TJOFLAT, Chief Judge:
This appeal is from an injunctive order enforcing an arbitration award entered under a collective bargaining agreement. The award, and therefore the injunction, directs the employer to comply with the provision of the collective bargaining agreement that requires the employer to notify the union before contracting out work to be performed in the employer’s shop. We vacate the injunction because the award it enforces is not “drawn from the essence” of the labor contract as required by law,
see United Steelworkers v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
363 U.S. 593, 597, 80 S.Ct. 1358, 1361, 4' L.Ed.2d 1424 (1960), and, alternatively, because an adequate remedy exists at law.
I.
The employer in this case, USX Corporation (USX or the Company), is a manufacturer of steel products. The union, United Steelworkers of America (the Union), is a labor organization that represents employees in the steel industry. On February 1, 1987, USX and the Union entered into a collective bargaining agreement (the labor agreement or the agreement) that governs USX’s employment of production and maintenance workers at the Company’s steel-manufacturing and by-product coke facilities.
The labor agreement requires USX to employ the Union’s members in the performance of the Company’s production and maintenance work at these facilities; this ban .does not apply, however, to maintenance work that, prior to March 1, 1983, USX had, as a “consistent practice,” contracted out.
When USX decides to let a contract for the performance of work at a covered facility, the Company must provide the Union with notice of the work unless an emergency situation exists, in which case the Company is exempt from providing pri- or notice.
The purpose of the notice is to give the Union an opportunity to determine whether the noticed contract is for production and maintenance work that the Un
ion’s members should perform. If the Union concludes that the proposed contract calls for such work, it may object and, if the matter is not resolved to its satisfaction, file a grievance and invoke the agreement’s expedited grievance procedure.
Under that procedure, if the parties cannot settle the dispute within five days, either side may demand arbitration.
To compensate Union members for wages lost when USX contracts out production and maintenance work (that presumably should be performed by Union members) without notifying the Union, the labor agreement authorizes the arbitrator
to fashion any remedy “appropriate to the circumstances of the particular case ... including the award of] earnings and benefits to the grievants who would have performed the work ....”
The sums USX might have to pay if it breaches its duty to notify could be substantial. First, USX must pay the contractor hired to do the work. Second, it may have to pay Union employees the wages they would have earned if permitted to do the work. Third, it may have to pay the expenses incurred by the Union in prosecuting its members’ grievances. Finally, the arbitrator has discretionary authority to impose additional sanctions “appropriate to the circumstances of the particular case”; we need not speculate, however, as to what such additional sanctions might be.
A.
The incident leading to the arbitration award the district court enforced in this
case began in early September 1988, at USX’s Fairfield Works, located in Birmingham, Alabama. A blast furnace — which recently had been the subject of a major rebuilding project — malfunctioned, causing “gummy slag,” a molten debris that is a byproduct of the smelting process, to run out of the furnace. Because this gummy slag threatened to “freeze up” the furnace, workers were needed immediately to repair and clean-up the furnace and its “runners,” i.e.. channels through which molten debris tiavels.
On September 11, USX, without notifying the Union, directed a contractor to perform the needed repair and clean-up work. By September 17, the furnace was fully operational; a number of the contractor’s workers remained on the- site after this date, however, performing clean-up work. The Union, on September 21, filed three grievances challenging the use of outside labor on the repair and clean-up work. The Union interpreted the Company’s use of outside workers as a violation of the agreement’s ban on contracting out production and maintenance work. When the parties failed to resolve the grievances, USX invoked arbitration.
On January 25, 1989, an arbitrator convened a hearing.
The Union, to demonstrate that the contracted-out work constituted production and maintenance work for which notice should have been given, produced evidence that, in the past, similar spills had been cleaned up by Union laborers. USX, characterizing most of the disputed repair work as part of the rebuilding of the blast furnace, as opposed to production and maintenance work, defended its use of outside labor as permissible under the agreement.
USX also cited the emergency nature of the gummy slag runout as exempting the Company from the notice requirement.
On February 7, 1989, the arbitrator sustained the Union’s grievances and issued an award. In his opinion accompanying the award,
the arbitrator found that although an emergency excused USX from notifying the Union when the runout began, the emergency soon abated and USX should have notified .the Union of the work it planned to contract out. The arbitrator had insufficient evidence, however, to determine whether any Union members should be compensated for lost wages; accordingly, he left the issue with the parties, granting them leave to return to arbitration if they could not reach a settlement.
(The parties subsequently agreed upon an appropriate remedy.) The arbitrator imposed no fine, nor did he give the Union the expenses it incurred in prosecuting its grievance. Apparently, USX’s conduct did not warrant such relief. He did, however, order USX “to hereafter provide notice of
contracting out as required by Section 2-C” of the labor agreement.
B.
The Union contends that USX has ignored the arbitrator’s admonition to comply with section 2-C of the labor agreement and has been contracting out work that should be performed in the plant by Union members. To stop this practice, the Union brought this suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama; invoking section 301 of the Labor-Management Relations Act of 1947, 29 U.S.C. § 185 (1988) (the LMRA),
the Union asked the district court to enforce the arbitrator’s award — that is, to enjoin USX, in the words of the arbitrator, “to hereafter provide notice of contracting-out as required by Section 2-C” of the labor agreement. The Union also sought money damages for the wages its members would have earned had they been permitted to perform certain contracted out work occurring after the arbitration award. USX answered the Union’s complaint, denying the Union’s allegations and contesting its right to any relief. Thereafter, both parties moved for summary judgment.
In support of its motion, the Union argued that it was entitled to an injunction as a matter of law because USX had demonstrated an unwillingness to abide by section 2-C of the labor agreement; the Union’s motion did not address its damages claim. USX, in turn, argued on several grounds that the court should deny the injunction and dismiss the case. First, the Union had met none of the traditional prerequisites for injunctive relief: for example, the Union failed to show that its legal remedy was inadequate, or that it needed an injunction to avoid irreparable harm. Second, the Union had not satisfied the other requirements for an injunction laid down by the Norris-LaGuardia Act, ch. 90, § 7, 47 Stat. 71, 29 U.S.C. § 107 (1988). Lastly, USX argued that the granting of an injunction or money damages would in effect eliminate arbitration as the mechanism chosen by the parties to resolve contracting-out disputes and thus would rewrite their labor agreement.
On March 15, 1990, the district court entered an order granting the Union’s motion for summary judgment and the injunc-tive relief it had requested, denied USX’s motion in which it had asked that the complaint be dismissed, and taxed costs against USX. The court found, from the affidavits and other exhibits submitted by the parties, that USX had been disregarding the arbitrator’s order to give the Union notice of contracting out in accordance with section 2-C of the labor agreement; the court observed that USX had not given notice, as required, “100% of the time.”
The court
thus rejected the Company’s argument that arbitration provided the Union and its members adequate relief and that an injunction was not needed to protect their rights under the agreement. As for USX’s argument that the Union had not satisfied the requirements of the Norris-LaGuardia Act, the court, citing
Textile Workers Union v. Lincoln Mills,
353 U.S. 448, 77 S.Ct. 912, 1 L.Ed.2d 972 (1957), held that these requirements were of no moment; the Act simply did not apply in the circumstances at hand.
After the March 15 order was entered, USX moved the court, pursuant to Féd. R.Civ.P. 59(e),
to alter, amend, or vacate the March 15 order, or, in the alternative, to modify certain language in the order. On April 3, 1990, the court granted USX the alternative relief it requested, and modified its injunctive order to read as follows:
Before it finally decides to contract out an item of work at the Fairfield Works, USX will provide notice of such intention to the Union_
Unless the item of work ... involves day-to-day maintenance and repair work and service,
such notice will be given not less than 25 days before the work is to be done, unless emergency situations do not permit it. Such notice shall be in writing and shall be sufficient to advise the Union ... of the location, type, scope, duration and timetable of the work to be performed so that the Union ... can adequately form an opinion as to the reasons for such contracting out. Such notice shall generally contain the information set forth below:
1. Location of work
2. Type of work:
a. Service
b. Maintenance
c. Major Rebuilds
d.New Construction
3. Detailed description of the work
4. Crafts or occupations involved
5. Estimated duration of work
6. Anticipated utilization of bargaining unit forces during the period
7. Effect on operations if work not completed in timely fashion.
(Emphasis added.)
C.
The appeal now before us is from the district court’s order of April 3, 1990, amending its injunctive order of March 15, 1990.
The parties, in their briefs, state that we have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1988), to review a “final decision” of the district court.
As noted, the Union moved for, and the court granted relief on, only the Union’s claim for injunc-tive relief, while USX’s summary judgment motion, which addressed both the injunction and damages claims, was denied. Furthermore, while the court taxed costs against USX, no entry of judgment appears in the record. The record reveals no other disposition of the Union’s damages claim, suggesting that a “final decision” may not have been reached in the court below.
It is possible that the Union abandoned the damages claim. If so, the court’s March 15 order, as amended, “clearly evidences its intent that the ... order represents] the final decision in the case” necessary for jurisdiction under section 1291.
Bankers Trust Co. v. Mallis,
435 U.S. 381, 387, 98 S.Ct. 1117, 1121, 55 L.Ed.2d 357 (1978). Alternatively, the parties may have left the matter of damages for a later day. If such is the case, the court granted a preliminary injunction reviewable under 28
U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) (1988),
and subject to less stringent procedural hurdles than those for a permanent injunction re viewable under section 1291.
See
11 Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure, § 2941, at 361 (1973).
Since jurisdiction exists under either section 1291 or 1292, and since our resolution of the merits in part II,
infra,
makes any differences in review irrelevant, it is not necessary to address whether a final decision was reached.
II.
As noted, after finding for the Union on its grievances, the arbitrator, in his award, ordered the Union “to hereafter provide notice of contracting out as required by Section 2-C” of the labor agreement.
In enforcing this aspect of the award, the district court, in effect, gave the Union the option of substituting the federal courtroom for the arbitrator’s hearing room as the forum for resolving contracting-out disputes. The labor agreement, however, does not give the Union this option; rather, the agreement forecloses federal forums by mandating the arbitration of
all
contracting-out disputes. We conclude, in sub-part A, that even if the arbitrator intended that his award rewrite the parties’ agreement in this fashion, the award is illegal and unenforceable, for it has not been “drawn from the essence” of the labor agreement.
See Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
363 U.S. at 597, 80 S.Ct. at 1361. Accordingly, the district court’s injunction cannot stand.
The court’s injunction must be set aside for another, independent reason as well. As we explain in subpart B, the prerequisites for injunctive relief are not present in this case; indeed, the principles of equity preclude such relief.
That the district court’s injunction will effectively abolish arbitration as the mechanism for resolving future contracting-out disputes becomes clear when one considers what will transpire the next time the Union claims that the Company has let a contract for production and maintenance work without notice, in violation of section 2-C. Posit a situation in which, as here, USX hires a contractor to do clean-up work after a blast furnace malfunctions. USX believes that an emergency exists and therefore does not immediately notify the Union that it has let the contract.
In time, the Union discovers the contractor’s employees on the job, or receives notice thereof, and, believing that USX has violated the district court’s injunction, moves the court to issue an order requiring the Company to show cause why it should not be
held in contempt and sanctioned.
The Union’s motion, the allegations of which the court accepts as true, demonstrates a violation of the injunction; hence, the court issues a show cause order and sets a hearing.
At the hearing, the Union’s evidence establishes that USX let a contract for production and maintenance work without notifying the Union as required by the labor agreement, and the court, rejecting USX’s argument that the situation constituted an emergency requiring no notice, holds the Company in contempt. At this point, what sanction could the court impose? What remedy could the court fashion to make the Union and its members whole?
If, on the one hand, the contracted-out work is not finished, the court could, at least in theory, require USX to give the balance of the work to the Union’s members.
At the same time, the court could order USX to compensate the Union members who could have done the work already performed for any wages they may have lost. On the other hand,, if the work has been finished, or circumstances otherwise preclude the substitution of Union members for the contractor’s employees at the job site, the court could require the Company to make whole any Union members who were deprived of the opportunity to do the clean-up work in violation of the agreement.
Could the court require the Company to compensate the Union for the attorneys’ fees it has incurred, in prosecuting the civil contempt proceeding, or, if the law foreclosed such relief, could the court fine USX and direct it to pay the fine to the Union?
An award of attorneys’ fees would, be highly problematical. The labor agreement makes no provision for the granting of such fees in judicial proceedings to enforce arbitration awards, and we know of no statutorily or judicially created authority that would authorize the court to. grant them.
To be sure, an arbitrator, if . he believes that an award of attorneys’ fees would be “appropriate to the circumstances of the case,”
may require the. Company to reimburse the Union for such expenses; the parties, however, in drafting their agreement, gave this authority to the arbitrator, not to the court.
As for a fine, the court could impose a fine and order it paid to the Union; the court could not do so, however, if the purpose of the fine is to punish USX for violating the injunction.
A fine levied to punish a contemnor is a criminal, not a civil, contempt sanction, and, in our hypothetical case, USX has not been charged with criminal contempt. Could the court fine USX as a means of coercing its future compliance with the injunction? Arguably, the court could, but it would be a close question
whether, in truth, the purpose of the fine is, instead, to punish USX for its past transgression.
It therefore appears that, in the circumstances we posit, the district court, depending on the status of the contracted-out work, might not be able to make the Union and its members as whole as could an arbitrator — because, as we have observed,
supra
at 1395-98, the discretion the parties have given the arbitrator to fashion an award is much broader than the discretion the law gives the district court to fashion a civil contempt sanction. The question thus arises: could the court, after concluding that USX violated section 2-C’s notice provision and holding it in contempt, “remand” the case to an arbitrator
and instruct the arbitrator, drawing on his authority under the labor agreement, to consider the remedies that might be “appropriate to the circumstances of the particular case” and to fashion whatever remedies he deemed appropriate? In theory, the court could do so;
but we know of no legal precedent for such a remand.
Assume, nonetheless, that the law would permit the court to remand the task of fashioning a remedy to an arbitrator. Would the arbitrator be bound by the court’s conclusion that USX had contracted out production and maintenance work without the requisite notice to the Union? That would depend on the court’s instructions to the arbitrator. If the court bound the arbitrator to its conclusion that USX had violated section 2-C’s notice provision, would the arbitrator still have discretion to deny the Union and its members relief on the ground that, in the arbitrator’s view, the “circumstances of the particular case” warranted no relief?
For example, suppose the arbitrator, after hearing the evidence adduced by the parties on the remedy issues — in particular, evidence the district court had not considered — concluded that the district court had erred; the contracted-out work was not production and maintenance work after all, or, if it was, an emergency excused USX from giving notice. In such a case, the arbitrator would reject the Union’s grievance and make no award. The Union, in turn, would have nothing to enforce in the district court. True, the Union could bring suit, but the district court would be powerless to substitute its judgment for that of the arbitrator and grant relief.
See United Paperworkers Int’l Union v. Misco, Inc.,
484 U.S. 29, 38, 108 S.Ct. 364, 371, 98 L.Ed.2d 286 (1987).
We do not know, of course, what path the district court will follow if, at some future date, the Union seeks a show cause order, the order issues, and, following a hearing, the court holds USX in contempt for violating the injunction. Presumably, the court (1) could decide all of the issues, leaving nothing for resolution by arbitration as provided in the labor agreement, or (2) could decide the question of whether USX violated the injunction and, if the Union prevailed, direct the parties to submit the matter of remedy to arbitration. If the
court chose the latter course, it would have to decide whether, on the one hand, to bind the arbitrator to its conclusion that USX failed to give notice as required by section 2-C or, on the other hand, to permit the arbitrator to exercise in full the authority conferred on him by the labor agreement, meaning that the arbitrator could reject the court’s conclusion that USX had violated section 2-C. If the court permitted the arbitrator to exercise in full the authority conferred on him by the labor agreement, the injunction served no purpose; for when called to enforce it, the court simply transferred the controversy to the arbitrator for decision. In this scenario, then, the court is a mere conduit — an expensive, unneeded conduit.
Neither of these courses of action has any support in the law; consequently, the court’s injunction cannot stand. Consider the first alternative. The court, following the show cause hearing, decides
all
of the issues; it holds USX in contempt, concluding that it should have notified the Union before letting the contract for the clean-up work, and fashions the remedy, leaving nothing for arbitration. In this scenario, the court arrogates entirely unto itself the role the parties gave the arbitrator when they drafted their labor agreement; thus, the court in effect rewrites the parties’ labor agreement. Admittedly, the court has not explicitly stricken the arbitration provision from the agreement; that provision remains extant as a dispute resolution mechanism. What the court has done, however, is give the Union the option of going to arbitration or going to court. The court’s stated reason for giving the Union these options is that it is dutifully enforcing an arbitration award.
Federal courts routinely enforce with in-junctive orders arbitration awards in labor cases.
See, e.g., Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
363 U.S. at 597, 80 S.Ct. at 1361. They do so, however, only if the award draws its essence from the labor agreement.
United Paperworkers Int’l Union,
484 U.S. at 38, 108 S.Ct. at 371. As the Supreme Court has cautioned, the
arbitrator is confined to interpretation and application of the collective bargaining agreement; he does not sit to dispense his own brand of industrial justice .... [H]is award is legitimate only so long as it draws its essence from the collective bargaining agreement. When the arbitrator’s works manifest an infidelity to this obligation, courts have no choice but to refuse enforcement of the award.
Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
363 U.S. at 597, 80 S.Ct. at 1361. Accordingly, we will not enforce an award that “directly contradicts the express language of the collective bargaining agreement.”
Bruno’s, Inc. v. United Food & Commercial Workers Int’l Union,
858 F.2d 1529, 1531 (11th Cir.1988). In the case at hand, the express language of the labor agreement gives both parties the right to demand, and to obtain, the arbitration of contracting-out disputes. The arbitrator’s award, however, as interpreted, and enforced, by the district court, gives the Union the right to ignore the Company’s demand for arbitration and to sue for injunctive relief; thus, the award “directly contradicts” that express language.
If this is how the arbitrator intended his award to be read, it is obvious that he did not draw the award from the essence of the contract.
The second, alternative course of action available to the court — in which it decides the notice issue and sends the remedy issues to the arbitrator — fails for the same reason: the court enforces an arbitrator’s award that has effectively rewritten, and contradicted, the labor, agreement.
The district court entered the injunction in this case without giving due
deference to the traditional prerequisites for such relief.
The principal prerequisite for injunctive relief is the absence of an adequate legal remedy. In most cases, the applicant establishes this prerequisite by showing that it “will suffer irreparable harm if the court does not intervene....” 11 Wright & Miller,
supra,
§ 2944, at 399;
see also supra
note 31;
Kowalski v. Chicago Tribune Co.,
854 F.2d 168, 171 (7th Cir.1988). Here, the Union made no such showing since an adequate remedy exists at law.
Arbitration takes much less time than litigation, and it is considerably less expensive.
Under section 2-C of the parties’ labor agreement, if a controversy does not settle within five days of the filing of a grievance, either party can demand arbitration; once arbitration is invoked, the other side has five days to respond — with “a written summary of the facts and arguments that it relies upon.” Within the same five-day period, an arbitration hearing, to commence within ten days, must be scheduled. Then, after the hearing is concluded, the arbitrator has five days to decide the case. Arbitration under section 2-C was designed to take no more than twenty days — from the demand for arbitration to the arbitration decision.
A federal district court could not be expected to dispose of a contracting-out dispute in anywhere near the time the parties have allotted for arbitration. Posit, for example, a situation in which the Union discovers that USX has let a contract for production and maintenance work. The contractor is already on the job site, and the Union, believing that USX has breached the labor agreement, wants to stop the work. The labor agreement contains no arbitration provision, however, so the Union has to take its breach of contract claim to court. The Union sues and asks the district court for preliminary and permanent injunctive relief (and for damages— the wages its members, who could have performed the work, have lost to date). The Union immediately seeks a temporary restraining order (TRO) to halt the work, but a TRO does not issue because, the court concludes, the Union’s members will not suffer irreparable injury; damages will make them whole. The Union, having
failed to obtain a TRO, now asks for a preliminary injunction. A considerable amount of time passes, because the Union has to obtain service of process on the contractor
as well as USX; meanwhile, the work continues unabated. After service of process is effected and due notice is given,
see
Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(a), a hearing on the Union’s application for a preliminary injunction is held. The injunction does not issue, however, because the Union fails to establish two of the four prerequisites for a preliminary injunction: (1) “a substantial threat that [the Union] will suffer irreparable injury if the injunction is not granted” and (2) “that the threatened injury to [the Union] outweighs the threatened harm the injunction may do to [USX].”
United States v. Lambert,
695 F.2d 536, 539 (11th Cir.1983) (quoting
Canal Auth. v. Callaway,
489 F.2d 567, 572 (5th Cir.1974)).
The Union also fails to obtain a permanent injunction; the contracted-out work is finished and, in any event, the Union has an adequate remedy at law in the form of money damages for the wages its members lost. The Union therefore seeks money damages. Whether the case is tried to the court or to a jury, further delay ensues before the matter is resolved.
In sum, it is clear that the parties’ expedited grievance procedure, with its provision for arbitration, provides a far better mechanism for resolving contracting-out disputes than the district court’s civil contempt proceeding.
Requiring the Union to resort to arbitration instead of civil contempt will certainly cause the Union no irreparable injury; on the contrary, the Union should receive considerable benefit — a greater benefit than it could ever receive from a civil contempt adjudication. As the parties contemplated when they entered into the labor agreement, the Union cannot repair to the courthouse unless, following arbitration and the receipt of an award calling for the payment of money or the performance of a
specific act
by USX, the Company fails to honor the arbitrator’s decision. If the Company fails to comply, the Union can sue and enforce the award — by obtaining a money judgment or an injunc-tive order.
III.
In conclusion, we set aside the district court’s injunctive order because (1) it enforces an arbitration award (if, indeed, it is an arbitration award) that is illegal, and (2) the Union has an adequate remedy at law. The case is REMANDED for proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
IT IS SO ORDERED.