680 N.E.2d 1320 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1996
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *441
During the negotiations, neither party offered or requested to continue operating according to the terms and conditions of the original CBA beyond its expiration date of September 25, 1993. However, the company vice-president testified that when the Union was told that the employer proposal was to be implemented, the Union "suggested that they wanted to continue negotiations, however, they didn't have an economic counter-proposal that was, that warranted, quite frankly."
Although the Union had taken a strike vote and was willing to go out on strike at the expiration of the contract, the union employees worked under the terms of the unilaterally implemented employer proposal continuously from September 25, 1993, until June 19, 1994. There was no evidence in the record that they entered into any written or verbal agreement to do so.
Negotiations between the parties resumed on June 16, 1994. Dissatisfied with the course of negotiations and frustrated with the amount of overtime its members were working, the Union decided to engage in a work stoppage, and so informed the company on June 19, 1994.
Klosterman hired temporary replacement workers and has continued operations. The company at all times has maintained that work was available to union employees under the terms of the employer proposal of September 24, 1993. All the striking employees indicated on their application for determination of unemployment benefits that they expected to return to work at Klosterman.
The purpose of unemployment compensation is to provide financial assistance to individuals who are able and willing to work, but who find themselves unemployed through no fault of their own. Salzl v. Gibson Greeting Cards (1980),
The Ohio Supreme Court has approved the definition of a lockout as "a cessation of the furnishing of work to employees or a withholding of work from *444
them in an effort to get for the employer more desirable terms."Zanesville Rapid Transit, Inc. v. Bailey (1958),
We believe that one reason why this test has often been more easily stated than applied is because the appellate court inOriti v. Bd. of Rev. (1983),
While this economic unreasonableness exception is also discussed in Bays, we believe it was not adopted by the Bays
court as part of the status quo test, and properly so. An absolutely crucial part of the Pennsylvania case law on which the Bays court relies is the theme that in the context of entitlement to unemployment compensation benefits the employer'sjustification for altering the *445 status quo should not be considered. Local 730 v. Unemp. Comp.Bd. of Rev. (1984),
In other words, in the application of the status quo test, the reason why an employer does not agree to an extension of the status quo is irrelevant. This is wholly appropriate, as a hearing examiner in an unemployment compensation case is not in a position to evaluate the legitimacy of that reason. This is what in our view is the flaw in those cases which use some form of employer economic justification as part of the analysis of the status quo test. These courts are confusing what might be fair in a negotiating session with fault for a work stoppage. This includes Oriti, supra; Johnson v. Ohio Bur. of Emp. Serv.
(1993),
While it is clear from Bays that the conduct of both sides, labor and management, will be scrutinized in the application of the status quo test, it is also clear from the court's extensive reliance on Vrotney that the legitimacy of the reasons for the employer's refusal to extend the status quo is irrelevant in this context.5 What is especially pertinent from Vrotney is that while "an ultimatum laid down by the employer that work will be available only on his (employer's) terms" may be a perfectly legitimate position in a bargaining session before the expiration of the collective-bargaining agreement, it is not a manifestation of a desire to maintain the status quo or an acceptable excuse not to do so.
While the court in Bays was unanimous in adopting the status quo test, the justices sharply disagreed in the application of the test to the case before it. What is also clear from the majority in its application of the status quo test is that the pertinent time in which to apply the test is after the collective-bargaining agreement has expired and while new negotiations are in progress. This is crucial to our analysis in this case. *446
Negotiations broke down after a few sessions and a work stoppage occurred on June 19, 1994. That is the date on which the claimants argue they were locked out, and thus entitled to unemployment compensation benefits.
The hearing officer found that when Klosterman implemented its unilateral offer the day before the original CBA expired, a new status quo was created. He then applied the Bays test to the new status quo, and found that it was the employees who refused to continue working under the status quo; thus, the work stoppage was other than a lockout, and the claimants were not entitled to benefits. This analysis is erroneous and contrary to law.
We agree with our colleagues in Johnson, supra, to the extent that they held that there is no support in law "for the proposition that a company's unilaterally implemented final offer can create a `new' status quo in the absence of a newly ratified collective bargaining agreement." Id.,
"We find nothing in either Bays or Oriti which would indicate that the term `status quo' refers to anything but that period during which the parties agree to maintain the existing terms and conditions of employment manifested by the pre-existing collective bargaining agreement. Because the status quo is the terms and conditions of the pre-existing collective bargaining agreement, a priori the analysis of whether a strike or lockout occurred must take place at that point in time when either party first refuses to continue under the terms of the pre-existing agreement while negotiations continue."
The reason for this should be apparent. The entire point of preserving the status quo is that it has already been bargained for by both sides. In another of the Pennsylvania cases which have formed so much a part of Ohio precedent in this area of law, Fairview School Dist. v. Unemp. Comp. Bd. of Rev. (1982),
Bays also requires that the status quo test must be applied while negotiations are ongoing. Bays,
Judgment accordingly.
PAINTER, J., concurs.
DOAN, J., dissents.
"(D) Notwithstanding division (A) of this section, no individual may serve a waiting period or be paid benefits under the following conditions:
"(1) For any week with respect to which the administrator finds that:
"(a) His unemployment was due to a labor dispute other than a lockout * * *."
Dissenting Opinion
I have no qualm with the majority's analysis of the general law regarding the status quo continuation of employment. The honest disagreement I have is that the majority has misconstrued the facts of this case.
The vote to strike was taken in late September 1993, not June 16, 1994. Thus, the strike vote action was taken when no negotiations were ongoing and there was no offer from the union to continue operations under the status quo. I must therefore conclude that after the September 1993 strike vote, the employees went to work under new terms which they accepted because the union had not offered a status quo continuance of work. I reason that the employees individually, and as a union, waived the necessary prerequisite conditions to continue employment at the status quo. It is not credible to determine that new negotiations some nine months later between the company and union can somehow bootstrap these facts to a status quo implementation of employment.
The union-company relationship was waived in late September 1993 and was nonexistent in June 1994. The negotiations in June 1994 must therefore be viewed as negotiations to organize the employees into a union shop once again with a newly proposed contract.
I would affirm the determination of the trial court. *449