Plumber, Steamfitter And Shipfitter Industry Pension Plan & Trust v. Siemens Building Technologies Incorporated

228 F.3d 964
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 3, 2000
Docket99-35758
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 228 F.3d 964 (Plumber, Steamfitter And Shipfitter Industry Pension Plan & Trust v. Siemens Building Technologies Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plumber, Steamfitter And Shipfitter Industry Pension Plan & Trust v. Siemens Building Technologies Incorporated, 228 F.3d 964 (9th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

228 F.3d 964 (9th Cir. 2001)

PLUMBER, STEAMFITTER AND SHIPFITTER INDUSTRY PENSION PLAN & TRUST, PLUMBERS, STEAMFITTERS & SHIPFITTERS INDUSTRY HEALTH & WELFARE TRUST; LOCAL 290 PLUMBER, STEAMFITTER & SHIPFITTER INDUSTRY RETIREE HEALTH TRUST; LOCAL 290 PLUMBING & PIPEFITTING INDUSTRY JOURNEYMAN
& APPRENTICESHIP TRAINING FUND; LOCAL 290 GAS DISTRIBUTION EMPLOYEES VACATION TRUST; UNITED ASSOCIATION UNION LOCAL 290 PLUMBERS, STEAMFITTER & SHIPFITTER INDUSTRY SCHOLARSHIP FUND; PLUMBING & PIPEFITTING MANAGEMENT TRUST FUND; PIPING INDUSTRY CONTRACT ADMINISTRATION FUND, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
SIEMENS BUILDING TECHNOLOGIES INCORPORATED, a Delaware corporation, fka Landis & taefa, Inc., Defendant-Appellant.

No. 99-35758

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

Argued and Submitted July 13, 2000
Filed October 3, 2000

Edwin C. Thomas, III, David M. Novak, Bell, Boyd & Lloyd, Chicago, Illinois, for the defendant-appellant.

Darrell L. Cornelius, Portland, Oregon, for the plaintiffs

Appeal from United States District Court for the District of Oregon; John Jelderks, Magistrate Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. CV 97-00779-JJ

Before: Alfred T. Goodwin, Susan P. Graber, and William A. Fletcher, Circuit Judges.

GOODWIN, Circuit Judge:

This appeal probes the legal question whether a collective bargaining agreement covers certain employees, and the fact question whether the trustees of an ERISA employee benefits plan had a legitimate purpose to audit certain payroll records of the Appellant employer's operations, as the trustees claim, or were being used by a trade union, as the employer claims, to increase union membership by establishing that union work was being performed by nonunion employees.

The trial court took testimony and examined documents and concluded that the collective bargaining agreement was intended to define covered employees as all employees performing the work of installing and maintaining heating, cooling, and ventilation systems, as a legal matter of contract interpretation, and then found, as a fact, that the trustees had a legitimate trust purpose of making certain that the employer was contributing all the funds required by the collective bargaining agreements and the terms of the various trust instruments.

The employer contends on appeal that the trial court erred as a legal matter in construing the collective bargaining agreement, and clearly erred as a matter of fact in finding that the purpose of the requested audit was the permissible purpose of protecting and enhancing the trust for the benefit of the beneficiaries and not the covert purpose of providing leverage for the organizational objectives of expanding the jurisdiction of the union over work done by the nonunion employees in the appellant's workforce.

BACKGROUND

In order to analyze the contending theories on appeal, it is necessary to look at some historical background.

Defendant Siemens engages, nationwide, in engineering, installation, repair, and servicing of heating, ventilating, and air conditioning systems for commercial and industrial clients. The plaintiffs in this case are the trustees of six multi-employer employee benefit plans.

Historically, most of Siemens's labor was performed by unionized workers in the plumbing, steamfitting, and related trades. Accordingly, Siemens is a party to a series of collective bargaining agreements ("CBAs") with an international labor union of plumbers and pipefitters. These CBAs (the "National Agreements") contain work jurisdiction provisions and general terms relating to wages, hours worked, working conditions, fringe benefits, etc. The National Agreements required Siemens to enter into agreements with local unions to set wage and benefits rates according to local standards. The National Agreements also bound Siemens to various trust documents with respect to employee benefit plans. The trust documents involved in this case allow the trustees to audit Siemens's records to ensure compliance with the contribution terms.

Evolving sophistication of electronic controls for such systems has reached the point where specialists trained in the installation and adjustment of computerized controls are needed in addition to traditional plumbing and pipe fitting workers to accomplish the installations demanded by the customers Siemens seeks to attract and retain. Siemens has employed a substantial number of nonunion computer-trained specialists and has contended that, because these workers are neither apprentices nor journeymen plumbers or pipefitters, Siemens has no duty to account for them, to make payroll deductions for them, or to contribute to the Trusts on their behalf. The systems specialists are not union members and do not pay union dues, and Siemens does not make fringe benefit contributions to the Trusts on their behalf.

The trustees contend that anyone doing the general type of work defined in the work jurisdiction clause, including the installation and maintenance of the employer's systems, is doing the work of apprentices and journeymen and is therefore a covered employee within the meaning of the CBA and, therefore of the trust instruments.

In 1992, Local 290 tried to unionize the systems specialists, but failed. The contentious nature of the audit and this litigation has its roots in a history of jurisdictional grievances and failed unionization efforts.

Each of the Trusts is governed by an eight-member board, with four members representing employees and four members representing employers. The trustees meet every three months. For the periods between meetings, interlocutory authority is delegated to a two-person standing committee. The standing committee consists of Frank Quinn, an employer representative, and Matt Walters, an employee representative. Each has served on the standing committee for more than eleven years.

Employer audits come in four varieties: initial one-year audits, random audits, termination audits and trouble audits. The audit at issue in this case is a trouble audit. The trustees may initiate a trouble audit when they have reason to believe that an employer has failed to make all required contributions.

The systems specialists became the center of trustee attention when Walters received information that systems specialists were doing work within the work jurisdiction of plumbers and pipefitters. Walters suggested, and Quinn concurred in, a trouble audit to determine whether contributions were owed to the Trusts and whether union dues were owed to Local 290 by or on behalf of any employee or group of employees. The "true" motivation or purpose of the audit was vigorously litigated before the trier of fact.

The Trusts formally requested an audit, and a CPA named Sutton was selected to perform the audit. Siemens contends that Local 290's participation in the audit and the focus on the systems specialists were concealed when the audit was initiated. During the early stages of the audit, Siemens became aware of the attention being paid to the systems specialists and resisted the auditor's efforts to obtain documents related to the specialists.

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228 F.3d 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plumber-steamfitter-and-shipfitter-industry-pension-plan-trust-v-ca9-2000.