OPINION OF THE COURT
In this labor relations case, the district court concluded that, in the absence of appropriate language in a collective bargaining agreement, an arbitration award in a grievance proceeding was not final. We agree and will affirm.
Plaintiff, a long-time employee of Interstate Container Corporation, underwent heart bypass surgery in 1992 and collected benefits for several months, as provided by a collective bargaining agreement. In January *298 1998, his application for a disability pension was approved by the Paper Industry Union-Management Fund. He also applied for and receivеd disability insurance benefits from the Social Security Administration.
As a result of these developments, Interstate treated plaintiff as a retired employee and terminated his medical insurance as of January 19, 1993. When his physical condition improved, plaintiff applied for reinstatement of employment with Interstate. When the Company denied his request, his union filed grievances on his behalf. They were processed through the steps set out in the collective bargaining agreement and culminated in an arbitrator’s decision favorable to Interstate.
Plaintiff subsequently brought a breach of contract suit in state court and Interstаte removed the action to federal court. The district judge granted partial summary judgment to Interstate, but held that on two breach of contract counts, the case would have to proceed because the grievance arbitration was not final and binding. The district court then certified the1 issue as a сontrolling question of law under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) and we granted leave to appeal.
Article VII of the collective bargaining agreement directs that “grievances shall be processed in the following manner” and lays out a four-step procedure beginning with the participation of a supervisor and working up through the plant manager and general manager. Step 4 provides that if the dispute has not been settled at that point, the union can give the company “notice of its intention to submit the grievance to arbitration” and request the American Arbitration Association to supply a list of arbitrators. The arbitrators’ authоrity is limited to “interpreting and/or applying the language of the existing Labor Agreement”; they cannot “amend, modify, or alter in any manner whatsoever, any provision of the Agreement.” The words “final” or “binding” do not appear in Article VII.
The preface to the entire collective bargaining agreement includеs the following statement: “The terms herein stated are the exclusive terms for collective bargaining between the respective parties. It is mutually agreed by the parties that all claims under prior contracts shall be considered null and void with the effective date of this Agreement.”
The district court first noted thе absence of such terms as “binding” or “final” in Article VII and then looked to the collective bargaining agreement in its entirety to determine whether the parties intended to preclude a suit under section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185(a). Although the company relied on the ■ preface to thе collective bargaining agreement for its assertion that arbitration was exclusive and binding, the court disagreed, finding that the paragraph “does not compel the conclusion that the arbitration provision ... is final and binding.” Finally, the district judge pointed out that although “the grievance procedures are mandatory [that] does not necessarily mean they are final and binding.”
Although the district court did not articulate the controlling question of law that it certified under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), from the briefs and arguments presented to us, we construe the question to be whether an arbitration award precludes review on the merits under section 301 when the cоllective bargaining agreement does not provide that arbitration is the final, binding, or exclusive means of resolving the dispute. 1 The answer to that question requires consideration of several cross-currents in labor law.
I.
National labor policy favors access to a judicial forum to resolve labor disрutes. Section 301 provides that “suits for violations of contracts between an employer and a labor organization ... may be brought in any district court of the United States.” 29 U.S.C. § 185(a).
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Although section 301 facially appears to be only a jurisdictional statute, it has been construed broadly to establish a cause of action as well.
See Textile Workers Union v. Lincoln Mills,
In
Groves v. Ring Screw Works,
In
Clayton v. International Union Automobile Workers,
Yet another consideration enters into the picture. In section 203(d) of the Labor Managemеnt Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 173(d), Congress emphasized that: “Final adjustment by a method agreed upon by the parties is declared to be the desirable method for settlement of grievance disputes arising oyer the application or interpretation of an existing collective-bargaining agreement.” Commenting on this admonition in
United Steelworkers v. American Mfg. Co.,
Arbitration, however, is a question of contract and “a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to submit.”
United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co.,
From this brief review of these familiar cases in labor law, we derive the following policies. Section 301 suits provide a judicial remedy for violations of a collective bargaining agreement.
Hines,
II.
Reconciling these .sometimes conflicting policies is the task presented in this case. The parties do not dispute that the grievance is arbitrable, that arbitration is mandatory, and that it has resulted in an award. The issue is whether the award is “final” in the sense that the courts may not rejudicate the grievance. Preliminarily, we agree with the district court’s view that the preface to the collective bargaining agreement does not govern the issue here. The quoted paragraph is simply a standard integration clause.
It is important to distinguish between terms sometimes used interchangeably in this field. Arbitration may be mandatory in the sense that the parties are required to use that procedure. Although appellate rulings have used the word “exclusive,” they do not govern the issue of whether the arbitration awards aré “final” in the sense that they preclude resort to a section 301 suit on the merits, but rather the opinions refer to the requirement that the grievance procedures be exhausted before filing suit.
See, e.g., Clayton,
Extrapolating from the general principles, we conclude that because the court must determine the duty to arbitrate from an interpretation of the collective bargaining agreemеnt, it also has the task of determining the dispositive effect to be given to an award — again, by construing the contract. Although a presumption in favor of arbitrability exists, that procedure may not-be imposed upon the parties except by agreement. A contract that is silent on the method of resolving grievаnces cannot be said to require arbitration, despite the policy that favors that procedure.
Warrior & Gulf Navigation,
In this ease, the employer argues that because the contract makes arbitration mandatory, it must necessarily be final as well. That argument finds support in the policy favoring arbitration as a means of resolving disputes, but fails to meet the requirement of authorization by agreement of the parties. It is one thing to say that the collective bargaining agreement may be liberally construed to give an expansive definition to the subject matter of arbitration, but quite another to interpret the contract to impose finality on all grievances.
Imposing finality deprives a party of the right to present the merits of an arbitration award for review by a court. The opportunity to seek correction of an allegedly incorrect resolution of a grievance is a valuable right and not one to be denied cavalierly. In that context, the presumption of arbitrability cannot bear the weight the employer attributes to it. It cannot create finality in the arbitration process when the collective bargaining agreement is silent on the point. In short, the lack of a provision for finality or exclusivity does not overсome the presumption of access to the courts for review on the merits.
Our ruling in this respect is consistent with the policy of recognizing the compulsory nature of arbitration required by collective bargaining agreements. Mandatory arbitration prior to resort to a court is a different concept from mandatory arbitration precluding resort to a court. We do not discourage, but continue to endorse, the submission of grievances to arbitration. What we do decline to recognize is an expansive interpretation of the dispositive effect of arbitration when the collective bargaining agrеement provides no basis for such a construction.
The parties have not cited any appellate cases directly on point, nor has our research uncovered any. Although
Groves
speaks of the strong presumption in favor of access to a neutral forum, that case is not precisely applicable because the alternative was a strike, a course of action that the Court could
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not favor. To the same effect,
see Dickeson v. DAW Forest Prods. Co.,
Interstate cites
Communications Workers v. AT & T,
Interstate also refers tо district court decisions allegedly demonstrating that courts will not allow parties to “relitigate” arbitrated claims, even in the absence of a “finality clause” in the collective bargaining agreement. Those cases do not help Interstate, but simply present examples of wording in collective bargаining agreements establishing finality — language that is lacking here.
See, e.g, Sear v. Cadillac Auto. Co.,
We decline to consider an unpublished opinion of the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit,
McInnes v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
Our decision in
Cady v. Twin Rivers Towing Co.,
Here, the parties rely solely on the wording of the contract for their positions, without any evidеnce of an established bargaining history or course of conduct to support their interpretations. We do not rely solely on the absence of “talismanic” phrases, but we must give full credit to the language the parties have chosen to include — or not include — in their agreement.
Collective bargaining аgreements almost invariably explain that arbitration proceedings will be “final,” “binding,” or “exclusive,” or use other words to that effect. This agreement was drafted by parties well-versed in labor matters and cognizant of that convention. The omission of any indication that arbitration proceedings should be final and binding leads us to conclude that, if we nevertheless declared them to be so, we would not be enforcing the will of the parties, as expressed in their agreement.
As we stated in
Communication Workers v. AT & T,
The order of the district court will be affirmed.
Notes
. We call to the attention of the parties and the district court this Court's rule that the "certifications required by 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) shall state concisely the ‘controlling question of law.’ ” 3d Cir. LAR 5.1. (1995). See also Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 5(b).
