Minnesota Joint Board v. United Garment Manufacturing Co.

338 F.2d 195
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1964
DocketNo. 17199
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 338 F.2d 195 (Minnesota Joint Board v. United Garment Manufacturing Co.) 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
Minnesota Joint Board v. United Garment Manufacturing Co., 338 F.2d 195 (8th Cir. 1964).

Opinion

JOHNSEN, Chief Judge.

This appeal has been permitted to be taken under 28 U.S.C.A. § 1292(b). It is from an order of the District Court denying a motion by a local union and an international union to have a suit against them for damages stayed and to require the employer to submit the controversy and claim involved to arbitration under the provisions of the parties’ collective bargaining agreement. We think the court erred in denying the motion and accordingly vacate the order.

The action was one instituted under § 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 185(a), for alleged violation of the no-strike clause contained in the bargaining agreement. By this clause the parties had agreed that “there will be no strikes, sit-downs or lock-outs during the term of this Agreement”. The unions’ obligation in this respect was, however, qualified by a proviso making it subject to the recognition contained in a “Supplemental Agreement” (covering payments by the employer to the international union’s retirement and insurance fund) of a right in the union to “direct its members to discontinue work in the plant” for any delinquency in such payments, which continued for five days, and of which the union received written notice from the trustees of the fund.

The language of the arbitration clause of the bargaining agreement was as follows: “If any controversy arises over the interpretation of or adherence to any of the provisions of this Agreement and if such controversy cannot be determined by the parties hereto, the matter shall be referred to a Board of Arbitration * * (which) shall hear * * * and finally determine the controversy”. There were provisions for setting up a board of arbitration, as well as provisions for attempting to effect resolution of grievances before the arbitration stage was reached, but these are not material here.

The strike involved was called in October 1959 and lasted for a period of ten days to two weeks. It was prompted apparently by the employer’s refusal to engage in any negotiations for modification of the bargaining agreement. At the time, however, the employer was also delinquent in its payments to the retirement and insurance fund.

Settlement of the strike was made by a “Memorandum of Agreement” executed on October 15, 1959. The suit of the employer against the unions was instituted in October 1960. It was the employer’s contention that the bargaining agreement had an absolute term from May 24, 1957, to May 31, 1961, during which the unions had no right to insist on changes in or negotiations for modification of the contract. The unions contended that the bargaining agreement left them with a right to demand changes and negotiations for modification after the first year of the term, by giving written notice of their desire therefor sixty days “prior to May 31st of any year”, and that the giving of such a notice terminated the further operation of the agreement.

By the language of the bargaining agreement, the term thereof was to commence on May 24, 1957, “and shall continue up to and including May 31, 1961, and from year to year thereafter, unless sixty (60) days’ notice in writing by registered mail from either party to the other be given prior to May 31st of any year of intention to modify or amend this Agreement”. Immediately following this there was a provision that “if at any time during the term of this Agreement”, by reason of economic conditions or other causes affecting the industry, “either of [198]*198the parties considers it necessary to modify wages * * * a conference may be requested to discuss such modification by giving sixty (60) days’ written notice to the other party prior to the anniversary date”.

On January 26, 1959, the local union sent a letter to the employer giving notice of its desire “to modify certain of the terms and conditions” of the agreement, without making specification of its demands but simply stating that it would discuss them at a mutually-agreed-upon meeting. As previously indicated, the employer refused to engage in any negotiations for modification on the contention that the agreement provided for no right to demand changes or bargaining negotiations except in relation to any continuance or extension of it beyond May 31, 1961. Without attempt by the union to have arbitrated whether its interpretation of the agreement or that of the employer was correct on the question of the right to seek modification and the obligation to negotiate before May 31, 1961, a strike was called in October 1959.

Clearly, the contention of the unions that a right existed under the contract to insist upon modification and negotiation in 1959, and the contention of the employer that no such right was provided for under the contract until 1961, presented a “controversy * * * over the interpretation of * * * the provisions” of the bargaining agreement. Equally was there involved a “controversy * * * over * * * adherence to * * * the provisions” of the bargaining agreement in the employer’s contention that the unions’ action was in violation of their no-strike obligation, and in the unions’ contention that the notice of desire for modification and the employer’s refusal to negotiate entitled them to regard the bargaining agreement as no longer in effect.

Further, insofar as the unions sought to justify the strike on the employer’s delinquency in payments to the retirement and insurance fund, was there presented a controversy both over interpretation of and over adherence to the provisions of the contract, on the employer’s contentions (1) that the unions could not at the time have called a strike under the exemption provision of the supplemental agreement, because this provision required as a condition precedent to the right to strike receipt by the unions of a written notice from the trustees of the fund in necessary proof of the default, and (2) that the right was in any event one to discontinue work only to obtain payment of the employer’s arrears, so that a use of it to make other demands and a refusal to return to work unless these were met would not be within its privilege and therefore would constitute a violation of the general no-strike clause.

In this connection, it might be noted that the “memorandum of agreement”, dated October 15, 1959, by which the strike was settled, made no mention of the employer’s arrears to the retirement and insurance fund. It declared that “the agreement now in effect will continue until May 31, 1961”, and provided that the parties were agreeing to a settlement of an additional %% contribution being made by the employer to the “health fund”; of wages being increased “5% across the board”; and of another holiday being granted the employees, if this should be accorded on a national basis in the industry.

In summary, all the matters which have been referred to clearly were on their face questions which the parties, for purpose of any dispute between them, had bound themselves to have arbitrated and as to which they had agreed that “a Board of Arbitration * * * shall hear * * * and finally determine the controversy”.

The right to have all controversies over interpretation of or adherence to the provisions of the bargaining agreement submitted to and determined by arbitration was one existing in favor of both parties. Neither could deprive the other of any aspect of the right either in scope or in incident. Thus it would [199]*199not be possible for one party to remove such a controversy from the field of arbitrability because it undertook to make it the subject of a claim for legal damages against the other.

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338 F.2d 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-joint-board-v-united-garment-manufacturing-co-ca8-1964.