United Food & Commercial Workers Union, Local No. 663 v. Seneca Foods Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedApril 14, 2026
Docket0:25-cv-02891
StatusUnknown

This text of United Food & Commercial Workers Union, Local No. 663 v. Seneca Foods Corporation (United Food & Commercial Workers Union, Local No. 663 v. Seneca Foods Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota 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 Union, Local No. 663 v. Seneca Foods Corporation, (mnd 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

United Food & Commercial Workers No. 25-cv-2891 (KMM/EMB) Union, Local No. 663,

Plaintiff,

v. ORDER

Seneca Foods Corporation,

Defendant.

This case arises from an arbitration of a labor dispute and the parties’ disagreements about the effect of the arbitrator’s decision. The Plaintiff, United Food & Commercial Workers Union, Local No. 663 (“the Union”), asks the Court to confirm the arbitration award. The Defendant, Seneca Foods Corporation (“Seneca”), seeks a declaration that there is no valid arbitration award to confirm. If the arbitration award is valid, Seneca alternatively asks the Court to declare that it has no application after December 31, 2025. The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment. As discussed below, the Court grants the Union’s motion to the extent it seeks confirmation of the award and, as a result, dismisses Seneca’s first counterclaim. The Court also grants Seneca’s motion to the extent it seeks a declaration that the arbitration award does not apply after December 2025. Finally, the Court denies both parties’ requests for an award of attorney fees. BACKGROUND Seneca processes fruits and vegetables for sale in the United States. It has a frozen- food packaging and distribution facility in Rochester, Minnesota. The Union is a labor organization, 29 U.S.C. § 152(5), that represents the interests of approximately 166 employees who work at Seneca’s Rochester facility. The Union and Seneca are parties to a

Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”) that governs their relationship from February 1, 2024 through February 1, 2028. The CBA contains provisions addressing Union members’ paid time off (“PTO”). However, the CBA itself does not spell out the terms that apply to employees’ accrual and use of PTO. The contract instead incorporates by reference a corporate PTO policy applicable to all of Seneca’s Minnesota employees. (CBA, Art. 8, § 1 (“All employees are

eligible to participate in the paid time off policy applicable to Minnesota employees in accordance with the terms of the policy.”) [Dkt. 1-1].) Before the current CBA was ratified, Seneca had a PTO policy that handled employee vacation and sick time separately, but in 2023, the Minnesota Legislature enacted the Earned Sick and Safe Time Act (“ESSTA”). See Minn. Stat. §§ 181.9445–.9448. Among other things, the ESSTA provides a system by

which Minnesota employees accrue earned sick and safe time and allows employees to use that accrued time for a variety of reasons, such as employees’ illnesses or their family members’ health care. Minn. Stat. §§ 181.9446 (accrual), 181.9447, subd. 1 (use). Seneca determined that its previous approach to PTO was non-compliant with the ESSTA,1 so on January 1, 2024, it adopted the Minnesota State Paid Time Off Policy for Regular

Employees (“2024 PTO Policy”). (2024 PTO Policy [Dkt. 25-1].)

1 See Dkt. 29 at 3 n.1 (explaining Seneca’s response to the ESSTA). Citations are to ECF pagination. Under the 2024 PTO Policy, when a Seneca employee accrued PTO and sought to take a day off of work, she could redeem PTO so that she still got paid when she missed

her shift. Seneca, however, occasionally schedules employees to work mandatory overtime, meaning that its employees can sometimes be scheduled to work ten-hour or twelve-hour shifts instead of a typical eight-hour day. This caused disagreement between the Union and Seneca about whether the 2024 PTO Policy required an employee who missed a day of work for an ESSTA-qualifying reason to use more than eight hours of PTO if she was scheduled to work a ten-hour or twelve-hour shift that day.

At least with respect to this point of disagreement, the 2024 PTO Policy is not a model of clarity. The Policy says only the following: Each full day of paid MN PTO for regular non-exempt and exempt employees will be calculated at normal scheduled hours multiplied by the employee’s straight time hourly rate of pay.

(2024 PTO Policy at 4 (emphasis added).) According to the Union, if an employee took a day off for an ESSTA qualifying reason, she would only have to use eight hours of PTO to account for the absence, even if she was scheduled to work mandatory overtime that day. The Union said that this understanding was consistent with how the parties’ previous course of dealing defined a day for purposes of using up sick time. Under the Union’s interpretation, if an employee was scheduled to work a twelve-hour shift, the employee would only be required to use up eight hours of accrued PTO, and she would keep four additional hours of PTO in the bank to use later. However, in April of 2024, Seneca began implementing the 2024 PTO Policy based on its contrary interpretation of what the Policy required. Under its interpretation, if the

employee was scheduled to work a twelve-hour shift, she would have to use twelve full hours of accrued PTO. This interpretation would no longer leave the additional four hours of accrued PTO for the employee to use later. After Seneca adopted the 2024 PTO Policy, the Union filed a grievance asserting that Seneca “unilaterally changed the ‘day’ from 8 hours to all scheduled hours for purposes of ESST.” (Grievance [Dkt. 1-2].) Seneca denied the Union’s grievance, and the parties

submitted their dispute for arbitration consistent with the CBA’s dispute-resolution procedures. (CBA, Art. 9, §§ 1–4.) The Arbitrator2 held a hearing in Rochester on November 20, 2024. Following the hearing, the parties submitted post-hearing briefing and framed the issues for the Arbitrator’s decision. The Arbitrator described the parties’ positions as follows:

[Seneca’s] view is that if an employee is scheduled to work more than eight hours and has an unplanned absence, the employee must use any applicable PTO hours to cover the length of the absence. The Union’s view is that if the employee is scheduled to work more than eight hours, the employee is obligated to use no more than eight hours of PTO even if the length of the absence exceeds eight hours.

(Arbitration Award at 2 [Dkt. 4].) On March 1, 2025, the Arbitrator issued his decision (hereafter “Arbitration Award” or “Award”). (See id.) The Arbitrator concluded that there would have been no agreement

2 The parties selected Peter G. Davis to arbitrate their dispute, and the Court refers to Mr. Davis as “the Arbitrator” throughout this Order. (Arbitration Award at 1 [Dkt. 4].) reached on this issue if the parties knew of their good faith misunderstanding. Because of that, the Arbitrator stated that he could not “in good consci[ence] issue an award that creates

a winner and a loser” and indicated that his decision was “strongly influenced by [his] 50 years of mediating labor disputes[.]” (Id. at 3.) Ultimately, the Arbitrator reached the following conclusion: [I]t is my award that unless the parties otherwise agree, the new PTO benefit will alternately be applied to each disputed absence occurring on or after April 29, 2024 (the date the grievance was filed) in a manner first consistent with the Employer’s view and then next with the Union’s view.

(Id.) After the arbitration hearing, but before the Arbitrator issued the Award, Seneca adopted a new PTO policy for its Minnesota employees, effective January 1, 2025 (“2025 PTO Policy”). (2025 PTO Policy [Dkt. 25-2].) In relevant part, Seneca changed the language of its PTO policy to more clearly reflect its own view of how PTO must be used when an employee’s ESSTA qualified absence occurred on a day when she was scheduled to work more than 8 hours. The new policy states: “When using PTO-Sick-Personal time, an employee is required to use enough time to cover their actual shift/workday.” (Id.

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United Food & Commercial Workers Union, Local No. 663 v. Seneca Foods Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-food-commercial-workers-union-local-no-663-v-seneca-foods-mnd-2026.