Karetnikova v. Trustees of Emerson College

725 F. Supp. 73, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14179, 1989 WL 141563
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 27, 1989
DocketCiv. A. 88-549-K
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 725 F. Supp. 73 (Karetnikova v. Trustees of Emerson College) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Karetnikova v. Trustees of Emerson College, 725 F. Supp. 73, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14179, 1989 WL 141563 (D. Mass. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

KEETON, District Judge.

Dr. Inga Karetnikova filed this action in Massachusetts Superior Court alleging that *75 the President and Trustees of Emerson College denied her promotion and tenure on the basis of her expression of her political beliefs. Plaintiff alleges that the defendants acted in violation of her rights under the law of contracts, and in violation of other state law rights. Defendants removed this action to federal court and now move to dismiss.

Defendants also move to strike plaintiffs memorandum in opposition to their motion to dismiss on the ground that it was not timely filed. Defendants, however, have not made any showing that they have been prejudiced by the late filing. Plaintiffs motion to file the memorandum late is allowed.

Defendants have moved to dismiss on the following grounds. First, defendants argue that plaintiffs contract claims are barred because the plaintiff did not comply with the grievance and arbitration procedure provided in the Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”). Second, defendants argue that plaintiffs claim in Count III for breach of a covenant of good faith is preempted by the CBA. Finally, defendants argue both that Count IV fails to state a claim under the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act (“MCRA”), and that such a claim, if alleged, would be preempted by the CBA. As to Count III, the motion to dismiss is allowed in part. In all other respects the motion to dismiss is denied.

I. Facts Alleged in the Complaint and Appended Exhibits

Plaintiff alleges the following facts:

Dr. Karetnikova is an art scholar and film critic. In 1981, she accepted a tenure-track faculty position at Emerson College. In each of the following years, up to and including the academic year 1986-87, she entered into a one-year contract with Emerson College that incorporated the CBA between Emerson and the Emerson College Chapter of the American Association of University Professors, the certified bargaining representative for the College’s regular full-time faculty.

The CBA sets forth in detail the procedures to be followed and the standards and criteria for the award of promotion and tenure. In accordance with the procedures set forth in the CBA, Karetnikova submitted her application for promotion and tenure in September 1986. The Divisional Promotion and Tenure Committee, as provided by the CBA, then reviewed her application. The Committee expressed its strong support for her tenure application and voted unanimously to approve the granting of promotion and tenure to Karet-nikova. The Committee noted in particular her “outstanding research, publication and creative accomplishment, and her continuing recognition nationally and internationally in the fields of film and art.”

Next, also in accordance with the CBA, Karetnikova’s application was forwarded to the All College Faculty Status Committee, which also voted “unanimously and enthusiastically” to support the granting of tenure to Karetnikova and noted “Karetniko-va’s credentials as a published scholar and creative professional.” The application was then forwarded, as provided by the CBA, to the Chief Academic Officer of Emerson, the Provost, Dr. Michael Kittros, who also strongly recommended that Kar-etnikova be granted promotion and tenure. The application then went, in accordance with the CBA, to the President of Emerson, Dr. Allen E. Koenig, who recommended against promotion and tenure. The Trustees voted to deny Karetnikova promotion and tenure. The letter from the Vice President and Academic Dean, Jacqueline Lie-bergott, which informed Karetnikova of the denial, stated that her denial was “related primarily to insufficient evidence of scholarship, research, and creative accomplishments during the period of time [she] was a member of the Emerson faculty.”

Karetnikova alleges that she was denied tenure, not because of a lack of evidence of scholarship and research, but because Allen Koenig, the President of Emerson College, disagreed with her conservative political views and her views about a proposed student exchange program with the Soviet Union. Karetnikova alleges that after publication of her opinions, she encountered “a negative change in the President’s attitude towards her” and that Koenig “no longer *76 spoke to her or acknowledged her presence when meeting in public, nor did he award her bonuses for teaching, as he did to others, despite her superior evaluations.”

II. Failure to Use Grievance Procedure

Defendants argue that plaintiffs claims under the CBA are barred because the CBA provides a grievance and arbitration procedure, which they allege is the exclusive remedy for claims arising under the CBA. Under federal labor law, where a collective bargaining agreement provides a grievance procedure as the exclusive remedy for the claim, an employee must at least attempt to exhaust all of the contractual provisions for resolving a grievance before resorting to the courts. See United Paperworkers International Union v. Misco, 484 U.S. 29, 108 S.Ct. 364, 370, 98 L.Ed.2d 286 (1987). It is undisputed that Karetnikova has not pursued the grievance and arbitration procedures provided by the contract and is now timebarred from doing so.

Plaintiff argues that she is not required to exhaust the grievance and arbitration procedures provided by the CBA because the CBA affirmatively excepts claims of a substantive nature concerning promotion and tenure from the grievance and arbitration procedure. The CBA provides that all grievances are arbitrable except as otherwise stated in the CBA. The CBA, Section 11.2, also provides, however:

It is understood that as regards promotion, appointment, reappointment, and tenure, the issues to be grieved are procedural and not substantive in nature.

Plaintiff’s claims that she was improperly denied tenure and promotion are substantive in nature. Plaintiff has not alleged any procedural irregularity in the processing of her application. In fact, she has explicitly alleged that each procedural step taken was in accordance with and provided for by the CBA. Her claims concern alleged departures from permissible substantive criteria for tenure and promotion decisions. Claims of failure to consider proper criteria and claims of consideration of improper criteria are substantive, not procedural, in the sense that is relevant here. Nor has any party provided any evidence for a different interpretation of the terms substantive and procedural. Thus, because her disputed claims are substantive rather than procedural, the CBA explicitly exempts them from the grievance procedure under the CBA.

Defendants do not dispute that this provision of the CBA precludes plaintiff from obtaining review, through the grievance and arbitration procedures, of disputes over substantive issues regarding promotion and tenure. Defendants argue, however, that this clause of the CBA extinguishes any substantive claim for tenure or promotion. This is a contention that the exemption clause of the CBA operates to preclude all substantive rights under the contract with respect to promotion, appointment, reappointment and tenure, including the contract right to be free from discrimination.

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Bluebook (online)
725 F. Supp. 73, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14179, 1989 WL 141563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/karetnikova-v-trustees-of-emerson-college-mad-1989.