Sheet Metal Workers v. Systemaire Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 2001
Docket98-3414
StatusPublished

This text of Sheet Metal Workers v. Systemaire Inc. (Sheet Metal Workers v. Systemaire Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheet Metal Workers v. Systemaire Inc., (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ________________

Nos. 98-3414 and 99-1787 ________________

Sheet Metal Workers International * Association, Local Union No. 36, * * Appellee, * Appeal from the United States * District Court for the v. * Eastern District of Missouri. * Systemaire, Inc., * * Appellant. * *

________________

Submitted: December 17, 1999 Filed: March 6, 2001 (Corrected 3/20/01) ________________

Before BEAM, HEANEY, and HANSEN, Circuit Judges. ________________

HANSEN, Circuit Judge.

Systemaire, Inc. appeals the district court's order granting summary judgment in favor of Sheet Metal Workers International Association, Local Union No. 36 (Local 36). In its summary judgment order, the district court upheld a decision of a Local Joint Adjustment Board ordering Systemaire to pay $10,000 (which the Board characterized as "damages") to Local 36 for violating a collective bargaining agreement (CBA). The district court also awarded attorneys' fees of $4,562.60 to Local 36, which award Systemaire separately appeals.

I. Facts and Procedural Background

Systemaire is a mechanical contractor operating in the St. Louis, Missouri, area. Local 36 is a St. Louis labor union representing sheet metal workers. Pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement with Local 36, Systemaire agreed to assign certain specified work to Local 36. Systemaire also entered into a collective bargaining agreement with another union, Pipefitters Local Union No. 562 (Pipefitters). A substantial overlap exists between Systemaire's collective bargaining agreement with Local 36 and the company's collective bargaining agreement with the Pipefitters with respect to the work reserved and to be assigned to each craft. As a result, "jurisdictional" disputes often arise between the two unions regarding Systemaire's allocation of its work between the two unions.

The collective bargaining agreement between Systemaire and Local 36 contains a provision addressing the jurisdictional dispute issue. The CBA states that "[i]f a contractor is signatory to a labor agreement with more than one union and a jurisdictional dispute arises between the crafts the contractor employs, every attempt will be made to resolve said dispute including but not limited to any local or national Jurisdictional Disputes Board which may exist. The contractors and the union agree to abide by any decisions made by any local or national Jurisdictional Disputes Board." (Appellee's App. at 15.) The CBA also contains the following language regarding grievances. Pursuant to Section 1 of Article X of the CBA, "[g]rievances of the Employer or the Union, arising out of interpretation or enforcement of this Agreement, shall be settled between the Employer directly involved and the duly authorized representative of the Union, if possible. Both parties may participate in conferences through representatives of their choice." (Appellee's Separate App. at 30.) In addition,

2 Section 2 of Article X of the CBA provides that "[g]rievances not settled as provided in Section 1 of this Article may be appealed by either party to the Local Joint Adjustment Board where the work was performed . . . Except in the case of a deadlock, a decision of a Local Joint Adjustment Board shall be final and binding." (Id.)

As a means of resolving jurisdictional disputes, Local 36, the Pipefitters, the Mechanical Contractors Association of St. Louis (MCA), and the Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning Contractors National Association, St. Louis Chapter (SMACNA) established a local joint jurisdictional committee. On February 25, 1995, the committee met to adjudicate a jurisdictional dispute between Local 36 and the Pipefitters. After a hearing, the committee awarded the disputed project to the Pipefitters. One week later, Local 36 announced that it would no longer recognize the local committee or abide by its decisions. There is no evidence in the record that discloses the existence of a "national jurisdictional disputes board." Some of the affected contractors (including Systemaire) opted to adjudicate the jurisdictional disputes through the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) pursuant to the procedure outlined in § 10(k) of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). See 29 U.S.C. § 160(k). Consequently, from May 1995 to May 1996, the NLRB heard several cases involving jurisdictional disputes between Local 36 and the Pipefitters. In each case, the NLRB decided the dispute in favor of the Pipefitters. The NLRB, however, refused to issue an "area-wide" ruling governing all future disputes between the two unions. Rather, the NLRB limited relief "to the particular controversy that gave rise to these proceedings." Pipefitters Local Union No. 562 (Systemaire), 320 NLRB 124, 130 (1995).

In April 1996, another jurisdictional dispute arose between Local 36 and the Pipefitters. The Pipefitters threatened to strike if Systemaire refused to award them a material handling pipe installation project for Sunline Brands. Faced with competing claims to the work, Systemaire concluded that the pipe installation work involved in the Sunline project mirrored the type of work that the NLRB had previously awarded to

3 the Pipefitters and awarded the Sunline project to the Pipefitters. (Appellant's App. at 69.)

Local 36 then filed its grievance concerning the assignment of the Sunline work pursuant to the grievance article of its CBA with Systemaire. The grievance came before the Local Joint Adjustment Board (LJAB) as provided for in the CBA. The Pipefitters hold no seats on the LJAB. Rather than appear in person before the LJAB, Systemaire sent two letters. In the first letter (Appellant's App. at 116), Systemaire asserted that the issues were not grievable because they were jurisdictional disputes between the two unions, and that based on the NLRB's ruling in a previous case involving similar work performed by Systemaire, the Sunline work had been correctly assigned by Systemaire to its pipe fitter represented employees. In the second letter, which was sent a few days before the LJAB's scheduled hearing on the grievance, Systemaire again asserted that the dispute was a jurisdictional one which it intended to pursue before the NLRB, but it also submitted its arguments on the merits of the grievance ("In the event the Local Joint Adjustment Board chooses to discuss these grievances in our absence. . .") asserting that the work allocation it had made to the Pipefitters on the Sunline project was in accord with the "past area practice." The LJAB proceeded to hold its hearing on the grievance on January 30, 1997. Local 36 appeared in person and presented its case; Systemaire did not. On February 6, 1997, the LJAB issued its decision and unanimously found that Systemaire had improperly awarded the Sunline project to the Pipefitters and levied the $10,000 damage assessment against Systemaire. The LJAB's written decision is silent with respect to Systemaire's contention that the issue was not grievable.

Systemaire filed unfair labor practices charges against both Local 36 and the Pipefitters before the NLRB. Systemaire renewed its argument that the project in dispute was factually identical to projects previously awarded to the Pipefitters. The NLRB, however, declined to hold a hearing on this matter. The NLRB concluded that the past assignments could not serve as a basis for attacking the LJAB's decision on the

4 individual grievance because the NLRB had declined to issue an area-wide decision. Consequently, the NLRB declined to issue complaints on Systemaire's unfair labor practices charges.

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