Having become convinced that Spalding Sports Worldwide, Inc. (Spalding) had terminated his employment without proper cause, 1 plaintiff-appellant Martin J. Mulvi-hill asked his union — Local 1851 of the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders, Blacksmiths, Forgers and Helpers (the Union) — to prosecute a grievance against Spalding pursuant to the collective bargaining agreement then in effect (the CBA). The Union did so. But when Spalding rejected the grievance, the Union refused to bring the matter to arbitration.
Mulvihill subsequently brought suit in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts against Spalding and the Union. In due course, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of both defendants. Mulvihill appeals. Concluding, as wе do, that Spalding acted with proper cause, we affirm the judgment below.
I. BACKGROUND
We present the facts derived from the record in the light most favorable to the party opposing summary judgment (here, the plaintiff).
See Plumley v. S. Container, Inc.,
Mulvihill began his tour of duty at Spalding in 1969. At the times material hereto, a CBA was in effect between Spalding and the Union. The CBA included a management rights provision, which stated, inter aha, that Spalding would “continue to direct working forces, including the right to ... discharge [employees] for proper cause.” The CBA also mapped *18 out a standard grievance mechanism. Under it, an offended employee could lodge a grievance with a Union-organized committee and expect the grievance committee to press Spalding to resolve the complaint. If that failed, the Union had the right to compel Spalding to proceed to binding arbitration.
Mulvihill, a long-time Union member, held a job within the bargaining unit. In 2000, a coworker, Amy Charest, accused him of sexual harassment. Acting on Charest’s formal complaint, Spalding conducted an investigation. The results of that probe led it to terminate Mulvihill’s employment. Contending that Spalding had discharged him without proper cause, Mulvihill submitted a grievance.
Buoyed by Mulvihill’s thirty-two years of service, the Union’s grievance committee lobbied Spalding to reconsider its decision, reinstate Mulvihill, and award him back pay. The main thrust of the Union’s argument was that discharge was “too serious” a remedy for the asserted misconduct. Spalding rejected the Union’s importunings, pointing to Charest’s complaint and the results of its investigation.
In her complaint, Charest had accused Mulvihill of: spreading “false rumors” within the company to the effect that she was “having an affair” with a fellow employee named Mike Rattell; telling Rat-tell’s wife — who also worked for Spald-ing — about the alleged affair; “interfering with [Charest’s] personal life” and making her feel “violated”; and creating a situation in which Charest found it “emotionally and physically ... hard [to] concentrate] on [her] work.” Spalding’s investigation into these remonstrances revealed the following undisputed facts. On September 7, 2000, Charest’s husband, Todd, had gone to MuMhill’s home on mаtters unrelated to this dispute. The two discussed Char-est’s putative involvement in a sexual relationship with Rattell and Mulvihill agreed to give Todd Charest’s telephone number to Rattell’s wife (Melissa) so that she could contact him regarding their spouses’ suspected infidelity. Mulvihill passed the telephone number to Melissa Rattell at work the following day. He proceeded to tell two other Spalding employees (Domenic Montessi and Ray Perreault) about the alleged affair. According to them, he supplied graphic detail.
Spalding’s sexual harassment policy prohibits “sexual discrimination or harassment which undermines the employment relationship by creating an intimidating, hostile, and offensive work environment.” Thе policy specifically defines verbal harassment to include “spreading rumors about a coworker’s sex life” and forbids any such conduct that may “unreasonably interfere! ] with an employee’s work performance.” The executive in charge of the investigation, Robert Bourdeau, concluded that Mulvihill’s behavior transgressed the policy and created a working environment that Charest reasonably found offensive. After consulting with senior management, Bourdeau terminated Mulvihill’s employment.
As said, the Union initially processed a grievance on Mulvihill’s behalf. When Spalding resisted, the Union accepted Spalding’s response, ignored Mulvihill’s protests, and allowed the matter to die on the vine. After the deаdline for submitting the grievance to arbitration had passed, Mulvihill filed suit against Spald-ing and the Union. His complaint asserted, inter alia, that (1) Spalding had violated section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (LMRA), 29 U.S.C. § 185, by cashiering him without proper cause (in derogation of the CBA), and (2) the Union had failed to heed its duty fairly to represent him with respect to Spalding’s breach.
*19
This sort of double-barreled suit is known as a hybrid section 301 action.
See, e.g., Arriaga-Zayas v. Int’l Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union,
The district court determined, at the summary judgment stage, that Spalding had acted with proper cause in discharging Mulvihill (and, therefore, had not breached the CBA). On this basis, the court disposed of the section 301 claims. Mulvihill also had asserted a defamation claim, and the court found that claim wanting as well. This appeal ensued.
II. ANALYSIS
We begin our analysis with a reiteration of the by-now-familiar summary judgment standard. We then provide an overview of the interaction between hybrid section 301 actions and Title VII. Finally, we turn to the merits of Mulvihill’s claims.
A. The Summary Judgment Standard.
The role of summary judgment is to look behind the facade erected by the pleadings and assay the parties’ proof in order to determine whether a trial will serve any useful purpose.
Plumley,
In conducting this tamisage, the district court must scrutinize the record in the light most flattering to the party opposing the motion, indulging all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.
Morris v. Gov’t Dev. Bank,
This samе paradigm governs our de novo review of a district court’s summary judgment rulings.
Plumley,
B. The Governing Law.
Federal common law supplies the substantive rules for adjudicating interlocked claims against an employer and a trade union for breach of a CBA.
See Crider
v.
Spectrulite Consortium, Inc.,
In this case, the CBA allowed Spalding to take certain personnel actions (including dismissal) for “proper cause.” Spalding concluded that it had such cause and fired Mulvihill. The Union refrained from testing that conclusion through arbitration. In run-of-the-mine actions, the finality provisions of the CBA would operate to preclude judicial review of such a determination.
See Abernathy v. United States Postal Serv.,
Although this remedial avenue can lead to make-whole relief, there is no guarantee of safe passage. Typically, claimants attempting to make the requisite showing in hybrid section 301 actions must carry a heavy burden. Such claimants “are not entitled to relitigate their discharge[s] merely because they offer newly discovered evidence that the charges against them were false and that they in fact were fired without [sufficient] cause.”
Hines,
Let us be perfectly clear. Proof of the required nexus does not entail a “but for” causal connection between the union’s breach of duty and the erroneous discharge.
Webb v. ABF Freight Sys., Inc.,
This case follows the classic pattern for a hybrid section 301 action. It involves an assessment of the actions of Spalding and the Union against the background understanding of “proper cause” as that term is used in the CBA. The matter is complicated, however, because the principal allegation against Mulvihill — the charge of sexual harassment — implicates Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e to 2000e-17. Employee-claimants in hybrid sectiоn 301 actions that impinge upon an employer’s responsibilities under Title VII must carry an especially heavy burden. That is so because the presence of Title VII transforms the case from a relatively simple two-variable equation that aspires to strike a suitable balance between an employee’s rights and an employer’s hegemony into a more complex three-variable analysis in which that balance must be struck while simultaneously ensuring that important federal anti-discrimination policies are honored.
See Malik v. Carrier Corp.,
Although the case law is sparse, we think that our conclusion as to the relative weight of the employee’s burden is solidly based. Title VII “vest[s] federal courts with plenary powеrs to enforce the statutory requirements.”
Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co.,
Following this logic, it is evident that when sexually charged innuendo contaminates a workplace and creates an abusive environment, Title VII is violated — and the violation constitutes an unlawful employment practice.
See Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Servs. Inc.,
“Congress gave private individuals a significant role in the enforсement process of Title VII.”
Alexander,
This brings us to the degree of deference. Because the employer in such cases vindicates the important congressional policies against discriminatory employment practices, it fulfills a quasi-administrative function.
See Alexander,
C. The Breach of Contract Claim.
With these precepts in mind, we proceed to the merits of the case. Mulvihill hypothesizes that Spalding discharged him without “proper cause” as that term is used in the CBA. We test this hypothesis.
Whether the undisputed facts in a specific case establish — or fail to establish — proper cause for discharge within the contemplation of a given CBA is a question of law (and, thus, a question for the court).
Crider,
In this case, the question of whether proper cause exists to sustain the employee’s discharge intersects with the question of whether the record contains substantial evidence. After all, to find substantial evidence supporting the adverse employment action for Title VII purposes but not for purposes of a broadly worded management rights provision in the CBA would frustratе the legislative policies at stake.
See id.
at 23;
see also Williams,
In sexual harassment eases, “the objective severity of harassment should be judged from the perspective of a reasonable person in the [employeej’s position considering all the circumstances.”
Oncale,
Here, substantial evidence in the summary judgment record shows that Spalding had proper cause to discharge Mulvihill. The social context in which Mulvihill’s behavior occurred was an industrial workplace. Spalding had adopted an explicit sexual harassment policy, administered pursuant to Title VII and the counterpart state statute, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 151B, § 3A(b), and had warned its work force that it took that policy seriously. Common sense suggests that a reasonable person, aware of the policy, could not have justified discussing the involvement of two coworkers in an extra-marital affair with a third-party member of the work force who had no legitimate interest in the subject matter. More importantly, from an objective standpoint Mulvihill’s comments altered the conditions of Charest’s employment and unreasonably interfered with her work performance. Thus, substantial record evidence provides a firm foundation for Spalding’s conclusion that Mulvihill’s conduct violated the company’s published sexual harassment policy.
This same evidence also validates Spalding’s claim that the discharge was a reasonable response to Mulvihill’s misconduct. Spalding’s sexual harassment policy stated unequivocally that potential punishments for violations included dismissal. The record makes manifest that once Charest filed a formal complaint, Spalding assigned the matter to a senior officer (Bourdeau). Bourdeau promptly interviewed key witnesses to determine the verаcity'of the allegation that Mulvihill was telling tawdry tales. When Bourdeau afforded Mulvihill the opportunity to explain his behavior, Mulvihill did not disclaim the substance of the comments attributed to him by others. ■ Instead, he insisted that he had acted appropriately because his discussion of the affair with Charest’s husband related only to the truth of the situation (and, thus, the discussion could not constitute harassment). The tortured nature of this logic itself lends support to the employer’s ultimate decision. It is bad enough when an employee acts in a sexually harassing manner; it is even worse when he cannot see the failings in his own conduct.
■ Based on Bourdeau’s investigation, Spalding deemed termination to be the appropriate remedy. As the record contains substantial support for a. finding that Mulvihill’s behavior constituted sexual harassment, we have no basis to second-guess the decision to fire him.
See Mesnick,
This ends our inquiry into whether the record contains substantial evidentiary support sufficient to ground Mulvihill’s discharge. We hold that it does. As explained above, this holding necessarily means that Spalding acted with proper cause within the purview of the CBA.
See Boston Med. Ctr.,
To be sure, Mulvihill resists the conclusion that Spalding had proper cause to discharge him under the terms of the CBA. To this end, he makes a litany of arguments. None has merit.
He starts with the strange proposition that, by embedding the “proper cause” standard in the CBA, Spalding had surrendered the right to determine the existence vel non of proper cause and left that determination to an arbitrator. Building on this shaky foundation, he argues that Spalding was contractually bound to submit the propriety of any proposed discharge to arbitration. This argument flies in the teeth of both federal labor law and the plain language of the CBA.
“[FJederal labor law is chiefly designed to promote [ ] the formation of the collective agreement and the private settlement of disputes under it.”
Int’l Union, UAW v. Hoosier Cardinal Corp.,
In this case, the process to which the parties agreed for settling differences is embodied in Article 9 of the CBA. That article outlines a two-step procedure for resolving grievances. The first step sets various time limits for processing written grievances. The second step contemplates that “[i]f the Company’s [first-step] answer is unsatisfactory to the Union,” then the grievance “shall be submitted to arbitration.” That clause further provides, however, that “[i]f the Union has not submitted a request for arbitration with[in] thirty (30) calendar days of receipt of the step one answer, the grievance shall be considered settled on the basis of [the employer’s] answer.”
There is no language in the CBA that guarantees individual employees that every grievance will be arbitrated. To the contrary, the grievance procedure leaves to the Union’s sole discretion the decision as to whether to request arbitration. Such provisions are common fare in CBAs — and
*25
where they exist, courts typically cede the union considerable leeway in evaluating the merit associated with a particular grievance and the resources that it will expend to prosecute that grievance.
Miller v. United States Postal Serv.,
Viewed against this bаckdrop, it is evident that Spalding and the Union reached a final settlement of Mulvihill’s grievance when Spalding denied it and the Union elected not to pursue the matter further.
3
As between the parties to the CBA, that determination was “valid, binding, and enforceable.”
Textile Workers,
Mulvihill next asseverates that deferring to the results of Spalding’s investigation violates the summary judgment standard and, in the bargain, denigrates the importance of employee rights under collective bargaining agreements. This asseveration lacks force.
As we have explained, Mulvihill beаrs the burden of demonstrating that Spalding discharged him in derogation of the CBA.
Hines,
In a related vein, Mulvihill contends that several factual issues surrounding Spald-ing’s investigation preclude summary judgment. None of his prolix argumentation exposes any material fact sufficient to derail the summary judgment train.
First, Mulvihill posits that a reasonable juror could find that his conduct was that of a concerned employee hoping to diffuse a potentially explosive situation, not that of a sexual harasser. This thesis runs along the following lines. Mulvihill says that it is reasonable to infer that Spalding acted without proper cause because a more thorough investigation would have revealed the following facts. (1) While Todd Charest was at Mulvihill’s home to estimate the costs оf a needed roof repair, he inquired whether Mulvihill had heard any rumors that his wife was involved in a sexual liaison with Mike Rattell. (2) Mul-vihill replied that he had heard “shop talk” about such a tryst. (3) When Todd Char-est asked for Melissa Rattell’s telephone number, Mulvihill told him that he did not have it but that he would give Todd’s number to .Melissa so that she could contact him if she so chose. (4) Mulvihill then gave Melissa Rattell the telephone number and told her of his conversation with Todd Charest. (5) He then recounted these conversations to his supervisor, Montessi, believing that the situation could have detrimental effects for the working environ *26 ment .(6) According to Mulvihill, Montessi wanted nothing to do with the matter and walked away. (7) Later the same day, Perreault noticed that Amy Charest was not at work and expressed concern about her increased absenteeism and substandard job performance. (8) When Perreault asked Mulvihill if he knew of anything that might be affecting her work, Mulvihill told Perreault of his conversations with Todd Charest and Melissa Rattell.
Even if the record supports this chain of sanguine inferences — a matter on which we take no view — Mulvihill’s analysis is misguided. The question here is not whether Amy Charest and Mike Rattell were actually engaged in an extra-marital affair. Nor is the question whether Mulvi-hill’s actions were well-intentioned. The fact is that Spalding, after due investigation, reasonably concluded that Mulvihill’s remarks about the alleged affair, regardless of either their accuracy оr their purpose, unnecessarily created a hostile work environment for Amy Charest (and, thus, violated Spalding’s published sexual harassment policy). This reasonable conclusion constituted proper cause for Spald-ing to discharge Mulvihill. Seen in this light, Mulvihill’s inferential chain, even if credited, would not alter any
material
fact.
See Morris,
The next factual dispute to which Mulvi-hill alludes involves the extent of Spald-ing’s investigation. In this regard, he draws our attention to the statement in Spalding’s sexual harassment policy that “no disciplinary action will be taken without a thorough investigation of the facts which shall include gathering of statements from all parties and witnesses involved in the matter.” From this launching pad, he jumps to the conclusion that Spalding’s investigation was not conducted in good faith (or, at least, that a jury could so find) because Bourdeau neglected to interview three potential witnesses. This suggestion cannot withstand scrutiny.
The persons that Bourdeau decided not to interview were Mike Rattell, Melissa Rattell, and Todd Charest. Mulvihill’s attack overlooks that Bourdeau reasonably concluded that he did not need to talk to these individuals because the issue was not whether a meretricious relationship existed, but, rather, whether Mulvihill was conversing with his coworkers about Amy Charest’s sex life. There is no evidence in the record that suggests that the three named individuals had any personal knowledge as to whether Mulvihill engaged in gossip-mongering. Thus, the decision not to interview them was well within the employer’s broad discretion. A fortiori, that decision was insufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact anent Spalding’s good faith.
4
See Williams,
Mulvihill also maintains that there are factual issues regarding the validity of the accusations against him. This is true as far as it goes — but it does not go very far. The investigation reveals that all of the witnesses agreed that Mulvihill had commented in the most crude and offensive terms about a sexual liaison between Amy *27 Charest and Mike Rattell. Although Mul-vihill admits his role in the discussions, he denies that he used uncouth language. That asserted factual dispute has nо bearing on our analysis. There is no evidence that Charest herself was exposed to Mulvi-hill’s comments at first hand and, in all events, the violation that sparked Mulvi-hill’s ouster did not depend on the phraseology that he used. Whether Mulvihill spoke to his coworkers with the saltiness of a sailor or the eloquence of a Shakespearean scholar, it was the essence of his statements that created the hostile work environment. The linguistic trappings were, at most, the icing on the cake. Hence, Mulvihill again fails to limn a material dispute sufficient to block summary judgment.
Finally, Mulvihill asserts that Spalding’s sexual harassment policy only prohibited “spreading false rumors.” To bolster this argument, he points to a company mаnual describing “on the job conduct,” which specifically cites the spreading of false rumors as violative of “proper standards of conduct.”
This argument is hopeless. For one thing, the record is devoid of any evidence that Spalding ever limited its sexual harassment policy to conform to this description. For another thing, the fact that Mulvihill’s salacious statements may have been true — a matter that we need not decide — would not alter the fact that his dissemination of them to Charest’s coworkers violated the company’s sexual harassment policy and fomented a hostile work environment.
Although Mulvihill’s asseverational array contains a smattering of other arguments, none warrants discussion. Wе conclude, therefore, that Spalding had proper cause for cashiering Mulvihill and that, under the CBA, it bears no liability for wrongful discharge.
D. The Fair Representation Claim.
Our conclusion that Spalding did not breach the CBA when it terminated Mulvi-hill’s employment serves to dispose of his case against the Union as well. To prevail against either defendant in a hybrid section 301 action, a plaintiff must show that the employer discharged him in derogation of the CBA.
DelCostello,
E. The Defamation Claim.
Mulvihill’s complaint also contained a claim that Spalding, by labeling him as a sexual harasser, defamed him. The district court entered summary judgment against him on this claim, and Mulvihill appeals.
This aspect of the case need not occupy us for long. “We have steadfastly deemed waived issues raised on appeal in a perfunctory manner, not accompanied by developed argumentation.”
United States v. Bongiorno,
After citing to his own self-serving testimony to the effect that some of his associates told him that they had heard he was fired for sexual harassment, Mulvihill makes the general assertion that the “record before the court contains an abundance of evidence which a jury could credit showing this charge to be false, and that defendant Spalding knew that Mulvihill did not sexually harass anyone.” Appellant’s *28-38 Br. at 45. ■ That is the beginning and the end of his argument vis-á-vis the defamation count. He makes no attempt either to marshal the pertinent facts or to engage in reasoned analysis.
This treatment is too perfunctory to preserve the issue for appeal. Mulvihill has done no more than point in a desultory manner to a welter of paper — the record ■appendix comprises almost 1,400 pages— without “arrayfing] these plethoric eviden-tiary materials in any systematic way” with respect to his putative cause of action.
Mass. Sch. of Law at Andover, Inc. v. Am. Bar Ass’n,
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no furthеr. While courts should give broad latitude to employers in investigating charges of sexual harassment in the workplace, the federal interest in eradicating sexual harassment must nonetheless be balanced against the equally strong federal interest in protecting inadequately represented union employees from wrongful discharge. To achieve this balance, the law allows an employee who is fired for sexual harassment to prevail in an ensuing hybrid section 301 action only if he can show that the employer lacked a substantial evidentiary basis for its determination that he was guilty of sexual harassment. Mulvihill has failed by a wide- margin to make this showing. He also has failed to make out a prima facie case of defamation. Accordingly, we affirm the entry of summary judgment in the defendants’ favor.
Affirmed.
Notes
. By virtue of certain corporate transactions not relevant here, Spalding is now known as The Top-Flite Golf Company.
. Such deference to factual determinations and interpretations of private contract disputes is consistent with federal labor law when issues of well-defined and dominant public policy are at stake.
See E. Associated Coal Corp. v. United Mine Workers,
. As an aside, the record indicates that the Union at first intended to arbitrate the grievance but chose not to do so after assessing the strength of Spalding’s case.
. We hasten to add that even were we to assume that the failure to interview one or more of these individuаls constituted a violation of Spalding's announced protocol, it would not necessarily undercut the entry of summary judgment. After all, “[t]he grievance processes cannot be expected to be error-free. The finality provision has sufficient force to surmount occasional instances of mistake.”
Hines,
. In all events, there was no discernible defamation. Based upon the undisputed facts, Mulvihill, while at work, discussed Charest’s sex life with their coworkers. He thereby contravened Spalding’s sexual harassment policy. See supra Part 11(C). For workplace purposes, that made him guilty of sexual harassment. Under those circumstances, it is hard to imagine how Spalding’s alleged publication could have been actionable.
