Local Union 97 v. NRG Energy, Inc.

53 F.4th 42
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 10, 2022
Docket21-2565-cv
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 53 F.4th 42 (Local Union 97 v. NRG Energy, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Local Union 97 v. NRG Energy, Inc., 53 F.4th 42 (2d Cir. 2022).

Opinion

21-2565-cv Local Union 97 v. NRG Energy, Inc. 1 2 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 3 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 4 ____________________ 5 6 August Term, 2021 7 8 (Argued: April 27, 2022 Decided: November 10, 2022) 9 10 Docket No. 21-2565-cv 11 12 ____________________ 13 14 LOCAL UNION 97, INTERNATIONAL 15 BROTHERHOOD OF ELECTRICAL WORKERS, 16 AFL-CIO, 17 18 Plaintiff-Appellant, 19 20 v. 21 22 NRG ENERGY, INC., 23 24 Defendant-Appellee. 25 26 ____________________ 27 28 Before: POOLER, PÉREZ, Circuit Judges, and RAKOFF, 1 District Judge. 29

1Judge Jed S. Rakoff, United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation. 1 Appeal from United States District Court for the Northern District of New

2 York (Gary L. Sharpe, J.) dismissing Local Union 97, International Brotherhood

3 of Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO’s (“Local Union 97”) complaint against NRG

4 Energy, Inc. Local Union 97 brought a complaint compelling arbitration based on

5 a dispute between NRG and Local Union 97 over retiree benefits. Because the

6 presumption of arbitrability applies to the parties’ collective bargaining

7 agreement, we reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this

8 opinion.

9 Reversed and remanded.

10 ____________________

11 KENNETH L. WAGNER, Blitman & King LLP, 12 Syracuse, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellant. 13 14 JOSEPH M. MCGUIRE, Shawe Rosenthal LLP, 15 Baltimore, MD, for Defendant-Appellee. 16 17 POOLER, Circuit Judge:

18 In 2003, NRG Energy, Inc., a leading energy company in the United States,

19 and Local Union 97, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO

20 (“Local Union 97”), a union primarily of electrical workers, executed a

21 memorandum of agreement (“2003 MOA”) detailing a two-pronged approach to 2 1 providing retiree life insurance benefits. First, under the 2003 MOA, employees

2 hired before 2003 would be grandfathered into the existing retiree life insurance

3 benefit, and second, employees hired after 2003 would receive no retiree life

4 insurance benefit. The 2003-2007 collective bargaining agreement (“2003-2007

5 CBA”) between NRG and Local Union 97 included the second prong, but not the

6 first. The parties engaged in four subsequent CBAs covering the years 2007

7 through 2019 that all contained identical language regarding the life insurance

8 benefit.

9 However, in the 2019-2023 CBA, the retiree life insurance benefit was

10 amended to provide: “Effective November 1, 2019, the retiree life insurance

11 benefit for employees hired prior to [2003] will be a lump sum of $10,000.” App’x

12 at 49. Local Union 97 understood this to mean that all employees hired prior to

13 2003 but retiring after 2019 would only receive a $10,000 retiree life insurance

14 benefit, while retirees who had retired prior to November 1, 2019 when the new

15 CBA went into effect (“Pre-2019 Retirees”) 2 would continue to be grandfathered

2The district court termed the affected retirees the “Pre-2019 Retirees.” The grievance includes former employees who retired in 2019 before the November 1, 2019 adoption of the new CBA, but for consistency, this opinion adopts the district court’s nomenclature. 3 1 into the existing retiree life insurance benefit. To the union and the retirees’

2 surprise, NRG notified Pre-2019 Retirees that their life insurance benefit would

3 be changed to a lump sum of $10,000.

4 Local Union 97 then brought a complaint seeking to compel arbitration of

5 a grievance they submitted alleging that NRG violated the terms of the CBAs by

6 changing the life insurance benefit for the Pre-2019 Retirees to a lump sum of

7 $10,000. The district court held that: 1) the grievance is not arbitrable under the

8 2019-2023 CBA, 2) the 2003 MOA is not arbitrable, and 3) the grievance is not

9 arbitrable under any of the CBAs covering 2003-2019. See Local Union 97, Int’l

10 Bhd. of Elec. Workers, AFL-CIO v. NRG Energy, Inc., 561 F. Supp. 3d 322 (N.D.N.Y.

11 2021).

12 We disagree with the district court and hold that the grievance is arbitrable

13 under the 2019-2023 CBA because the broad arbitration provision creates a

14 presumption in favor of arbitrability that NRG failed to overcome. This

15 conclusion alone ends the analysis and requires reversal of the district court.

16 However, we also hold that the parties’ dispute was arbitrable under the Prior

17 CBAs because the 2003 MOA was a supplemental agreement which arguably

18 vested the life insurance benefit for life. 4 1 BACKGROUND

2 I. Factual Background

3 Local Union 97 is the collective bargaining agent for approximately thirty-

4 five NRG employees who work at NRG’s electric stations in New York. Id. at 325.

5 Since 1999, the parties have operated through consecutive CBAs covering these

6 employees. In 2003, while negotiating a new CBA, Local Union 97 and NRG

7 agreed to various retiree benefits for current and future employees, which they

8 set forth in a memorandum of agreement. The 2003 MOA states that “[c]urrent

9 employees will be grand fathered as to their participation in life insurance Plan A

10 or Plan B at retirement,” and “[e]mployees hired after September 30, 2003 will

11 not be provided with a life insurance benefit upon retirement.” App’x at 83.

12 In 2003, the parties entered into the 2003-2007 CBA which stated that

13 employees hired after 2003 would not be provided with a life insurance benefit

14 upon retirement (the “Life Insurance Provision”). Local Union 97 and NRG

15 executed four more CBAs from 2007 to 2019 all containing the same Life

16 Insurance Provision. In the current 2019-2023 CBA, the Life Insurance Provision

17 was amended and now states: “Effective November 1, 2019 the retiree life

18 insurance benefit for employees hired prior to September 30, 2003, will be a lump 5 1 sum of $10,000.” App’x at 49. This provision applies to NRG employees

2 employed under the 2019-2023 CBA who were hired prior to 2003 and retired

3 after 2019. It does not apply to retirees who were hired prior to 2003 and retired

4 before 2019—that is, the Pre-2019 Retirees. However, NRG notified the Pre-2019

5 Retirees that their life insurance benefits would also be changed to a lump sum of

6 $10,000. Because of that, a dispute arose between Local Union 97 and NRG

7 regarding retiree life insurance benefits.

8 The 2019-2023 CBA includes the following arbitration clause:

9 Should [Local Union 97] claim that a dispute or difference has arisen 10 between [NRG] and [Local Union 97] as to the meaning, application 11 or operation of any provision of this agreement, such dispute or 12 difference shall be presented within thirty (30) working days and 13 settled in the following manner, and there shall be no quitting or 14 suspension of work during or on account of such dispute or 15 difference.

16 App’x at 52.

17 On October 22, 2020, Local Union 97 submitted a grievance on behalf of

18 the Pre-2019 Retirees, alleging that NRG’s action violated the portions of the CBA

19 relating to life insurance. On October 28, 2020, NRG Labor Relations Director

20 Rich North emailed a letter to the union stating that retirees are not “employees”

21 of NRG, are not covered by the 2019-2023 CBA with Local Union 97, and that

6 1 NRG was not required to recognize Local Union 97 as representative of the

2 retirees. Subsequently, Local Union 97 obtained written authorization from 113

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53 F.4th 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/local-union-97-v-nrg-energy-inc-ca2-2022.