Minneapolis-St. Paul v. Northwest

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 2004
Docket03-3082
StatusPublished

This text of Minneapolis-St. Paul v. Northwest (Minneapolis-St. Paul v. Northwest) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minneapolis-St. Paul v. Northwest, (8th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit

No. 03-3082

* Minneapolis-St. Paul Mailers Union, * Appeal from the United Local #4, * States District Court * for the District of Plaintiff - Appellant, * Minnesota * v. * * Northwest Publications, Inc., doing * business as St. Paul Pioneer Press, * * Defendant - Appellee. * *

Submitted: May 13, 2004 Filed: August 13, 2004

Before WOLLMAN, BYE, and HAMILTON1, Circuit Judges.

HAMILTON, Circuit Judge:

1 The Honorable Clyde H. Hamilton, United States Circuit Judge for the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, sitting by designation. The Minneapolis-St. Paul Mailers Union, Local #4 (the Union) appeals the district court’s2 order confirming in full an arbitration award in favor of Northwest Publications, Inc., d/b/a St. Paul Pioneer Press (the Company). For reasons that follow, we affirm.

I. The Company publishes a daily newspaper entitled the “St. Paul Pioneer Press” and employs members of the Union to perform various tasks in order to prepare the newspapers for public sale and distribution. At issue in the present dispute between the Union and the Company is work known as “insertion” or “inserting,” which is the placing of sections of the paper and advertising flyers into other parts of the paper to create a single package. At all times relevant to this case, the working relationship between the Union and the Company was governed by a collective bargaining agreement (the CBA) covering the period November 1, 1999 through October 31, 2004.

Several provisions of the CBA are particularly relevant to the issues on appeal. The first is Section 6 of the CBA, which initially sets forth the Union’s jurisdiction as follows: The jurisdiction of the Union is defined as including all mailing room work of the Publisher and includes all work appertaining to mailing, such as addressing, tagging, jogging, stamping, labeling, bundling or wrapping, preparing list or wrappers . . . stacking, folding, handling of bundles or mail sacks, distributing, counting of papers (leaving or returning), banding, strapping, tying, sacking, delivering papers to chutes, inserting or dispatching of papers, envelopes or magazines, whether done by hand or power machine . . . and the Publisher shall make no other contract covering such work except as otherwise provided in this agreement. . . .

The Honorable Ann D. Montgomery, United States District Judge for the 2

United States District Court for the District of Minnesota. - 2 - All work within the jurisdiction of the Union shall be performed only by journeymen, journeymen II, trainees and extras, except as otherwise provided in this agreement.

Notwithstanding any other provision of this agreement, the Publisher shall have the right to do the following:

A. To distribute newspapers and transaction sheets to the field in any form or manner determined by management and to count and tie newspapers in the field by persons not covered by this agreement. However the Publisher’s right to tie newspapers in the field shall not be construed as a right to prepare newspapers in the field for wholesale redistribution to other distribution centers.

(J.A. 40).

The second relevant provision of the CBA is contained in Addendum No. 4., which has been in effect since November 21, 1978, as part of each of the sequential collective bargaining agreements governing the parties’ relationship. Notably, there is no dispute that Addendum No. 4 is part of the CBA presently at issue. Addendum No. 4 provides as follows: THIS AGREEMENT, made this 21st day of November, 1978, between NORTHWEST PUBLICATIONS, INC., Publisher of the St. Paul Pioneer Press and Dispatch and MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL MAILERS’ UNION #4, shall be attached to, and made part of, the present collective bargaining agreement.

A. The intent of this Agreement is as follows:

1. The Publisher shall have no restrictions on his method of bulk distribution other than the inserting of a minimum of 40,000 complete Sunday papers by Mailroom personnel {40,000 changed to 20,000 effective 11-1-83}.

- 3 - 2. The balance of the Sunday paper may be distributed in a maximum of three separate parts. Inserting {if any} into the three separate parts will be done by Mailroom personnel.

3. In the event of any conflict between this supplemental agreement and any provision of the collective bargaining agreement between Minneapolis-St. Paul Mailers’ Union #4 and Northwest Publications, Inc. . . . the terms of this supplemental agreement shall control. . . .

B. In recognition of the above agreement, the Publisher agrees to provide the following benefits:

1. DENTAL PLAN

Effective the first month after signing of the Agreement, the Publisher will contribute to a Dental Plan, selected by the Union, a maximum of $25 per month for all regular situation holders in the Mailroom who elect to enroll in the plan. The Publisher shall have no liability in respect to the plan other than the stated contribution {increased to $42.05 per month effective 11-1-83}.

2. HOSPITALIZATION

Effective with the first payroll deduction following the signing of this agreement, the Company contribution to the group hospital plan specified in the first paragraph of Section 22 of the Collective Bargaining Agreement is increased to 100%.

- 4 - Effective with the first payroll deduction following signing of this Agreement, the Publisher will pay the full cost of Group Health {HMO} coverage for each employee so enrolled up to an amount equal to 110% of the premium required for the applicable coverage in the group hospitalization plan specified in Section 22 of the current Agreement.

3. ITU NEGOTIATED PLAN

The Publisher’s contribution to the ITU Negotiated Pension Plan shall be increased by 1/2% effective May 1, 1978, for a maximum of 4-1/2%.

4. ONE DAY VACATION

Vacations may be taken one day at a time by notifying the Chairman, subject to the approval of the Foreman.

(J.A. 71-72) (emphasis added).

Also of relevance to the issues on appeal, the record contains an internal memorandum of the Company in which a Company negotiator contemporaneously summarized for management his understanding of the agreement which formally became Addendum 4 (the 1978 Internal Memo). In relevant part, the 1978 Internal Memo provides as follows: The parties agreed also to a change in the concept of jurisdiction in that the union stated the company must insert a minimum of 40,000 “Complete Sunday Papers.” In the exchanges on this subject it is important to remember what the understandings of the parties were on this 40,000 completes.

(1) This is the total liability of the Company. - 5 - (2) The union stated it did not care to when [sic] these completes were distributed.

(3) The Company can distribute the rest of its circulation in any manner and to whomever it chooses so long as it is not over three pieces.

It is clearly understood that management need not concern itself that these completes be distributed to single copy distributors.

(4) The union stated what it was giving to management was “Bulk Delivery” as opposed to its current odd counts etc. delivery.

(5) The union stated management attorneys should write the language which would reflect this understanding.

Note: It is important that the language reflect this is a modification of the union’s jurisdiction on inserting the total product - and that its only obligation is to a number (40,000 completes) and further the rest of the distribution would be at the discretion of the company.

(J.A. 76-77).

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