Royal Center, Inc. appeals the order of the District Court for Nevada, Foley, J., presiding, which had required RCI to submit to arbitration two grievances arising out of RCI’s collective bargaining agreement with appellee Local Joint Executive Board of Las Vegas, Culinary Workers Union et al. RCI argues that the closure of its business terminated its collective bargaining agreement, along with any obligation to arbitrate grievances that arose after the closure occurred.
In early 1980, RCI completed its acquisition of a complex in Las Vegas, Nevada, consisting of a casino, hotel and entertainment facilities. At that time, RCI entered into a collective bargaining agreement with the Union, which represented approximately 60% of the restaurant, casino, bar and housekeeping employees at the complex.
The agreement provided an exclusive arbitration remedy for “all grievances.” A “grievance” was broadly defined as “a dispute or difference of opinion between the Union and the Employer involving the meaning, interpretation, application to employees covered by this Agreement, or alleged violation of any provision of this Agreement.” Section 29.02 of the agreement also provided that in the event RCI sold its business, RCI would require its successor to assume the Collective Bargaining Agreement with the Union.
In March 1982, accumulated operating losses caused RCI to close its complex and terminate all employees covered by the collective bargaining agreement. Several *1161 months later, RCI sold the complex to a limited partnership, 305 Convention Center Drive Associates. The sale contract did not require the 305 corporation to assume RCI’s collective bargaining agreement with the Union, despite Section 29.02 of that agreement. The 305 corporation performed substantial alterations and reopened the complex in November 1983 as a family arcade with game center, cartoon theater, and slot machine and mechanical gaming devices. RCI continues to operate the gaming devices, employing approximately fifty employees, not all of whom fall within the job classifications covered by the collective bargaining agreement with the Union.
Shortly after the reopening, the Union filed unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board. The NLRB dismissed the Union’s charge that 1) RCI and the 305 corporation had improperly refused to bargain with the Union, and 2) that no bona fide sale of business had occurred to the 305 corporation. The Union’s appeal to the General Counsel of the NLRB was denied in March 1984.
The Union sued RCI in Nevada state court in December 1983, charging that RCI had 1) violated Section 29.02 by failing to condition the sale of the complex on the 305 corporation’s assumption of the collective bargaining agreement, and 2) violated the collective bargaining agreement’s hiring and other substantive terms after resuming operations with the 305 corporation in November 1983. Under this second allegation, the Union argued that no bona fide, arms-length sale of the complex had occurred, and hence the new enterprise was still covered by the collective bargaining agreement between RCI and the Union.
RCI removed the action to the District Court of Nevada. The district court granted the Union’s Motion to Compel Arbitration of the Union’s two grievances.
RCI appeals, claiming that the district court erred in deciding 1) that the collective bargaining agreement had not been terminated by RGI’s closure of the complex, and 2) that the Union’s grievances fell within the scope of the arbitration clause. We have jurisdiction over RCI’s timely filed appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. •
I. DID THE ARBITRATION CLAUSE SURVIVE THE CLOSURE OF RCI’S OPERATIONS AND TERMINATION OF THE COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT?
The district court found that the collective bargaining agreement had not been extinguished when RCI closed its operations, and therefore that the agreement’s arbitration clause continued to govern disputes arising after the closure. Because we find that the arbitration clause here survives closure regardless of whether the collective bargaining agreement generally remained in effect, we affirm the district court’s decision to refer the dispute over section 29.02 to the arbitrator.
“Termination of a collective bargaining agreement does not necessarily extinguish a party’s duty to arbitrate grievances arising under the contract.”
O’Connor Co. v. Carpenters Local Union No. 1408,
RCI presents no evidence to negate the presumption that its arbitration clause, which covers “all grievances,” survives the termination of the agreement. The broad definition of arbitrable “grievances” — “a dispute or difference of opinion between the Union and the Employer involving the meaning, interpretation, application to employees covered by this Agreement, or alleged violation of any provision of this Agreement,” is indistinguishable from arbitration provisions held to survive termination of the collective bargaining contract.
See Nolde,
II. DO THE GRIEVANCES FALL WITHIN THE SCOPE OF THE ARBITRATION CLAUSE?
We must next consider whether this particular controversy is covered by the duty to arbitrate. Like the survivability issue, the question of* the scope of the arbitration duty is “a matter to be determined by the Court on the basis of the contract.”
John Wiley,
Following the Supreme Court, we have emphasized that the scope of the duty to arbitrate must be read quite broadly. As we recently held, “[w]e ordinarily will not except a controversy from coverage of a valid arbitration clause ‘unless it may be said with positive assurance that the arbitration clause is not susceptible of an interpretation that covers the asserted dispute.”
Marchese v. Shearson Hayden Stone, Inc.,
Applying this lenient standard, the Supreme Court has referred for arbitration a dispute over severance pay rights,
see Nolde,
and a dispute over contractual seniority rights,
see Piano & Musical Instrument Workers, Local 2549 v. W.W. Kimball Co.,
A. The grievance over Section 29.02 was properly sent to the arbitrator.
Nolde controls our decision. The arbitration clause does not “expressly ex- *1163 elude” a dispute over RCI’s obligation to condition its sale of business on the 305 corporation’s assumption of the collective bargaining agreement. Under Nolde and the general presumption in favor of a broad scope for arbitration clauses, the Section 29.02 grievance was properly sent to arbitration.
This result is also consistent with circuit court decisions referring claims for severance pay, pension benefits, vacation pay, and other typical collective bargaining rights due after a plant closing.
See, e.g., United Steelworkers v. American Smelting and Refining Co., Inc.,
RCI, however, seeks to distinguish these cases as permitting arbitration only of “rights undeniably accruing under contract prior to termination.” Because the benefits arising out of Section 29.02 of RCI’s collective bargaining agreement will not accrue until after termination, RCI argues that arbitration is not necessarily compelled by prior cases.
RCI’s focus on accrual, however, was implicitly rejected by the Supreme Court in
Nolde, see Federated Metals Corp.,
More importantly, RCI’s distinction runs counter to the reasoning in John Wiley,
The logic, of
John Wiley
compels the arbitration of Section 29.02. The clause mandating carryover of the Union’s labor contract is of no value to the bargaining Union until the contract for the sale of business is actually negotiated. This sale will frequently occur contemporaneous with or after closure of the original business — i.e., after the original contract has been terminated. Although the parties here did not “expressly contemplate”,
id.
at 554,
The only result consistent with the original intent of the parties,
*1164
RCI raises one final argument against interpreting Section 29.02 to fall within the scope of the arbitration clause. Where there has been a virtual 100% turnover of employees, application of a collective bargaining agreement negotiated on behalf of prior employees is “fundamentally unfair to the new employee complement and saddles the new operation with an agreement ill fitting its operational needs.” This argument, however, is irrelevant to the issue of arbitrability before us; it instead goes to the advisability, on policy grounds, of enforcing a contractual provision freely bargained for by RCI in 1980. Any inquiry into the merits of the provision is explicitly barred by. Supreme Court precedent.
AT & T Technologies, Inc. v. Communications Workers of America,
— U.S. —,
B. The “alter ego”grievance.
Because there has not been an “express exclusion” of the issue whether RCI sold its business in a bonafide, arms-length transaction to the 305 corporation,
see Nolde,
However, the NLRB Regional Director has already decided that “there is insufficient evidence that 305 Convention Drive Associates, L.P., is an alter ego of Royal Center Inc.” This decision has been upheld on appeal to the NLRB General Counsel.
In
Carpenters’ Union Local No. 1478 v. Stevens,
But
Carpenters’ Local
does more than bar the Union from proceeding against the
305
corporation. Ordinarily it would preclude the Union from obtaining any arbitration award from RCI that may be based on a contrary finding that 305 is in fact the alter ego of RCI.
See
On the other hand, the Union correctly notes that two Ninth Circuit cases bar us from, in effect, giving collateral estoppel power to the NLRB’s finding that 305 is not the alter ego of RCI. As we held in
Edna H. Pagel, Inc. v. Teamsters Local Union 595,
Following Edna Pagel, we therefore AFFIRM the district court’s decision to send the alter ego issue to the arbitrator.
III. CONCLUSION
“Whether or not the Union's demands have merit will be determined by the arbi
*1165
trator in light of the fully developed facts. It is sufficient for present purposes that the demands are not so plainly unreasonable that the subject matter of the dispute must be regarded as non-arbitrable because it can be seen in advance that no award to the Union could receive judicial sanction.”
John Wiley,
