MANVILLE FOREST PRODUCTS CORPORATION, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
UNITED PAPERWORKERS INTERNATIONAL UNION, AFL-CIO and United
Paperworkers International Union, AFL-CIO, Local
364, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 86-4959.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
Oct. 28, 1987.
Peyton Lacy, Jr., Lange, Simpson, Robinson & Sоmerville, Birmingham, Ala., Richard A. Gear, Shreveport, La., for plaintiff-appellant.
Robert H. Urann, Gardner, Robein & Healey, Metairie, La., Melinda Branscomb, United Paperworkers Intern. Union, Legal Dept., Nashville, Tenn., for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.
Before GEE, JOHNSON, and HILL,* Circuit Judges.
JOHNSON, Circuit Judge:
The Manville Forest Products Corporation (Manville) appeals the district court's grant of summary judgment enforcing an arbitration award in favor of the United Paperworkers International Union. Because we agree with the district court that the award was based on the collective bargaining agreement and did not violatе public policy, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Manville owns a paper mill in West Monroe, Louisiana. The United Paperworkers International Union and Manville have signed a series of collective bargaining agreements going back to the 1940s. Under these agreements, a job classification could be changed or eliminated only by mutual agreement between Manville and the Union. At the end of each three-year contract term, the Union or Manville could propose modifications to the existing agreement. The parties negotiated each modification. When negotiations were complete, the parties sent the printer a copy of the previous contract and a list of approved changes. If no change was approved to a particular provision, that provision was retained in the new contract.
The West Monroe mill contained seven paper machines. Until 1982, each machine had assigned to it one "broke hustler" whose job was to gather nonsaleable trash paper from the machine and take it away for recycling. The 1980-1983 collective bargaining agreement provided for seven broke hustler positions, one for each machine. In early 1982, Manville expеrienced difficulties and shut down machines 1 to 5, putting employees on temporary layoff.
In August 1982, Manville restarted machine No. 5. The company negotiated with the Union to eliminate several positions, including the broke hustler on machine No. 5. Soon after the Union and Manville began negotiations for the 1983-1986 contract. During negotiations, Manville representatives told the Union that no plans existed to restart machines 1, 2, and 4, and that there was no need to include provisions related to those machines. As a consequence, the contract sent to the printer was silent on the staffing of those machines.
In 1984, Manvillе decided to restart machine No. 1. The company and the Union negotiated the machine's staffing, but failed to reach an agreement. In June 1984, Manville restarted the machine without a broke hustler. The Union filed a grievance.
In accordance with the 1983-1986 contract's arbitration clause, the parties submitted their dispute to binding arbitration. The arbitrator found that, considering past practices and the negotiating history of the 1983 contract, the omission of references to the machine No. 1 broke hustler did not suffice to eliminate that position. Concluding that the broke hustler position was still mandated by the agreеment, the arbitrator ordered Manville to fill it. Manville brought suit in the district court to vacate the arbitration award, and the Union counterclaimed for enforcement. The district court gave summary judgment for the Union, ordering enforcement.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Judicial review of arbitration awards is severely limited. A court may not review thе merits of an award--it must accept the facts found by the arbitrator and the arbitrator's interpretation of the contract and applicable law. W.R. Grace and Co. v. Local Union 759,
The courts have, however, placed some limits on arbitrators' power. An arbitration award will not be enforced if it stems from fraud or partiality; if it concerns a matter not subject to arbitration under the contract; if it does not "dra[w] its essence" from the contract; or if it violates public policy. W.R. Grace,
B. The "Essence" of the Collective Bargaining Agreement
Manville does not allege fraud or partiality or contest the arbitrability оf disputes over the broke hustler position. Manville does, however, argue vehemently that, because the 1983 contract makes no reference to a broke hustler for machine No. 1, the arbitrator could not have based his decision that such a position existed on the "essence" of the agrеement. Instead, Manville claims that the arbitrator attempted to dispense "his own brand of industrial justice," a practice condemned by the Supreme Court. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
One of the rare cases in which this Court overturned an arbitration award for failure to "draw its essence" from the contract is HMC Management Corp. v. Carpenters District Council,
The arbitration award in the instant case, like the award in HMC Management, does contain passages apparently disapproving of management actions. Hоwever, unlike the arbitrator in HMC Management, the arbitrator here supported his decision with specific fact findings on past dealings between the parties and their intent as revealed by their negotiating history. Specifically, the arbitrator concluded that a broke hustler position for machine No. 1 was part of the 1983 agreement because: (1) under the parties' past practice, a position continued to exist until abolished by mutual agreement; (2) there was no mutual agreement to abolish the machine No. 1 broke hustler position; and therefore (3) that broke hustler position was still in existence and the сompany was obligated either to fill it or to negotiate for its abolition. Step number (2) in the arbitrator's reasoning depends, in turn, on the arbitrator's uncontested factual finding that failure to mention the machine No. 1 broke hustler position in the written contract was due to the misapprehension that machine No. 1 would remain out of service, not to mutual agreement concerning machine No. 1.
This Court must accept the factual findings of the arbitrator. See, e.g., Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
Beginning with the 1960 "Steelworkers Trilogy," which forms the foundation of labor arbitration law, the Supreme Court emphasized that an arbitrator may look beyond the written contract when interpreting a collective bargаining agreement:
The collective bargaining agreement.... is more than a contract; it is a generalized code to govern a myriad of cases which the draftsmen cannot wholly anticipate. ... It calls into being a new common law--the common law of a particular industry or of a particular рlant. ... Gaps may be left to be filled in by reference to the practices of the particular industry and of the various shops covered by the agreement. ... The labor arbitrator's source of law is not confined to the express provisions of the contract, as the industrial common law--the practices of the industry and the shop--is equally a part of the collective bargaining agreement although not expressed in it.
Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co.,
Manville argues, however, that the 1983 contrаct contained a "no modification" clause and did contain an integration or "zipper" clause that precluded the arbitrator from using extrinsic sources:
The arbitrator shall have no power to add to, subtract from, alter, amend or disregard any provision of this Agreement.
1983 Contract, Exhibit B, art. XIII(B) ("no modifiсation" clause).
All modifications, amendments or supplemental agreements to this Agreement have been reduced to writing and are listed in the attached pamphlet. Any modification, amendment or supplement executed after the effective date of this Agreement shall be void and of no fоrce and effect unless reduced to writing and approved by the parties signatory hereto.
Id., art. XXXIII(C) (integration or "zipper" clause).
In regard to the "no modification" clause, this Court has repeatedly held that such clauses do not prevent an arbitrator from looking to past practice. Piggly Wiggly,
To summarize: the arbitrator legitimately drew on the parties' past praсtices and negotiating history to fill a gap in the written contract. The award does "draw its essence" from the collective bargaining agreement, so elucidated.
C. Public Policy
A court may overturn an arbitration award if the award violates a clearly defined public policy. W.R. Grace,
Manville's argument depends on the premise that the 1983 agreement either excluded a machine No. 1 broke hustler position or was neutral on the subject. If the slate was blank, the arbitrator could not force Manville to write on it. Manville's argument fails, however, because the arbitrator found that the slate was not blank. According to the arbitrator's interpretation of the agreement--which we must accept--the position existed аnd Manville was required to negotiate in order to gain the Union's consent to eliminate it. Indeed, Manville began negotiations but subsequently dropped them and instituted the change unilaterally.1
Requiring a party to abide by the terms of its own agreement does not constitute the forcing of a concession. Therefore the arbitrator's award did not violate the public policy expressed in 29 U.S.C. Sec. 158(d).
III. CONCLUSION
Given that an arbitrator may look to the past dealings of the parties when interpreting a collective bargaining agreement, the arbitrator in the instant case did "draw the essence" of his award from the agreemеnt. For the same reasons, the award did not force a concession in violation of public policy. Since we are precluded from questioning the arbitrator's factual findings or interpretation of the agreement, we AFFIRM the district court's decision to enforce the award.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Judge Hill concurred in the аbove opinion before his death on October 19, 1987
Although the arbitrator did not expressly find that Manville failed to negotiate to an impasse, we agree with the district court that such a finding is implicit in the arbitrator's opinion. We must interpret an ambiguous arbitration award so as to uphold the award. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
