OPINION
The Times & Alleganian Company, a newspaper publisher, appeals the district court’s order compelling arbitration with Cumberland Typographical Union No. 244 (“Union”) of a dispute which arose under an expired collective bargaining agreement concerning that agreement’s lifetime job guarantee provision. We find that the district court correctly applied Section 301(a) of the Lаbor-Management Relations Act of 1947, 29 U.S.C. § 185, to compel the arbitration, and therefore we affirm.
I.
The Times & Alleganian Company (“Company”) publishes a daily newspaper in Cumberland, Maryland. The Union is the exclusive bargaining representative for the Company’s composing room employees. The parties have negotiated numerous successive collective bargaining agreements.
In 1976, thе Union and Company negotiated a lifetime job guarantee agreement (“UG”) for the composing room employees. The UG was published initially in the parties’ 1976 collective bargaining agreement and republished in all successive collective bargaining agreements, unchanged from its original form. In pertinent part, the UG provides as follows:
The Employer agrees that all employеes (journeymen and apprentices), covered by this agreement with a priority date of November 1, 1976 or earlier, whose names appear on the attached priority list will be retained on situations for the remainder of their working life unless *403 vacating same through retirement, resignation, permanent disability, death or discharge for cause. Provided, however, in the event of permanеnt suspension of the Employer’s operation such employment guarantee will thereupon cease, and provided further, in case of a strike, lockout, Act of God, or other situation over which Employer has no control, results in a period of temporary suspension of the Employer’s operations, the job guarantee will be suspended for such period of temporary suspension of operation only. The terms of this Article shall continue in force through succeeding agreements unless changed by mutual agreement between the parties. Because of and in consideration of the unique job guarantee set forth in this agreement, it is specifically agreed that the Company shall have the right to take full advantage of all automation and technоlogy development which, in the opinion of the Company, would improve productivity, efficiency, and/or economy, provided, however, the above individual lifetime job guarantee will not be affected by the introduction of any new equipment or procedures.
The parties’ most recent collective bargaining agreement expired by its terms on October 31, 1987. After bargaining over 19 mоnths for an agreement to succeed the expired one, the parties reached agreement on all terms and conditions of employment in the new contract except wages. During the negotiations, the parties continued to abide by all of the terms and conditions of employment specified in the expired agreement.
In negotiating the wage issue, the Company insisted thаt the wages of the LJG employees would be cut from $434.50 per week to $302.00 per week. The Union, denying that impasse had been reached, rejected this proposal on the ground that it violated the continuing LJG. By letter dated June 13, 1989, the Company unilaterally implemented its wage cut proposal. At the same time, the Company implemented all other contractual terms previously agrеed to between the parties, including the continuation of the grievance-arbitration procedure used in the expired agreement. That procedure specifically provided that all disputes which might arise as to the construction to be placed upon any clause of the agreement, and which could not be resolved by the specified internal grievance prоcedure, were to be referred to arbitration.
The Union filed a grievance, alleging that the Company’s unilaterally-imposed wage reduction violated the continuing LJG agreement. As provided by the grievance-arbitration procedure, the Joint Standing Committee met to discuss the Union’s grievance. The Committee, comprised of two Union and two Company representatives, did not resоlve the grievance. The Union then requested that the grievance be referred to arbitration, but the Company refused to arbitrate.
The Union filed the suit underlying this appeal in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland pursuant to Section 301(a) of the Labor-Management Relations Act of 1947 (“LMRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 185. The Union sought to compel arbitration and, alternatively, to obtain a declaratory judgment that the wage reduction was unlawful. The parties stipulated to all material facts 1 and filed crossmo-tions for summary judgment on the claim regarding arbitration. The district court dismissed the declaratory judgment claim without prejudice.
The district court granted summary judgment for the Union, ordering the parties to submit the dispute to binding arbitration and staying the action pending the outcome of the arbitration. The court held thаt, since the wage reduction arguably had an impact upon the preexisting job guarantees of the UG and since the UG was a vested right, under the parties’ arbitration clause any dispute arising out of the job guarantee is subject to arbitration. *404 However, the court limited the arbitrator’s role to determining whether the wage cut imposed by the Company violated the UG, prohibiting the arbitrator from “sеtting or suggesting an acceptable wage.” The court’s order provided that, if the arbitrator struck down the wage cut, the parties would continue the collective bargaining process.
The Company now appeals to this court.
II.
A party cannot be compelled to submit a dispute to arbitration unless he has contractually agreed to do so.
AT & T Technologies, Inc. v. Communications Workers of America,
The Supreme Court has established four principles to guidе courts in determining whether a labor dispute is arbitrable. Under the first principle, the parties must have contracted to submit the grievance to arbitration. The second principle requires that the court determine whether the contract provides for arbitration of the particular grievance in question. The third principle demands that the court not decide the merits of the grievanсe while determining the arbitrability of the dispute. Finally, if the contract contains an arbitration clause, a presumption of arbitrability arises. The court should not decline to order arbitration “unless it may be said with positive assurance that the arbitration clause is not susceptible of an interpretation that covers the asserted dispute.”
AT & T, supra,
The district court in this case correctly found that the collective bargaining agreement did not specifically exclude from arbitration the continuing job guarаntee provision. In fact, the wording of the grievance-arbitration clause indicates that the parties intended this provision to be subject to arbitration. This clause states, in pertinent part:
... To this Joint Standing Committee shall be referred all disputes which may arise as to the construction to be placed upon any clause of the agreement ... or alleged violations thereof, which cannot be settled otherwise.... Shоuld the Joint Standing Committee be unable to agree then it shall refer the matter to a board of arbitration.... The decision of this board shall be final and binding upon both parties ...
(Emphasis added).
The Company alleges, however, that the district court did not have jurisdiction under Section 301 to compel arbitration of this dispute because, since the collective bargaining agreement had expired at the time thе dispute arose, there was no agreement in effect. The Supreme Court significantly undermined this argument in
Nolde Bros. Inc. v. Bakery & Confectionery Workers Union,
The Company claims that the dispute in this case did not “arise under” an expired contract, and that
Nolde
did not address the issue of whether unilateral implementation of a contract was a sufficient basis for Section 301 jurisdiction. It is clear from the wording of the parties’ grievance-arbitration clause that any dispute over the construction of the UG was covered by this broad grievance-arbitration prоcedure during the term of the collective bargaining agreement. Moreover, as the district court observed, the job guarantee right is a vested right that continues after the expiration of the main collective bargaining agreement. The cases interpreting
Nolde
have held that in order to “arise under” an expired contract, a dispute must involve rights which to some degree have vested or accrued during the life of the contract.
Litton v. NLRB, supra,
— U.S. at -,
Moreover, the district court found a present agreement to arbitrate, evidenced by the parties’ manifest intent to abide by the agreed-upon provisions of the expired collective bargaining agreemеnt. After the agreement expired, the parties continued to abide by all its terms. The Company included the previously agreed-upon grievance-arbitration procedure in its unilateral final offer. The parties utilized this procedure to deal with the Union’s subsequent grievance concerning the imposed wage rate. When presented with the Company’s last offer, the Union employeеs did not expressly reject it, but continued to perform their duties while registering a grievance concerning the single provision found objectionable.
2
Several Circuits have found, in similar cases, that the parties’ conduct manifested an intent to accept arbitration despite the absence of a complete collective bargaining agreement.
Int’l Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Local 1603 v. Transue & Williams Corp.,
The Company claims, howеver, that neither its conduct nor the language of the grievance-arbitration provision manifested an intent to arbitrate “new contract” provisions different from the comparable provisions in the expired agreement, i.e., the new wage rate. It argues that the Union’s present grievance concerning the Company’s unilateral imposition of a lowered wage rate is not a dispute over whether rights guaranteed by the UG have been violated, but an attempt to force arbitration of a more favorable wage rate for the new contract which the Union was unable to negotiate successfully.
On the contrary, the Union is seeking arbitration of rights vested in the previous collective bargaining agreement: arbitration which “relates either to the meaning or prоper application of a particular provision with reference to a specific situation.”
Elgin, J & E Ry. Co. v. Burley,
The Company argues that to compel arbitration will promote labor unrest when the outside arbitrator imposes contract terms unguided by economic forces and agreed-upon standards. The courts, it is asserted, cannot bind the parties in perpetuity to forego the use of economic weapons in support of their bargaining positions.
See NLRB v. Columbus Printing Pressmen,
The Company raises the specter of public policy violated by an arbitrator empowered to perpetuate a “new contract” arbitration provision, citing
NLRB v. Columbus Printing, supra,
Having reviewed the district court’s reasoning
de novo,
we find that the Union was entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the issue of arbitrability of this dispute. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Among the undisputed facts are (1) that the UG continues in effect, аnd (2) that the arbitration clause is binding in this dispute.
.
International Union, United Mine Workers v. Big Horn Coal Co.,
. The Supreme Court has distinguished "new contract" arbitration, which relates to disputes which look to the acquisition of rights for the future and not to the assertion of rights claimed to have vested in the past, from “rights" arbitration, in which the claim is to rights that have accrued and not merely to have new rights created for the future.
Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Ry. Co. v. Burley,
. The Company cites in support of its argument only one case involving the printing industry,
NLRB v. Columbus Printing Pressmen,
