19, 2004
DocketNo. 02-4215
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 99 F. App'x 634 (International Chemical Workers Union Council v. RJF International Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Chemical Workers Union Council v. RJF International Corp., 99 F. App'x 634 (6th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Patricia Kibbe, an employee of RJF International Corporation (“RJF”), filed a grievance over the company’s decision to place her on unpaid leave after she tested positive during an employee drug screen. As provided by the terms of the applicable collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) between Kibbe’s union, the International Chemical Workers Union Council (the “Union”), and her employer, Kibbe’s grievance was referred to arbitration. The arbitrator issued an opinion sustaining the grievance and ordering that RJF immediately reinstate Kibbe and compensate her for lost wages for the period from September 12, 2000, to the date of her reinstatement, excluding a layoff period that occurred while Kibbe was on leave.

The Union and its local office filed suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, seeking to vacate or modify the arbitral award so as to provide for the payment of additional back pay (Count I) and to enforce the modified award (Count II). The complaint was later amended to request that the court order RJF to reinstate Kibbe retroactively (Count III). The Union and RJF each filed motions for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment [636]*636to RJF on Counts I and II and dismissed Count III.

On appeal, the Union argues that the district court erred in applying the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”) to this case. With respect to the arbitration award, the Union contends that the award should be vacated or modified because the arbitrator failed to order sufficient back pay and to select the proper date for Kibbe’s reinstatement. The Union also asserts that this court should remand the calculation of Kibbe’s back pay award to the arbitrator and confirm portions of the award that the Union did not seek to have vacated. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the decision of the district court.

I.

Kibbe was employed by RJF at its facility in Marietta, Ohio. The company laid off Kibbe and other production line employees in 1999 due to lack of work. In late spring 2000, Kibbe was recalled to work. RJF informed Kibbe that, pursuant to company policy, she was required to complete a return-to-work drug and alcohol screening. Kibbe completed the examination on April 25, 2000, and she returned to work on April 30. On May 1, Kibbe learned that she had tested positive for phenobarbital, a barbiturate. Specifically, Kibbe’s test revealed the level of phenobarbital as 3,164 ng/mL. In accordance with a company policy that set the permissible limit of barbiturates at 300 ng/mL, RJF placed Kibbe on indefinite leave. On May 5, 2000, Kibbe filed a grievance alleging that she was placed on indefinite suspension in violation of the CBA between the Union and RJF. Under the provisions of the CBA, Kibbe’s grievance was referred to arbitration.

Soon after Kibbe learned that she was being placed on leave, her treating physician, Dr. Thomas Durnell, faxed RJF a letter stating that Kibbe was taking Bella-mine-S, a prescription medication used to treat the symptoms of menopause. On May 9, Kibbe participated in a second drug screen, and she again tested positive for phenobarbital at a level of 2,621 ng/mL. RJF informed Kibbe that, as a result of her second drug test, she would remain on indefinite leave. On May 17, the Medical Director of RJF contacted Dr. Durnell in a letter that acknowledged, “Ms. Kibbe is on a medication prescribed by you which contains a small amount of phenobarbital.” The letter also inquired whether Kibbe could be placed on another medication that would control her menopause symptoms, “while not posing the same potential safety concerns that her current medications [sic] raises.”

Dr. Durnell did not reply to this letter until September 12, 2000. In his September 12 letter to RJF, Dr. Durnell stated that he did not feel that there was reason to change Kibbe’s medication and that he could not comment on potential safety concerns resulting from Kibbe taking Bella-mine-S. Furthermore, Durnell stated, “I have no knowledge of the nature of her employment responsibilities or the potential danger involved if Patricia would experience any side effects that would impair her ability to perform her job.”

On February 9, 2001, Kibbe and other RJF employees were laid off. The parties do not dispute that, because of her seniority status, Kibbe would have been laid off from February 9 until March 26, 2001, even if she had not been on unpaid leave prior to the layoff. On March 26, RJF again recalled Kibbe and informed her that she needed to pass a return-to-work drug screening. Kibbe participated in another drug test, which was positive for phenobarbital at a level of 1,655 ng/mL. RJF maintained Kibbe on unpaid leave.

[637]*637On November 30, 2001, after a hearing, the arbitrator assigned to Kibbe’s case sustained her grievance. The arbitrator ordered that Kibbe be “reinstated with full seniority and benefits, compensated for all lost wages incurred, less outside earnings or unemployment compensation, if any, for the period from September 12, 2000 to the date of her reinstatement pursuant to this award.” The arbitrator also noted that the “period of layoff from February 9, 2001 to March 26, 2001 is to be excluded from the lost wage calculation.” The arbitrator did not award Kibbe compensation for overtime that she potentially could have earned during portions of her leave. The arbitrator remanded the issue of computing the amount due to Kibbe back to the parties but retained jurisdiction over the matter for sixty days “in the event the parties cannot reach agreement on the back pay award.”

In response to the arbitrator’s decision, Michael Struble, the Human Resources Manager of RJF, met with local union representatives on December 5, 2001. Struble told the Union that Kibbe would be removed from indefinite leave status for December 6 and 7 but would be placed on layoff status after December 7. Struble explained that RJF had scheduled the layoff prior to the issuance of the arbitrator’s decision and that Kibbe’s low seniority dictated that she be among the group of employees laid off. RJF agreed that Kibbe did not need to work on December 6 and 7, but the company would pay her salary for those days. Kibbe was again placed on layoff status.

In February 2002, the Union and its local division filed suit against RJF in district court, requesting that the court vacate or modify the arbitration award to the extent that it: (1) denied Kibbe back pay for the period from May 2, 2000, through September 11, 2000; (2) denied Kibbe payment for lost overtime; and (3) required deduction of Kibbe’s interim earnings and unemployment compensation from RJF’s payment (Count I). The Union also argued that the district court should confirm the arbitrator’s award and enforce the arbitrator’s opinion, with the Union’s proposed modifications (Count II).

Kibbe remained laid off through April 17, 2002. She was recalled to work, effective April 29, 2002, and RJF required that Kibbe undergo another return-to-work drug screen. The results of Kibbe’s drug test revealed a level of phenobarbital higher than any of Kibbe’s earlier drug screenings. RJF refused to allow Kibbe to return to work unless one of five named medical professionals — including Kibbe’s treating physician, Dr. Durnell — stated that she was able to safely and substantially perform her essential job functions.1 On May 8, 2002, Dr. Durnell provided another evaluation to RJF, which read in part:

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99 F. App'x 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-chemical-workers-union-council-v-rjf-international-corp-ca6-2004.