Rothlein v. Armour & Company

391 F.2d 574
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 26, 1968
Docket16771
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 391 F.2d 574 (Rothlein v. Armour & Company) 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
Rothlein v. Armour & Company, 391 F.2d 574 (3d Cir. 1968).

Opinion

391 F.2d 574

Regis ROTHLEIN, Robert Rectenwald, Anthony J. Zoelle, Robert
McLaughlin, Robert Safron and Leo Heckman, on
Behalf of Themselves and All Others
Similarly Situated, Appellants,
v.
ARMOUR & COMPANY, Inc.

No. 16771.

United States Court of Appeals Third Circuit.

Argued Dec. 21, 1967.
Decided March 26, 1968.

Richard D. Gilardi, McArdle & McLaughlin, Pittsburgh, Pa., for appellants.

John G. Wayman, Reed, Smith Shaw & McClay, Pittsburgh, Pa., (Scott F. Zimmerman, Pittsburgh, Pa., on the brief), for appellee.

Before BIGGS, McLAUGHLIN and VAN DUSEN, Circuit Judges.

OPINION OF THE COURT

VAN DUSEN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from summary judgment entered for the defendant below, Armour & Company, Inc., in a suit brought against Armour by the appellants, certain employees of Armour. The appellants allegedly represented a class of eighty-six employees and sought an accounting and payment of amounts owing them under a pension plan established by Armour in 1952. They brought the suit under Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (29 U.S.C. 185(a)) claiming the accounting and payment were owed them under a collective bargaining agreement between Armour and the appellants' union, Local 249, General Teamsters, Chauffeurs, and Helpers of America ('Teamsters Local 249').

The 1952-3 collective agreement first made Armour's Pension 'plan effective for appellants.1 This pension plan coverage was apparently continued in the agreements negotiated every year until 1964.2 In 1964, Teamsters Local 249 obtained Armour's agreement to make payments to the Teamsters Pension Plan. The 1964 contract said nothing about the Armour plan; it merely provided that Armour would pay certain sums per employee per week into the Teamsters Pension Plan.3

The apparent gravamen of appellants' complaint is that they have never seen the documents governing the actual '1952' Armour Pension Plan. (It is noted that such pension plan does not appear in the record.) Furthermore, they claim they have no idea of the amounts accumulated for each employee under the '1952' plan. The appellees, on the other hand, aver under oath4 that in negotiations for the 1964 agreement, Teamsters Local 249 agreed that all employees would withdraw from and cease to have any right, title or interest in the Armour Pension Plan or Pension Fund, with the exception of five named employees who could not qualify for the Teamsters Pension Plan.5 As evidence of this alleged agreement, appellee points to Exhibit III of its Answer, a 'Supplemental Agreement' to the 1964 contract, and the provision that 'in settlement of grievances or working conditions * * * it is recognized that * * * (the five) employees will continue to be covered by the Armour Plan. * * *'6 Armour contends that the necessity of making such an agreement proves that all employees, including the five later exceptions, were otherwise totally out of the Armour Pension Plan. An appellants' affidavit by an employee who allegedly attended all negotiations of the 1964 contract, denied that Teamsters Local 249 ever waived any employee's 'right, title and interest in and to the Armour Pension Plan and the Armour Pension Fund.'

After the complaint and answer were filed, Armour asked for summary judgment, alleging that the appellants had not exhausted the contractual grievance procedure. The district court granted a stay of all proceedings to allow appellants to pursue the grievance procedure. After the appellants had taken their grievance through the three steps provided in the 1964 agreement, both sides stipulated an end to the stay. Appellants asked that the trial under Section 301 again proceed; Armour amended its motion for summary judgment stating that the grievance procedure had resulted in a final rejection of the appellants' grievance. Interpreting the grievance procedure of the 1964 contract as making the rejection of appellants' grievance 'final,'7 and finding the decision in Haynes v. United States Pipe & Foundry Company, 362 F.2d 414 (5th Cir. 1966) persuasive that the 'final' determination was binding on the court,8 the district court granted Armour's motion for summary judgment.

We do not agree with the District Court that on this record no substantial issue of fact remains. As a major step in any reasoning that permits the conclusion below, it must be decided that the present controversy is a 'difference * * * between the Company and employees' as that phrase was intended in Article XIV of the 1964 contract.9 It is conceivable that a request for an accounting and payment under an 'old' employer pension plan is not a 'difference' as that word is used in this present contract. Furthermore, there must also be a preliminary determination that the 'grievance procedure' in the 1964 contract is the appropriate procedure in this case and not the 'grievance procedure' of Article #14 of the 1952 agreement which has as its apparent final step:

'If a mutual understanding cannot be arrived at, said grievance shall be turned over to the local for further study and a decision.'10

Although the 'old' contract was apparently terminated by the union June 19, 1964, it is possible that the '1952' grievance procedure is the appropriate one in this case. The pension fund at issue was made effective under the old contract and the notes of the hearing on the stay referred to the 'applicable grievance procedure'. The parties then proceeded to employ the 1964 grievance procedure. But the record does not give any indication that the district court ever decided this question of which grievance section should be employed to decide pension plan rights granted under the earlier '1952' contract. This latter grievance provision might well require a different conclusion as to whether exhaustion of its provisions produced a 'final' decision on a 'difference' between Armour and its employees.11

It is appropriate in this case, however, also to point out the legal rules applicable if the district court again decides that these individual employees have obtained a 'final' decision under the relevant contract grievance procedure. It seems proper under Federal Labor Law that such suits by individuals under Section 301 of the L.M.R.A. not be dragged out indefinitely by procedural or preliminary controversies and that individual claims, if they are properly before the court under Section 301 jurisdiction, be decided on the merits without unnecessary delay.

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391 F.2d 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rothlein-v-armour-company-ca3-1968.