The question raised in this appeal is whether a public sector employer who deducts agency or “fair share” fees from a nonunion employee’s paycheck may be held liable when the local union fails to provide the employee with the financial disclosure required by Chicago Teachers Union Local No. 1 v. Hudson,
1. BACKGROUND
Pursuant to California law and provisions in the collective bargaining agreements (“CBAs”) governing their employment, the plaintiffs — who are not members of their local teachers union — are required to pay “agency” or “fair share” fees to those unions. See Cal. Gov’t Code §§ 3502.5(a), 3540.1(i), 3546. These fees, which are designed to compensate the un
Unions sometimes engage in activities unrelated to collective bargaining, such as contributing to political candidates and ideological causes. Agency fee payers,
To ensure that agency fee payers are not required to pay fees in excess of those properly chargeable, they are afforded three procedural protections. First, agency fee payers are entitled to “an adequate explanation of the basis for the fee,” which “include[s] the major categories of expenses, as well as verification by an independent auditor.” Hudson,
In this case, the unions failed to meet Hudson’s first requirement: provision of
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. See Weiner v. San Diego County,
III. DISCUSSION
The superintendents argue that, pursuant to Knight v. Kenai Peninsula Borough School District,
The district court held, and the plaintiffs argue, that the deduction of agency fees from the plaintiffs’ salaries, constitutes “adverse action” under Knight. We disagree. The “adverse action” contemplated by Knight must be more serious than the routine collection of fees despite a union’s failure to provide a proper notice. In other words, the routine collection of agency fees does not trigger a duty on the part of the employer to ensure that every employee has received a proper Hudson notice.
In coming to the opposite conclusion, the district court relied on a portion of Knight, which, if read on its own, might well lead to the -conclusion that the employer’s deduction of fees without determining whether the union’s notice was proper constitutes adverse action. Knight favorably cites a Sixth Circuit case, Tierney v. City of Toledo,
First, although Knight cites Tierney favorably in the portion described above, it does so immediately after criticizing the case in significant measure. Knight,
Second, when examined closely, Tierney itself does not stand for the proposition that employers must ensure that proper notice is given to each individual before fees are deducted. Tierney requires that a plan comporting with Hudson be in place before fees are deducted. Tierney,
Although employers certainly owe nonunion member employees the general duty set forth in Hudson of ensuring that procedures exist “that minimize impingement and that facilitate a nonunion employee’s ability to protect his rights,” Hudson,
Accordingly, we reverse and direct entry of summary judgment for the superintendents.
REVERSED.
Notes
. The plaintiffs sued the superintendents in their official capacity.
. By the time the district court granted summary judgment, only four of the eight original plaintiffs retained standing to pursue their claims. Accordingly, only four plaintiffs— Richard DiGiacomo, Diane Foster, Barry Lee Parks, and Mark Albrecht — are currently before this court.
. In Abood v. Detroit Board of Education,
. The school districts may withhold agency fees from the plaintiffs' paychecks without the plaintiffs' authorization. See Cal. Ed.Code § 45061; Cumero v. Public Employment Relations Board,
. Nonunion teachers are called agency fee payers because they pay fees under the terms of their employers’ agency shop agreements. In contrast, union teachers pay "membership dues.”
. Chargeable fees are comprised of "not only the direct costs of negotiating and administering a collective-bargaining contract and of settling grievances and disputes, but also the expenses of activities or undertakings normally or reasonably employed to implement or effectuate the duties of the union as exclusive representative of the employees in the bargaining unit.” Ellis v. Brotherhood of Ry., Airline & S.S. Clerks,
. In Prescott, this court made "it clear that the financial statements accompanying the notice must be audited (not merely reviewed) in order to assure that the union has actually spent the amounts of money it claimed to have spent on the chargeable activities.”
. We note that when examined closely, the resolution of one of the plaintiffs' claims in Knight supports our holding. One of the eight plaintiffs involved in the Patterson case, which was one of the cases consolidated into the Knight appeal, authorized the deduction of agency fees from his pay when he received a letter from the union demanding payment or threatening discharge. Knight,
Aware that the employer-defendant had deducted fees from one of the plaintiffs’ paychecks against his wishes, the Knight court nevertheless held as to all plaintiffs, that the school district’s duty to evaluate the sufficiency of the union's Hudson notice was not triggered. Implicit in that holding is the holding we reach today: that the non-consensual deduction of agency fees does not trigger a duty on the part of the school district to ensure that a proper Hudson notice was given by the union.
