Dennis GWIRTZ; Sarah Korns; Alan Siggelkow; Donald
Sowash; Doris Williams; James P. Chinni, On
behalf of themselves and others
similarly situated,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
OHIO EDUCATION ASSOCIATION, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 88-4126.
United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.
Argued Aug. 17, 1989.
Decided Oct. 11, 1989.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Nov. 28, 1989.
Jаmes A. Calhoun, Mansfield, Ohio, Glenn M. Taubman (argued), National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, Springfield, Va., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Bruce R. Lerner (argued), Robert H. Chanin, Bredhoff & Kaiser, Washington, D.C., Ira J Mirkin, Green, Haines, Sgambati, Murphy & Macala, Youngstown, Ohio, John A. Daily, Daily & Condrea, Akron, Ohio, for defendant-appellee.
Before KEITH and MARTIN, Circuit Judges; GIBBONS, District Judge.*
BOYCE F. MARTIN, Jr., Circuit Judge.
Six nonunion public school teachers appeal the district court's judgment for the Ohio Education Association in this action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983. The plaintiff teachers claim that their first amendment rights were violated by the defendant union's collection of fair share fees under a public employment collective bargaining agreement. We hold that the union's procedure in collecting the fair share fees from the plaintiffs is not constitutionally infirm and accordingly affirm the decisiоn of the district court.
I.
The plaintiffs, public school teachers in two districts in Ohio, declined to join the local education associations that are recognized as the exclusive bargaining representatives for all teachers in their respective districts. Under Ohio law, public employees within a bargaining unit who are not members of the unit's designated exclusive bargaining representative may be required to pay "fair share fees" to the exclusive representative and its affiliated organizations. Ohio Revised Code Sec. 4117.09(C). Pursuant to this provision of Ohio law, the local education associations sought to collect fair share fees from nonmember employees, including the рlaintiffs, during the 1987-88 year.
To collect fair share fees from nonmembers, the local associations followed a procedure adopted by the Ohio Education Association, the affiliated state union of the local associations, in which certain financial information would be disclosed to all the nonmember employees requirеd to pay fair share fees. The information disclosed to the nonmember employees included: (1) the audited basic financial statement of the Ohio Education Association; (2) an audited "Supplemental Schedule" setting forth the expenditures by the Ohio Education Association that were chargeable to nonmember employees and thоse expenditures that were not chargeable to nonmembers;1 (3) the 1987-88 budget of the Ohio Education Association; and (4) the audited financial statement and "Supplemental Schedule" of the National Education Association, the affiliated national union of the local associations. The Supplemental Schedule of the Ohio Education Association provided to nonmember employees was issued pursuant to Statement Auditing Standard No. 29, which is one of the various standards issued by the Auditing Standards Board of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
The plaintiffs filed suit against the Ohio Education Association on December 30, 1987, claiming that the association had violated their constitutional rights by failing to disclose adequate financial information prior to collecting fair share fees from them. More specifically, the plaintiffs alleged that the Association was constitutionally required to disclose its financial information with a "Special Report" issued pursuant to Statement on Auditing Standard No. 14, rather than with a Supplemental Schedule issued pursuant to Statement on Auditing Standard No. 29. On February 1, 1988, the plaintiffs also filed a motion for class certification, seeking to represent a class of all current and future nonmember employees who are required to pay fair share fees under their respective collective bargaining agreements.
The district court held a оne-day evidentiary hearing on April 29, 1988, and issued its memorandum opinion granting judgment in favor of the Ohio Education Association on November 18, 1988
II.
On appeal, the plaintiffs argue that the Ohio Education Association is constitutionally required to provide them with financial information audited at thе "highest" available level of auditing service. According to the plaintiffs, the "low level" of audit service that the Ohio Education Association's auditors have performed does not insure that the chargeability or nonchargeability of the Association's fair share fees is accurately determined. The plaintiffs assert that the standard is the highest avаilable level of audit service. They argue that this is the only way they can determine if the share fees are used appropriately. Chicago Teachers Union v. Hudson,
We disagree with the plaintiffs' assertion that Hudson, Damiano and Tierney require a union such as the Ohio Education Association to engage its auditors to perform the "highest" possiblе level of audit service on financial information provided to payors of fair share fees who decline to join their designated exclusive bargaining representatives. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the district court that the Association's disclosure of financial information to the plaintiffs is constitutionally sufficient.
In Hudson, the Supreme Court examined the procedures utilized by the Chicago Teachers Union to collect fair share fees from teachers who did not become members of the union. The Court held, in part, that the first amendment dictated that the nonmember teachers be given "sufficient information to gauge the propriety of the union's [fair share] fee."
In Damiano and Tierney, this circuit applied Hudson to cases involving nonunion member publiс employees who challenged the procedures followed by unions for collecting fair share fees from them. This court in Tierney found the procedure for the collection of fair share fees from nonmembers to be constitutionally infirm under Hudson because nonmembers were not, prior to the collection of fees from them, provided with detailed financial information concerning all major categories of union expenses that had been audited by an independent certified public accountant.
Applying Hudson, Tierney and Damiano to the present case, we conclude that the district court did not err in determining the Ohio Education Association's financial disclosure to nonunion member employees to be constitutionally adequatе. The Association furnished the plaintiffs with the budgets, audited financial statements and audited Supplemental Schedules of the Ohio Education Association and the National Education Association. Following an evidentiary hearing at which the parties offered expert testimony, the district court specifically found that: (1) the Auditing Standard No. 29 Supplementаl Schedule was a proper reporting mechanism for special subject matters such as the matter in this case, and (2) the Auditing Standard No. 29 Supplemental Schedule was subjected to an independent audit because the financial statements from which the Supplemental Schedule is derived were subjected to detailed testing. Given these findings by thе district court, which we must accept unless clearly erroneous,2 we conclude that the type of financial disclosure provided by the Ohio Education Association meets the requirements of Hudson.
Under Hudson, a union must adequately explain the basis for a fair share fee and that "adequate" financial disclosure to nonunion members would includе the major categories of expenses and verification by an independent auditor.
We reject the plaintiffs' contention that the Association's financial disclosure is inadequate under Hudson because the financial information disclosed was not audited at the "highest" level of audit service available or because the Association did not employ the "least restrictive" procedure imaginable to collect the fair share fees. The language in Hudson does not support this argument. Hudson stated that nonunion member employees must be given information "sufficient" to determine propriety of the union's fair share fee, but specifically noted that the union need not provide nonmember employees with an exhaustive and detailed list of all its expenditures and that "absolute precision" in the union's calculation of the fair share fees was not expected or required.
We also reject the plaintiffs' assertion that this court's decisions in Damiano and Tierney requirе the Ohio Education Association to utilize the "highest" level of audit services in its financial disclosure to nonunion member employees. In Damiano and Tierney, we merely recited and then applied the standards in Hudson to the cases concerning procedures followed by unions for collecting fair share fees from nonmember employеes.4 In Damiano and Tierney we did not extend the analysis of Hudson or set any additional or more stringent standards that a union must meet in disclosing financial information to nonmember employees. Thus, because the financial disclosures of the Association to the plaintiffs satisfy the constitutional requirements of Hudson, the disclosures are also constitutionаlly sufficient under Damiano and Tierney.
Finally, we note that our decision in this case is in accord with the recent holdings of other circuits on the issue of financial disclosures to nonunion member employees. In Andrews v. Education Association of Cheshire,
We agree with the conclusion of the district court that the type of financial disclosure provided to the plaintiffs by the Ohio Education Association under its fair share fee plan is constitutionally sufficient. We also agree that the district court did not err in refusing to rule on the plaintiffs' motion for class certification, Marx v. Centran Corp.,
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
The Honorable Julia S. Gibbons, United States District Judge for the Western District of Tennessee, sitting by designation
Fair share fees are "chargeable" to public employees who decline to become members of their designated exclusive bargaining representatives if the fees are expended by the union for activities germane to collective bargaining, contract administration or grievance adjustment. Howеver, fair share fees are not chargeable to nonmember public employees if the fees are spent by the union for ideological or political activities. Abood v. Detroit Board of Education,
A finding is clearly erroneous only when "the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed." United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
On the question of "verification" by an auditor, we reject the plaintiffs' argument that the function of the independent auditor is to verify the union's calculation of the chargeable or nonchargeable nature of the major categories of union expenditures. Whether a union expenditure is "chargeable" or "nonchargeable" to nonmember employees is a legal determination that depends upon the type of union activity for which the expenditure is made. It is not the role of an auditor to make such a legal determination. Rather, an auditor's role is to verify the expenditures made by the union so as to ensure that the expenditures that the union claims it made for particular expenses were actually made for those expenses. Andrews v. Education Association of Cheshire,
We note that, although the unions' procedures were found constitutionally deficient in both Tierney and Damiano, the constitutional infirmities arose from aspects of the unions' procedures not at issue in this case. For example, in Damiano, the union had even failed to inform nonmember employees of the actual amount of the fair share fee or how the fee had been calculated. In Tierney, the union failed to provide audited financial information prior to the collection of the fair share fees. The financial disclosure procedures followed by the Association are clearly not deficient in such ways
