Tenet Healthsystem Philadelphia, Inc. v. National Union of Hospital & Health Care Employees

383 F.3d 169, 2004 WL 2086056
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 20, 2004
Docket03-2085, 03-2193
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 383 F.3d 169 (Tenet Healthsystem Philadelphia, Inc. v. National Union of Hospital & Health Care Employees) 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
Tenet Healthsystem Philadelphia, Inc. v. National Union of Hospital & Health Care Employees, 383 F.3d 169, 2004 WL 2086056 (3d Cir. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

GIBSON, Circuit Judge.

District 1199C of the National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees and Tenet HealthSystem Philadelphia, Inc., each appeal from the district court’s 1 order vacating an arbitration order in part and dismissing Tenet’s suit to vacate the other part of the arbitration order. We will affirm in part and remand in part for entry of judgment in favor of District 1199C.

This case arises at the intersection of the bankruptcy and labor laws. The suit was filed as an adversary proceeding in the Chapter 11 bankruptcy of Allegheny Health, Education and Research Founda *172 tion and related entities, 2 which owned a number of hospitals in Philadelphia. Employees at four of the hospitals were represented by District 1199C and were covered by collective bargaining agreements. Tenet purchased substantially all the assets of these hospitals in a transaction approved by the bankruptcy court 3 under 11 U.S.C. §§ 105, 363 and 365 (2000). Tenet and District 1199C now contest whether Tenet is bound to pay sick leave benefits under the collective bargaining agreements between District 1199C and Allegheny.

After Allegheny filed bankruptcy, Tenet and Allegheny entered an agreement for Tenet to purchase Allegheny’s assets and, later, an amendment to the agreement, with a closing date of November 10, 1998. 4 Under the asset purchase agreement, Tenet assumed some liabilities of Allegheny and disclaimed other liabilities, which remained the obligation of the bankruptcy estate. In particular, the agreement contained a list of “Assumed Contracts” in Schedule 2.01(e), which Allegheny, as debt- or-in-possession, would assume and assign to Tenet. The collective bargaining agreements between Allegheny and District 1199C were listed on Schedule 2.01(e). 5 The asset purchase agreement defined “Assumed Liabilities” as including (inter alia) “all obligations of Sellers arising on or after the Closing Date with respect to any period commencing on the Closing Date under the Assumed Contracts.” Conversely, the asset purchase agreement contained a list of “Excluded Liabilities” for which Tenet would not become liable; one item excluded was “liabilities or obligations arising from any Assumed Contract before the Closing Date or resulting from any breach or default prior to the Closing Date of any Assumed Contracts or other Assumed Liabilities.... ” The asset purchase agreement also contained a section labeled, “5.03, Employee Matters,” in which Tenet agreed to bargain with unions currently representing Allegheny’s employees but with the following proviso: “Employees employed under written Con *173 tracts will not be offered employment pursuant to this Section, but employment of such employees shall be governed by the terms of the Assumed Contracts, if any, relating to such employees.”

Allegheny moved in the bankruptcy court for an order approving the asset purchase agreement under 11 U.S.C. §§ 105, 363, and 365. District 1199C received notice of the motion and the hearing on the motion. In two sale orders dated October 1 and 30, 1998, the bankruptcy court approved the asset purchase and assignment of the assumed contracts to Tenet and ordered the non-debtor parties to the assumed contracts to assert any claims for existing defaults against Allegheny in the bankruptcy or else to be barred from asserting the claims. The sale closed on November 11,1998.

After the sale closed, Tenet and District 1199C took opposing positions about what the terms of employment would be for District 1199C members. Tenet offered to credit the members with 40 hours of accrued sick leave, which it later conditioned upon District 1199C agreeing to eliminate leave pay prospectively for the first day of any absence. District 1199C rejected the prospective elimination of pay for the first day of an absence, and Tenet responded by refusing to credit members with any accrued sick leave.

District 1199C filed a grievance accusing Tenet of refusing to abide by the terms of the collective bargaining agreements. The grievance proceeded to arbitration on the following questions: “Did the Employer violate the collective bargaining agreements by refusing to pay employees sick leave starting with the first day of absence and by refusing to pay employees accumulated sick leave? If so, what shall be the remedy?” Tenet maintained the position that the grievance was not arbitrable, but it participated in the hearing, preserving its objection for judicial review. The arbitrator observed that the issue of arbitrability was reserved for judicial determination and that his powers were limited to interpreting the collective bargaining agreements signed by Allegheny and District 1199C. He concluded that those agreements provided for accrued sick leave and payment for the first day of leave, as requested by District 1199C. Accordingly, he ordered Tenet to pay sick leave that had accumulated before November 11, 1998, and to pay employees sick leave for the first day of each absence.

Tenet notified Allegheny’s trustee that it considered Allegheny liable to indemnify Tenet under the asset purchase agreement for the cost of the arbitration award. The asset purchase agreement provided that Allegheny would indemnify Tenet against any loss due to excluded liabilities, and Tenet contended that the liability for accrued sick leave was an excluded liability.

Tenet then brought this suit in the bankruptcy court. Count I sought vacatur of the arbitration award on the grounds that the dispute was not arbitrable and that it fell within the exclusive jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court. For convenience’s sake, we will refer to the part of Count I concerning the accrued sick leave obligation as Count IA and the part concerning the prospective sick leave obligation as Count IB. 6 Count II sought indemnity from the *174 Allegheny bankruptcy estate for $4,500,000, which Tenet estimated as the cost to it of complying with the arbitrator’s award. District 1199C counterclaimed, seeking enforcement of the arbitration award, both as to accrued and prospective sick leave obligations.

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383 F.3d 169, 2004 WL 2086056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenet-healthsystem-philadelphia-inc-v-national-union-of-hospital-ca3-2004.