Kraft Foods, Inc. appeals from a judgment of the district court affirming an arbitration award. The arbitrator found that Kraft had violated its collective bargaining agreement (the “Agreement”) with the Office and Professional Employees International Union, AFL-CIO, CLC, Loсal 1295 (the “Union”) by applying the Agreement’s break-in wage provisions to one class of new employees while paying a second class full wages. Finding that the parties had agreed to a break-in wage provision applying to all new employees covered by the Agreement, the arbitrator ordered back pay to the workers who had received break-in wages so that all workers would enjoy full wages during the period in which Kraft was in breach. Kraft filed a suit in district court under Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, arguing, inter alia, that the remedy exceeded the arbitrator’s authority. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court rejected this claim and affirmed the arbitrator’s judgment. We now do the same.
I.
We state the facts as the arbitrator found them.
See United Paperworkers Int’l Union v. Misco, Inc.,
In October, 1997, the Union learned that Kraft had hired maintenance and power plant employees (the “crafts employees”) at standard wage rates rather than the break-in rates provided for in the Agreement. However, all new production employees were paid the break-in wages. The Union filed a grievance challenging the discriminatory application of the break-in wage provision. The dispute was submitted to arbitration pursuant to the Agreement. Kraft argued that it had agreed only to break-in rates for production employees; this limitation had been “inadvertently” omitted from the Agreement.
The arbitrator rejected Kraft’s claim of mutual mistake, finding that “there was a meeting of the minds between the parties that the break-in rates set forth in Article 10 would apply to all bargaining unit employees hired after May 21, 1996.” (emphasis in original). The arbitrator also concluded that he could not reform the Agreemеnt as Kraft proposed because Article 43 gave the arbitrator “no authority to amend, alter or modify this Agreement or its terms.” The arbitrator therefore found Kraft in breach and ordered it to apply the break-in wage provision evenly until the Agreеment terminated in 1999.
The more difficult question related to an appropriate remedy for the past discrimination. The arbitrator found that there were only two plausible methods of remedying Kraft’s unequal application of the break-in wages. He could order the crafts workers to remit the wages paid to them in violation of the Agreement, a remedy that he characterized as “patently unfair” and one that Kraft and the Union opposed. Or he could order back pay to the production workers to make up for the compensation they lost when Kraft “discriminated against them by applying the break-in rates to them but not to other newly hired [crafts] employees.” The arbitrator found that this alternative provided “reasonable and equitable” compensation for Kraft’s breach. On appeal, Kraft does not challenge the arbitrator’s finding that it breached the Agreement. Rather, it argues that the back-pay remedy exceeded the arbitrator’s authority.
II.
The. general prinсiples that we must apply are familiar. Our review of labor arbitral decisions is extremely narrow and “extraordinarily deferential.”
Dorado Beach Hotel Corp. v. Union de Trabajadores de la Industria Gastronomica Local 610,
Kraft argues that the arbitration clause of the Agreement denied the arbitrator the power to order the back-pay remedy. Becаuse “[t]he extent of an arbitrator’s authority lies within the language of the contract,” we must carefully consider any restrictions that the Agreement imposes on the arbitrator’s power.
Strathmore Paper Co. v. United Paperworkers Int’l Union,
This standard “no-modification” clause incorporates general legal principles concerning an arbitrator’s authority, “reinforcing] the admonition in
Misco
that legitimate arbitral awards draw their essence from the contract.”
LaRocque v. R.W.F., Inc.,
While courts disagree on the extent to which a “no-modification” clause bars arbitrators from looking beyond the language of the agreement to determine breach,
1
courts agree that “the fashioning of an appropriate remedy is not an addition tо the obligations imposed by the contract.”
Tobacco Workers Int’l. Union, Local 317 v. Lorillard Corp.,
Kraft argues that this case is different because the arbitrator’s remedy directly altered the Agreement. In Kraft’s view, it was ordered to “violate the collective bargaining agreement a second time to remedy its first violation of the agreement.” In a sense, Kraft is right: the arbitrator’s bаck-pay award had the effect of eliminating the break-in wage clause entirely during the time period in which Kraft had applied it in a discriminatory fashion.
2
However, a standard “no-modification” clause does not limit remedies of this type if such a remedy is required to cure a breach and is not specifically barred by the agreement.
See Dixie Warehouse & Cartage Co. v. General Drivers, Warehousemen & Helpers, Local Union No. 89.,
Where, as here, the agreement neither requires nor bars particular remedies, the arbitrator’s discretion “is at its zenith.”
Advest,
The remedy in this casе meets this standard. To redress the discriminatory treatment caused by Kraft’s breach, the arbitrator had to choose between the unpalatable pay-back approach or one that ordered Kraft to provide back pay to the production workers. While the arbitrator’s decision to order back pay effectively nullified the break-in wage provision during the period of breach, this result is
Affirmed
Notes
. Courts are split on whether these clauses limit an arbitrator’s powers of contract construction to a greater extent than the background law.
Compare Holly Sugar Corp. v. Distillery Union,
. We note, however, that the arbitrator did not modify the agreement prospectively. Rather, he ruled that Kraft would have to honor the break-in wage provision as written until the agreement terminated.
