Quick v. National Labor Relations Board

245 F.3d 231
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 2001
Docket99-4043, 00-3032
StatusUnknown
Cited by1 cases

This text of 245 F.3d 231 (Quick v. National Labor Relations Board) 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
Quick v. National Labor Relations Board, 245 F.3d 231 (3d Cir. 2001).

Opinion

*236 OPINION OF THE COURT

McKEE, Circuit Judge.

We are asked to decide if a “union security clause” in a collective bargaining agreement required an employee in a purported “union shop” to continue paying any union dues after he resigned from the union. If we determine that the obligation to pay dues ceased, we must then decide if the employee has standing to seek review of an order of the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) denying attorney’s fees for defending against the labor union’s state court action to recover “delinquent” dues under the circumstances here. As a subset of that inquiry we will discuss whether the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”) authorizes the NLRB to award attorney’s fees to a non-profit corporation that provided free legal services to the employee.

For the reasons that follow, we hold that the disputed clause allows employees to stop paying all union dues upon resignation from the union. We also hold that the employee has no standing to challenge the NLRB’s refusal to award attorney’s fees in connection with the union’s state court action because the employee incurred neither personal expense nor personal liability in defending against that suit. Inasmuch as the employee has no standing to contest the Board’s denial of an award of attorney’s fees, we will dismiss the employee’s petition for review, and grant the Board’s petition for enforcement.

I. BACKGROUND

The Graphic Communications International Union Local No. 735-S (the “Union”) is the exclusive bargaining representative for all full-time and regular part-time production and maintenance employees at the Quebecor Printing Inc. facility in Hazleton, Pennsylvania (the “Company”). Section 2.2 of the relevant collective bargaining agreement between the Union and the Company (the “CBA”) contained what is commonly referred to as a “union security clause” 1 providing as follows:

It is agreed that new employees shall be required as a condition of continued employment to apply for membership in the Union upon completion of the [90-day] probationary period or on the effective date of the Agreement, whichever is later.

Section 2.4 of the CBA contained a dues checkoff authorizing the employer to withhold the amount of an employee’s dues from his/her paycheck. Section 2.4 also stated that the dues checkoff authorization was irrevocable for a period of one year or until the expiration of the CBA, whichever was earlier, and that any timely revocation would be effective 10 days after the Company received written notice of it.

Patrick Quick had been president of the Union while working for another employer in the 1960’s. He was hired by NADCO, the Company’s predecessor, as a general *237 helper in August of 1993. A collective bargaining agreement between NADCO and the Union contained a union security clause identical to § 2.2 above. Quick joined the union and signed a checkoff authorization form when he was hired by NADCO. In 1995, the Company purchased NADCO and the CBA was ratified including §§ 2.2 and 2.4.

On August 23,1996, Quick prepared and signed two letters. The first referred to a speech given at the Harvard School of Business concerning the importance of human assets in a business. It also contained his own thoughts about how a union should treat its members. Quick concluded that letter with: “Therefore due to the fact that the above does not seem to be the purpose of this Union, I therefore submit the following resignation.” The second letter began: “I, Patrick D. Quick, do hereby resign” from the Union. It then listed his reasons and ended with: “I HEREBY RESIGN.” Quick gave the documents to a Company employee named Charlie Allen. Allen was not an agent of the Union, but he accepted the letters and said that he would give them to the chief shop steward. Quick also gave copies of the letters to Jack Butler, the Company’s Director of Human Resources. The company continued to deduct the full amount of union dues from Quick’s paycheck after he delivered these letters.

In March, 1997, Quick sent a letter to Thomas Obzut, the Union’s treasurer-secretary. That letter stated:

As a non-member of [the Union] working in the [Company’s] bargaining unit, I am being forced to have deducted from my pay an amount equivalent to the full member dues. To the extent that I may be required to pay anything to [the Union] I do not want to pay more than is legally required. Specifically, I do not want to pay if at all the “financial core” minimum 2 required to support the Union’s administration [of the CBA]. Please advise me in writing 1) what the “financial core” minimum amount is which the Union contents (sic) I am required to pay, and 2) the basis for the Union’s calculation in that regard.

The Union received that letter on March 11, 1997. On March 24, Obzut responded with a letter in which he informed Quick that the “financial core” amount was 83.53% of full union dues. That letter further stated that Quick would receive a rebate of 16.47% every January as long as he remained a member of the Union. However, the full amount of union dues continued to be deducted from Quick’s pay.

*238 On April 13, Quick sent the Union a letter requesting financial justification for the Union’s calculations of the percentage of dues owed by “financial core” members and objecting to paying full dues subject to an annual rebate. On May 19, 1997, Obzut sent Quick a letter that began: “This is to advise you that I have received your letter stating your wish to become a non-member of the Union. You further explained your wish to become a financial core member of the Union.” The letter then argued the advantages of full union membership, and concluded, “if I do not hear from you again, I will assume that your resignation is effective as of May 1,.... You must notify me in writing if you wish to become a Beck objector as well....” 3 At this point, the Union regarded Quick as a financial core member effective May 1,1997, and began deducting financial core dues from Quick’s paycheck as of that date.

On June 2, Quick sent another letter to the Union in which he asserted that he had previously resigned from membership in the Union, that the requirement that he continue to pay any dues violated the NLRA, and that the requirement was not justified under the CBA. That letter ended: “Effective (10) days from now I revoke my dues checkoff form I previously may have signed several years earlier.” The Union received this letter on June 6 and the all dues deductions from Quick’s paycheck ceased about ten days later.

On June 10, Obzut acknowledged receipt of Quick’s June 2nd letter, but said that Quick, as past president of the Union, knew that Pennsylvania was not a “right-to-work” state and that if he wished to continue to work for the Company, he would have to pay union dues pursuant to the CBA. However, Obzut followed up with yet another letter dated July 23, in which Obzut acknowledged Quick’s right to discontinue Quick’s dues checkoff. However, that letter continued:

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245 F.3d 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quick-v-national-labor-relations-board-ca3-2001.