The Graham County Electric Cooperative (“the Co-op”) appeals the order of the district court directing arbitration with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 387 (“the Union”) despite Co-op’s timely notice of termination. We affirm.
FACTS
The Co-op and Union were parties to a series of collective bargaining agreements. The agreement at issue contained the following provisions as to duration:
The Agreement shall be in full force and effect from July 1, 1982 to July 1, 1983 and thereafter until either party, hereto shall give to the other party sixty (60) days written notice of desire for change, amendment or termination____ During such sixty day period, conference shall be held by and between the parties hereto with a view to arriving at further agreement, and this Agreement shall remain in full force and in effect during such period of negotiations, as well as during the period of arbitration provided in Article VII, should any amendment be submitted for arbitration as therein provided.
Article VII, section 4, of the agreement requires arbitration over “any difference that may arise between the Cooperative and the Union concerning the overall application or interpretation of this Agreement, including differences concerning amendments to this agreement at any termination date____”
On April 6, 1984, more than sixty days before July 1, 1984, the Co-op gave notice to the Union that it desired to terminate the agreement as of July 1. Negotiations over new contract terms began but failed to produce a new agreement. On June 26, 1984, five days before the expiration date set by the old agreement, the Union gave notice of its demand for arbitration of the unresolved issues. The Co-op refused to submit to arbitration.
The Union sued to compel arbitration. The district court held for the Union and ordered arbitration to commence. DISCUSSION
As the issue in this case is entirely one of law, we review
de novo. United States v. McConney,
Both the Union and Co-op acknowledge that the language of the arbitration clause, if operative, would cover “interest arbitration.” “Interest arbitration” is arbitration over new contract terms. Interest arbitration is distinct from “grievance arbitration,” which covers disputes regarding compliance with an existing agreement.
Sheet Metal Workers v. Huggins Sheet Metal, Inc.,
The Co-op contends that its notice of April 6 resulted in termination of the arbitration clause along with the rest of the contract on July 1. Under this interpretation, the arbitration clause did not extend beyond the termination of the contract and could not govern the resolution of a dispute over the terms to be included in a new contract to commence after the expiration date.
The Co-op relies heavily on
M.K. & 0. Transit Lines, Inc. v. Division 892,
On the facts, however,
M.K. & O.
may be distinguished from the case before us. The
M. K. & O.
court acknowledged that the contract there lacked language that would justify the submission to arbitration of the question of disputed terms of a future contract after termination of the original contract.
That timely notice of termination or “termination” itself may not automatically cancel an arbitration clause finds support both from the Supreme Court and from this and other circuits. It is well-established that federal labor policy favors arbitration as the means of resolving disputes over the meaning and effect of collective bargaining agreements,
Nolde Bros., Inc. v. Bakery Workers,
In
Nolde,
the Supreme Court held that the obligation to arbitrate a severance pay dispute (“grievance arbitration”) survived the termination of the contract. The fact that the contract “terminated” as a result of timely notice rather than “expiring” at its appointed date was not decisive. Consistent with
Nolde,
the obligation to arbitrate a new contract (“interest arbitration”) may also survive the termination of an old contract.
Winston-Salem Printing Pressmen & Assistants Union v. Piedmont Publishing Co.,
More recently, this court, in
Hotel & Restaurant Employees Local 70S v. Williams,
The language of Local 103 is directly on point. The language of the Co-op’s contract indicates that the parties intended that the arbitration clause should continue past the termination of the contract if arbitration had been demanded prior to that termination. Based on our reading of the language of the contract, the order of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
