Trustees for Michigan Carpenters' Council Health and Welfare Fund, Michigan Carpenters' Council Pension Fund, Michigan Carpenters' Council Apprenticeship & Training Fund, and Michigan Chapter Associated General Contractors of America, Cross-Appellees v. Sobie Company, Inc., a Michigan Corporation, Cross-Appellant

885 F.2d 871, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 14394
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 1989
Docket88-1439
StatusUnpublished

This text of 885 F.2d 871 (Trustees for Michigan Carpenters' Council Health and Welfare Fund, Michigan Carpenters' Council Pension Fund, Michigan Carpenters' Council Apprenticeship & Training Fund, and Michigan Chapter Associated General Contractors of America, Cross-Appellees v. Sobie Company, Inc., a Michigan Corporation, Cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees for Michigan Carpenters' Council Health and Welfare Fund, Michigan Carpenters' Council Pension Fund, Michigan Carpenters' Council Apprenticeship & Training Fund, and Michigan Chapter Associated General Contractors of America, Cross-Appellees v. Sobie Company, Inc., a Michigan Corporation, Cross-Appellant, 885 F.2d 871, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 14394 (6th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

885 F.2d 871

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
TRUSTEES FOR MICHIGAN CARPENTERS' COUNCIL HEALTH AND WELFARE
FUND, Michigan Carpenters' Council Pension Fund, Michigan
Carpenters' Council Apprenticeship & Training Fund, and
Michigan Chapter Associated General Contractors of America,
Plaintiffs-Appellants Cross-Appellees,
v.
SOBIE COMPANY, INC., a Michigan corporation,
Defendant-Appellee Cross-Appellant.

Nos. 88-1439, 88-1738 and 88-1799.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

Sept. 25, 1989.

Before RALPH B. GUY, Jr., BOGGS and ALAN E. NORRIS, Circuit Judges.

RALPH B. GUY, Jr., Circuit Judge.

In this action to recover delinquent fringe-benefit contributions, brought pursuant to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. Sec. 1001, et seq., plaintiffs, the trustees of three multiemployer fringe-benefit funds (the Funds)1 and the Michigan Chapter of the Associated General Contractors of America, appeal the district court's judgment for the defendant employer, Sobie Company, Inc. (Sobie), and the award of attorney's fees in favor of Sobie. Sobie cross-appeals the district court's pretrial decision that the applicable statute of limitations in this case is Michigan's six-year statute for general contract actions as opposed to its one-year statute governing claims for wages and fringe benefits. We are persuaded that the district court's ruling as to liability and attorney's fees was correct. Accordingly, we affirm that ruling without reaching the statute of limitations issue.

Sobie is a specialty building contractor based in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Sobie had a bargaining relationship with the Union2 for some thirty to thirty-five years, during which they executed various collective bargaining agreements (CBAs).3 The Funds are multiemployer benefit funds that receive contributions pursuant to CBAs negotiated between Sobie and the Union. By their terms, the CBAs in this case covered "journeymen carpenters and apprentices." (App. 34). An apprentice, as understood by the parties, is a carpenter who is enrolled in an organized apprenticeship program, as referenced in the CBA. (App. 42). A journeyman is a carpenter who has completed the apprenticeship program or its equivalent and who has been designated by the Union as a fully-skilled carpenter. The provisions of the various CBAs are identical with respect to Sobie's obligation to make fringe-benefit contributions, but vary from year to year on the amount of contribution rates.4 The CBA's Union security clause requires employees covered by the agreement to become members of the Union. The bargaining relationship between the Union and Sobie ended in 1986, when a majority of Sobie employees voted to decertify the Union as their collective bargaining representative. This suit commenced shortly thereafter.

The CBA grants Sobie "full and exclusive power and discretion in hiring new employees for their respective jobs." (App. 35). Historically, Sobie employed workers classified as journeymen carpenters to carry out construction work. Sobie also employed workers who performed carpentry work from time to time, but whose skill levels precluded them from being classified as carpenters by the company. Sobie's journeymen carpenters were members of the Union, as required. Pursuant to the CBA, Sobie paid fringe-benefit contributions to the Funds for its journeymen carpenters and apprentices. Sobie did not, however, make any contributions on behalf of those employees not classified as journeymen or apprentice carpenters. Likewise, those employees were not required to join the Union. Both Union and management testimony indicated that an employee did not become covered by the CBA merely because he periodically performed carpentry work. Moreover, the Union never objected to Sobie's employment practices.

The Funds, in 1981, conducted a payroll audit of Sobie and queried "non-carpenter/non-Union" employees about the nature of their work. Some workers indicated that they were performing carpentry work. Thus, by at least 1981, the Funds became aware that Sobie was not making fringe-benefit contributions for some employees who performed carpentry work. Nevertheless, the Funds did not issue any notice of delinquent contributions or take other action against Sobie.

In 1984, the Funds again audited Sobie and, again, contacted and queried non-carpenter/non-Union employees about the nature of their work. When Sobie's president, Jake Austhof, learned of these contacts and realized that the Funds might be trying to collect delinquent contributions for those employees, he refused to sign a new CBA5 with the Union until the fringe-benefit contribution issue was resolved. Subsequently, the Union secretary-treasurer, Art Selles, approached Austhof seeking his signature on a new CBA. Selles promised to take care of the fringe-benefit issue regarding non-Union employees. According to Austhof, Selles, in Austhof's presence, picked up the phone and spoke to someone at the Funds about the matter and proclaimed, "It's settled, business as usual." Austhof, believing that the issue had been resolved, signed the new CBA. Again, the Funds did not issue a notice of delinquency or otherwise make a claim against Sobie.

In June 1985, State Carpenters representative Harold McCastle was assigned to Sobie by Marv Grisham, the secretary-treasurer of State Carpenters, who also served as the head trustee of the Funds. McCastle began probing into the Funds' perceived difficulties with Sobie. Representatives of the Funds and State Carpenters coordinated efforts to resolve two concerns: (1) completing a 1984 audit and resolving the fringe-benefit problem, and (2) Sobie's employment of both Union and non-Union workers performing carpentry work. McCastle asked Grisham to defer any action by the Funds in order to see if Union representatives could resolve the matter.

Previously, in April 1985, State Carpenters representative Freeman Billock persuaded Sobie to classify six more employees as journeymen carpenters or apprentices. Those employees then joined the Union. Effective May 1, 1985, Sobie began paying fringe-benefit contributions on those six employees. Neither the Union nor the Funds claimed that Sobie was obligated to pay retroactive benefits for those employees for the period prior to their reclassification.

On May 31, 1985, James Hutchison, the president of the District Council, pursuant to the CBA, notified Sobie by mailgram (App. 252) that it was in violation of the Union security and fringe-benefit provisions of the CBA. On the same day, the Funds demanded an audit of payroll records. Subsequently, State Carpenters representative Harold McCastle, District Council President James Hutchison, and Carpenters Local business agent Orville Hubert met with Sobie officials to discuss the issues noticed in the mailgram. Key Fund representatives were aware that these issues were going to be negotiated.

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885 F.2d 871, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 14394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-for-michigan-carpenters-council-health-and-welfare-fund-michigan-ca6-1989.