Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge GINSBURG.
Howard University appeals from the judgment of the district court affirming an arbitration award in favor of the union that represents the campus police. Howard claims the arbitrator did not have jurisdiction to resolve the dispute and, by excluding certain evidence relevant to the merits, made an error so еgregious as to constitute “misconduct.” We affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. Background
The Metropolitan Campus Police Officer’s Union is the exclusive representative of “officers, sergeants, and other security personnel” employed by the Howard University Campus Police Department. In December 2003, H. Patrick Swygert and Carla McCormick, respectively the presidents of the University and of the Union, signed a collective bargaining agreement (CBA), Appendix C of which was styled “Wage Compensation Package” and contained a list of planned salary increases for covered employees. The CBA included this аrbitration clause: “[A]n allegation that there has been a violation, misapplication, or misinterpretation of the terms of this Agreement shall [be subject to arbitration].”
In May 2004, the Union filed a grievance claiming Howard had not increased salaries in accordance with Appendix C. Howard, which did not оbject to resolving the grievance through arbitration, argued before the arbitrator that inclusion of Appendix C in the contract was a mutual mistake. According to Howard, the parties had not reached an agreement on the wage compensation package when they signed the contract; they had intended to table negotiations until after the Christmas holiday, and unintentionally included Appendix C in the executed agreement. The arbitrator framed the dispute as follows: *719 “Whether or not the Parties had a meeting of the minds on Appendix C, the Wage Compensation package.”
The arbitrator сonducted an evidentiary hearing in which she heard testimony from, among others, Howard’s chief negotiator, Leroy Jenkins, and the Union president, Carla McCormick. President Swygert, who had signed the CBA on Howard’s behalf, did not testify. In order to show the Union had not intended to include Appendix C in the agreement, Howard proffered the testimony of Kimberly Kline, the Union’s chief negotiator. The Union objected that Kline’s testimony violated its attorney-client privilege and the arbitrator excluded it. In a declaration filed in the district court, Kline said she would have testified as follows:
During open negotiations, the parties agreed to continue negotiating over the Wage Compensation Package after the Agreement was signed. Specifically, the parties agreed to continue negotiating certain pay increases that the union members would receive on the basis of seniority over the term of CBA.
Following execution of the Agrеement, the parties did, in fact, continue to negotiate over the specified pay increases. Attached hereto as Exhibit 1 is an email that I forwarded to Leroy T. Jenkins, counsel for Howard University, dated February 9, 2004, which was almost two months after the Agreement was executed. The purpose of this emаil was to continue negotiating the pay increases.
Howard also proffered, and the arbitrator received into evidence, the February 9 email mentioned in the declaration. It reads:
Leroy — Could you fax me the Performance Appraisal that is being used for the guards. I assume the drug testing facilities аppendix that was being used in the last contract is still okay. Also, do you have comments/suggestions regarding the salary bands that were submitted?
The arbitrator sustained the Union’s grievance. Finding the February 9 email ambiguous and noting that President Swy-gert did not testify for Howard, she concluded there was no “clear and concretе evidence” to support the University’s contention that Appendix C was included in the CBA by mutual mistake. She therefore held the University was required to abide by the wage terms in the Appendix.
Howard moved for reconsideration, which the arbitrator denied. The Union then moved to confirm the arbitration award in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia, and Howard removed the case to district court pursuant to Section 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185(a), which provides that “[s]uits for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization ... may be brought in any district court of the United Statеs having jurisdiction of the parties.” Once in district court, Howard filed a motion to vacate the award, contending for the first time that the arbitrator “did not have substantive jurisdiction under the CBA to determine whether Howard University and the Union formed [a] ‘meeting of the minds’.... ” Howard also argued the arbitrator had impermissi-bly excluded the testimony of Kimberly Kline.
The district court affirmed the award.
Howard Univ. v. Metro. Campus Police Officer’s Union,
Howard appealed to this court.
II. Analysis
We review the district court’s decision de novo.
Teamsters Local Union No. 61 v. UPS, Inc., 272
F.3d 600, 603 (D.C.Cir.2001). Under long-standing precedent, we may vacate a labor arbitration award only if it does not “draw[ ] its essence” from the terms of the collective bargaining agreement.
United Steelworkers of Am. v. Enter. Wheel & Car Corp.,
While courts ... may review the substance of an arbitration award, only the narrowest circumstances will justify setting the award aside. An arbitrator cannot, for instance, ... ignore the contract and dispense his own brand of industrial justice. But if an arbitrator was arguably сonstruing or applying the contract, a court must defer to the arbitrator’s judgment.
Madison Hotel v. Hotel & Restaurant Employees, Local 25,
That the arbitrator may have made a “mistake of law” does not affect the standard of review: The parties “have agreed to be bound by the arbitrator’s interpretаtion without regard to whether a judge would reach the same result....”
Am. Postal Workers Union v. USPS (APWU),
A. Arbitrability
Howard contends the arbitrator laсked jurisdiction to hear the grievance, but it did not raise this objection until it moved in the district court to vacate the award. As a result, the Union argues, the objection was forfeit.
We agree with the Union, as does every other circuit to have considered the issue: Absent excusable ignorance of a prеdicate fact, a party that does not object to the arbitrator’s jurisdiction during the arbitration may not later do so in court.
See United Indus. Workers v. Gov’t of the V.I.,
First, arbitration is a matter of consent; if a party submits to arbitration without objecting to the arbitrator’s jurisdiction, then it may fairly be said to have consented to the arbitration, and the other party, having gone forward with the proceeding, may fairly be said to have relied upon that consent.
See United Indus.
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Workers,
Second, requiring a party to objeсt to the arbitrator’s jurisdiction during the arbitration conserves resources. If a party objects to the arbitrator’s jurisdiction and the arbitrator sustains the objection, then the parties can go directly to court and, if the court affirms, avoid an unnecessary arbitration proceeding.
Howard invokes
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union No. 515 v. Hope Electrical Corp.,
B. Exclusion of evidence
Howard contends the award should be vacated because the arbitrator excluded Kline’s testimony, and points us to the Supreme Court’s instruction to “look[] to the [Federal Arbitration Act] for guidance in labor arbitration cases.”
United Paperworkers Int’l Union v. Misco, Inc.,
[I]n making evidentiary determinations, an arbitrator need not follow all the niceties observed by the federal courts. The arbitrator need only grant the parties a fundamentally .fair hearing.... [A] federal court may vacate an award only if the panel’s refusal to hear pertinent and material evidence prejudices the rights of the parties to the arbitration proceedings.
Lessin v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
Howard аrgues the arbitrator erred in excluding Kline’s testimony based upon the attorney-client privilege because her testimony contained no privileged statements; it referred only to communications made in open negotiations with Howard. Moreover, Howard submits, her testimony spoke directly to the central issue at the hearing, that is, whether the parties had made a mutual mistake in including Appendix C in the CBA. It therefore contends this error was so prejudicial that it amounted to the type of “misconduct ... in refusing to hear evidence pertinent and *722 material to the controversy,” 9 U.S.C. § 10(a)(8), that justifies vacating an arbitration award.
There was no misconduct in the exclusion of Kline’s testimony. Although Howard is correct that testimony by an attorney describing statements made in open negotiations would not be subject to the attorney-client privilege in a federal court,
see In re Sealed Case,
According to the declaration filed in the district court, Kline, speaking for the Union, made the statements at issue to Leroy Jenkins, Howard’s chief negotiator, during the negotiations. At the arbitration hearing, Jenkins testified on Howard’s behalf regarding these statements. Although Jenkins’s testimony is not in the district court record, he could only have testified to the effect that the parties made a mutual mistake — which means Kline’s testimony would have been duplicative. The only value apparently to be added by Kline’s testimony was that, as the attorney and chief negotiator for the Union, she could most credibly speak to the Union’s intentions. Her credibility arоse, however, from her direct knowledge of the Union’s intentions during negotiations, and that knowledge derived at least in part from privileged communications and in whole from her representation of the Union. Therefore, the arbitrator’s decision to bar Kline’s testimony out of a concern for a client’s intеrest in confidentiality, even if her testimony nominally contained only unprivileged statements, was certainly not misconduct.
Moreover, “a federal court may vacate an award only if the [arbitratorj’s refusal to hear pertinent and material evidence prejudices the rights of the parties to the аrbitration proceedings.”
Lessin,
But wait! Howard objects that Swygert had no knowledge of Howard’s intentions and was merely “performing the ministerial act of signing the Agreemеnt presented to him.” Perhaps so — Howard did not make that point when it moved for reconsideration, nor does it claim in its brief to have made the point during the hearing— but we cannot, consistent with the applicable standard of review, fault the arbitrator for drawing a negative inference from
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Swygert’s failure to testify.
Cf. Hoxie v. DEA,
Howard relies heavily upon three cases from other circuits,
Tempo Shain Corp. v. Bertek, Inc.,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons set out above, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
In any event, the Union’s allegation that Howard did not comply with Appendix C plainly fell within the parties’ agreement to submit to arbitration any "allegation that there has been a violation ... of the terms of this Agreement.” The phrase "this Agreement” obviously refers to the contract duly executed by the parties. That an arbitrator may rule a provision is unenforceable because the parties made a mutual mistake does not mean the provision is not part of the contract.
See Buckeye Check Cashing, Inc. v. Cardegna,
