174 A.2d 684 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1961
This is an application to vacate an arbitration award of a board of arbitration selected from a panel furnished by the American Arbitration Association. A counter motion to confirm the award was filed by the respondents Peter Preteska (the employee involved), the International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, and its Local 1010. The board held hearings on the union appeal from a company decision discharging its employee Peter Preteska. The award of the majority (one dissent) directed the reinstatement of said Peter Preteska with back pay specified as $3531.04. Preteska had been discharged for violation on company premises of § 53-298 of the General Statutes, entitled "Policy Playing." Preteska entered a plea of guilty to a violation of this statute in the Stratford Municipal Court on October 20, 1959, and also for violation of a company rule governing gambling on the premises. The evidence of violation of said § 53-298 was found on his person and in his constructive possession on the tote truck which he regularly operated on the premises. It consisted of several small slips of paper containing approximately forty three-digit numbers identified by Preteska as policy plays, one football pool slip, one treasury balance result sheet, one treasury balance ticket, two Irish sweepstakes tickets, two world series lottery tickets, several slips of paper containing altogether twenty-five three-digit numbers identified by Preteska as policy plays, seventeen $1 bills and one $5 bill, three containers in which were found a two-foot length of adding machine tape on which there were forty-five three-digit *477 numbers identified by Preteska as a policy play handicap, several slips of paper containing approximately 100 three-digit numbers identified by Preteska as policy plays, and a policy player's handicap manual. Some of these records, all of which involved policy playing, Preteska admitted were prepared on company premises and equipment, and even on company time. He conceded this had been going on several times a week for months. The chairman of the board so found.
The issues raised may be divided into two main categories as follows: (1) Did the arbitrators exceed their powers by rendering an award which contravenes the public policy of the state of Connecticut, hence said award being illegal and unenforceable? (2) Did the said board act in excess of its powers in awarding back wages in the amount of $3531.04?
The plaintiff and the defendant Local 1010-UAW have entered into an agreement, in evidence as exhibit A. Article 5, § 1, of said agreement provides: "The Company shall have the right to discharge or discipline employees for just cause." It is fundamental that an agreement for the submission of an issue or issues to arbitrators constitutes the charter of the entire arbitration proceedings. Niles-Bement-PondCo. v. Amalgamated Local 405,
Application to vacate an award is a special proceeding authorized by statute. Section
As it has been pointed out, the submission in this case was unrestricted, the agreement providing that the majority decision of the board of arbitration shall be final and binding upon the company and the union. There was nothing which required the arbitrators to decide the matter "according to law." By the terms of the agreement, arbitration is permissive, not mandatory, the parties themselves controlling the contract and the form in which a submission is made. United Electrical Radio MachineWorkers v. Union Mfg. Co.,
However, the case now before us presents facts which are clearly distinguishable from many of the arbitration cases which have been heard in this state. A question of public policy is raised. The agreement entered into between these parties is a contract. It is a rule of law that a contract which contravenes public policy will be declared illegal and unenforceable. Beit v. Beit,
Section 53-298 is the statute upon which the employee, Preteska, pleaded guilty and was found guilty by the court. The facts show that he was guilty of a violation of this statute while on the company premises. "Policy playing" is a method of gambling by betting as to what numbers will be drawn in a lottery. State v. Mola,
But § 53-298 creates a responsibility beyond that of the person who possesses, keeps, manages or is the custodian, and so forth, of the property described in the statute. The last sentence in said statute reads as follows: "Any owner, mortgagee in possession, lessee or occupant of any building, room, structure or place, or part thereof, who knowingly permits the same to be used or occupied for any of the purposes mentioned in this section, shall be fined not more than one hundred dollars or imprisoned *480 not more than six months or both." This statute places a direct responsibility on the owner or lessee of premises — in this case the employer. The statute expresses the legislative purpose and public policy of the state in regard to gambling. The employer now is in the position of the occupant of a building who was aware of gambling activities being conducted on the premises. The legislature of our state has laid down the mandate that the occupant of premises (in this place the employer) must police the use of his premises. On the facts as they exist in the instant case, it would appear that the arbitrators have ruled that the employer must furnish both premises and opportunity to such employees to carry on gambling activities, furnishing also the equipment to use in keeping and storing gambling records, and that it must pay its employees for any time lost as a result of arrest, incarceration or conviction of a violation of the state law in this regard. The matter goes deeper than the simple question of the dismissal of Preteska, who readily admits to being a violator of the statute on the premises. The question is primarily whether an employer may take disciplinary action under the "just cause" agreement in the contract against an employee whose violation of the criminal gambling laws also creates a violation on the part of the employer with knowledge of what is going on.
Arbitrators may not take unto themselves, whether or not by assent of the parties, authority to act against the public interest. As stated in Tandy
v. Elmore-Cooper Livestock Commission,
In the light of the undisputed evidence, it is concluded that the interpretation of the "just cause" provision in the contract by the arbitrators — that the conduct of the employee, Preteska, is not subject to disciplinary action by the employer — is void as being contrary to public policy.
In view of the above finding, no back wages should be awarded.
The decision and award of the arbitrators is vacated.