CARPENTER LOCAL NO. 1027, MILL CABINET-INDUSTRIAL DIVISION,
affiliated with the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and
Joiners of America and Chicago and Northeast Illinois
District Council of Carpenters, AFL-CIO, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
LEE LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIAL CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 92-3670.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued June 8, 1993.
Decided Sept. 7, 1993.
Hugh J. McCarthy, Nancy J. Doyle, Collins P. Whitfield, Brian J. Stephenson, Joseph P. Berglund (argued), McCarthy & Associates, Chicago, IL, for plaintiffs-appellees.
James S. Frank (argued), Steven M. Post, Phillips, Nizer, Benjamin, Krim & Ballon, New York City, for defendant-appellant.
Before COFFEY and MANION, Circuit Judges, and ALDISERT, Senior Circuit Judge.*
MANION, Circuit Judge.
Lee Lumber and Building Material Company fired Richard Gonsowski in February 1990. Gonsowski's union, Carpenter Local No. 1027, filed a grievance on Gonsowski's behalf. Shortly after the union filed the grievance, Lee agreed to reinstate Gonsowski if, among other conditions, he returned to work within seven days. Lee and the union agreed that the union would notify Gonsowski of his reinstatement and make sure he returned to work on time.
Unfortunately, Gonsowski was out of town and union officials were unable (or neglected) to track him down and tell him to report to work. Gonsowski did not learn about his reinstatement until he returned to Chicago and spoke to a union representative, nine days after Lee agreed to reinstate him. By then, it was too late; when Gonsowski reported to work the following day, a Lee officer told him that Lee would not reinstate him and that his firing was final.
The union filed a second grievance charging that Lee fired Gonsowski without just cause, but the parties were unable to settle the grievance. The collective bargaining agreement between the union and Lee contained a provision allowing the arbitration of any "grievance," which the agreement defined as "a complaint or claim against the Employer." Pursuant to that provision, the union submitted Gonsowski's grievance for arbitration.
As the arbitrator saw things, the issue before him was whether Lee had "just cause to terminate the grievant, Richard Gonsowski, under the Agreement.... If the Company did not have just cause to terminate the grievant under the Agreement ... what is the remedy?" The arbitrator ruled that Gonsowski could not be held responsible for failing to report back to work on time because he had not been told when to report back to work. The arbitrator also ruled that although the union had agreed to tell Gonsowski about his reinstatement, Lee was still responsible for failing to reinstate him: "It is the Company that reinstates, not the Union." Therefore, the arbitrator found that Lee violated its agreement to reinstate Gonsowski and ordered Lee to reinstate Gonsowski with back pay. But the arbitrator did not stop there. Because the union had failed to carry out its agreement to tell Gonsowski about his reinstatement, the arbitrator ordered the union to reimburse Lee the amount of back pay Lee owed to Gonsowski.
The union filed a complaint in the district court seeking to vacate the portion of the arbitrator's decision ordering the union to reimburse Lee. Lee filed a counterclaim seeking enforcement of the entire award. The district court granted summary judgment for the union. The court held that by ordering the union to reimburse Lee for Gonsowski's back pay, the arbitrator exceeded his contractual authority by in effect deciding a claim by Lee against the union. Lee appeals the district court's decision.
Judicial review of arbitration awards is limited. Courts give arbitrators' decisions considerable deference; only if the arbitrator's decision fails to "draw[ ] its essence from the collective bargaining agreement" will a court refuse to enforce that decision. United Steelworkers v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
The limited scope of judicial review of arbitration decisions comes from the fact that arbitration is a creature of contract. Contracting parties who agree to submit disputes to an arbitrator for final decision have chosen to bypass the normal litigation process. If parties cannot rely on the arbitrator's decision--if a court may overrule that decision because it perceives factual or legal error in the decision--the parties have lost the benefit of their bargain. Arbitration, which is intended to avoid litigation, would instead become merely the starting point of litigation. See Ethyl Corp.,
By the same token, respect for the parties' contract justifies the limited review courts do undertake. An arbitrator draws his power from the parties' contract. "[A]rbitration is a matter of contract and a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to submit." United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Co.,
The union maintains that the arbitrator imposed a remedy--union reimbursement to Lee for the amount of back pay Lee owed Gonsowski--that the collective bargaining agreement did not allow him to impose. According to the union, this is so clear that the arbitrator could not have been interpreting the contract when he ordered reimbursement; he must have been relying on his own sense of industrial justice.
Lee does not point to any specific language in the collective bargaining agreement that even arguably authorized the arbitrator to order the union to reimburse Lee. In fact, the collective bargaining agreement does not explicitly set forth any remedies an arbitrator may impose. But this is not unusual, nor does it, by itself, limit the arbitrator's remedial authority. Were that so, the arbitrator would be powerless to impose any remedy, and that could not be correct. Since the arbitrator "derives all his powers from the agreement, the agreement must implicitly grant him remedial powers when there is no explicit grant." Miller Brewing Co. v. Brewery Workers Local No. 9,
When a collective bargaining agreement neither mentions a specific remedy nor contains language from which that remedy can be "fairly implied," a court must consider "whether it is at all plausible to suppose that the remedy devised was within the contemplation of the parties and hence implicitly authorized by the agreement." Miller Brewing Co.,
Not only does the collective bargaining agreement strongly imply that the arbitrator could not impose the reimbursement remedy he imposed in this case, we think it is clearly implausible to suppose the parties ever contemplated that remedy. Given the arbitration clause the parties did agree to, it is "almost unimaginable" that the union would have agreed to the type of remedy imposed here if the question had arisen during bargaining. See Miller Brewing Co.,
Lee argues that even if the collective bargaining agreement limited the arbitrator's remedial authority, the parties expanded that authority by not expressly limiting the possible remedy in the question they submitted for arbitration and by actually litigating the issue of union liability before the arbitrator. Parties to a collective bargaining agreement containing an arbitration provision may supplement and extend that agreement in their submission to the arbitrator. See Mobil Oil Corp. v. Independent Oil Workers Union,
But none of this helps Lee. In the district court, Lee did not depend on the submission or the parties' arguments before the arbitrator to establish the arbitrator's remedial authority. Thus, Lee has waived the issue. See Moseley, Hallgarten, Estabrook & Weedon v. Ellis,
We recognize that in a similar situation, the Tenth Circuit upheld an arbitral award of back pay against a union. In United Food & Commercial Workers v. Safeway,
Lee understandably argues that we should reach the same conclusion as the Tenth Circuit in Safeway. But Safeway is distinguishable because there is no mention in that case of any language in the collective bargaining agreement limiting arbitrable grievances solely to claims against the employer. Different contractual language justifies different results. Safeway does not stand for the proposition that a submission that does not expressly restrict the party from whom relief is available authorizes remedies against a union in the face of a collective bargaining agreement limiting arbitrable grievances only to claims against the employer.
Lee raises two more issues. First, Lee argues that if we find the arbitrator's reimbursement award unenforceable, we should vacate the entire award--including that part finding that Lee must pay back pay to Gonsowski--and remand to the arbitrator so that he may fashion a remedy consistent with our ruling. Lee does not explain clearly why this course is necessary. As best we can tell from its brief, Lee seems to be asserting that the arbitrator determined that Lee was not really at fault for Gonsowski's firing. Rather, the union was. Since the union, not Lee, caused Gonsowski's firing, the arbitrator decided that Lee should not be responsible for Gonsowski's back pay; hence, the order to reimburse Lee. If the court vacates the reimbursement order but not the back pay order, says Lee, the court would improperly be substituting its judgment as to an appropriate remedy for the arbitrator's judgment.
This argument rests on a mischaracterization of the arbitrator's decision. The arbitrator did not find that Lee was not responsible for Gonsowski's back pay. The arbitrator found that Lee fired Gonsowski without just cause and ordered Lee to reinstate Gonsowski with back pay. Nothing in the arbitrator's order makes Lee's liability to Gonsowski dependent on the union's payment of reimbursement. The arbitrator did not order the union to pay Gonsowski. Nor did the arbitrator order Lee to pay Gonsowski if the union paid Lee. Rather he simply ordered Lee to pay Gonsowski, and the union to pay Lee. Thus, in enforcing the back pay order but not the reimbursement order we are not substituting our judgment for the arbitrator's. We are enforcing the remedy against Lee that the arbitrator decided was appropriate while vacating a separate remedy against the union that the arbitrator was unauthorized to impose.
Lee finally argues that because the collective bargaining agreement between it and the union expired on May 25, 1990, it should not be responsible for back pay after that date. Cf. Polk Brothers, Inc. v. Chicago Truck Drivers Union,
For the reasons set forth, we affirm the district court's judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Hon. Ruggero J. Aldisert, Senior Circuit Judge for the Third Circuit, is sitting by designation
