128 Lab.Cas. P 11,130
ISLAND CREEK COAL COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
DISTRICT 28, UNITED MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA, Defendant-Appellant,
and
Local Union 2232, United Mine Workers of America;
International Union, United Mine Workers of
America, Defendants.
No. 93-2305.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued May 9, 1994.
Decided July 6, 1994.
ARGUED: Susan Debra Oglebay, Kobak & Oglebay, Pound, VA, for appellant. David J. Laurent, Polito & Smock, P.A., Pittsburgh, PA, for appellee. ON BRIEF: Daniel L. Fassio, Pittsburgh, PA, for appellee.
Before WILKINS and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges, and ELLIS, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge HAMILTON wrote the opinion, in which Judge WILKINS and Judge ELLIS joined.
OPINION
HAMILTON, Circuit Judge:
District 28, United Mine Workers of America (District 28), appeals the district court's decision vacating the penalty portion of an arbitration award. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm.
* The National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement of 1978, 1984, and 1988 (NBCWA) prohibits the performance of "classified work"1 by supervisory personnel.2 Island Creek Coal Company (Island Creek) and the International Union, United Mine Workers of America; District 28, United Mine Workers of America; and Local Union 2232, United Mine Workers of America (collectively UMWA) have a history of disputes dating to 1981 over Island Creek's performance of classified work. In that year Arbitrator Marlyn E. Lugar (Lugar) arbitrated a grievance concerning the performance of classified work at the Virginia Pocahontas Number 5 Mine (the Mine).3 Finding that Island Creek violated the NBCWA's prohibition on classified work, Arbitrator Lugar ordered Island Creek to cease and desist. He intimated that "punitive damages" might be appropriate in the event of future violations.
In 1988, the parties settled the same type of grievance. Island Creek agreed that it would stop its supervisory employees from performing classified work and would abide by Arbitrator Lugar's 1981 decision. The issue arose again in 1990 at the Mine. Arbitrator Peter J. Judah (Judah) restated Arbitrator Lugar's cease and desist order and imposed punitive damages of $2,000.4 Arbitrator Judah emphasized that the punitive damages were based on the 1988 settlement agreement rather than on the NBCWA itself.
On February 1, 1988, Island Creek and UMWA entered into the present version of the NBCWA. The 1988 NBCWA contained a mandatory means for resolving disputes arising under that agreement: a three-step grievance procedure followed, if necessary, by final and binding arbitration. The NBCWA does not expressly provide for an award of punitive damages.
On or about November 13, 1991, one of Island Creek's employees filed a grievance alleging that a foreman had violated the 1988 NBCWA by performing classified work. The parties ultimately submitted the matter to arbitration pursuant to the terms of the NBCWA. Arbitrator Bernard H. Cantor (Cantor) reviewed the history of disputes at the Mine. Determining that there had been similar violations and an earlier cease and desist order, he stated:
If there is something more than a straight forward violation, if there is a pattern of repeated violations, then there can and should be a mandate to cease and desist. A cease and desist order itself, however, must be enforceable. It does not require the existence of a new contract, even though Arbitrator Judah reached for that further support for his decision. The straightforward fact that the Company had been ordered to stop it is sufficient to authorize the arbitrator standing in the stead, as he does, of courts of general jurisdiction for the purpose of dealing with this contract, to lay down a reasonable amount as a rule constituting the imposition of a penalty for violation of a prior order of quasi-judicial body.
This is not "punitive damages" in the tort sense. The application of that term to damages given in this situation is absolutely inappropriate. It is an enforcement penalty and it stands as such and is justified by the long history within the Bituminous Coal Industry contract. The contract has grown over time as a way of life. To those who live by it, there must be no wrong without a remedy. Frustrations have led to Cease and Desist orders. Such an order means nothing unless it can be enforced. The contract contemplates effective enforcement.
(J.A. 71). Arbitrator Cantor then issued the following award:
(1) Grievant is allowed compensation for one-half a shift pay at straight time.
(2) The Cease and Desist order applicable to this mine entered by Arbitrator Lugar, restated by Arbitrator Judah, is here restated.
(3) A penalty for failure to obey the Cease and Desist order, based on the experience since the Judah order is hereby imposed in the amount of $1,000 to be paid to the Union.
(J.A. 74-75) (Emphasis added).
After Arbitrator Cantor's award, Island Creek brought an action in the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia for declaratory and injunctive relief against the UMWA. Island Creek sought to vacate the "enforcement penalty" of $1,000 imposed by Arbitrator Cantor. The UMWA filed a counterclaim seeking to enforce the penalty. Finding that Arbitrator Cantor exceeded the scope of his authority in imposing the penalty, the district court vacated that portion of the award. The district court enforced the other portions of the arbitration award. District 28 appeals from that portion of the order vacating the penalty part of Arbitrator Cantor's decision.5
II
The question of whether a labor arbitrator exceeded the scope of his authority is a question of law. Upshur Coals Corp. v. United Mine Workers of Am., Dist. 31,
An arbitrator's award is entitled to special judicial deference on judicial review. Accordingly, a federal court's review of an arbitrator's award under Sec. 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 185, is very limited. United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co.,
III
Absent an express provision in the collective bargaining agreement, the law of this circuit does not permit an arbitrator to impose a punitive award or punitive damages. Cannelton Indus.,
Likewise, we refused to uphold a punitive award not provided for in the collective bargaining agreement in Baltimore Regional Joint Bd. v. Webster Clothes,
[t]he award of damages in the present case does not draw its essence from the bargaining agreement, for the agreement's essence does not contemplate punitive, but only compensatory awards.... In the absence of any provision for punitive awards, and of any substantiating proof of willful or wanton conduct, an arbitrator may not make an award of punitive damages for breach of a collective bargaining agreement.
Baltimore Regional Joint Bd.,
In Cannelton Industries,
It is not clear from Basial's opinion whether he awarded money damages because Cannelton violated the notice requirements and the Volz award or because Cannelton violated the NBCWA by contracting out work that union employees should have performed. If Basial ruled for the former reason, as Cannelton argues, the award is purely punitive and it does not draw its essence from the NBCWA.
Id. at 594.
In the wake of this authority, there is little doubt that the $1000 award in this case is punitive. Arbitrator Cantor awarded the individual grievant compensation for invasion of his work time. Entitlement to compensatory damages for contract breach rests on a party's suffering "some legally cognizable loss, be it manifestly monetary or measurable in monetary terms." Baltimore Regional Joint Bd.,
Second, District 28 argues that Arbitrator Cantor's award should be enforced even though the NCBWA does not provide for punitive awards. In support of its contention, District 28 points to decisions from other circuits allowing punitive damages even though the collective bargaining agreement did not provide for such awards. See Lee v. Chica,
IV
In summary, we hold that an arbitrator cannot award punitive damages where the collective bargaining agreement does not specifically so provide. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Classified work is bargaining unit work reserved for classified employees
Article 1A, Sec. (c) of the 1988 version of the NBCWA provides:
Supervisory employees shall perform no classified work covered by this Agreement except in emergencies and except if such work is necessary for the purpose of training or instructing classified Employees. When a dispute arises under this section, it shall be adjudicated through the grievance machinery and in such proceedings the following rule will apply: The burden is on the Employer to prove that classified work has not been performed by supervisory personnel.
(J.A. 104-05).
Island Creek oversees several mining operations in Virginia, including the Virginia Pocahontas Number 5 Mine
Island Creek paid this punitive award on July 23, 1991, apparently without protest
United Mine Workers of America, Local 2232 (Local 2232) and International Union, United Mine Workers of America, are not parties to this appeal
It is unclear whether punitive damages may be imposed in the absence of a provision in the collective bargaining agreement allowing punitive damages where willful and wanton conduct is present: "With respect to vacation shutdowns, compensatory damages may be awarded only when a breach of the bargaining agreement causes a monetary loss. In the absence of willful or wanton conduct, punitive damages should not be awarded." Westinghouse,
Along a similar vein, language in Baltimore Regional Joint Board referring to willful and wanton conduct may have created some confusion inasmuch as it appears to imply that, in order to award punitive damages, there must be (1) an express provision in the bargaining agreement and (2) willful and wanton conduct. Our subsequent precedent, however, has never endorsed the view that both a provision expressly allowing punitive damages and evidence of willful and wanton conduct is necessary. Cannelton Indus.,
District 28 also attempts to distinguish between punitive awards and awards intended as a penalty. It argues that the award in the instant case is a "penalty" rather than "punishment." See International Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 450 v. Mid-Valley, Inc.,
District 28 contends that our recent decision in Peoples Sec. Life Ins. Co. v. Monumental Life Ins. Co.,
District 28 argues that these circuits allow an award of punitive damages unless the collective bargaining agreement specifically prohibits such an award. Although District 28 argues that the Sixth Circuit also allows punitive damages in arbitration awards, it admits that the status of such punitive awards remains unclear in that circuit. See Local 120 v. Brooks Foundry, Inc.,
