OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS
Plaintiff in this action seeks to have an arbitration award set aside for the reason that it is against the great weight of the evidence and, furthermore, goes beyond the provisions of the contract and, therefore, beyond the power of the arbitrator. The issue arbitrated was whether the discharge of the Plaintiff was for just cause, and the arbitrator concluded that it was.
The threshold question presented by the briefs, however, is whether the action was timely filed in this Court. Defendant contends that the statute of limitations was exceeded and, therefore, that the Court is without jurisdiction to consider the merits of the case. Plaintiffs’ action was filed some eleven months after the arbitrator denied Plaintiff’s request for reconsideration.
Jurisdiction rests on Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185. This case is not, however, the more common situation in which the action is for direct breach of a collective bargaining agreement but rather is a claim that an arbitration award should be vacated. The courts are not in agreement as to the statute of limitations that should apply to such an action brought under the federal labor law. Defendant suggests that the correct statute of limitations is that provided in the American Arbitration Act (AAA), 9 U.S.C. § 12, a three-month statute, or, in the alternative, the twenty-day limitation period provided for arbitration based actions in state court. GCR 769.9(2); MCLA § 600.-5001. The statute referred to in the Court Rule indicates, however, that the statute does not govern labor arbitration matters. It is further to be observed, although neither party raises the point, that the statute of limitations applied in a Section 301 breach of the duty of fair representation case arising in Michigan is three years since the action is deemed analogous to a tort claim.
See Smart
v.
Ellis Trucking,
In Smart v. Ellis Trucking, supra, the Sixth Circuit dealt with a contention that the action was barred by the three-month statute of limitations of the AAA or, in the alternative, by the twenty-day version provided in state law. Because that action was a breach of the duty of fair representation action, not an action to vacate an arbitration award, as such, the three-year limitation period was found to apply, and the court did not need to resolve which limitations period would apply in an action to vacate an arbitration award. Thus, the Court remains without Sixth Circuit guidance on this issue.
Plaintiff urges that the case of
UAW v. Hoosier Cardinal Corp.,
*157
It has been suggested that in the context of review of arbitration awards, there is similarly no need for uniformity of rules of limitation from state to state for the reason that the private dispute resolution process has failed.
E. g., Santos v. Carpenters District Council,
Rather, I am persuaded that the three-month statute of limitations set forth in the AAA should be applied in order that uniformly prompt resolution of such matters may be had. I am cognizant of the fact that the AAA technically exempts contracts of employment from its coverage, 9 U.S.C. § 1, but it has been held that judicial decisions making arbitration clauses specifically enforceable, see
Textile Workers
v.
Lincoln Mills,
Plaintiff urges that reference to the limitations period set forth in the AAA is not proper. Apart from
Santos v. Carpenters District Council,
One other issue raised by Plaintiff merits comment. It is suggested that the decision of the Sixth Circuit in
Kentucky Mills v. Jackson,
In the alternative, were I to conclude that the analogous state statute of limitations should apply, Plaintiff’s action similarly would be time-barred. The cases recognize the importance of prompt resolution of post-arbitration disputes and suggest that shorter limitations periods should be chosen where possible. E. g., Barbario v. Anchor Motor Freight, supra at 1006. Each of the cases cited by Plaintiff, including Santos, supra, found an analogous state statute of limitations dealing specifically with arbitration, and in at least two instances, the period was the same as that provided in the AAA, UMW v. Jones & Laughlin, supra (three months); Barbario v. Anchor Motor Freight, supra (90 days), and in one case it was shorter. DeLorto v. UPS, supra (30 days). It is also pertinent to note that in the Jones & Laughlin case, relied on by Plaintiff, the court was confronted with an argument that the short Pennsylvania statute of limitations could not be applied for the reason that its own terms barred its use absent agreement by the parties. The court observed:
The plaintiffs argue that the Pennsylvania arbitration statute should not be applied in any case where the parties have not expressly agreed to be bound by its provisions, and cite Pennsylvania cases to the effect the General Arbitration Act applies only when the parties expressly agree that it apply. This proposition ig *159 nores the fact that the three-month provision is being applied as a matter not of state but of federal law. ...
We find no Pennsylvania cases in which the limitation period in an arbitration at common law has been indicated or discussed.
Id. at 1211.
In an effort to ascertain the applicable Michigan statute of limitátions, were the Court to look to Michigan for guidance, the Court has searched without success for a case determining the limitations period for a common law attack on an arbitration award.
See
2A
Michigan Digest,
“Arbitration and Award,” at n.85 (West). Thus, we are left with the twenty-day period provided for arbitration attacks generally, though Plaintiff correctly notes a statutory exception for cases like that at bar. GCR 769.-9(2); MCLA § 600.5001. Further, it is interesting to note that, in the context of statutory interest arbitration, it recently was held that a failure to make appeal to the courts within the sixty-day period provided in the Administrative Procedures Act, MCLA § 24.304, for review of a final agency decision barred consideration of the appeal.
National Union of Police Officers v. Board of Commissioners for the County of Wayne,
Plaintiff argues that the contract limitation of six years should apply, but I find no support for that conclusion, and such a rule would intolerably delay final resolution of arbitration matters. It might be argued that the three-year limitation period used in Section 301 fair representation cases should apply, but that is not really an analogous situation, and the three-year provision in such cases is best understood as having had roots in tort law, a logical parallel due to the nature of the breach of the duty of fair representation claim. The issues in the case attacking an arbitration award are dissimilar, and I find no ground for resort to the three-year limitation period.
Having made these observations, I conclude that the most analogous state limitation period is that provided by the Court Rule governing arbitration attacks. Though it is true that, statutorily, provisions do not apply in situations like that at bar, I rely on the analysis recited above from the case cited by Plaintiff, UMW v. Jones & Laughlin, supra. The pertinent question is what state statute of limitations most closely addresses the situation presented in the case brought under the federal law, in this case, Section 301. This conclusion finds support in the observation that the Michigan statute and the one precedent discovered which barred an arbitration appeal on timeliness grounds, National Union of Police Officers v. Board of Commissioners, supra, both indicate that but a brief time for appeal of arbitration awards is envisioned. As the state statutes of limitations discussed in the cases from other jurisdictions cited above illustrate, Michigan, by favoring a short period in which to appeal arbitration decision to the courts, is in step with the prevailing view. Accordingly, I find, in the alternative, that even if Michigan law were referenced for the purpose of setting the limitations period to govern the case at bar, the action would be untimely.
Plaintiff urges that considerations of equity compel denying the motion to dismiss even if timeliness is found to be a problem. Plaintiff suggests that Defendant had ample notice of the problem here sought to be litigated and that no prejudice to Defendant would exist. Plaintiff further notes that another action, claiming employment discrimination, was being finalized prior to the filing of this case. In response, it can be said that the concerns reviewed in the foregoing discussion which relate to prompt resolution of these matters preempt the considerations raised by Plaintiff. Moreover, the fact that the Defendant was aware of this problem is no answer, for the factual scenario underlying such actions nearly always would assure that such facts *160 could be pleaded in an effort to avoid filing deadlines, and Plaintiff makes no claim that Defendant in any way acted to mislead him. Finally, as evidenced by the fact that Plaintiff ultimately did file separate actions-one for employment discrimination and the other presently under consideration-there was no reason to delay in attacking the arbitration award in order to complete preparation of the discrimination action. Accordingly, I find that Plaintiffs contentions in avoidance of the statute of limitations must be rejected.
Finally, Plaintiff requests that if the Court concludes as it has, an opinion on the merits nevertheless should be rendered since it is said that guidance on the merits of this action would facilitate possible nonjudicial resolution of the employment discrimination action. While the Court surely wishes not to discourage possible resolution of the companion action, providing a ruling on a matter over which jurisdiction does not exist, for the reasons here stated, would be providing a ruling only advisory in nature. Because I deem such rulings ill-advised generally, I decline Plaintiff’s invitation.
For these reasons, then, Defendant’s motion to dismiss is GRANTED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
