Paper, Allied-Industrial Chemical & Energy Workers International Union, Local 4-12 v. Exxon Mobil Corp.

657 F.3d 272, 2011 WL 4133563
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 2011
Docket07-30559
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 657 F.3d 272 (Paper, Allied-Industrial Chemical & Energy Workers International Union, Local 4-12 v. Exxon Mobil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paper, Allied-Industrial Chemical & Energy Workers International Union, Local 4-12 v. Exxon Mobil Corp., 657 F.3d 272, 2011 WL 4133563 (5th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OWEN, Circuit Judge:

Paper, Allied-Industrial, Chemical and Energy Workers International Union, Local 4-12 (the Union) brought this suit to compel Exxon Mobil Corporation (Exxon-Mobil) to arbitrate two labor grievances pursuant to the parties’ collective bargaining agreement. The district court granted the Union’s motion for summary judgment with respect to one grievance but denied it with respect to the other and denied ExxonMobil’s motion for summary judgment. The Union and ExxonMobil have both appealed. We reverse in part and affirm in part, holding that neither grievance is arbitrable.

I

The Union represents certain employees at ExxonMobil’s Baton Rouge, Louisiana, refinery and chemical plant. The Union and ExxonMobil entered into two collective bargaining agreements (to which we will refer in the singular as the collective bargaining agreement or the agreement), the first effective from April 1996 to March 2002 and the second from April 2002 to March 2006. The two agreements are identical in all relevant respects and contain an arbitration clause that defines an “arbitrable grievance” as “a good faith claim by one party that the other party has violated a written provision of this agreement.”

The parties’ dispute focuses on the following provisions of the agreement:

212. Recognition of Management Functions
(a) The Union recognizes that the Employer has the right, on its own initiative, to perform any function of management at any time, so long as it does not violate any express provision of this Agreement.
(b) The following acts are functions of management:
(1) Those acts which are not within the area of collective bargaining as required by the National Labor Relations Act;
(2) Those acts which are usually exercised by other employers; and
(3) Those acts which management should exercise in order to properly manage the business.
251. What Grievances Are Arbitrable An arbitrable grievance is a good faith claim by one party that the other party has violated a written provision of this Agreement. If the claim is disputed, the issue is either
(1) The interpretation of the provision, or
(2) The facts, or both.
1131. General
(a) The company may let independent contracts. But it will not let a maintenance contract or contracts that will cause an employee in either Mechanical Division who has five or more years of Plant Service to be laid off for lack of work during the term of this agreement.
(b) A maintenance contract is one which provides for the performance of maintenance work within the Refinery and *275 Chemical Plant bounds which has customarily been performed by employees in the Mechanical Divisions.
1151. Exercising Rights
Neither party shall exercise any right under this agreement in an arbitrary manner, but each party shall exercise its rights in a reasonable manner and in good faith.

In 1997, ExxonMobil announced that it would begin contracting out the loading and unloading of tank trucks and railroad tank cars at its Baton Rouge chemical plant. This action displaced bargaining unit employees but resulted in no layoffs, since those employees were assigned to other work at the plant with the same classification, seniority, and pay rate. The Union filed a grievance (the contracting-out grievance) with ExxonMobil asserting that a number of sections of the collective bargaining agreement, including Sections 1131 and 1151, had been violated. After following the formal grievance process, ExxonMobil denied the claim.

Five years later, in 2002, ExxonMobil eliminated two and one-half bargaining unit posts at the Baton Rouge facility. The Union filed a grievance (the post-reduction grievance) asserting that this action violated Section 1151 of the collective bargaining agreement. The grievance process was initiated, and ExxonMobil ultimately denied the claim.

The Union filed a formal demand for arbitration of both grievances. ExxonMobil declined to proceed to arbitration, asserting that the grievances were not arbitrable under the collective bargaining agreement. The Union then filed suit in district court seeking to compel arbitration. Both parties moved for summary judgment, and the district court granted the Union’s motion in part and denied the motion in part, holding that the contracting-out grievance was arbitrable but the post-reduction grievance was not. The district court denied ExxonMobil’s motion for summary judgment as “moot” and dismissed the Union’s action. Both parties then appealed to this court.

II

This court reviews an order compelling arbitration de novo. 1 Likewise, we review de novo the denial of a motion to compel arbitration. 2

III

In determining whether the grievances at issue are arbitrable, we must examine the scope of the parties’ agreement, as reflected in the arbitration clause. If the collective bargaining agreement provided that “[a]n arbitrable grievance is a claim by one party that the other party has violated a written provision of this Agreement,” our task would be an easy one. The Union’s claim that Exxon-Mobil violated section 1131 of the agreement when it engaged independent contractors would be arbitrable. But that is not what the agreement provides. The element of “good faith” is included in the arbitration clause. The words “good faith” are not surplusage and reflect that not every claim that the collective bargaining agreement has been violated is arbitrable. Only “good faith elaim[s] by one party that the other party has violated a written provi *276 sion of [the CBA]” is arbitrable. As the Supreme Court has repeatedly reminded courts and litigants, “[a]s with any agreement to arbitrate, we are obliged to enforce the parties’ ... agreement ‘according to its terms.’ ” 3 “[P]arties may agree to limit the issues they choose to arbitrate,” 4 and the parties have done so here.

The context of the term “good faith” in the collective bargaining agreement indicates that it is not an entirely subjective standard. There must be a good faith claim that “a written provision” of the agreement has been violated. The plausibility of a claim that a written provision has not been honored is indicative of whether that claim can be in good faith.

Our court had occasion to construe an identical “good faith” arbitration provision in a case in which the meaning of the terms “other conditions of employment” and “working conditions” in a collective bargaining agreement were at issue. 5

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Bluebook (online)
657 F.3d 272, 2011 WL 4133563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paper-allied-industrial-chemical-energy-workers-international-union-ca5-2011.