NEVADA STATE EDUC. ASS'N VS. CLARK CTY. EDUC. ASS'N

2021 NV 8
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 2021
Docket79208
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 NV 8 (NEVADA STATE EDUC. ASS'N VS. CLARK CTY. EDUC. ASS'N) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NEVADA STATE EDUC. ASS'N VS. CLARK CTY. EDUC. ASS'N, 2021 NV 8 (Neb. 2021).

Opinion

137 Nev., Advance Opinion e' IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

NEVADA STATE EDUCATION No. 79208 ASSOCIATION; NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION; RUBEN MURILLO, JR.; ROBERT BENSON; DIANE DI ARCHANGEL; AND JASON WYCKOFF, FL Appellants, MAR 0 4 2021 vs. CLARK COUNTY EDUCATION CLE EL

ASSOCIATION; JOHN VELLARDITA; BY HIEF DEPUTY CLERK AND VICTORIA COURTNEY, Respondents.

Appeal from district court orders granting summary judgment in a union contract matter. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Kerry Louise Earley, Judge. Affirmed.

Leonard Law, PC, and Debbie A. Leonard, Reno; Bredhoff & Kaiser, PLLC, and Robert Alexander and Georgina Catherine Yeomans, Washington, D.C., for Appellants.

Snell & Wilmer, LLP, and Kelly H. Dove, John S. Delikanakis, Bradley T. Austin, and Michael Paretti, Las Vegas; Snell & Wilmer, LLP, and Andrew M. Jacobs, Tucson, Arizona; Asher, Gittler & D'Alba, Ltd., and Joel A. D'Alba, Chicago, Illinois, for Respondents.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA

(01 I 947A 46Px3 -0001:7 BEFORE PARRAGUIRRE, STIGLICH and SILVER, JJ.

OPINION By the Court, STIGLICH, J.: The bylaws of national- and state-level unions are contractually binding on affiliated local unions unless and until the local union disaffiliates from the parent unions. The local and parent unions may also enter into other contracts that govern certain aspects of their relationship. In this dispute between a local teachers union and its state and national affiliates, we conclude that the parent unions' bylaws, while binding, did not by their own terms control the important issue of the transmission of dues from the local to the state affiliate. Instead, the local union's obligation to transmit dues was the subject of a separate contract. That contract contained a provision expressly permitting either party to terminate it by giving timely notice. We hold that the local union validly terminated this contract pursuant to that provision and so was not contractually obligated to continue transmitting its members' dues to the state union. Based on this, and because the parent unions' remaining tort-based claims also fail, we affirm the district coures grant of summary judgment to the local union. BACKGROUND The three unions' contractual relationship The Clark County Education Association (CCEA) is a local union representing teachers and other employees of the Clark County School District. The Nevada State Education Association (NSEA) is a statewide union whose members are teachers and other school district employees throughout Nevada. The National Education Association (NEA) is a national union that represents about three million teachers and other

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 2 (01 1947A education professionals throughout the United States. When this dispute began, these three unions had been affiliated for decades. Indeed, CCEA's bylaws required its members to join NSEA and NEA, and conversely, those unions bylaws required members to join the appropriate local affiliate. When a Clark County educator wished to become a union member, he or she would sign a Membership Enrollment Form. That form authorized the school district to deduct "professional dues" from the teacher's paycheck and to pay those dues to CCEA. The Membership Enrollment Form did not expressly state the amount of dues or which organizations' dues were included, but the long-standing practice was to deduct all three unions' dues and to transmit the lump sum to CCEA. Each organization set its own dues according to its own bylaws. The total dues for CCEA's members for the 2017-2018 school year were $810.50 per person, which constituted the sum total of the CCEA, NSEA, and NEA dues. For decades before the instant dispute, CCEA would transmit to NSEA all of NSENs and NEA's dues that it received. NSEA would, in turn, transmit NENs portion of the dues to NEA. However, the parties vigorously dispute which contractual provision, if any, required CCEA to transmit dues. There are several overlapping possibilities. First, there is section 2-9 of the NEA bylaws, entitled "Dues Transmittal and Enforcement Procedures." Section 2-9(a) states that "[s[tandards and contracts for transmitting dues shall be developed between the state affiliate and each local affiliate." Section 2-9(a) further states that "Mocal affiliates shall have the full responsibility for transmitting state and Association [i.e., NEN dues to state affiliates on a contractual basis."'

'Analogous provisions govern the transmission of dues from each state affiliate to NEA.

3 Section 2-9(b) further provides that la] local shall transmit to a state affiliate . . . at least forty (40) percent of the Association dues receivable for the year by March 15 and at least seventy (70) percent of the Association dues receivable for the year by June 1." Section 2-9(b), however, does not provide an explicit deadline to transmit one hundred percent of the NEA dues and does not address the state affiliate's dues at all. Next, there is the Dues Transmittal Agreement (DTA), which NSEA and CCEA entered into in 1979. The DTA designated CCEA as NSEA's agent "for the purpose of collecting and transmitting NSEA and NEA dues." It required CCEA to transmit those dues within ten working days after receiving them from the school district. The contract also provided that, should any amendment to the NSEA constitution or bylaws conflict with the DTA, the DTA would be automatically amended to reflect the amendment. Finally and crucially, the contract provided that it would "remain in force for each subsequent membership year unless terminated in writing by either party prior to September 1 of any NSEA membership year, or amended by mutual consent of both parties." Twenty years after entering the DTA, NSEA and CCEA entered into a second contract called the Service Agreement. That agreement set forth extensive services NSEA would provide to CCEA, including political action training, liability insurance coverage, and certain grant funding. The Service Agreement prominently stated that the DTA, which was included in the Service Agreement as an appendix, was to be "continued without change." Like the DTA, the Service Agreement renewed automatically each September 1, unless either party provided timely notice of termination.2

2Un1ike the DTA, the Service Agreement required thirty days notice of termination before the September 1 renewal date.

4 Finally, NSEA's bylaws also reference dues transmittal. They provide that "NSEA shall affiliate a local association when it meets the following minimum standards," with a short list of prerequisites for affiliation. One such prerequisite, added in 2015, is to "[hlave a dues transmittal contract with NSEA." The instant dispute In May 2017, CCEA notified NSEA that it wanted to terminate the existing Service Agreement and negotiate new terms. Although CCEA stated that time was of the essence, NSEA initially refused to negotiate before mid-September. In a July letter, CCEA reiterated its pressing need to renegotiate before the new school year began and clarified its position that the existing Service Agreement would expire at the end of August, with or without a new agreement in place. In early August, CCEA wrote to NSEA a third time.• Therein, CCEA stated that the Service Agreement "serve Ed] as the dues transmittal contract" and that there would be no agreement in place to collect and transmit dues to NSEA after August 31. CCEA firmly and clearly stated that if NSEA wanted CCEA to continue collecting and transmitting dues, then NSEA would have to negotiate a new agreement. No new agreement was forthcoming. The September 1 deadline came and went.

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2021 NV 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nevada-state-educ-assn-vs-clark-cty-educ-assn-nev-2021.