Walmart Stores Inc., V United Food And Comm Workers Int

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 30, 2015
Docket45442-4
StatusPublished

This text of Walmart Stores Inc., V United Food And Comm Workers Int (Walmart Stores Inc., V United Food And Comm Workers Int) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Walmart Stores Inc., V United Food And Comm Workers Int, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

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2Q1 J' P4 30 f, : 00 Srl; NIAS1IMGTON IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF W

DIVISION II

WAL-MART STORES, INC., No. 45442 -4 -II

Appellant,

V.

UNITED FOOD AND COMMERCIAL PUBLISHED OPINION WORKERS INTERNATIONAL UNION; ORGANIZATION UNITED FOR RESPECT AT WALMART; and DOES I -X,•

SUTTON, J. — We are asked to decide whether the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) I

2 preempts a state court trespass action. Wal- Mart Stores, Inc. ( Walmart) filed unfair labor practice

charges with the National Labor Relations Board ( NLRB) against the United Food and t

Commercial Workers International Union ( UFCW), Organization United for Respect at Walmart

OURWalmart), and John Does I -X over their alleged trespass and employee coercion activities

inside and outside Walmart stores in a number of states, including Washington.' After

withdrawing the trespass allegations before the NLRB, Walmart pursued the trespass allegations r

in state courts across the country, and filed a state trespass complaint against the UFCW in Pierce

29 U. S. C. §§ 151- 169.

2 U. S. CONST. art. VI, cl. 2 ( Supremacy Clause). 3 We refer to the respondents collectively as " UFCW." No. 45442 -4 -II

County Superior Court. The UFCW filed an anti -SLAW motion to strike Walmart' s complaint

under RCW 4. 24. 525.

The superior court ruled that, based on the Supremacy Clause of the United States

Constitution, the NLRA preempted Walmart' s state trespass action and dismissed the trespass

action. The court did not apply the anti- SLAPP analysis because it ruled that it did not have

jurisdiction over the underlying state trespass action. We hold that the NLRA preempts Walmart' s

state trespass action, and that the superior court correctly ruled that it did not have jurisdiction over

the trespass action and correctly declined to reach the UFCW' s anti- SLAPP motion. We affirm

the trial court' s dismissal.

FACTS

I. THE UFCW' S ACTIVITIES INSIDE AND OUTSIDE OF WALMART STORES

The UFCW is a national labor organization that represents grocery, retail, meat packing,

and food processing workers in many states, including Washington, and OURWalmart is a labor

organization and the UFCW' s wholly-owned subsidiary and agent. In 2012 and 2013, the UFCW

picketed, conducted in- store demonstrations; and organized flash mobs5 inside and outside

Walmart' s stores in Washington. On November 3, 2012, approximately 20 demonstrators entered

a Walmart store in Auburn, filled shopping carts with merchandise, marched through the aisles

4 Lawsuits filed under RCW 4. 24. 525 are called " Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation or SLAPP." See Laws of 2010, ch. 118 § 1( b).

5 A group of people who are summoned ( such as by e- mail or text messages) to a designated location at a specified time to perform an indicated action before dispersing. Merriam -Webster Unabridged, available at http:// unabridged.merriam- webster.com.

2 No. 45442 -4 -II

chanting and shouting, and blocked space next to cash registers. On November 23, a group of

approximately 15 demonstrators assembled in the parking lot of Walmart' s Lakewood store,

entered the store separately and pretended to shop, filling their carts with merchandise. They met

at the front of the store, blocked access to cash register lanes, and loudly sang and chanted anti-

Walmart lyrics to the tunes of Christmas carols. Walmart asked them to leave, but they refused.

Similar incidents occurred at other Walmart stores in Washington in November and December

2012 and in April and July 2013. And at.various times, similar incidents by the UFCW occurred

at Walmart' s stores in Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, and Texas. In response,

Walmart sent letters to the UFCW representatives stating that it revoked " any invitation, license

or privilege" to the UFCW or its subsidiary organizations to come onto Walmart' s property for

any purpose other than shopping. Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 83- 84.

II. WALMART' S UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE CHARGES BEFORE THE NLRB

On November 16, 2012, Walmart filed an unfair labor practice ( ULP) charge with the

NLRB against the UFCW under section 8( b)( 1)( A) of NLRA. 29 U. S. C. § 158 ( b)( 1)( A) ( Unfair

labor practices by labor organizations). Walmart alleged that ( 1) the NLRA prohibited the

UFCW' s " trespass" because it involved participants who " invaded" or " entered" Walmart property

and refused to leave when asked, CP at 240, and ( 2) the UFCW violated the NLRA "by planning,

orchestrating, and conducting a series of unauthorized and. blatantly trespassory in-store mass

demonstrations, invasive ` flash mobs,' and other confrontational group activities at numerous

facilities nationwide." CP at 24. As a result of this ULP charge, Walmart and the UFCW entered

into negotiations, settled this charge on January 29, 2013, and agreed to " a hiatus of at least 60

days" without " any picketing, including confrontational conduct that is the functional equivalent No. 45442 -4 -II

of picketing." CP at 240. On February 7, the UFCW engaged in similar incidents at a Maryland

Walmart store, prompting Walmart to file a second ULP against the UFCW. When similar

picketing activity occurred at a Michigan Walmart on May 22, Walmart filed a third ULP against

the UFCW.

The NLRB began investigating but, before it could complete its investigation, Walmart

amended its ULP charge and withdrew the trespass allegations. In a related matter in another state,

Walmart' s counsel explained that Walmart " withdrew all [ Labor Board] charges with respect to

these in-store invasion or property intrusions precisely because it chose [ state courts] and state

court actions for trespass rather than the NLRB process." Br. of Respondent at 4 ( alterations in

original).

III. WALMART' S STATE TRESPASS COMPLAINT

On April 17, 2013, Walmart filed a state trespass complaint against the UFCW in Pierce

County Superior Court. CP at 1- 14; 1384- 85. The UFCW filed an anti- SLAPP motion to strike

Walmart' s state trespass complaint under RCW 4. 24. 525, Washington' s anti- SLAPP statute. The

superior court ruled that, based on the Supremacy Clause, the NLRA preempted Walmart' s state

trespass action. The superior court declined to reach the UFCW' s anti- SLAPP motion to strike

and dismissed Walmart' s trespass action. Walmart appeals.

ANALYSIS

Walmart argues that ( 1) the filing of ULP charges under the NLRA did not trigger federal

preemption because the state trespass action is a separate legal controversy with different legal

elements and remedies, even if it arises from similar facts, and ( 2) the " deeply rooted in local

feeling" exception to preemption applies and the state court should have retained jurisdiction here

0 No. 45442 -4 -II

to resolve the trespass matter, ( 3) the likelihood is slight that the state court' s jurisdiction would

interfere with NLRB' s jurisdiction, and (4) without state court intervention, Walmart would be left

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