Miron Construction Company (“Miron”) filed a complaint under Section 301 of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, requesting the district court to compel tripartite arbitration of two sets of grievances brought against it by the International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 139 (“Operators”) and the Wisconsin Laborers District Council (“Laborers”). The Operators filed a counterclaim asking the district court to compel bipartite arbitration with Miron. The Laborers, in support of Miron’s motion for tripartite arbitration, filed a motion to intervene in the Operators’ counterclaim аnd to dismiss it for want of a necessary party. The district court ordered Miron and the Operators to submit to bipartite arbitration and denied Miron’s motion for tripartite arbitration and the Laborers’ motions to dismiss and to intervene in the counterclaim. 1 We affirm.
I. Background
Miron is a general construction contractor and a member of a multi-employer bargaining association, the Wisconsin Chapter of Associated General Contractors, Inc., which negotiates collective bargaining agreements with a variety of construction trade unions on behalf of the member employers. By virtue of its membership in this organization, Miron was signatory to a collective bargaining agreement with the Operators (“Area II Agreement”), which granted the Operators the exclusive right to operate forklift trucks in construction jobsites in most of Wisconsin. 2 Miron agreed to subcontract all work covered by the terms of the Area II Agreement to signatories to the Agreement. 3 Should any unresolvable grievances, disputes or complaints arise under the terms of the Agreement, Miron and the Operators agreed to submit all such disputes to final and binding bipartite arbitration. 4 The Agreement еxcepted no dispute from this mandatory bipartite arbitration procedure. 5
Miron had bound itself to a similar collective bargaining agreement with the Laborers (“Laborers Collective Bargaining Agreement”), which covers the operation of mason-tending forklifts. 6 Like the Area II Agreement, the Laborers’ Agreement requires all work covered under the Agreement to be subcontracted to a signatory to the Agreement. 7 Although it is obvious that the La *561 borers’ Collective Bargaming Agreement conflicts with the Area II Agreement over the assignment of mason-tending forklift work, this conflict, unfortunately, is neither uncommon in the industry, nor unknown to this court. 8
In December 1991, Miron was awarded the contract to construct an addition to the American Club in Kohler, Wisconsin. Miron subcontracted the masonry work to Bill Den-tinger, Inc. Dentinger was a signatory to the Laborers’ Collective Bargaining Agreement, but, according to the Operators, was not a signatory to the Area II Agreement. 9 Pursuant to its contract with the Laborers, Dentinger assigned members of that union to man a masonry forklift used to supply the bricklayer employees with material.
Claiming mason-tending forklift work was covered under the Area II Agreement, thе Operators filed a grievance on March 19, 1992 seeking pay in lieu of work for violation of the union signatory subcontracting clause and requested bipartite arbitration of the dispute. The Laborers filed a similar grievance under its Agreement to determine the work was properly assigned to its workers and for pay in lieu of work in the event it was reassigned. Miron refused to submit its dispute with the Operators to bipartite arbitration on the ground that the dispute was jurisdictional in nature. On June 4, 1992, Miron filed a complaint seeking tripartite arbitration among all three parties.
In the meantime, the Laborers threatened to strike if the work was reassigned. On June 12, 1992, Miron filed a § 8(b)(4)(ii)(D) unfair labor practice charge against the Laborers with the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”).
10
These two actions formed the necessary predicate for Miron and the Laborers to petition the NLRB for a § 10(k) hearing.
11
The NLRB held a § 10(k) hearing on August 18, 1992 and awarded the work at the Kohler jobsite to the Laborers.
12
Wisconsin Laborers District Council,
During this same summer, the aforementioned set of events repeated themselves at a different jobsite. Miron was awarded the contract to construct the' Kettle Moraine Correctional Institute in Sheboygan County, Wisconsin. Miron subcontracted the masonry work to Par Construction Company. Par was not a signatory to the Area II Agreement and employed members of the Laborers to operate the mason-tending forklifts. The Operators again filed a grievance seek *562 ing pay in lieu of work. The Laborers promptly responded with its own grievance. Miron again refused to submit to bipartite arbitration with the Operators and, on January 19, 1993, amended its complaint filed in the district court on June 4, 1992 to include the two new grievances. Miron also filed for an NLRB determination of this second dispute and the parties are still awaiting the Board’s ruling. In February 1994, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Operators on its counterclaim and against Miron’s complaint and ordered Miron to submit to bipartite arbitration with the Operators. The district court also denied the Laborers’ motion to intervene and motion to dismiss the Operators’ counterclaim for want of a necessary party because it failed to show how it would be prejudiced by such arbitration.
II. Analysis
Relying primarily on common law and policy justifications from other circuits, Miron and the Laborers argue on appeal that the jurisdictional nature of their dispute with the Operators authorizes this court to order the parties to submit to tripartite arbitration. Alternatively, they contend that the Operators’ demand for bipartite arbitration for a violation of the subcontracting clause should be dismissed because it is in direct conflict with the NLRB’s award of the work to the Laborers. Finally, to the extent that this circuit’s precedent to the contrary on both of these arguments applies and cannot be distinguished, Miron and the Laborers invite this court to ovеrrule such precedent.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Colip v. Clare,
A.
All parties to this case have offered to submit to some form of arbitration to resolve their respective disputes. However, this court will not rely on that generаl willingness to arbitrate as authority for ordering the three parties to come together and arbitrate any dispute which has arisen. “[A]rbitration is a matter of contract and a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to submit.”
AT & T Technologies, Inc. v. Communications Workers,
While many collective bargaining agreements do excludе jurisdictional disputes from the normal arbitration procedures, 13 the Area *563 II Agreement in the case at bar required bipartite arbitration for all disputes between Miron and the Operators. Unlike past versions of the Agreement, there was no requirement that the two parties submit jurisdictional disputes to tripartite arbitration. Thus, the collective bargaining agreement provides no authority for us to order tripartite arbitration among the parties.
Miron and the Laborers insist that we should follow the examples of other cases which have considered tripartite arbitration. However these eases are distinguished by the ability of the parties to point to a contractual mechanism authorizing tripartite arbitration.
See, e.g., Alberici-Eby,
However, no case has ordered the parties to submit to tripartite arbitration to resolve two distinct contractual grievances arising from the same set of facts. The instant case thus lacks the “requisite contractual nexus” to order tripartite arbitration since the parties have not agreed to arbitrate the merits of the same dispute.
National Rural Letter Carriers’ Ass’n,
Furthermore, our decision in
Hutter Constr. Co. v. International Union of Operating Eng’rs, Local 139,
Miron and the Laborers urge us to overrule
Hutter
and adopt the reasoning of the Eighth Circuit in
Local 513, Int’l Union of Operating Eng’rs v. J.S. Alberici Constr. Co.,
Thus, we conclude that the district court’s decision to order Miron and the Operators to submit to bipartite arbitration was well-grоunded in the terms of the Area II Agreement. The subcontracting dispute between Miron and the Operators is separable from any jurisdictional dispute which might exist between the Operators and the Laborers.
B.
Miron and the Laborers contend that even if bipartite arbitration is proper under the Area II Agreement, the NLRB’s decision to award the American Club work to the Laborers in the § 10(k) hearing precludes the Operators from filing a grievance under the subcontracting clause. This assumes that the arbitrator’s award will be inconsistent with the NLRB decision. When an arbitration award is in conflict with the decision of the NLRB in a § 10(k) proceeding, the NLRB decision takes precedence.
Carey v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp.,
This court in
Hutter
held that an arbitrator’s award of backpay to one union is not inconsistent with the NLRB’s decision to award the work to a different union.
Id.,
In the alternative, Miron and the Laborers invite us to overrule or harmonize
Hutter
with other cases. Their argument is that only the union who has the superior claim to the work is entitled to compensation. Since the Laborers were awarded the work, an arbitrator’s decision to award pay in lieu of the work to another union would effectively undermine the § 10(k) decision. They ask us to adopt the reasoning of the Third Circuit in
Local 30, United Slate, Tile & Composition Roofers v. NLRB,
First, the NLRB itself agrees that its decision to award work to one union does not preclude the losing union from pursuing its contractual remedies against the general contractor.
15
See Local Union 33 (Blount Brothers),
Blount makes it clear that a 10(k) award does not block a union’s access to
its contractual remedies for breach of a union signatory subcontracting clause. Subsequent to the instant 10(k) procеeding, Iron Workers is free to continue to seek redress under its contract with Am-bridge for alleged breach of contract, if Iron Workers limits its conduct to pursuing its grievance against Ambridge. Under Blount, such conduct is not coercive, and any charge filed with the Board concerning that conduct will be dismissed.
Slattery Assoc.,
1990 NLRB Lexis 615 at *10-11. The right to pursue contractual remedies also includes the right to ask for monetary damages, including pay in lieu of work.
Blount Brothers,
Second, a union’s mere pursuit of its contractual remedies against the general contractor, absent a demand that the subcontractor reassign the work, does not amount to coercion in contravention of the § 10(k) award. Since the subcontractor has complete control over which union actually performs the work, maintenance of an action against the general contractor cannot be viewed as a veiled attempt to force a reassignment of the work. The element of coercion is what distinguishes the instant case from
Local 30, United Slate, Tile & Composition Roofers v. NLRB,
This distinction between an arbitration award against a general contractor and an arbitration award against the employer responsible for work assignment was recognized by the First Circuit in
J.F. White Contracting Co. v. Local 103 Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers,
Thus, we conclude that the § 10(k) award does not preclude the Operators from pursuing its subcontracting clause grievance in bipartite arbitration. An arbitrator’s award of backpay to one union in a subcontracting dispute is not inconsistent with the NLRB’s prior award of the work to a different union in a § 10(k) proceeding. Hutter controls this case despite the difference in the sequence of the collateral proceedings. The NLRB itself recognizes that the losing party in a § 10(k) award may continue to pursue its contractual remedies against the general contractor. This is not coercive behavior in contravention of the § 10(k) award because it is aimed at Miron rather than the subcontractor who is ultimately responsible for assigning the work. Since the Operators only seek relief under the subcontracting clause, Miron is not incapable of complying with the orders of both proceedings.
III.
For all of the reasons given above, we Affirm the district court’s decision ordering Miron and the Operators to submit to bipartite arbitration to resolve the Operators’ grievance.
Notes
. The denial of the Laborers' petition to intervene and of its motion to dismiss the Operators' counterclaim for want of a necessary party provided the basis of appeal No. 94-1646, which was consolidated with No. 94 — 1546 for purposes of this decision. However, the Laborers completely failed to brief these issues on appeal, instead limiting its argument to the scope of Miron's appeal. Apparently, it believes that resolution of Miron's appeal will resolve its own appeal as well. Therefore, we need not consider this second subject of appeal.
See Luddington v. Indiana Bell Telephone Co.,
. According to section 7.8 of the Area II Agreement:
The operation of elevator or forklift trucks on construction jobsites (excluding warehouse and storage yards as per Teamster Operating Engineers International Agreement) is exclusively the craft work of the Operating Engineers, and assignment of said operation shall be made to an Operating Engineer, dispatched and covered by the terms and conditions of this Agreement.
. Section 4.1 of the Area II Agreement provided, in pertinent part:
The Contractor agrees that, when subletting or contracting out work covered by this Agreement ... he wiE sublet or contract out such work only to a subcontractor who has signed, or is otherwise bound by, a written labor agreement entered into with the Union.
. Section 8.2 of the Area II Agreement provided, in pertinent part: "All grievances, disputes or complaints of violations of any provisions of this Agreement shall be submitted to final and binding arbitration by an arbitrator from the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service.”
. Prior to 1987, the Area II agreement mandated tripartite arbitration for jurisdictional disputes. This exception was removed under the 1987 Amendments to the Agreement and was not reintroduced when the Agreement was again amended in 1990.
. See Exhibit A, Jurisdictional Claims, of the Laborers’ Collective Bargaining Agreement.
. Section 9.10.1 of the Laborers' Collective Bargaining Agreement provided that
It is agreed that any work sublet and to be done at the site of the construction alteration, painting or repair of a building, structure, or *561 other work, and when a portion of said work tо be sublet is under jurisdiction of this Agreement, the work shall be sublet to a subcontractor signatory to this Agreement.
. We have encountered the dispute between the Laborers and the Operators over the assignment of forklift work on a number of occasions.
See International Union of Operating Eng'rs, Local 103 v. Indiana Constr. Corp.,
. There appears to be some dispute as to whether Dentinger is a signatory to the Area II Agreement. This dispute is not relevant to the question of whether bipartite arbitration is appropriate. Rather, it is precisely the type of issue which can be resolved before the arbitrator.
. Under § 8(b)(4)(ii)(D) of the National Labor Relations Act, labor organizations are prohibited from threatening to strike in order to force an employer to assign work to members of one union rather than members of another union.
.A § 10(k) proceeding is a hearing conducted by the NLRB subsequent to a § 8(b)(4)(ii)(D) claim to determine which union has the superior claim to "work in dispute.” Before the NLRB may proceed with a determination of the dispute, it must be satisfied that there is reasonable cause to believe that § (8)(b)(4)(ii)(D) has been violated and work is actually "in dispute," and that the parties have not agreed on a method for a volun-taiy adjustment of the dispute.
. According to the Board, several factors are relevant to the NLRB's determination of the dispute, including the collective bargaining agreements, company preference and practice, area practice, relative skills, and economy and efficiency of operations.
See Wisconsin Laborers District Council,
. The collective bargaining agreements in
Alberici-Eby, 992
F.2d at 729;
Indiana Constr.,
. The Laborers rely on the § 10(k) hearing's concurrence for its allegation that the NLRB made a finding that the Operators' claim was not arguably meritorious. Such reliance is obviously misplaced.
. In fact, the NLRB summarily dismissed . charges that the Operators were engaging in an unfair labor practice by maintaining its grievanсe after the § 10(k) award. See letter from Joseph A. Szabo, Regional Director, NLRB re cases 30-CC-521 and 30-D-154 dated Dec. 15, 1993. (Operators' supplemental appendix at A-21). An appeal of this decision is pending. See letter from Yvonne T. Dixon, Director, Office of Appeals, NLRB re cases 30-CC-521 and 30-CD-154 dated June 16, 1994. (Laborers' supplemental appendix at A-l).
. Iron Workers Local 433 (Swinerton & Walberg Co.), 308 N.L.R.B. No. 105, 1992 NLRB Lexis 1060 (1992), contrary to the Laborers’ assertions, supports the Board’s position that the losing union in a § 10(k) proceeding may pursue a subcontracting clause grievance against the general contractor. In Swinerton & Walberg, the Board *566 found that Locаl 433 alleged no violation of the subcontracting clause in its grievance. Furthermore, its petition to compel arbitration did not mention the subcontracting clause. Id., 1992 NLRB Lexis 1060 at *3-4. According to the district court, "[Local] 433 contorts the history of this case in its attempt to transform it into a subcontracting clause dispute.” Id., 1992 NLRB Lexis 1060 at *4 n. 2. The Board found that "S & W, the general contractor, assigns the disputed work and is the employer against whom Iron Workers Local 433 filed a grievance." Id., 1992 NLRB Lexis 1060 at 4. Thus, the Board properly held that the maintenance of an action to compel arbitration was in contravention of its § 10(k) award. It cited Blount Brothers with approval, but found it inapplicable on these facts.
