Plaintiff-Appellant Boston & Maine Corporation (the “B & M”) challenges the district court’s denial of its motion for summary judgment and concurrent grant of summary judgment for Defendant-Appellee Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees (the “BMWE”). The B & M had challenged the enforcement of certain of Public Law Board 4669’s awards to the BMWE-affiliatеd claimants. The BMWE sought enforcement of the same awards, which the district court granted. We affirm the judgment of the district court.
BACKGROUND
In March 1986, the BMWE-member employees exercised their right to self-help in a dispute with two carriers, the Maine Central Railroad Company (the “MEC”) and the Portland Terminal (the “PT”). The MEC’s and the PT’s BMWE-represented employees asked the employees of the B & M to withhold their labor from the B & M to assist them in resolving their dispute. In April 1986, the B .& M issued notices that jobs left vacant by sympathetic strikers would be permanently abolished, including the jobs left vacant by the claimants. On April 19, 1986, the B & M directed the striking employeеs to return to work by April 25, 1986, or their positions would be filled by permanent re
When the BMWE’s strike against the MEC was halted on May 16, 1986, the claimants attempted to return to work. When they tried to return to work, they were informed that they were not entitled to return to work because they had forfeited their seniority by not complying with Rule 13 of the collective bargaining agreement (“the CBA”), which required that “[e]mployees laid off by reason of force reduction, desiring to retain their seniority rights, must, within ten (10) days from [the] date laid off, file their name and address, in writing, in triplicаte, with their immediate supervising officer.” The claimants were not permitted to return to work until sometime after July 23, 1986, when, by memorandum, the B & M restored them seniority in compliance with a permanent injunction granted by the district court in
Railway Labor Executives Ass’n v. Boston & Maine Corp.,
In accordance with the mandate of this court, the district court entered an order referring the contractual disputes concerning the B & M to “the National Railroad Adjustment Board or Public Law Board, whichever is applicable.” As a result, on February 13, 1989, the BMWE and the B & M entered into an agreement to establish a Public Law Board pursuant to Section 3 Second of the Railway Labor Act (the “RLA”), 45 U.S.C. § 153 Second, to hear the 175 disputes at issue. In March 1989, the National Mediation Board (the “NMB”) established Public Law Board 4669 to hear the disputes and appointed Edwin H. Benn from the Board. On May 10, 1993, Referee Benn resigned as the neutral member of Public Law Board 4669. The BMWE and the B & M partisan members on the Board agreed to select Elizabeth C. Wesman as the neutral member to replace Referee Benn, and on August 3,1993, she was duly appointed by the NMB.
With Wesman as the neutral member, Public Law Board 4669 heard five cases (Nos. 6, 7, 9, 10 and 11) and subsequently Wesman issued proposed awards in each of the five cases. Public Law Board sustained, in part, the claims in Awards 6, 7, 9 and 10— with the B & M partisan member dissenting — finding that the сlaimants had been erroneously deprived of their seniority by the B & M’s actions. These.four awards ordered the B & M to compensate the claimants in those cases with
back pay for wages [each claimant] ... would have earned, but for the erroneous removal of his seniority on May 19, 1986[,] for the interval between that date, and the date of his assumption of the position to which he was properly entitled, following restoration of his seniority on July 23, 1986. [Claimants are] ... аlso entitled to restoration of any vacation rights [they] ... may have lost as a consequence of the erroneous removal of [their] ... seniority.
The B & M has refused to pay the back pay ordered by the four awards (Nos. 6, 7, 9, and 10) of Public Law Board 4669. Instead, the B & M filed a motion for summary judgment with the district court seeking to have the awards set aside; in response, the BMWE filed a motion for summary judgment seeking to enforce these awards. The B & M now appeals the district court’s denial of its motion, as well as the district court’s decision to grant the BMWE’s motion. Like the district court before us, we refer to Award No. 6 only, since it is the lead decision in this matter, the reasoning of which is incorporated in Awards Nos. 7, 9 and 10.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We examine a grant of summary judgment
de novo,
applying the same decisional standards as the district court.
Wyner v. North Am. Specialty Ins. Co.,
78 F.3d
“Judicial review of an arbitrаtion award is among the narrowest known in the law.”
Maine Cent. R. Co. v. Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees,
DISCUSSION
In her revised Award, ultimately adopted by the Board, Referee Wesman concluded that because the First Circuit, in its December 22, 1986, decision, reversed the part of the district court’s order thаt restored the seniority of the affected employees, but the B & M failed to retract its July 23,1986, memorandum restoring such seniority, the issue of whether claimants were deprived of their seniority was “moot.” Public Law Board No. 4669, Award No. 6, p. 10. The district court ordered the enforcement of Award No. 6 beсause it concluded that “the decision that it is not necessary to interpret the contract is a decision which is entitled to the same level of deference as a finding of contractual meaning.”
Boston & Maine Corp. v. Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees,
No. 94-321-P-C,
On appeal, the B & M contends that, because the RLA directs that the role of a public law board is to interpret or apply the provisions of a collective bargaining agreement, and because the instant parties’ agreement did not expand the Board’s jurisdiction beyond that set by the RLA, by failing to interpret and apply the CBA in making her decision the Board exceeded its authority. The B & M buttresses this argument by claiming that the arbitrator’s failure to interpret or apply the CBA violated this court’s prior conclusion that the disputes in question required the interpretation or application of the CBA.
See Railway Labor Executives’ Ass’n v. Boston and Maine Corp.,
As an initial matter we reject the contention that our previous opinion dirеcted that the Board construe the CBA. The B & M points to a statement in our previous opinion that “[w]hether a party is in breach of a collective bargaining agreement ... ‘requires the interpretation [and] application’ ” of that agreement.
Railway Executives’Assoc.,
We turn to the question of the proper scope of the arbitrator’s authority. The B & M asks us to adopt the view that the Board’s sole authority was to apply and interpret the provisions of the CBA that the parties brought before it, and that by dismissing the issue brought bеfore it as moot, the Board exceeded that authority. We cannot accept such a restrictive reading of the scope of arbitration in this case. We have stated before that “once an issue has been committed to arbitration, both the CBA and the submission itself should be taken into account in determining the scope of the submission.”
El Dorado Tech. Servs.,
Similarly, B & M claims that the arbitrator failed to interpret the CBA in this ease, in particular the CBA’s Rule 13 governing the retention of seniority rights during furlough. The Board concluded that because B & M had restored these rights pursuant to the district court’s ruling in 1986, and did not retract this restoration pursuant to the First Circuit’s 1986 reversal, the issue of whether the B & M properly terminated employees’ seniority is “moot.” While the instant case differs from El Dorado Technical Services in that there the arbitrator’s ruling was challenged on appeal for considering provisions of the CBA that were not submitted for arbitration for the parties, we think that El Dorado Technical Services at the very least directs that the Board’s decision not to interpret Rule 13 cannot alone support the conclusion that the Board exceeded the scope of its authority, despite the fact that the parties’ submission focused on Rule 13.
The parties’ submission agreement in fact stated that the “Board shall have jurisdiction only of the claims and grievances” shown on an attached list containing the claimants’ names that included the Rule 13-related issue of seniority. We conclude the Board’s mootness ruling is a plausible interpretation of the “claims and grievances” language in the submission. We defer, per
El Dorado,
to the Board’s conclusion that the “claims” consisted of
only
the question of
remedy,
since the B & M essentially conceded the question of
liability. Cf. Pack Concrete, Inc. v. Cunningham,
What we are left with, then, is the question of whether an arbitrator’s decision that the existing record does not present a justiciable controversy, in and of itself, oversteps the arbitrator’s authority pursuant to the RLA. We conclude that the Board cannot seriously be considered to have overstepped its bounds, where, as here, the arbitrator’s decision was grounded in B & M’s allowance via its memorandum — prior to arbitration — of the remedy sought by employees. The Supreme Court has clarified that arbitration boards undеr the RLA are not restricted simply to the interpretation of the agreement
It is well settled that a case is moot “when the issues presented are no longer ‘live’ or thе parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome,”
United States Parole Comm’n v. Geraghty,
CONCLUSION
As a result of the foregoing, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. We also reject the B & M's contention that the district court made a finding of fact that the arbitrator failed to interpret or apply the CBA. In review of RLA arbitration, the factual findings of the arbitral panel are “conclusive” upon the district court. 45 U.S.C. § 153 First(q). Thus, the district court was not obligated to make findings of fact for the purposes of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a),
see Makuc v. American Honda Motor Co.,
