Lewis v. Balt. Convention Center

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 1, 2016
Docket1920/15
StatusPublished

This text of Lewis v. Balt. Convention Center (Lewis v. Balt. Convention Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Balt. Convention Center, (Md. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 1920

September Term, 2015

_________________________

ANTHONY LEWIS, et al.

v.

BALTIMORE CONVENTION CENTER, et al.

Kehoe, Nazarian, Shaw Geter,

JJ.

Opinion by Nazarian, J.

Filed: December 1, 2016 A class of employees of the Baltimore Convention Center (the “Class”) appeals the

judgment of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City dismissing their claims against the City

of Baltimore (the “City”) and their union, AFSCME Local 44 (the “Union”). The Class

had alleged that the City breached its contract with the Union by failing to properly pay

overtime wages, that the Union had breached its duty of fair representation, and that the

Union had interfered tortiously with the contract. The circuit court dismissed the complaint

and we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The Baltimore Convention Center (“the Convention Center”) first opened in 1979

and is owned and operated by the City. Until late 2008, though, Convention Center

employees were not covered by the same employment contract as most City employees,

which took the form of a recurring memorandum of understanding (“MOU”) between the

City and the Union. The MOU requires the City to pay employees an increased overtime

wage for time worked on sixth, seventh, and eighth consecutive days, and for odd-hour

shifts. But because employment at the Convention Center regularly entails working

weekend night shifts, and six, seven, or eight consecutive days to accomplish the Center’s

primary function (hosting conventions), Center employees originally were treated for

overtime pay purposes as mayoral appointees, and paid according to the overtime

provisions of the City’s Administrative Manual, Section 205-2. For terms of employment

other than overtime pay, Convention Center employees were treated “as if” they were

covered by the MOU, even though they were not formally covered by it.

2 As a result, Convention Center employees occupied a unique space on the City’s

payroll: they received most of the benefits built into the MOU, but weren’t officially

covered by it. And over time, this uniqueness led to frustration and grievance. Employees

began challenging the arrangement in 2005; on August 22, 2008, at the employees’ urging,

the Union asked the City Labor Commissioner for a bargaining unit clarification that would

bring Convention Center employees within the MOU. The City agreed. The City and the

Union negotiated and, on October 22, 2008, concluded a new MOU for the 2009 and 2010

fiscal years (“FY”) that included Convention Center employees as part of the bargaining

unit.

This didn’t resolve all of the employees’ concerns, though, so in 2009, the Union

and the City exchanged correspondence and held meetings designed to address the

employees’ complaints, chief among them the issue of payment for consecutive day

overtime under the MOU. The meetings culminated in an extended meeting on March 2,

2010, at which the Union and City reached an understanding that did not include payment

of past consecutive day overtime pay for Center employees under the FY2009–10 MOU.

Shortly after the conclusion of the 2009-2010 meetings, negotiations for the

FY2011–12 MOU began, and they were tense. The Union claims that it pursued the

consecutive day overtime pay issue on behalf of the Convention Center employees during

negotiations, but the City opposed any change, especially in the light of the strain the Great

Recession was putting on the City’s budget. As the Union’s counsel explained in a

September 15, 2011 letter, this was “the second consecutive year in which most all City

3 employees [] face[d] compulsory wage furloughs,” and that the City had “little funds to

adjust discretionary economic issues.”

The negotiations for the FY2011–12 MOU took so long that agreed terms of the

MOU went into effect before contentious terms were resolved. Ultimately, the new MOU

did not change the terms regarding consecutive day overtime pay. The Union later

explained to the Class that it had to relent on this issue in order to complete the MOU for

all represented City employees. The MOU clarified the City’s longstanding position on

overtime pay in an addendum to the new MOU, executed on June 29, 2011, to the extent

that it made explicit that “[t]he Convention Center shall continue to follow its existing pay

practices including its method of calculating overtime.” In addition, the FY2011–12 MOU

contained one other relevant overtime provision, paragraph 15.E.2, that tracked the City’s

policy for mayoral employees (again, the source of the historic practice): “[w]here in the

normal operation of a department, work is regularly scheduled on Saturdays and/or

Sundays, no more than ten (10) days of work shall be scheduled for any employee in each

fourteen (14) day period, unless there is an emergency or unforeseen circumstance.” See

BUREAU OF THE BUDGET & MGMT. RESEARCH, CITY OF BALT., ADMINISTRATIVE

MANUAL, § 205-2 (1990).

On July 6, 2012, the Class filed suit in the United States District Court for the

District of Maryland against the Convention Center (a City agency) and its director for,

among other claims, breach of contract. The court dismissed the case on December 10,

2012 on a variety of grounds, including the ground that the Class could not bring a breach

of contract claim before exhausting administrative remedies. The Class then attempted an

4 administrative remedy by submitting a class-based grievance to the Union. At the

penultimate step in the grievance process, though, the Union decided, on June 21, 2013,

not to pursue arbitration against the City, and sent the Class a long letter detailing its

rationale.

The Class responded to that setback on March 18, 2015 with the complaint

underlying this appeal. The Class alleged claims of breach of contract against the City,

“breach of the union representation agreement” against the Union, “tortious breach of the

duty of fair representation” against the Union, and “tortious interference with the MOU

contract” against the Union. The City filed a motion to dismiss on May 11, 2015. The

court granted the City’s motion to dismiss (or motion for summary judgment in the

alternative) by oral ruling on June 29, 2015, and entered the accompanying written order

on July 1, 2015. Without reaching the merits, the court dismissed the claims against the

City because the Class had not satisfied the notice requirement of the Local Government

Tort Claims Act (“LGTCA”), and dismissed the other claims as barred by the statute of

limitations. This appeal followed.

II. DISCUSSION

The Class disputes that its claims are barred by threshold procedural defects,1 and

asks us to reverse for consideration of the merits. But although we have some doubt about

1 The Class phrased the Questions Presented as follows in its brief:

1. Whether the trial judge was clearly erroneous in hearing and deciding the Appellees’ motions to dismiss the original complaint, which had been replaced by the successor First 5 whether the LGTCA applies to the Class’s claims against the City, we have no doubt that

the Class’s claims against the City and the Union, whatever their merits, were long barred

by limitations by the time they were filed, and that the tortious interference claim fails as a

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