Monongahela Valley Hospital v. United Steel Paper and Forestr

946 F.3d 195
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 30, 2019
Docket19-2182
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 946 F.3d 195 (Monongahela Valley Hospital v. United Steel Paper and Forestr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monongahela Valley Hospital v. United Steel Paper and Forestr, 946 F.3d 195 (3d Cir. 2019).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ________________

No. 19-2182 ________________

MONONGAHELA VALLEY HOSPITAL INCORPORATED

v.

UNITED STEEL PAPER AND FORESTRY RUBBER MANUFACTURING ALLIED INDUSTRIAL AND SERVICE WORKERS INTERNATIONAL UNION AFL-CIO CLC,

Appellant

________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 2:18-cv-00371) District Judge: Honorable David S. Cercone ________________

Argued November 13, 2019

Before: AMBRO, KRAUSE, and BIBAS, Circuit Judges (Opinion filed: December 30, 2019)

Anthony P. Resnick (Argued) United Steelworkers International Union 60 Boulevard of the Allies, Room 807 Pittsburgh, PA 15222

Counsel for Appellant

Hayes C. Stover (Argued) K&L Gates 210 Sixth Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15222

Counsel for Appellee

OPINION OF THE COURT ________________

AMBRO, Circuit Judge We have the rare situation where not even our heavy degree of deference to arbitrators can save an arbitration decision and award. Monongahela Valley Hospital, Inc. sought to vacate an arbitration decision and award in favor of United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial and Service Workers International Union, AFL-CIO, CLC. The District Court granted the Hospital’s motion for summary judgment and vacated the award. The Union now appeals, arguing that the District Court erred by exceeding its very limited scope of review and should

2 have confirmed the award because it rationally derived from the parties’ collective bargaining agreement (the “CBA”). We agree with our District Court colleague, and thus we will affirm. I. BACKGROUND

The Hospital has approximately 1,100 employees, just under half of whom are in a bargaining unit represented by the Union. Working supervisors are not included in the bargaining unit. The CBA, in effect from July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2017 (thus at all times relevant to this dispute), governed the relationship between the Hospital and the bargaining unit employees. It included a dispute resolution process whereby an aggrieved employee could submit a grievance that if unresolved through the grievance procedure, could be appealed to arbitration. Under § 8(F)(3) of the CBA, an arbitrator’s authority is limited “only to interpret[ing], apply[ing] or determin[ing] compliance with [its] provisions.” The arbitrator specifically lacks the “authority to add to, detract from or alter in any way the provisions of this [CBA].” Id.

The CBA provision before us—§ 13(B)(6)—concerns the scheduling of vacation. It provides that [v]acation will, so far as possible, be granted at times most desired by employees; but the final right to allow vacation periods, and the right to change vacation periods[,] is exclusively reserved to the Hospital. Any changes in vacation schedules may be realized by mutual consent. In the event the

3 Hospital unilaterally changes a schedule causing the employee to suffer financial loss, the Hospital agrees to reimburse the employee for provable loss.

(Emphases added.) Conflicts over vacation scheduling occurred only when there was a limited number of bargaining and non-bargaining unit employees that performed the same or similar functions such that only one employee could be away at a time. There were only three instances in the record before late 2016 when a bargaining unit employee did not receive her desired vacation because a supervisor (not a bargaining unit member) chose the same days (and in one of those instances the issue went away). To avoid vacation scheduling conflicts, the Hospital, in apparent agreement with the Union, experimented with using “blackout” periods for scheduling 2017 vacation whereby certain weeks were blocked off for vacation. The Hospital, however, found that the experiment was unsuccessful in eliminating scheduling conflicts and discontinued it after that year. Our case stems from a dispute over vacation days between bargaining unit employee Carol Konsugar and her working supervisor, a non-bargaining unit employee. At the end of 2016, Ms. Konsugar requested vacation for the following year during the week of December 25, 2017. The Hospital denied her request because her working supervisor had requested that same week off and both could not be away

4 at the same time.1 Ms. Konsugar then filed a grievance in January 2017 alleging the denial of her requested vacation as a CBA violation, and arbitration ensued.2 The parties selected Gerald Kobell as the arbitrator. The Union argued before him that § 13(B)(6) of the CBA gave its employees preference when there were conflicting vacation requests, while the Hospital contended the “final” and “exclusive” language in that section conferred on it ultimate discretion over vacation scheduling. In an attempt to reconcile the competing positions, the arbitrator framed the issue as “whether the Hospital violated the [CBA] when it denied

1 The record is not clear whether Ms. Konsugar’s requested week of December 25, 2017, was “blacked out.” The arbitrator, based on Union Exhibits 5 and 6, stated only that the week of December 18, 2016, was blacked out. It appears the “2016” was a scrivener’s error considering that the arbitrator later refers to those same exhibits as blacking out vacation for 2017, see App. 46; 48. In any event, the Hospital represented at oral argument, and the Union did not dispute, that Ms. Konsugar was unaffected by the “blackout” policy, See Trans. of Oral Arg. at 18–19, 23–24. We therefore proceed on the assumption that Ms. Konsugar’s request for vacation during the week of December 25, 2017, did not involve a “blackout period.” To the extent the arbitrator ruled that the Hospital may no longer use “blackout” periods, we need not weigh in on this point.

2 The grievance referenced specifically only Ms. Konsugar’s violation. Two other disputes over vacation scheduling allegedly arose during 2017, yet they were not squarely before the arbitrator, and we do not address them here.

5 employee Carol Konsugar the vacation she desired [for 2017] in December 2016.”

In interpreting § 13(B)(6), the arbitrator stated he could not “conclude that the subsequent reservation of exclusivity in allocating vacations entirely to the Hospital completely negates . . . ‘so far as possible’” because of his concern that it could then always deny bargaining unit employees their vacation requests. Accordingly, the arbitrator sustained the grievance, ruling that, “notwithstanding the Hospital’s reservation of exclusive rights contained in Section 13[B](6) of the Agreement,” the CBA precluded the Hospital from using “blackout” periods and prevented it from “deny[ing] senior employees in the bargaining unit their desired vacation[] when there is no operating need.” The Hospital filed a complaint with the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania under § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, seeking to vacate the award on the grounds that “[t]he arbitrator’s decision and award exceeded his authority, ignored the plain language of the CBA, and . . . failed to draw its essence from the language of the CBA.” Both parties moved for summary judgment. The District Court, after acknowledging that it owed a “heavy degree of deference to the arbitrator,” ruled nonetheless that the arbitrator’s interpretation of § 13(B)(6) “(1) was a manifest disregard of the plain language of the CBA[,] (2) ignored the clear intentions of the parties[,] and (3) failed to construe such provision to give effect to all parts of the provision.” Accordingly, it granted the Hospital’s motion for summary judgment and vacated the arbitration award.

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946 F.3d 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monongahela-valley-hospital-v-united-steel-paper-and-forestr-ca3-2019.