Lead Opinion
We granted review to consider whether a provision of an interest arbitration award was properly vacated by the Commonwealth Court as being in excess of the arbitration panel’s authority. The disputed provision pertains to a requirement that the Commonwealth furnish legal representation to certain public safety employees in any legal proceeding arising from employment-related conduct, including criminal or otherwise intentional or malicious conduct, and that it indemnify such employees against civil judgments resulting from such conduct.
I. Background
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the Pennsylvania Corrections Officers Association (the “Union”),
When the Union and the Commonwealth began negotiating for a new CBA, they could not agree on the new provisions of Article 33, Section 21. They ultimately submitted their dispute to binding arbitration pursuant to Section 805 of the Public Employee Relations Act (“PERA”).
where representatives of units of guards at prisons or mental hospitals or units of employes directly involved with and necessary to the functioning of the courts of this Commonwealth have reached an impasse in collective bargaining!,] and mediation as required in [43 P.S. § 1101.801] has not resolved the dispute, the impasse shall be submitted to a panel of arbitrators whose decision shall be final and binding upon both parties with the proviso that the decisions of the arbitrators which would require legislative enactment to be effective shall be considered advisory only.
43 P.S. § 1101.805.
During the arbitration hearings, the Union expressed dissatisfaction with the way the Commonwealth exercised its discretion. It submitted evidence regarding the lack of reimbursement where certain criminal matters had been dismissed, and referenced two instances where an employee was not reimbursed for civil actions that were settled or dismissed. The Union thus proposed changes to Article 33, Section 21, to require the Commonwealth to provide legal representation for all civil and criminal cases, regardless of whether the underlying conduct was alleged to have been malicious or negligent. The Commonwealth opposed the Union’s proposal and offered testimony from the DOC’s Chief Counsel that it contradicted the regulations promulgated by the Executive Board of the Commonwealth (the “Executive Board”), which prohibit Commonwealth attorneys from representing employees in criminal matters. See 4 Pa.Code § 39.1.
The arbitration panel issued an award in January 2006 (the “Award”), one paragraph of which adopted verbatim the Union’s proposed amendatory language for Article 33, Section 21. In particular, Paragraph 18 of the Award provides:
(a) If a bargaining unit member is charged with a criminal action arising from the performance of his/her duties, he/she shall select local counsel in consultation with the Commonwealth. The Commonwealth shall pay for the fees of such counsel to the extent the fees are in line with prevailing rates in the area.
(b) If a bargaining unit member is a defendant in a civil suit arising from the performance of his/her duties, the Commonwealth shall immediately furnish counsel and defend the member.
(c) The Commonwealth shall be responsible for judgments rendered against the member in job-related suits where the bargaining unit member has acted within the scope and responsibility of his/her office.
Award at 10, ¶ 18. The arbitrator appointed by the Commonwealth dissented from Paragraph 18 on the theory that it was contrary to law and not within the panel’s jurisdiction.
The Commonwealth petitioned the Commonwealth Court to vacate Paragraph 18, arguing that it requires the Commonwealth to take actions that are expressly prohibited by the first three sections of Title 4, Chapter 39 of the Administrative Code. See 4 Pa.Code §§ 39.1-39.3. The Union countered that the portions of the Code cited by the Commonwealth are statements of policy, and not binding regulations with the force and effect of law.
The Commonwealth Court vacated Paragraph 18 of the Award. See DOC v. Pa. State Corr. Officers Ass’n,
The court then discussed the distinction between a regulation and a statement of policy under the Commonwealth Documents Law.
Analyzing these three prongs, the court first held that, in promulgating Chapter 39, the Executive Board acted under its legislatively granted power reflected in Section 709(f) of the Administrative Code of 1929,
Having determined that Chapter 39 contains regulations with the force of law, the Commonwealth Court considered whether Paragraph 18 of the Award forced the Commonwealth to violate those regulations. First, the court explained, the regulations generally preclude the Commonwealth from providing an attorney for criminal matters, see 4 Pa.Code § 39.1(a), but the Award requires the employer to consult with the employee in the selection of an attorney and pay that attorney’s fees. This requirement, the court reasoned, violates Section 39.1(a).
As to civil actions, the Commonwealth Court explained that Paragraph 18 requires the employer to provide counsel and indemnify the employee in all civil suits
Even if the regulations could be viewed as being tantamount to statutory enactments, Judge Pellegrini disagreed with the majority’s conclusion that a matter is not a proper subject of bargaining simply because it is addressed in the equivalent of a statute. Absent a direct legislative prohibition against negotiating over an issue, Judge Pellegrini concluded that a subject impacting wages, hours, or other terms and conditions of employment must be negotiated. Additionally, the dissent would have concluded that the Award was not in excess of the arbitrators’ powers, as it did not require the employer to provide legal representation that was forbidden by Chapter 39.
This Court granted the Union’s petition for allowance of appeal, limited to the question of whether the Commonwealth Court’s decision was in accord with Section 805 of PERA, 43 P.S. § 1101.805. See DOC v. Pa. State Corr. Officers Ass’n,
II. Review of Section 805 Awards
Section 701 of PERA gives public employees the right to bargain collectively
The Commonwealth Court has applied narrow certiorari in reviewing Section 805 awards, see FOP, Lodge No. 5 ex rel. Costello v. City of Phila.,
These competing policy concerns are likewise in tension with regard to interest arbitration undertaken pursuant to Section 805 of PERA. Like Act 111 employees, Section 805 employees are prohibited, for policy reasons, from striking as a means of exerting pressure on their employers, see 43 P.S. § 1101.805; Franklin County Prison Bd. v. PLRB,
As explained, narrow certiorari only allows courts to consider questions relating to the arbitrators’ jurisdiction, the regularity of the proceedings, an excess of the arbitrators’ powers, and constitutional deprivations. See City of Pittsburgh v. FOP,
III. Litigation Protection as a Term or Condition of Employment
A threshold question — and one on which the Commonwealth Court panel was divided — is whether Paragraph 18 pertains to a term or condition of employment that is bargainable under Section 701 of PERA. See 43 P.S. § 1101.701 (requiring collective bargaining “with respect to wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment”). If it does not, then the provision was in excess of the arbitrators’ authority, the Commonwealth Court was correct to vacate it on that basis, and our inquiry will be at an end.
In PLRB v. State College Area School District,
State College Area School District also reflects the reality that some items may be of fundamental concern to the employees’ interest in wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment, while still implicating, or at least “touching on,” basic managerial policy. State Coll. Area Sch. Dist.,
Accordingly, and as already stated, our first task is to determine whether the litigation benefits in issue constitute terms or conditions of employment for H-l bargaining unit members.
By the nature of their jobs, these employees come into daily, physical contact with prison inmates or patients at state
[Ojnly a handful of Commonwealth employees are ... expected, as a condition of their employment, to interact with other individuals who desire to ... injure or kill [them]. During the hearings, the [Union] presented evidence showing that the animosity of the jailed toward their jailers is expressed in many forms, one of which was the filing of frivolous lawsuits against [Union] members.
Brief for Union at 10-11 (emphasis omitted) (citing R.R. 243a, 253a, 363a, 441a-443a); see also id. at 42 (“[I]nmates have no love lost for the very people whose jobs are to keep them from loosing themselves upon ... society.”). These averments, moreover, are not presently contradicted by the Commonwealth. Thus, we agree with the Union that, in view of this unique set of circumstances under which the employees must perform their jobs, litigation protection is a term of employment for H-l unit members.
The next question is whether Paragraph 18’s directive that such protection be provided unduly infringes upon the Commonwealth’s inherent managerial prerogatives. Since the Office of General Counsel already has discretion under the Pennsylvania Code to provide such representation or indemnification for legal fees and judgments, it would be difficult for the Commonwealth to argue that requiring it to supply these benefits unduly infringes upon its managerial prerogatives as an employer. Thus, in performing the analysis required by Elhvood City and IAFF, we find that Paragraph 18 pertains to bargainable subject matter for H-l employees. Accord State v. Pub. Safety Employees Ass’n,
IV. Illegality
We now proceed to the central question in this case: whether the Award constitutes an excess of the arbitrators’ authority because it requires the employer to perform an illegal act. The Union first
A. Legislative rules versus policy statements
As the Commonwealth Court recognized, the Executive Board promulgated Chapter 39 pursuant to a specific legislative grant of power under the Administrative Code of 1929 (see supra note 7), namely, Section 709(f) of that statute, which allows it to make rules and regulations regarding reimbursements to employees. See 71 P.S. § 249(f); see also Yurgosky v. AOPC,
Additionally, the Union does not deny that the provisions of Chapter 39 were promulgated using proper administrative procedures or that they are reasonable. As for their asserted character as policy statements, the Union relies on the fact that discretion is reposited within the Office of General Counsel in certain defined circumstances. For example, if the General Counsel determines that a criminal prosecution arising from the acts or omissions of a Commonwealth employee has a basis in law or fact, she retains discretion to authorize reimbursement of legal fees if the employee’s defense is ultimately successful. See 4 Pa.Code § 39.1(b). Examples such as these, however, are insufficient to demonstrate that Chapter 39 cannot be a substantive regulation.
In Lopata v. UCBR,
A properly adopted substantive rule establishes a standard of conduct which has the force of law ... The underlying policy embodied in the rule is not generally subject to challenge before the agency. A general statement of policy, on the other hand, does not establish a “binding norm.” ... A policy statement announces the agency’s tentative intentions for the future.
These provisions comport with the definition of a substantive regulation because they create a controlling standard of conduct, in this case the conduct of the Commonwealth as employer. The fact that the benefits are, in some instances, dependent on a prior determination by the Office of General Counsel concerning the nature of the underlying conduct does not convert these regulations into discretionary rules or undercut their status as setting forth binding norms. Simply put, there is a difference between a determination regarding actions that have occurred, and an exercise of discretion regarding benefits to be conferred. We note, as well, that even statutes enacted by the General Assembly may allow for the exercise of discretion by governmental actors, see, e.g., 42 Pa.C.S. § 9721 (giving a sentencing court discretion to run multiple sentences concurrently or consecutively); Commonwealth v. Graham,
B. The interrelationship between the Award and the regulations
The question then becomes whether Paragraph 18 requires the Commonwealth to perform an act that these regulations prohibit, thereby constituting an excess of the arbitrators’ powers. As noted, the Commonwealth asserts that the Award does require an illegal act because, in some instances, it mandates reimbursement, indemnification, and/or representation without the exercise of employer discretion as set forth in the regulations. The Commonwealth states that the Award thereby divests it of the discretion it is legally obligated to exercise. See Brief for Commonwealth at 16-20. On the other hand, the Union’s position is that, if a certain benefit (such as providing a legal defense) is discretionary with an employer, clearly the employer may confer it; hence, an arbitration award requiring its conferral cannot possibly command the employer to take an action that it could not have
A review of our cases in which this Court has applied the excess-of-authority prong reveals that it, like narrow certiorari itself, is “very constricted,” FOP, Lodge No. 5,
We have stated that “[o]ur definition of what constitutes ‘an excess of an arbitrator’s power’ [is] far from expansive.” Essentially, if the acts the arbitrator mandates the employer to perform are legal and relate to the terms and conditions of employment, then the arbitrator did not exceed her authority.
Id. at 299,
Similarly, in Smith, this Court exercised narrow certiorari review of a grievance award where a state trooper was fired after committing illegal conduct, including driving while intoxicated and placing a loaded gun into a victim’s mouth while threatening to kill her. The grievance arbitrator overruled Smith’s discharge on the basis that it was disproportionate to discipline meted out in other cases. In upholding the award as falling within the arbitrator’s power, this Court referred to the “severe limits placed on our appellate authority” which are “dictated by the legislature as part of a carefully crafted plan of remediation to correct flaws” in the prior system. Smith,
Given the narrow confines to which this Court has historically adhered in applying the excess-of-authority prong, we are not convinced that an award requiring the conferral of litigation benefits in situations where the employer already retains discretion to confer those benefits is judicially voidable. For one thing, as the Union points out, it does not require an illegal act or an act that the employer could not undertake voluntarily. Moreover, except in the most egregious cases of employee misconduct (discussed below), the benefits constitute legitimate terms or conditions of employment. In this latter respect, we find Washington Arbitration to be particularly helpful, not only because it illustrates the type of award that is properly considered to reflect an excess of the arbitration panel’s powers, but because it is the seminal case stating what that terminology means. The Court explained:
[W]e are of the opinion that [arbitration] panels may not mandate that a governing body carry out an illegal act. We reach this result by quite frankly reading into the enabling legislation the requirement that the scope of the submission to the arbitrators be limited to conflicts over legitimate terms and conditions of employment. Were this not so, virtually any issue could be submitted to the arbitrators under the guise of a labor conflict.... The essence of our decision is that an arbitration award may only require a public employer to do that which it could do voluntarily. We emphasize that this does not mean that a public employer may hide behind self-imposed legal restrictions.
Id. at 176-77,
Here, we have already determined that the litigation benefits addressed by Paragraph 18 constitute a bargainable term of employment for the public safety employees who are members of the H-l bargaining unit. Further, in many instances the Commonwealth, under its own regulations, may provide such benefits through an exercise of its discretion. In keeping with the narrow confines of review for an excess of the arbitrators’ authority, we find that an award affirmatively requiring such benefits in the same circumstances where they are discretionary is not beyond the arbitrators’ power, as it does not require an illegal act. Put differently, the Award’s removal of any discretion embodied in Sections 39.1 through 39.3 does not constitute an excess of the arbitrators’ authority under Washington Arbitration and its progeny.
In light of the above analysis, it is evident that Paragraph 18 should not have been completely invalidated under narrow certiorari review. Rather, it should only have been deemed unenforceable to the extent it requires an illegal act. Cf. United Parcel Serv. v. Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen & Helpers of Am., Local Union No. 430,
As to subsection (a), the Commonwealth, like the Commonwealth Court majority, is of the view that consulting with the employee in the selection of counsel and the paying of counsel fees amounts to defending the employee, which gives rise to a conflict of interest. We do not consider this to be an adequate basis on which to void subsection (a). First, the Commonwealth’s objection predicated upon a possible conflict of interest cannot rest solely on the furnishing of legal fees, because its own regulations already permit fees to be advanced and/or reimbursed in criminal cases under some circumstances. See 4 Pa.Code § 39.1. To the degree the Commonwealth echoes the Commonwealth Court’s assertion that paying legal fees and consulting on the selection of an attorney “is tantamount to providing an attorney,” Pa. State Corr. Officers Ass’n,
As noted, Paragraph 18(a) states, quite simply, that the Commonwealth must pay an employee’s reasonable attorney’s fees in any criminal action arising from the performance of the employee’s duties. Section 39.1(a) addresses criminal cases that the Office of General Counsel deems frivolous, and requires reimbursement of all such fees, as well as advancement of the same limited only by the balance in the employee’s retirement account. This provision is mandatory in the sense that it does not give the employer any discretion to decide whether or not to either advance or, ultimately, reimburse, the employee for reasonable counsel fees: the employer must advance fees up
Subsections (b) and (c) require the Commonwealth to defend Union members who are sued civilly so long as the suit arises from the performance of the employee’s duties, and to pay any resulting judgment if the employee acted within the scope and responsibility of his office. Here again, in many cases the General Counsel is already required to provide such defense and indemnification — specifically, in cases of alleged negligence or other unintentional conduct, see 4 Pa.Code § 39.2, and in instances where it appears to the General Counsel that the defendant’s conduct giving rise to the cause of action “was within the scope of his employment and a good faith exercise of his authority,” regardless of the nature of the allegations. Id. § 39.3(a).
The only circumstance in which subsections (b) and (c) of Paragraph 18 may require an action at odds with the regulations arises when the General Counsel determines that the employee’s conduct “was a bad faith exercise of his authority, malicious or outside the scope of his employment.” 4 Pa.Code § 39.3(b)(1). Even then, the General Counsel is permitted to provide the employee with a legal defense, see id., or reimburse the employee for fees and costs after a successful defense. See id. § 39.3(b)(2). Thus, the only instance in the civil arena where Paragraph 18 actually requires an action affirmatively forbidden by the regulations is reflected in subsection 18(c), which makes the Commonwealth
As a final consideration, by promulgating substantive regulations having the force and effect of law, the employer in this case — the Commonwealth — has been given the power to, in effect, legislate regarding a category of benefits that we have determined to be bargainable terms and conditions of employment, as explained above. This raises a substantial question under PERA concerning the extent to which the Commonwealth should be permitted, ultimately, to utilize its rule-making authority as a shield against conflicting arbitration awards, when such awards are subjected to narrow-certiorari judicial review. Indeed, allowing the Commonwealth to do so arguably implicates Washington Arbitration’s caveat that a public employer should not be permitted to “hide behind self-imposed legal restrictions.” Washington Arbitration,
V. Conclusion
Certain classes of governmental employees perform functions that are vital to public safety. These include police officers, firefighters, prison guards, individuals involved in the custody, care, and control of patients at state mental hospitals, and employees necessary to the functioning of the judiciary. During the last century, labor unrest among some of these groups led to legislation precluding them from striking, while giving them the ability to bargain collectively over terms and conditions of employment, together with the associated right to submit unresolved bargaining disputes to binding arbitration. See generally Betancourt,
The Order of the Commonwealth Court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. Paragraph 18 of the Award is upheld with exceptions as indicated in this Opinion.
Notes
. The Union is the bargaining representative for the “H-l bargaining unit,” which consists of approximately 9,500 personnel employed by the Department of Corrections (“DOC”) and the Department of Public Welfare ("DPW”). See generally Pa. State Corr. Officers Ass’n v. State Civil Serv. Comm’n (DOC),
. Act of July 23, 1970, P.L. 563, No. 195 (as amended, 43 P.S. §§ 1101.101-1101.2301).
. The public employer's duty to bargain collectively is limited by Section 703, which states that the parties may not implement a CBA provision that conflicts with either a statute enacted by the General Assembly or a municipal home rule charter. See 43 P.S. § 1101.703. Notably, the CBA is alleged to conflict with administrative regulations, and not a statute or a home rule charter.
. The Executive Board is a seven-person board comprised of the Governor and six agency heads designated by the Governor. See 71 P.S. § 64. It is authorized, among other things, to standardize qualifications for employment, titles, salaries, and wages of persons employed by state agencies, see id. § 249(a), and to "make rules and regulations providing for travel, lodging and other expenses” for which executive branch employees may be reimbursed. Id. § 249(0-
. The Union also unsuccessfully argued that the Commonwealth had waived its objection. No issue regarding waiver is presently before this Court.
. Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 769, No. 240 (as amended, 45 P.S. §§ 1102—1602).
. Act of April 9, 1929, P.L. 177, No. 175 (as amended, 71 P.S. §§ 51-732).
. Section 39.1 states:
(a) The Commonwealth will not provide an attorney to defend a present or former official or employe in a criminal case arising from acts or omissions occurring while in the service of the Commonwealth. If it is determined by the General Counsel or the General Counsel’s designee that there is no basis for the prosecution as a matter of law or fact, the Commonwealth will reimburse the employe for reasonable attorneys fees and to that end will make any required advance of these fees, limited by the balance in the retirement account of the employe.
(b) In a case in which the General Counsel or the General Counsel's designee does not determine that there is no basis for the prosecution in law or fact, he may nevertheless authorize the reimbursement of reasonable attorneys fees if the employe’s defense is successful.
4 Pa.Code § 39.1.
. Section 39.2, entitled, "Civil cases involving unintentional conduct,” states:
When a Commonwealth official or employe is sued in his official or individual capacity for alleged negligence or other unintentional misconduct occurring while in the scope of employment, the Commonwealth will provide a defense in all cases. If an insurance policy purchased by the Commonwealth affords coverage, the insurance company will undertake the defense with an attorney of its choosing at its expense. If there is no insurance coverage, the Commonwealth will provide an attorney to defend the official or employe. The Commonwealth will indemnify the defendant for the expense of a judgment against him in this case. The defendant may engage his own attorney but any attorneys fees will not be reimbursed by the Commonwealth and indemnification will be in the sole discretion of the General Counsel.
4 Pa.Code § 39.2.
. Specifically, Section 39.3, pertaining to civil cases involving intentional or malicious conduct, provides:
(a) Good faith in exercise of authority. Regardless of the allegations made against the defendant, if it appears to the General Counsel or to the General Counsel’s designee that the defendant’s conduct giving rise to the cause of action was within the scope of his employment and a good faith exercise of his authority, the Commonwealth, or its insurance company if there is coverage, will undertake the defense with an attorney of its choosing at its expense, and will indemnify the defendant for the expense of a judgment against him or a settlement that is approved by the General Counsel or the General Counsel's designee. The defendant may engage his own attorney but indemnification and reimbursement of attorneys fees by the Commonwealth will be in the sole discretion of the General Counsel.
(b) Bad faith or malicious conduct, or conduct outside the scope of employment.
(1) If the General Counsel or the General Counsel’s designee determines that the defendant’s conduct was a bad faith exercise of his authority, malicious or outside the scope of his employment, the General Counsel, in his sole discretion, will determine whether the Commonwealth will undertake the defense of the defendant. The Commonwealth will not indemnify the defendant for a judgment against him, and will notify the defendant that he may be subject to personal liability and should engage his own attorney.
(2) If the General Counsel or the General Counsel’s designee has determined initially that the defendant's conduct was a bad faith exercise of his authority, malicious or outside the scope of his employment, and the defendant ultimately prevails in the civil action, the General Counsel, in his sole discretion, may determine that the Commonwealth will reimburse the defendant for the costs of defense and fees of his private attorney.
4 Pa.Code § 39.3.
. Finally, in answering the dissent, the majority suggested that legal representation and indemnification do not constitute bargainable wages or other terms and conditions of employment for purposes of Section 701. It reasoned that representation and indemnification are not forms of "compensation” as such, since they constitute a net zero gain and, moreover, alleged malicious or criminal conduct can never constitute the performance of an employee's duties. See id. at 370-71 & n. 23.
. The dissent also questioned the majority’s conclusion that legal representation and indemnification are not terms and conditions of employment. See supra note 11. The dissent reasoned that public officials are routinely exposed to litigation for actions taken during employment, and thus, corrections officers could be subject to financial ruin for meritless charges brought by inmates. Hence, the dissent concluded that this type of financial protection constitutes a term of employment. See Pa. State Corr. Officers Ass’n,
. Act of June 24, 1968, P.L. 237, No. Ill (as amended, 43 P.S. §§ 217.1-217.10).
. Although FOP, Lodge Number 5 involved an Act 111 grievance arbitration award, it employed the same narrow certiorari standard applicable to Act 111 interest arbitration awards. See Betancourt,
. An award pertaining to an issue that was not placed in dispute before the board also reflects an excess of the arbitrators’ powers. See Upper Providence Police,
. The Commonwealth asks us not to address this question because it was raised as an issue in the Union’s petition for allowance of appeal, and allocatur was expressly denied on all issues except the one that this Court accepted for review. However, the question is subsumed within the review standard for Section 805 awards as articulated above. Also, any failure on our part to resolve it would leave in place the appellate court's conclusion, in the nature of an alternative holding, see generally Commonwealth v. Markman,
. The assertion in State College Area School District, that if a "matter is one of inherent managerial policy but does affect wages, hours and terms and conditions of employment, the public employer shall be required to meet and discuss such subjects," is not to the contrary. A close reading of that opinion reveals that this pronouncement did not pertain to mandatory bargaining, but to inherent managerial policies subject to Section 702’s separate meet-and-discuss mandate, which, by its terms, applies to managerial policies that have an impact on wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment. See 43 P.S. § 1101.702.
. In reaching the opposite conclusion, the Commonwealth Court focused on one instance of alleged malicious conduct by an employee, and reasoned that such an action can never be undertaken in the performance of public duties. See Pa. State Corr. Officers Ass'n,
. Although the "plan of remediation” in view was Act 111, as discussed previously the same essential remedy, with its concomitant restrictions on judicial review, applies in the present, Section 805, context.
. When an employee covered by PERA is not within the category of public safety personnel entitled to narrow certiorari review, courts use the "essence test” for grievance awards issued pursuant to an existing CBA. See State Sys. of Higher Educ. (Cheyney Univ.) v. State Coll. Univ. Prof'l Ass'n (PSEA-NEA),
. We express no opinion whether a different outcome would obtain if the General Assembly had commanded that the Commonwealth retain discretion over the benefits at issue. For example, Section 702 of PERA expressly reserves to the employer "areas of discretion or policy” such as "functions and programs of the public employer, standards of services, its overall budget, utilization of technology, the organizational structure!,] and selection and direction of personnel.” 43 P.S. § 1101.702. The litigation benefits in question here are not of the same character as those enumerated, and, indeed, the Commonwealth does not argue that Paragraph 18 contravenes Section 702.
. Our legal system accepts that this type of compartmentalization can exist without a conflict. The furnishing to an indigent defendant of the services of a public defender at government expense is one example of where the government selects the defense attorney and pays his or her fees without raising a conflict of interest.
. The Commonwealth additionally maintains that subsection (a) is invalid because it overrides portions of Chapter 39 which "prevent[] the Commonwealth from becoming embroiled in litigation and criminal proceedings involving egregious abuses of authority or lewd and vulgar acts by employees — -acts that are clearly outside the scope of employment.” Brief for Commonwealth at 17. The Commonwealth alleges, in this regard, that similar arising-from-the-performance-of-duties language in a separate award favoring the State Police Troopers Association has been interpreted by grievance arbitrators to cover actions occurring while the individual is on duty, thus forcing the Pennsylvania State Police to defend troopers who commit crimes or engage in acts of sexual assault or harassment, so long as the trooper is “in uniform and on the clock.” Id. at 19. The Commonwealth does not direct our attention to any judicial decisions embodying such a construction, or provide any basis to conclude that the interpretations rendered by various grievance arbitrators affect the viability of Paragraph 18(a). As we have indicated, moreover, that subsection may not be implemented in an instance where the charges are non-frivolous and the employee’s defense is unsuccessful.
. Paragraph 18 is silent with regard to out-of-court settlements.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring and dissenting.
I agree with and join much that the majority has written. I agree with the majority’s application of the narrow certiorari scope of review. I heartily agree with the majority’s conclusion that Paragraph 18 of the interest arbitration award pertains to terms and conditions of employment. I believe that the en banc Commonwealth Court majority’s conclusion regarding whether the coverage of legal expenses for civil and criminal actions pertaining to the affected public employees could be characterized as a term and condition of employment to be a patent, egregious, and far-reaching error in need of immediate correction. The majority’s correction of that error will prove to be of significant value to the bench and bar.
However, I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that the arbitration panel in this case exceeded its power with respect to the remaining provisions of Paragraph 18. I believe that the panel was within its authority to award Paragraph 18 in its entirety, and I would thus reverse the Commonwealth Court’s order in its entirety.
The majority briefly addresses the issue of whether the Commonwealth, or any other public employer, may skirt its statutory obligation to bargain with public employees by promulgating regulations regarding bargainable employment issues, use such regulations as sacrosanct “authority” to avoid bargaining on these issues, and thus compel a result in its favor on such issues. As the majority notes, long ago we determined that public employers can “not ... hide behind self-imposed legal restrictions.” City of Washington v. Police Department of City of Washington,
I see no need to leave this issue for another day. Indeed, I believe the resolution of this issue is necessary for the proper disposition of the question this Court certified for appeal.
As the majority correctly determined, any judicial review of the “final and binding” arbitration award in this case would fall under the third prong of narrow certiorari, concerning the limits of the power or authority of the arbitration panel. With respect to the third prong of narrow certiorari, we have held:
Our definition of what constitutes an excess of an arbitrator’s powers is far from expansive. Essentially, if the acts the arbitrator mandates the employer to perform are legal and relate to the terms and conditions of employment, then the arbitrator did not exceed her authority.
FOP, Lodge No. 5, supra at 296-97,
It is critical to recognize in this case that the Commonwealth agencies are not prohibited by any legislative act from complying with Paragraph 18 of the award. The Chapter 39 regulations, which the majority here determines limit the authority of the arbitration panel, are not compelled by any statute. These regulations are purely the product of the executive arm of the Commonwealth. Accordingly, that executive arm can voluntarily comply with Paragraph 18 by simply altering its regulations,
I believe that the circumstance presented in this case is exactly the circumstance contemplated by this Court in City of Washington, where we determined that public employers can “not ... hide behind self-imposed legal restrictions.” Id. at 555,
. However, I distance myself from the majority’s application of rationale from City of Philadelphia v. International Ass'n of Firefighters, Local 22,
Moreover, I disagree with the majority that PERA supports its determination that we may consider whether the award at issue unduly infringed upon managerial prerogatives. Section 702 of PERA, 43 P.S. § 1101.702, does provide that items of inherent managerial policy are not bargainable. However, the provision applicable in this case— Section 805 of PERA, which applies to unique populations of public employees that are closely akin to Act 111 employees — relevantly provides that "[njotwithstanding any other provision of this act ... [the decision of] the panel of arbitrators ... shall be final and binding....” 43 P.S. § 1101.805 (emphasis added). Section 805 thus eschews Section 702, and I take this circumstance as further evidence that City of Philadelphia and Borough of Ellwood City, albeit both Act 111 cases, came to erroneous conclusions on the issue of the primacy of managerial prerogatives or responsibilities.
. Finally, I must respectfully disassociate myself from the majority’s observation, in the last sentence of Section IV, that the majority's invalidation of the significant part of Paragraph 18 of the award is "not untoward.” Op. at 552-53,
