United Food & Commercial Workers, Local 1995 v. The Kroger Company

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 7, 2022
Docket3:20-cv-00948
StatusUnknown

This text of United Food & Commercial Workers, Local 1995 v. The Kroger Company (United Food & Commercial Workers, Local 1995 v. The Kroger Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Food & Commercial Workers, Local 1995 v. The Kroger Company, (M.D. Tenn. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE NASHVILLE DIVISION

UNITED FOOD & COMMERCIAL ) WORKERS, LOCAL 1995, ) ) NO. 3:20-cv-00948 Plaintiff, ) ) JUDGE RICHARDSON v. ) ) THE KROGER COMPANY and KROGER ) LIMITED PARTNERSHIP I, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION Pending before the Court in this action is “Plaintiff’s Motion to Dismiss Defendant The Kroger Company Without Prejudice” (Doc. No. 42, “Motion.”). This is an action in which the plaintiff seeks a very specific and limited remedy. Specifically, Plaintiff (“the Union”) brought this suit seeking to compel both Defendants to resolve in arbitration an issue concerning the application of a particular Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”).1 (Doc. No. 1). Within approximately 70 days of filing this action, the Union filed a Rule 12(c) motion for judgment on the pleadings seeking a judgment affording it such relief. (Doc. No. 19). On September 30, 2021, the Court granted the Union’s motion with respect to one Defendant but not the other; in particular, it ordered Defendant Kroger Limited Partnership I (“KLPI”) to arbitrate the applicable issue, but held that it could not, at least at that juncture, likewise order Defendant The Kroger Company to arbitrate, because it was not clear based solely on the pleadings that The Kroger Company was even a party to the CBA (Doc. Nos. 32 and 33). Anticipating

1 This situation is to be contrasted with the situation where a plaintiff files an action seeking damages and, in response, the defendant asks the court to compel the plaintiff to submit the claim to arbitration. disagreement between the parties as to how this entire case should proceed in light of the Court’s finding that final judgment should be granted against one Defendant but not (at least at that time) the other Defendant, the Court wrote in its Order: Before entering judgment against KLPI, the Court seeks the parties’ input as to how this case should proceed in light of this split resolution. Thus, by October 15, 2021, the parties shall file a joint notice (or, if necessary in light of an inability to agree, separate respective notices) as to whether KLPI should be ordered to arbitration without The Kroger Company, or whether a determination in this lawsuit of whether The Kroger Company is a party to the CBA (and thus should be sent to arbitration along with KLPI) should be resolved before KLPI is sent to arbitration.

(Doc. No. 33 at 1-2). In response to this dictate, after obtaining a short extension of the October 15 deadline, the parties (helpfully) filed a timely Joint Notice (Doc. No. 37). As to Plaintiff’s position on the question(s) raised by the Court, the Joint Notice advised, in pertinent part: Plaintiff United Food & Commercial Workers, Local 1995 intends to move this Court for an order severing its claims against Defendant The Kroger Company and dismissing such claims without prejudice, in accordance with Rule 21 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (or any other applicable Rules). Once such an order is issued, then Plaintiff will move for entry of judgment against Defendant Kroger Limited Partnership I (“KLP I”). If this Court is not inclined to issue an order dismissing Defendant The Kroger Company without prejudice, and will only entertain an order dismissing such claims with prejudice, then Plaintiff intends to take appropriate discovery to support a motion for summary judgment of its claims against Defendant The Kroger Company.

(Id. at 1). And the Joint Notice stated Defendants’ position on such question(s), in pertinent part, as follows: The Court should resolve The Kroger Co.’s obligation to arbitrate before ordering KLP I to arbitrate, unless Plaintiff dismisses The Kroger Co. with prejudice. This would require a case management order setting deadlines for discovery, depositions, motions, and trial on the issue of whether The Kroger Co. is signatory to the bargaining agreement and obligated, along with KLP I, to arbitrate the grievance.

(Id. at 2). As foretold in the Joint Notice, on November 18, 2021, Plaintiff moved (via the Motion) for dismissal of The Kroger Company without prejudice, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 21. Plaintiff was sufficiently clear that its request for dismissal was entirely dependent on the dismissal being without prejudice, and the Court therefore has construed the Motion (as it

believes it is properly authorized to do) as one seeking either dismissal without prejudice, or no dismissal at all—which is to say that (given the Court’s view of the Motion as all-or-nothing in that sense) to grant the Motion means to dismiss The Kroger Company without prejudice, and to deny the Motion means not to dismiss The Kroger Company at all. Defendants, not surprisingly or inappropriately, have declined to suggest the alternative of dismissal with prejudice. Like Plaintiff, and now the Court, Defendants view the decision for the Court as whether to order that The Kroger Company be dismissed without prejudice or not be dismissed at all.2 The Court pauses to address the significance of this decision. The significance turns on the precise nature of the distinction between a dismissal “with prejudice” and a dismissal “without

prejudice,” a distinction that judges and lawyers tend (in the undersigned’s view) to assume they fully grasp but rarely actually fully articulate. The Court will take care to articulate that distinction here, so that it is clear that the Court understands precisely the stakes here. . . . Rule 41. . . in discussing the effect of voluntary dismissal by the plaintiff, makes clear that an “adjudication upon the merits” is the opposite of a “dismissal without prejudice”:

“Unless otherwise stated in the notice of dismissal or stipulation, the dismissal is without prejudice, except that a notice of dismissal operates as an adjudication upon the merits when filed by a plaintiff who has once dismissed in any court of the United States or of any state an action based on or including the same claim.”

2 To the extent that Rule 21 would allow the Court “on its own” to dismiss The Kroger Company with prejudice based on the view that it would be “just” to do so, Fed. R. Civ. P. 21, the Court declines to consider exercising such discretion to do so. See also 18 Wright & Miller § 4435, at 329, n. 4 (“Both parts of Rule 41 ... use the phrase ‘without prejudice’ as a contrast to adjudication on the merits”); 9 id., § 2373, at 396, n. 4 (“ ‘[W]ith prejudice’ is an acceptable form of shorthand for ‘an adjudication upon the merits' ”). See also Goddard [v. Security Title Ins. & Guarantee Co., 14 Cal.2d, 47, 54, 92 P.2d, 804, 808 (1939) (stating that a dismissal “with prejudice” evinces “[t]he intention of the court to make [the dismissal] on the merits”). The primary meaning of “dismissal without prejudice,” we think, is dismissal without barring the plaintiff from returning later, to the same court, with the same underlying claim. That will also ordinarily (though not always) have the consequence of not barring the claim from other courts, but its primary meaning relates to the dismissing court itself. Thus, Black's Law Dictionary (7th ed.1999) defines “dismissed without prejudice” as “removed from the court's docket in such a way that the plaintiff may refile the same suit on the same claim,” id., at 482, 92 P.2d 804

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United Food & Commercial Workers, Local 1995 v. The Kroger Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-food-commercial-workers-local-1995-v-the-kroger-company-tnmd-2022.