United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co.

363 U.S. 574, 80 S. Ct. 1347, 4 L. Ed. 2d 1409, 1960 U.S. LEXIS 1921, 46 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2416
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 20, 1960
Docket443
StatusPublished
Cited by5,773 cases

This text of 363 U.S. 574 (United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co., 363 U.S. 574, 80 S. Ct. 1347, 4 L. Ed. 2d 1409, 1960 U.S. LEXIS 1921, 46 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2416 (1960).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

Mr. Justice Douglas,

announced by Mr. Justice Brennan.

Respondent transports steel and steel products by barge and maintains a terminal at Chickasaw, Alabama, where it performs maintenance and repair work on its barges. The employees at that terminal constitute a bargaining unit covered by a collective bargaining agreement negotiated by petitioner union. Respondent between 1956 and 1958 laid off some employees, reducing the bargaining unit from 42 to 23 men. This reduction was due in part to respondent contracting maintenance work, previously done by its employees, to other companies. The latter used respondent’s supervisors to lay out the work and hired some of the laid-off employees of respondent (at reduced wages). Some were in fact assigned to work on respondent’s barges. A number of employees signed a grievance which petitioner presented to respondent, the grievance reading:

“We are hereby protesting the Company’s actions, of arbitrarily and unreasonably contracting out work to other concerns, that could and previously has been performed by Company employees.
“This practice becomes unreasonable, unjust and discriminatory in lieu [sic] of the fact that at present [576]*576there are a number of employees that have been laid off for about 1 and % years or more for allegedly lack of work.
“Confronted with these facts we charge that the Company is in violation of the contract by inducing a partial lock-out, of a number of the employees who would otherwise be working were it not for this unfair practice.”

The collective agreement had both a “no strike” and a “no lockout” provision. It also had a grievance procedure which provided in relevant part as follows:

“Issues which conflict with any Federal statute in its application as established by Court procedure or matters which are strictly a function of management shall not be subject to arbitration under this section.
“Should differences arise between the Company and the Union or its members employed by the Company as to the meaning and application of the provisions of this Agreement, or should any local trouble of any kind arise, there shall be no suspension of work on account of such differences but an earnest effort shall be made to settle such differences immediately in the following manner:
“A. For Maintenance Employees:
“First, between the aggrieved employees, and the Foreman involved;
“Second, between a member or members of the Grievance Committee designated by the Union, and the Foreman and Master Mechanic.
“Fifth, if agreement has not been reached the matter shall be referred to an impartial umpire for decision. The parties shall meet to decide on an umpire acceptable to both. If no agreement on selection of an umpire is reached, the parties shall jointly peti[577]*577tion the United States Conciliation Service for suggestion of a list of umpires from which selection will be made. The decision of the umpire shall be final.”

Settlement of this grievance was not had and respondent refused arbitration. This suit was then commenced by the union to compel it.1

The District Court granted respondent’s motion to dismiss the complaint. 168 F. Supp. 702. It held after hearing evidence, much of which went to the merits of the grievance, that the agreement did not “confide in an arbitrator the right to review the defendant’s business judgment in contracting out work.” Id., at 705. It further held that “the contracting out of repair and maintenance work, as well as construction work, is strictly a function of management not limited in any respect by the labor agreement involved here.” Ibid. The Court of Appeals affirmed by a divided vote, 269 F. 2d 633, the majority holding that the collective agreement had withdrawn from the grievance procedure “matters which are strictly a function of management” and that contracting out fell in that exception. The case is here on a writ of certiorari. 361 U. S. 912.

We held in Textile Workers v. Lincoln Mills, 353 U. S. 448, that a grievance arbitration provision in a collective agreement could be enforced by reason of § 301 (a) of the Labor Management Relations Act2 and that the policy to be applied in enforcing this type of arbitration [578]*578was that reflected in our national labor laws. Id., at 456-457. The present federal policy is to promote industrial stabilization through the collective bargaining agreement.3 Id., at 453-454. A major factor in achieving industrial peace is the inclusion of a provision for arbitration of grievances in the collective bargaining agreement.4

Thus the run of arbitration cases, illustrated by Wilko v. Swan, 346 U. S. 427, becomes irrelevant to our problem. There the choice is between the adjudication of cases or controversies in courts with established procedures or even special statutory safeguards on the one hand and the settlement of them in the more informal arbitration tribunal on the other. In the commercial case, arbitration is the substitute for litigation. Here arbitration is the substitute for industrial strife. Since arbitration of labor disputes has quite different functions from arbitration under an ordinary commercial agreement, the hostility evinced by courts toward arbitration of commercial agreements has no place here. For arbitration of labor disputes under collective bargaining agreements is part and parcel of the collective bargaining process itself.

The collective bargaining agreement states the rights and duties of the parties. It is more than a contract; it is a generalized code to govern a myriad of cases which the draftsmen cannot wholly anticipate. See Shulman, Reason, Contract, and Law in Labor Relations, 68 Harv. L. [579]*579Rev. 999, 1004-1005. The collective agreement covers the whole employment relationship.5 It calls into being a new common law — the common law of a particular industry or of a particular plant. As one observer has put it: 6

. . [I] t is not unqualifiedly true that a collective-bargaining agreement is simply a document by which the union and employees have imposed upon management limited, express restrictions of its otherwise absolute right to manage the enterprise, so that an employee’s claim must fail unless he can point to a specific contract provision upon which the claim is founded. There are too many people, too many problems, too many unforeseeable contingencies to make the words of the contract the exclusive source of rights and duties.

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Bluebook (online)
363 U.S. 574, 80 S. Ct. 1347, 4 L. Ed. 2d 1409, 1960 U.S. LEXIS 1921, 46 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-steelworkers-v-warrior-gulf-navigation-co-scotus-1960.