Small Coal Operators Ass'n v. District 28, United Mine Workers

577 F. Supp. 420, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11276
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedNovember 30, 1983
DocketCiv. A. No. 83-0336-A
StatusPublished

This text of 577 F. Supp. 420 (Small Coal Operators Ass'n v. District 28, United Mine Workers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Small Coal Operators Ass'n v. District 28, United Mine Workers, 577 F. Supp. 420, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11276 (W.D. Va. 1983).

Opinion

[421]*421MEMORANDUM OPINION

GLEN M. WILLIAMS, District Judge.

Small Coal Operators Association, Inc. (hereinafter SCOA) is a Virginia corporation representing ninety-three coal operators in Southwest Virginia who employ persons represented by the United Mine Workers of America (hereinafter, UMWA). District 28, UMWA (hereinafter, District 28) not only is an unincorporated association and a labor organization, but also is an intermediate division of the International Union created by and through Article 9 of the UMWA constitution. District 28 and the other districts of the UMWA are given certain specific powers and duties under the labor agreement entered into with the Bituminous Coal Operators of America (hereinafter, BCOA) and, in addition, have certain powers and duties under their own constitution and the constitution of the International Union. This suit is brought pursuant to the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 Section 301(a), 29 U.S.C. § 185(a).

On July 21, 1983, District 28 entered into a written agreement with SCOA, marked as “Plaintiffs Exhibit # 1,” which directed the appointment of a District panel composed of seven arbitrators to hear all disputes between the members of District 28 and SCOA. Article XXIII, Section (b) Paragraph (2) of the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement of 1981 authorizes the establishment of the arbitration panel. The agreement also provides that at any time the parties, by mutual consent, may remove the panel of arbitrators by selecting a new panel either in part or in full.

Subsequent to their contract, District 28 and SCOA mailed a copy of their agreement to UMWA and BCOA, stating that the agreement was sent to them “for your information.” It is important to note at this time that the letter signed by the District 28 President, John Kennedy, and the SCOA Vice-President, Jack Head, did not ask that the UMWA and BCOA concur with their agreement: It only stated that the panel of arbitrators had been selected and that it was a “eo-Distriet arbitration panel, as permitted under Paragraph (2), § (b) of Article XXIII of the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement of 1981.” In this suit, District 28 contends, inter alia, that the agreement required the approval of the International Union and that a copy was sent for that approval rather than “for information.” The ink was hardly dry on the agreement when a dispute arose.

Indeed, on July 22, 1983, one day after the signing of the agreement, Cecil Stokes, an arbitrator who was not selected as one of the seven-member panel pursuant to that agreement, came to hear a dispute between Johnny Sheckler, a member of District 28, and Big Ten Corporation, a member of SCOA. The record shows without question that Arbitrator Stokes had been appointed to hear this dispute before the parties entered into their agreement on July 21, 1983; otherwise, he could not have been on the ground on July 22, 1983. SCOA objected to Stokes’ conducting the arbitration; District 28, on the other hand, insisted that Stokes proceed with the hearing.

Furthermore, District 28 immediately began inquiries to determine whether the parties were bound by the agreement of July 21, 1983. The Defendant’s Exhibit #2 shows that the District 28 President, John Kennedy, wrote a letter to the International Union on July 22, 1983 in which he asked whether the agreement was binding. The manager of the UMWA Contract Department, Bob Benedict, sent a letter dated August 4, 1983, received by District 28 on August 8, 1983. He relied upon Article XXIII, Section (b)(1), of the Agreement which provides that the International Union and the President of BCOA jointly shall establish the panel of impartial arbitrators if the employer and employee have not selected a panel within ninety days after the agreement goes into effect. Thus, the opinion of the International Union was that the parties had not complied with the ninety-day clause of Section (b)(2) and that District 28 and SCOA had no authority to have [422]*422entered into the agreement on July 21, 1983.

Meanwhile on August 2, SCOA filed this suit in which it requested a temporary restraining order to enjoin the arbitrational proceedings of Arbitrator Stokes and for other general relief. The court interprets the prayer of this suit as seeking enforcement of the contract of July 21, 1983. This court denied the temporary restraining order; Arbitrator Stokes held the hearing as scheduled on August 5, 1983; and on August 12, 1983, Arbitrator Stokes rendered an opinion favorable to District 28. This arbitrational opinion is the subject of a suit by District 28 against the Big Ten Corporation (U.S.D.C., W.D.Va., Civil Action No. 83-0414-A), which this court decides in a separate opinion.

District 28 contends: (1) that the court does not have jurisdiction of this suit because Section 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act grants jurisdiction over disputes between employers and employees and SCOA is not an employer and is not signatory to the contract; (2) that the agreement is void because the International Union has not ratified the agreement of July 21, 1983, (3) that SCOA and its represented companies are bound by custom and usage, or by what generally is known as the “common law of the shop,” in that the selection of arbitrators for the small coal companies customarily has been taken from the panel chosen by District 28 and Clinchfield, Westmoreland and other large coal companies in the area (the so-called “Clinchfield Panel”). Since Arbitrator Stokes was a member of this Clinchfield Panel, he had the authority to conduct the Sheckler arbitration; (4) that the agreement of July 21, 1983 was not binding because under Article XXVI(d), the International Union must approve of district agreements and contracts before they become effective and it has not done so in the instant case; and (5) that the issue concerning the propriety of this panel is in itself an arbitrational matter and, hence, arbitrators themselves should determine whether they are entitled to sit on a particular case. Therefore, Arbitrator Stokes had the authority as an arbitrator to decide whether he was the proper arbitrator of the Sheckler case.

Article XXIII addresses the issues of the court’s jurisdiction over this suit and SCOA’s standing to bring this suit. Specifically, it provides that representatives may act for an employer. Employers, therefore, may form groups to act for them just as the Districts of the Union act for their members. The contractual provision dealing with arbitrators, Section (b)(2) of the Article XXIII states in part as follows: “In such event, representatives of the Employer and the UMWA District in which the Employer operates shall ... select an impartial arbitrator or panel of impartial arbitrators .... ” The court is of the opinion that since the contract itself envisions representatives of the employers acting for them, SCOA was a proper party to enter into an agreement with District 28 and is a proper party to bring this suit.

District 28 contends in its second argument that ninety days had elapsed since the parties entered into their contract on June 6, 1981, and that District 28 and SCOA had not selected an arbitrational panel. As a result, therefore, no provision existed by which the parties could enter into an agreement. Article XXIII(b)(l), they contend, is the only authority by which the parties might establish a panel. More specifically, the President of the International- Union and the President of BCOA would have to select the panel.

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Bluebook (online)
577 F. Supp. 420, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/small-coal-operators-assn-v-district-28-united-mine-workers-vawd-1983.