Dеfendant National Distillers seeks review of the District Court’s order denying its motion for summary judgment and compelling arbitration. We affirm.
Defendant National Distillers is organized into the Liquor Division and the Chemical Division. National Distillers Liquor Division entered into a collective bargaining agrеement with Distillery, Wine & Allied Workers International (the Union). The agreement provided that the Liquor Division would employ only Union members and that аny disputes not resolved would be subject to arbitration.
The Liquor Division sent approximately twenty-five employees to the Chemical Division to provide maintenance, janitorial and lawn care services. For some purposes, the employees appear to have been joint employees of both divisions. Although these employees worked at the Chemical Division part time, they remained “employees” of the Liquor Division.
*851 James B. Beam Distilling Company (Jim Beam) bought the Liquor Division from National Distillers in May of 1987, and replaced National Distillers as the employer party to the collective bargaining agreement. The day after the sale was closed, Jim Beam, now the employer of all Liquor Division employees, recalled those workers previously assigned to the Chemical Division. The recalled workers in turn used their seniority to stay at Jim Beam, but less senior employees were less fortunate. Some were demoted while others were terminated altogether as a result of this recall. In order to replace those recalled workers, the Chemical Division hired nonunion employees.
In an attempt to redress these alleged wrongs the Union mailed a grievаnce to the Chemical Division on June 3, 1987, stating that “on 5-29-87 all union research employees were removed from the plant (25 jobs). Their work is being performed by non-union employees. Their current contract does not expire until 9-30-88.” After the Chemical Division returned the grievance, the Union filed a charge with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) against both the Liquor and Chemical Divisions, and Jim Beam. The NLRB refusеd to issue a complaint and the Union then filed an action to compel arbitration in District Court.
Defendant National Distillers filed a motion for summary judgment essentially claiming that the Union should have directed its grievance to Jim Beam. The District Court denied defendant’s motion аnd ordered them to submit to arbitration. It is from this order that defendant appeals.
The sole issue on appeal is whether this matter shоuld go to arbitration. In order to reach that issue we must determine whether National Distillers, including its remaining Chemical Division, is now bound by the arbitratiоn provisions of the collective bargaining agreement. Although the Chemical Division was not explicitly named in the agreement, we find thаt as a division of National Distillers, which was a signatory, they are bound. The question then becomes whether the issue of hiring nonUnion maintenance employees is subject to arbitration. We conclude that it is.
Although there is a strong federal policy which favors arbitration,
Lingle v. Norge Division of Magic Chef, Inc.,
Because collective bargaining agreements are contracts, parties who are not bound should not be obligated to arbitrate a dispute. Wiley,
While only parties to сollective bargaining agreements are bound generally, in some instances a non-signatory to the agreement may be so clоsely related to a signatory that both are bound.
Crest Tankers v. National Maritime Union of America,
The NLRB employs four factors in determining whethеr two or more related entities can be considered a single employer: (1) interrelation of operations, (2) common mаnagement, (3) centralized control of labor relations, and (4) common ownership.
Radio & Television Broadcast Technicians Local Union 1264 v. Broadcast Serv. of Mobile, Inc.,
In this case we believe that the circumstances taken as a whole warrant a finding of single employer status. Both the Liquor and Chemical Divisions were owned аnd managed by National Distillers, thus satisfying the second and fourth prongs of the Radio Union test. There was also a clear interrelation of opеrations. For example, some employees of the Liquor Division were sent to work at the Chemical Division, thus satisfying the first prong. There wаs also central control of both divisions when the agreement was made, and the arbitrator wili have to decide, among other things, whether the twenty-five maintenance jobs at the Chemical Division were traditionally Union jobs.
Additionally, there is support both in the collective bargaining agreement itself and from past matters that have been arbitrated for a finding of single employer status. The agreemеnt makes several references to “departments,” and the Chemical Division was a department of National Distillers. William Herrmann, National Distillers’ Industrial Relations Manager, stated in a deposition that the Chemical Division was considered to be one of the bargaining unit departments. Joint App. at 289. In an arbitration hearing in 1981 one of National Distillers’ lawyers stated that the maintenance employеes of the Chemical Division were covered under the same agreement, and implied that the Liquor and Chemical Divisions were part of a single entity by stating that they were both divisions of National Distillers. Joint App. at 228.
Therefore we hold that even though the Chemical Division wаs not a signatory to the collective bargaining agreement, it will still be bound by virtue of its single employer status with the Liquor Division under the umbrella of National Distillers.
Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court compelling National Distillers to arbitrate this grievance is affirmed.
