Allen Griffin, the appellee, brought a civil action for damages against the International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America. He claimed that the UAW had breached its duty of fair representation in handling the grievance based on his discharge by the Ford Motor Company. The case was tried before Judge McMillan and a jury and resulted in a verdict in favor of Griffin in the amount of $12,000. From this judgment, the UAW appeals.
In its brief the appellant raised several issues which were not pursued at oral argument. After a careful examination of the record, the briefs of the parties and the pertinent authorities, we conclude that these contentions are without merit. The only issue deserving discussion is whether there was sufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that the Union breached its duty of fair representation.
I
The phrase “duty of fair representation” is a legal term of art, incapable of precise definition. St. Clair v. Local 515, Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters, etc.,
The doctrine of the “duty of fair representation” was first given currency by the Supreme Court in Steele v. Louisville & N. R. Co.,
The outline of the duty of fair representation cognizable under Section 301 was further clarified in Vaca v. Sipes,
Nonetheless, the Supreme Court did not invest the union with a carte blanche. It sought to fashion an appropriate standard by which to measure union conduct. “[The doctrine of fair representation] includes a statutory obligation to serve the interests of all members without hostility or discrimination toward any, to exercise its discretion with complete good faith and honesty, and to avoid arbitrary conduct.” Vaca v. Sipes,
supra,
The repeated references in
Vaca
to “arbitrary” union conduct reflected a calculated broadening of the fair representation standard. Retana v. Apartment, Motel, Hotel & El. Op. U., Local 14,
For a successful suit against a union for breach of its duty of fair representation, the employee “must also have proved arbitrary
or
bad-faith conduct on the part of the union in processing his grievance.” Vaca v. Sipes,
supra,
II
For seven years Allen Griffin worked for the Ford Motor Company at its parts depot in Charlotte, North Carolina. His problems apparently began in July, 1965, when he was disciplined by the *184 Warehouse Operations Manager, D. J. Cashion, management’s second ranking member at the forty men depot, for allegedly reading a newspaper that lined the handtruck used by Griffin in his work. Cashion’s disciplinary action was successfully appealed by the Union. Subsequently, the relationship between the two men further deteriorated until they became embroiled in a fight 1 at a local hockey game, with Cashion sustaining facial lacerations and cracked ribs. As a result of these fisticuffs, Griffin was discharged by Depot Manager Meares upon his return to work. In addition, a local court fined Griffin $50 for the assault.
J. W. Brown, who worked immediately under Cashion, was the chairman of the Union’s Local House Committee. His responsibilities included handling the preliminary stages of the grievance procedure. He filed with Cashion, the very man with whom Griffin had the fight, the grievance seeking Griffin’s reinstatement. Not surprisingly, Cashion, representing Ford, refused reinstatement. After Griffin’s assault conviction, Brown recommended to his fellow committee members that Griffin’s grievance be withdrawn. When one of the committee members objected, Brown threatened to resign. The grievance was withdrawn by a 2-1 vote.
Griffin then appealed to the membership of his Local to reverse the decision to withdraw his grievance. A vote was taken and it was decided that Griffin’s grievance be pursued. In protest of the members’ action, House Committee Chairman Brown resigned his position as House Chairman. But the action of the House Committee in withdrawing Griffin’s grievance was upheld by an appeals committee of the International; although the committee recommended that efforts to secure Griffin’s reinstatement continue. Finally, Ford agreed to reinstate Griffin’s grievance and allow it to be processed through normal channels on the condition that Griffin waive any claim for back pay prior to the time the grievance was reinstated. Griffin accepted this proposal. The revived grievance, “frozen dead” 2 after the two-year hiatus, was eventually heard by the Ford Umpire, who on March 22, 1968, upheld the discharge.
Ill
The Union’s insistence on filing the discharge grievance with Cashion, the man with whom Griffin had fought, cannot be justified. It represents a stubborn refusal to recognize the inequity of placing the matter in the hands of a hostile person — Griffin’s antagonist. Although the Union may have acted in good faith, grieving the discharge in this manner can be viewed — as the jury apparently viewed it — as the equivalent of arbitrarily ignoring the grievance or handling it in a perfunctory manner. Vaca v. Sipes,
supra,
The Union attempts to justify submitting the grievance to Cashion by pointing out that the only other person with whom the grievance could have been filed was Meares, the Depot Manager. This, the UAW maintains, “was at best a Hobson’s choice: Cashion, the man Griffin assaulted on the one hand, and Meares, the man who discharged Griffin, the very act that was being protested, on the other hand.” 3
The Union’s contention overstates the case. Cashion had a history of difficulties in supervising the men under him. There was evidence that he was “very high tempered” and that he was willing to use his position of authority to pun *185 ish those “who crossed him.” Meares, at the time of the discharge, had heard only Cashion’s version of the fight and the incidents that led np to it. It is quite possible that if the grievance had been immediately filed with Meares and Cashion’s history of pugnacity with workers in general, and his goading of Griffin in particular, had been adequately presented, Meares would have mitigated his disciplinary action. The fact that Meares refused the grievance after it was reinstated nearly one and one-half years later has no relevance. The passage of time and the hardening of positions had taken their effect.
There was also evidence presented to the jury from which it might have found the Union’s handling of the grievance to have been motivated by bad faith. After the membership of the Local voted to pursue Griffin’s grievance, House Committee Chairman J. W. Brown resigned his position to protest the members’ action. He was replaced by George R. Kennedy. On April 8, 1966, Kennedy wrote Walter P. Reuther, the late president of the UAW, to express his opinion that the action of the Local in dropping Griffin’s grievance was the result of the friendship between Cashion and J. W. Brown. In the course of the letter Kennedy stated poignantly:
Mr. Cashion, having been a personal friend of the former Chairman [Brown] for many years, as well as a very good friend with one of the committeemen and a close friend of the union member who testified against Mr. Griffin, used these friendships to influence the committee’s decision to drop the case as far as the committee was concerned. Therefore, when the membership overruled the committee, the Chairman, Mr. J. W. Brown resigned.
In my opinion those officers who were in a position to help Mr. Griffin, were trying to find as many reasons as they could not to help him. This is illustrated by the very fact that I am writing this letter because Mr. T. C. Brown, our Recording Secretary, and the brother of Mr. J. W. Brown, the resigned Chairman, refused to answer your letter of March 80, 1966. (Emphasis added.)
There is sufficient evidence in the record to support the jury’s finding that the Union breached its duty of fair representation in handling Griffin’s discharge grievance. Therefore, the judgment of the District Court is hereby
Affirmed.
Notes
. Earlier in the summer, the two men almost became involved in a fight when Cashion invited Griffin outside the plant behind the railroad tracks to settle their difference and to “whip his blank” — an invitation declined by Griffin.
. This characterization was given the reinstated grievance by Judge McMillan. (Tr. 403.)
. Appellant’s Reply Brief at 2-3.
