36 N.Y.2d 957 | NY | 1975
Lead Opinion
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
On joining respondent association (a multi-employer collective bargaining association) each contractor-member agreed that, in the event of an alleged breach of its obligations of membership, claims of the association for damages therefor would be submitted to arbitration. In the event that the arbitrator should find that the member had violated its obligations, it was agreed that damages were to be awarded the association "in an amount no less than three (3) times the daily liquidated damage amount provided for in each * * * heavy and highway construction contract to which the undersigned firm is a party within the geographic area of the applicable labor contract * * * for each * * * day the firm complained of is found by the arbitrator to have been in violation of its obligations”.
A dispute thereafter arose between the association and appellant as to whether the latter had breached its agreement as a member of the association. On the demand of the association the parties proceeded to arbitration. The arbitrators held that appellant was in violation of the agreement for 58 days and awarded the association damages in the sum of $104,400. In so doing they stated: "It is the opinion of the undersigned that the liquidated damages clause is reasonable and necessary under the facts and circumstances herein, and therefore does not constitute a penalty.”
The association moved to confirm the award. Appellant made a cross motion to vacate the award, contending that the provision for damages was unenforceable as a penalty in violation of public policy. Special Term granted the motion to confirm and denied the cross motion to vacate. The Appellate Division majority affirmed, agreeing with the dissenters however that the damages clause imposed a penalty.
Having chosen the arbitration forum for the resolution of disputes with the association, appellant is bound by the deter
Arbitration here was in consequence of a broad arbitration clause in a field of collective bargaining. In that field public policy favors the peaceful resolutions of disputes through arbitration as contrariwise it looks with disfavor on the exaction of penalties. There are involved no interests of third persons which can be said to transcend the concerns of the parties to the arbitration. In such circumstances and for the reasons stated by both Mr. Justice Louis M. Greenblott and Presiding Justice J. Clarence Herlihy at the Appellate Division, we conclude that there is in this case no question involving public policy of such magnitude as to call for judicial intrusion (cf. Matter of Aimcee Wholesale Corp. [Tomar Prods.], 21 NY2d 621, 625; Matter of Allied Van Lines [Hollander Express & Van Co.], 29 NY2d 35; semble contra, Matter of Publishers’ Assn. [Newspaper Union], 280 App Div 500).
Dissenting Opinion
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the arbitrators’ award vacated. The so-called “liquidated damage” provision of the agreement between Associated General Contractors and Savin Brothers prescribed a penalty. Imposition of a penalty for breach of an agreement violates a strong public policy. Although mistake of law or fact will not permit vacatur of an arbitrator’s award, where an award, if enforced, would result in violation of public policy, it should be vacated.
Associated General Contractors is a national trade association in the construction industry. One of its purposes is to negotiate, on behalf of its employer-members, collective bargaining agreements with trade unions. Savin Brothers, Inc. is an employer-member. In 1972, the relevant period, Savin was constructing for the State an arterial highway in the City of Albany.
Savin had been a member of Associated since 1958. Pursuant to a by-law of Associated, Savin had executed a Designation of Bargaining Agent agreement with the association, in
On March 31, 1972, a collective bargaining agreement, negotiated by Associated with the Teamsters Union, expired. On the following day, the teamsters called a strike, which lasted until June 2, 1972. Negotiations between Associated and the teamsters continued during the strike.
On May 5, 1972, Savin, critical of the lack of progress of the labor negotiations, signed a separate one-year agreement with the union. On May 15, 1972, Associated notified Savin that it had breached its obligations and demanded arbitration. On May 17, 1972, Savin notified Associated that it was resigning as a member of the association effective immediately.
Following a hearing, the arbitrators held that Savin was in violation of the agreement for 58 days, from May 5 to July 2, 1972, and, in accordance with the formula in the agreement, awarded Associated $104,400 as "liquidated damages”. Associated moved at Special Term to confirm and Savin moved to vacate the award. The motion to confirm was granted. Both the arbitrators and Special Term held that the "liquidated damage” provision was reasonable and did not prescribe a penalty. The Appellate Division affirmed, two Justices dissenting. Although the court was unanimously of the view that the "liquidated damage” provision prescribed a penalty, it nevertheless permitted enforcement of the penalty on the ground
As the Appellate Division unanimously agreed, the "liquidated damage” provision obviously imposed a penalty. The rule was restated in Ward v Hudson Riv. Bldg. Co. (125 NY 230, 235): "If it shall * * * appear that the damage and loss, which may be presumed to result from non-performance, are uncertain and incapable of exact ascertainment, then the payment or liability fixed by them must be deemed to be liquidated damages and recoverable as such. Where, however, a sum has been stipulated as a payment by the defaulting party, which is disproportionate to the presumable or probable damage, or to a readily ascertainable loss, the courts will treat it as a penalty and will relieve; on the principle that the precise sum was not of the essence of the agreement, but was in the nature of a security for performance.” (See, also, Restatement, Contracts, § 339; 5 Williston, Contracts [3d ed], § 775A, p 657.)
The instant provision authorizing three times the daily liquidated damages provided in Savin’s construction agreements in the geographic area for which Associated negotiated labor agreements, "together with such other and further damages as the arbitrator in his discretion may determine”, prescribes a penalty according to the standards of Ward v Hudson Riv. Bldg. Co. (supra). There is no ascertainable relationship between the damage to Associated caused by a member’s breaches, and the daily liquidated damages payable by the member in the event of a breach of each of its construction agreements in the geographical area. The penalty is aggravated, especially when the liquidated damages are arbitrarily multiplied threefold. As was correctly noted by the Appellate Division, the "liquidated damage” provision was, of course, intended to be a deterrent, but designed as a penalty without relationship to damage sustained and then trebled.
An agreement which prescribes a penalty, without statutory authority, is violative of public policy and unenforceable (see, e.g., City of Rye v Public Serv. Mut. Ins. Co., 34 NY2d 470, 473; Mosler Safe Co. v Maiden Lane Safe Deposit Co., 199 NY 479, 485; Ward v Hudson Riv. Bldg. Co., 125 NY 230, 235, supra). The strong policy considerations underlying the rule are based upon the incompatibility of penalties with the compensatory nature of damages for breach of an agreement, and an aversion to enforce harsh, unequal bargains. Thus, in Ward v Hudson Riv. Bldg. Co. (125 NY 230, 235, supra), the
True, arbitrators generally are not bound by principles of substantive law or rules of evidence, and thus error of law or fact will not justify vacatur of an award (see Matter of Associated Teachers of Huntington v Board of Educ., 33 NY2d 229, 235, and cases cited). The immunity of arbitration awards to judicial review of such errors for that very reason mandates preclusion of violations of strong public policies by arbitrators in the arbitration process. Where, therefore, an award would enforce an illegal agreement or one violative of public policy, the courts will vacate it (see Matter of Associated Teachers of Huntington v Board of Educ., 33 NY2d 229, 235-236, supra, and cases cited; Matter of Western Union Tel. Co. [American Communications Assn.], 299 NY 177,187; Matter of East India Trading Co. [Halari], 280 App Div 420, 421, affd 305 NY 866; see, also, McLaughlin, 1968 Supplementary Practice Commentary to CPLR 7501, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, 1974-1975 Supp, p 154). Since enforcement of a penalty would violate public policy, an arbitrator’s award which enforces a penalty provision should be vacated (Matter of Publishers’ Assn. [Newspaper Union], 280 App Div 500, 504-506, supra; see Matter of East India Trading Co. [Halari], 305 NY 866, 872, [Van Voorhis, J., dissenting]; Domke, Commercial Arbitration, § 33.03; cf. 8 Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac, par 7510.07; but see Fleming, Arbitrators and the Remedy Power, 48 Va L Rev 1199, 1209; Note, Judicial Review of Arbitration: The Role of Public Policy, 58 Nw U L Rev 545, 554-555; Comment, The Enforceability of an Arbitrator’s Award of a Penalty, 52 Col L Rev 943, 945; contra, Wagner v Russeks Fifth Ave., 30 Misc 2d 127, 128). Thus, the award penalizing Savin for breach of the Designation of Bargaining Agent agreement should be vacated.
It is no answer to say that enforcement of "less severe” penalties would not violate public policy and thus should be enforced. By definition, penalties are "disproportionate” to the actual harm caused by the breach, and the drawing of the line between less severe and more severe penalties may not be left in the hands of private adjudicators subject to no judicial or other review.
In taking this view I am not unaware and indeed am deeply sympathetic to the benign and important benefits achieved both by the arbitration process and collective bargaining between associations of employers and employees. But I am also deeply concerned with the long history of abuse in those relationships between trade associations of less than impeccable quality and with corrupted trade unions, particularly in certain fields of enterprise. It takes a very short memory not to recall whole industrial pyramids of trade associations, compliant impartial chairmen functioning as arbitrators, and collusive employees’ organizations unfaithful to their members. To give such pyramids unreviewable power to impose penalties without let or hindrance is dangerous, although I am sure that statutory regulation, or labor board review or control of such devices, might be useful and would provide a way of meeting the unquestioned need for reasonable "penalties” or "liquidated damages” where proof of actual damages is too difficult or impossible.
The award should be vacated since the arbitration clause in the controlling agreement is invalid as in violation of public policy.
Accordingly, I dissent, and vote to reverse.
Order affirmed, with costs.