School District 42 v. Murray

514 A.2d 1269, 128 N.H. 417, 1986 N.H. LEXIS 301
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedAugust 7, 1986
DocketNo. 85-360
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 514 A.2d 1269 (School District 42 v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School District 42 v. Murray, 514 A.2d 1269, 128 N.H. 417, 1986 N.H. LEXIS 301 (N.H. 1986).

Opinion

Souter, J.

The defendants appeal from an order of the Superior Court (DiClerico, J.) enjoining them from seeking to arbitrate a dispute over the application of a collective bargaining agreement. We reverse.

As a public employer within the meaning of RSA 273-A:l, X, the plaintiff school district entered into a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with the defendant Nashua Teachers’ Union, Local 1044, AFT, NHFT, AFL-CIO. In administering the CBA, the union represented the individual defendant, Michael Murray, a guidance counselor who had been employed by the school district for some sixteen years at the time this litigation began.

When the school district placed Mr. Murray on probation for the 1983-84 academic year, the defendants claimed that the district had violated the CBA’s requirement of just cause for any disciplinary action. The district denied any violation of the CBA, asserting that placement on probation was not discipline within the meaning of the CBA, but was rather a discretionary prerogative of management. See RSA 273-A:l, XI.

The defendants demanded to litigate their position through the CBA’s grievance procedure, and after exhaustion of preliminary grievance mechanisms, they submitted the dispute to the American Arbitration Association in reliance upon the CBA’s provision for arbitration. The school district then petitioned the superior court to enjoin arbitration, on the ground that the dispute was not arbitrable.

On November 14, 1983, the superior court granted a preliminary injunction. By motion dated January 12, 1984, the union moved for a hearing on the request for permanent injunction or, in the alternative, for entry of a permanent injunction so that it could appeal. See Sup. Ct. Rs. 7, 8. In April 1984, and again in August 1984, the court requested counsel to submit any further material they might have bearing on the propriety of a permanent injunction. On June 25, 1985, the court issued an order making the injunction permanent.

From this procedural history it may appear that the case is moot, [419]*419and insofar as the individual defendant’s probationary status during the 1983-84 year is concerned, it is. It is undisputed, however, that his employment record notes his status for that year, and counsel at argument claimed that this is a continuing injury with potentially adverse consequences justifying continuance of the litigation. We believe that Mr. Murray is entitled to the benefit of the doubt on this point, especially in view of his counsel’s thwarted efforts to obtain a timely final order in the superior court. Accordingly, we will take up the merits.

We are immediately confronted, however, with the difficult question of whether to apply our usual standards limiting the scope of appeals. In the normal course, we would deal only with the merits of the issues that the parties raised in the trial court: whether the plaintiffs had demonstrated such risk of irreparable harm as to entitle them to equitable relief, whether they had an adequate remedy at law, and whether the superior court correctly concluded on the merits that the subject of the grievance was not arbitrable.

To proceed this way, however, would require us to ignore a far more significant issue, but one which was not raised until this court raised it during oral argument: whether the public employee labor relations board is vested with exclusive jurisdiction to determine the question of whether the dispute is arbitrable. Normally we would decline to consider this issue for the very reason that the appellants failed to raise it below. See Daboul v. Town of Hampton, 124 N.H. 307, 309, 471 A.2d 1148, 1149 (1983); see also Sklar Realty v. Town of Merrimack, 125 N.H. 321, 328, 480 A.2d 149, 153 (1984) (issues should be raised at trial in order to give the trial forum an opportunity to reach sound conclusions and to correct alleged errors). The price for applying this principle, however, would be our review of the superior court’s decision on the question of arbitrability, despite our belief that this question should not even reach this court without the benefit of the board’s judgment in the first instance. For we are convinced that, in the absence of a contractual provision granting the arbitrator authority to determine arbitrability of a given dispute, the board has exclusive original jurisdiction over the threshold question of arbitrability.

Faced with this dilemma, we believe that respect for the board’s jurisdiction should come first. The board is responsible in the first instance for articulating a coherent body of collective bargaining law to govern public employment. See Appeal of Town of Pelham, 124 N.H. 131, 134-35, 469 A.2d 1295, 1297 (1983). We would not give appropriate recognition to that responsibility if we were to consider the merits of an issue within the board’s exclusive [420]*420original jurisdiction without providing an opportunity for the board to rule on it first.

We turn then to the issue whether the superior court has jurisdiction to determine the arbitrability of a dispute under a public employees’ CBA, when a breach of the CBA would be an unfair labor practice subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the board under RSA 273-A:6,1. The school district presses two arguments for superior court jurisdiction. It relies, first, on the authority of Brampton Woolen Company v. Local Union 112, 95 N.H. 255, 256, 61 A.2d 796, 797 (1948), and Southwestern New Hampshire Transportation Co., Inc. v. Durham, 102 N.H. 169, 173, 152 A.2d 596, 599 (1959), which held as a general rule that the scope of'an arbitration clause in a labor or collective bargaining agreement is a question of law for the superior court. The district argues, second, that unless this general rule is affirmed and applied to the present case, the district will have no opportunity to litigate the question of arbitrability until the union files an unfair labor practice charge against it, claiming a wrongful refusal to arbitrate. It makes the same argument, in other words, that this court accepted in Brampton: if the employer refuses to arbitrate in a case where arbitrability is in issue it risks a later finding that it breached the contract; if, to avoid that risk, it participates in arbitration, it risks a later finding that it waived its objection. Brampton, supra at 256, 61 A.2d at 797.

Suffice it to say here that this is a sound reason for providing some forum for litigating a threshold issue of arbitrability. It does not necessarily follow, however, that the superior court must be that forum, and there are two arguments for finding jurisdiction elsewhere.

First, the defendants argue that the question of arbitrability is appropriately left as a threshold issue for the arbitrator, subject ultimately to superior court review when the parties, as in this case, have agreed to such review in accordance with RSA 542:1 (statutory authority for judicial review of arbitration, RSA 542:8, applies to arbitrator’s award under labor contract, if the contract specifically so provides).

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Bluebook (online)
514 A.2d 1269, 128 N.H. 417, 1986 N.H. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-district-42-v-murray-nh-1986.