Plaintiff George “Tom” Nemsky brought a lawsuit against defendants ConocoPhillips and the International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 399, for breach of the defendants’ Collective Bargaining Agreement and breach of the duty of fair representation, respectively. The district court granted summary judgment to defendants and Nemsky appeals that ruling. Local 399 also cross-appeals the district court’s denial of Rule 11 sanctions against Nemsky. For the reasons explained below, we affirm the judgment of the district court in all respects.
I. Background
A. The Collective Bargaining Agreement and the 2004 Substance Abuse Policy
Nemsky worked as an operating engineer at ConocoPhillips’s Wood River Refinery. The operating engineers at Wood River were represented by the International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 399. Local 399 and ConocoPhillips had a Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”) that governed the relationship between union members and ConocoPhillips. Article 20 of the CBA stated that a represented employee “may be disciplined, including discharge, only for just cause.” Article 20 also provided that, if, after compliance with normal discipline grievance procedures, a “complaint [against ConocoPhillips] is not settled in a satisfactory manner,” Local 399 “may submit the complaint to arbitration.” The CBA stated that, when arbitration is initiated, “it is understood and agreed that the arbitrator shall determine whether the Company had just cause for discipline.”
After the 2004 SAP was promulgated, Local 399, along with the nine craft unions also represented at the Wood River Refinery, filed a collective grievance regarding ConocoPhillips’s unilateral implementation of the revised policy. Local 399 wished to arbitrate the issue. However, ConocoPhillips maintained that the 2004 SAP was issued pursuant to its Article 21 rulemaking authority, that it was not part of the CBA, and that issues arising from it were not subject to the CBA’s grievance procedure. ConocoPhillips indicated that it would not submit to arbitration unless the union agreed that it could seek de novo court review of the policy’s substantive arbitrability, if necessary.
In addition to the collective grievance, on September 30, 2004, Local 399 filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board (“the NLRB”) regarding ConocoPhillips’s allegedly unlawful implementation of the 2004 SAP. The NLRB Regional Office dismissed the charge by letter on December 22, 2004 and an NLRB agent advised George Machino, the business representative of Local 399, of the futility of an appeal. Machino testified that he had expected the NLRB to defer the unfair labor practice charge to arbitration and when that did not happen he concluded that the NLRB agreed with ConocoPhillips that issues arising under the 2004 SAP were not arbitrable. Machino also testified that, around the time the NLRB filing was dismissed, he knew that no ConocoPhillips union in the country had been successful with grievances or unfair labor practices charges resisting ConocoPhillips’s new SAP. Floyd Fessler, Local 399’s business agent, likewise gave testimony that Local 399 believed its options with regard to the 2004 SAP were weak.
Machino testified that, with these concerns in mind, Local 399 made “a conscious decision ... to get the best deal that [it] could get on behalf of the [union] members.” Accordingly, Local 399 dropped its challenge to the 2004 SAP by entering into a “Memorandum of Agreement” (the “MOA”) with ConocoPhillips on January 27, 2005. The MOA stated that a “confirmed positive test” under the SAP “shall be cause for immediate termination and such termination shall not be subject to the grievance and arbitration provisions of the Collective Bargaining Agreement.” However, the MOA also stated that Local 399 “continues to maintain the right to grieve and arbitrate the integrity of the chain of custody process of the policy.”
At his deposition, Machino expressed satisfaction with Local 399’s retention of the ability to grieve chain of custody issues. Machino testified that, as far as he was aware, Local 399 was the “only union in the country that got any movement whatsoever in this policy” and stated that he viewed the retention of Local 399’s
B. Nemsky’s Termination
At the time of his termination, Nemsky had worked as an operating engineer for the Wood River Refinery for twenty-two years and had a history of solid work performance. As an operating engineer, he occupied a safety-sensitive post; one of his duties was to ensure that areas of the refinery were cleared of combustible material so as to minimize the possibility of an explosion at the refinery.
Nemsky reported to work on September 20, 2006 (a Wednesday) at 6:45 am. While working that morning, he inadvertently kicked over a can of pipe cement and got cement on his coveralls and shoe. He went to the restroom and used a solvent to remove the pipe cement. During the process of removing the cement, Nemsky was within a small unvented space and he began to feel light-headed.
After Nemsky left the restroom, he received a call from his supervisor informing him that he had been selected for a random drug and alcohol test pursuant to the SAP. Nemsky proceeded to the medical office for testing, where Nurse Pat Diener administered his first alcohol test around 7:45 am. Diener testified that Nemsky was fully cooperative through all testing. Prior to conducting the test, Nemsky told Diener that he had taken Robitussin immediately prior to reporting for work, but Diener was apparently unconcerned that this would taint the test. Nurse Diener used an Intoximeter handheld breath test device to conduct the alcohol testing. The first test given to Nemsky returned a 0.043 blood alcohol level, a result which qualified as a “detectable trace amount” of alcohol under the 2004 SAP. After the first test, the testing instrument automatically ran a “blank.” The “blank” test registered a 0.000 alcohol level, indicating that there was no residual alcohol in the testing equipment. After a fifteen minute wait, Diener gave Nemsky a second test, which showed a blood alcohol level of 0.044. After the second test, the testing instrument automatically required a calibration cheek. Diener conducted the calibration check using a standard canister of gas known to have an alcohol content of 0.037. Although the Intoximeter device is considered to be in proper working condition if the test measures within .005 of the known standard, the calibration check registered precisely at the level of the known standard, 0.037, without any measurable deviation.
After the second test, Nemsky called union official Floyd Fessler and told him that he had failed an alcohol test. Fessler told him to get a blood test as quickly as possible. Shortly after speaking with Fessler, Nemsky told ConocoPhillips medical office personnel that he needed to leave. Medical staff told him he could not drive because he was impaired, but offered to get a cab for him. Nemsky declined the cab.
Medical personnel gave Nemsky two additional breath tests at 8:40 am and 9:56 am, which returned results of 0.026 and 0.000 respectively. Between these third and fourth tests, Nurse Diener conducted another calibration check, which again produced the accurate result of 0.037.
Plaintiff argues that the breath tests were false positives. However, he admitted at deposition that he consumed between two and four beers the evening of September 19, 2006 (the night before his blood alcohol tests). Moreover, Machino testified that Nemsky told him two different stories regarding his consumption of alcohol the night before the positive tests. Machino testified that about a week after the positive alcohol tests, Nemsky told him
By certified letter dated September 22, 2006, ConocoPhillips informed Nemsky that his employment was terminated. On September 25, 2006, Nemsky asked Local 399 to “contest my discharge per Article 20” of the CBA. Local 399 sent at least two letters to ConocoPhillips stating that the union believed Nemsky’s termination “lack[ed] just cause” and indicating its intent to proceed to arbitration. By February 2007, Local 399 and ConocoPhillips had each designated their representatives for arbitration, yet no arbitration was ever held.
Nemsky filed suit with the NLRB against Local 399 and ConocoPhillips on March 21, 2007, complaining that the defendants had not followed through with arbitration. 2 Fessler later testified that he was “not certain” why arbitration had not occurred. Machino testified that Local 399 stopped processing Nemsky’s arbitration at least in part because Nemsky filed charges against the union with the NLRB.
Nemsky filed a federal law suit in the Southern District of Illinois. He alleged that ConocoPhillips had breached the CBA and that Local 399 had breached the duty of fair representation. ConocoPhillips and Local 399 filed motions for summary judgment and Local 399 also asked for Rule 11 sanctions against Nemsky. The district court granted summary judgment to both defendants but denied the motion for sanctions. Nemsky appeals the grant of summary judgment to defendants and Local 399 cross-appeals the denial of Rule 11 sanctions.
II. Discussion
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants de novo.
See Crider v. Spectrulite Consortium,
Nemsky filed his claim against Local 399 and ConocoPhillips under Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act.
See
29 U.S.C. § 185. That section gives federal courts jurisdiction over suits to enforce the terms of collective bargaining agreements.
Id.
Nemsky’s claim is a so-called “hybrid 301” action because he has sued Local 399 for breaching its duty of fair representation and his employer for breaching the collective bargaining agreement.
Crider,
The first part of Nemsk/s hybrid suit is his claim against Local 399 for breach of the duty of fair representation.
“ ‘National labor policy has been built on the premise that by pooling their economic strength and acting through a labor organization freely chosen by the majority, the employees of an appropriate unit have the most effective means of bargaining. ...’ ”
McLeod,
A union breaches its duty to fairly represent a member where its conduct toward a member is “arbitrary, discriminatory, or in bad faith.” Vaca
v. Sipes,
Nemsky argues that the union acted arbitrarily by entering into the MOA, which settled the union’s claims against ConocoPhillips arising out of the company’s enactment of the 2004 SAP. He claims that when Local 399 agreed to the MOA, it “surrendered] the right of all employees to ever again arbitrate a termination of employment for an alleged violation of the Substance Abuse Policy” and that this decision was “downright irrational.” He alleges that Local 399’s motivation for “caving in” to the company was its desire to obtain reinstatement of two employees who had been terminated for alleged violations of the SAP, a trade-off that Nemsky again characterizes as “irrational.” Finally, Nemsky rejects the notion that the union obtained a concession from ConocoPhillips by maintaining the right to grieve “chain of custody” issues with regard to the 2004 SAP. Rather, he believes that this clause only gave the union a right to grieve a narrow class of cases and that the union’s belief “that [the union] got something when the company agreed to comply with legal requirements regarding ‘chain of custody’ only reinforces the conclusion that the union acted arbitrarily and irrationally when it gave away the critical ‘just cause’ protections.”
This court has described the test for determining whether a union’s conduct is arbitrary as “quite forgiving.”
See Garcia,
We agree with the district court that no rational jury could find that the union was “irrational” under this highly deferential standard. At the time Local 399 signed the MOA, its unfair labor practice claims regarding the 2004 SAP had been dismissed by the NLRB, an NLRB agent had informed a union official that an appeal would be futile, and no other ConocoPhillips union in the country had succeeded in challenging the policy. It also bears noting that, at the time Local 399 signed the MOA, the union was aware that
Although his argument is less than cogent on this point, Nemsky also seems to argue that the union abandoned the arbitration of his termination in bad faith.
See Vaco,
A union’s failure or refusal to arbitrate a grievance because a member files charges against it is a breach of the duty of fair representation.
See
29 U.S.C. § 411(a)(4) (“No labor organization shall limit the right of any member thereof to institute an action in any court, or in a proceeding before any administrative agency.”);
see also NLRB v. Industrial Union of Marine & Shipbuilding Workers,
As noted above, in February 2007, the union informed ConocoPhillips that it believed Nemsky’s termination “lack[ed] just cause” and indicated an intent to proceed to arbitration. Despite their current litigation position that Nemsky’s termination could not be grieved or arbitrated, it is undisputed that by the end of February 2007, Local 399 and ConocoPhillips had each designated representatives for the purpose of moving forward with arbitration of the grievance. But no arbitration was ultimately held. Fessler testified that he “[was] not certain” why the arbitration had not occurred, while Machino testified: “quite frankly, it got stopped when [Nemsky] filed the charges against us” with the NLRB. Nemsky argues that Machino’s testimony shows that the union failed to arbitrate his grievance in retalia
Machino’s deposition testimony provides strong evidence in Nemsky’s favor in this regard. Machino testified as follows:
Q. Is there any other reason other than the fact that he didn’t go to the hospital that the union didn’t push his termination to arbitration?
A. Any other reasons. Well, quite frankly, it got stopped when he filed the charges against us for not doing it, and it was pending at the time.
Q. So why would the fact he filed a Section 301 claim against the union stop the union from arbitrating his termination?
A. He took the position that we weren’t going to.
Q. So why would that stop you? If he took the position that the Cubs are a better baseball team than the Cardinals, why — that wouldn’t stop it?
A. It was stopped on the basis we didn’t feel we had a case because he didn’t comply. And at that point, he quit communicating with us in regards to — he took the position we weren’t going to do it, so we were kind of out of bounds at that point in time.
The district court concluded from this testimony that the union abandoned the arbitration of Nemsky’s termination “because (1) the Union felt it had no case since Nemsky did not comply with Fessler’s urging that he have a blood test; and (2) Nemsky stopped communicating with the Union because he took the position that the Union was not going to arbitrate the issue.” But we respectfully submit that the district court’s reading does not take note of a third reason that emerges from Machino’s testimony: that the union stopped pursuing arbitration because Nemsky filed charges against it, as Machino stated in response to the first question excerpted above. Machino’s statement in this regard is direct evidence of Local 399’s alleged motivation for the abandonment, and would be sufficient to preclude summary judgment on this aspect of Nemsky’s claim.
B. Whether ConocoPhillips Breached the CBA
As noted above, in a “hybrid 301” claim, the employee’s claim against the union and his claim against the employer are linked: “neither claim is viable if the other fails.”
Crider,
Neither party disputes that Nemsky was terminated because of a confirmed positive alcohol test conducted pursuant to the 2004 SAP. But plaintiff asserts that ConocoPhillips’s enactment of the 2004 SAP breached the CBA. He points out that
C. Is Plaintiff Entitled to “Some Forum?”
Plaintiffs final argument is that, despite the union’s agreement to the MOA, he “must be afforded an alternative venue to enforce the remaining ‘just cause’ provision” in the CBA. Nemsky cites
McNealy v. Caterpillar,
D. Rule 11 Sanctions
Local 399 moved for Rule 11 sanctions against Nemsky, which the district court denied. Local 399 now cross-appeals the denial of sanctions. We review a district court’s denial of Rule 11 sanctions for abuse of discretion.
See Cooler & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp.,
Local 399 presents a convoluted argument for sanctions. It points out that Nemsky’s complaint originally alleged that the MOA was the result of a secret deal between ConocoPhillips and the union. Nemsky’s counsel later stated in an affidavit, in response to ConocoPhillips’s motion for summary judgment, that he believed his theory of a secret deal would be borne out by the depositions of Patricia Diener, the nurse who administered the breath tests, and Jay Hawley, ConocoPhillips’s designated corporate representative. According to Local 399, depositions were taken on February 28 and 29, 2008, during which Jay Hawley was present and available to be deposed. However, Nemsky’s counsel never took Hawley’s deposition. Local 399 argues that Nemsky’s counsel’s failure to take Hawley’s deposition was “objective conduct, consistent with the subjective conclusion that, considering the depositions taken on February 28 and 29 and the documents produced by Local 399 showing there was no ‘secret deal,’ plaintiffs counsel concluded Hawley’s deposition would be a waste of time and money.” Local 399 argues that, having concluded that there was no “secret deal,” plaintiff was obligated to dismiss his action.
The chain of inferences Local 399 asks this court to make in order to conclude that Nemsky should have dismissed his action at an earlier date can be described as speculative at best. Local 399 has not shown that Nemsky litigated in bad faith or that he advanced a frivolous claim. It
III. Conclusion
Nemsky provided evidence that the union failed to arbitrate his grievance in good faith and thus breached its duty of fair representation. However, plaintiff did not provide evidence that ConocoPhillips breached the CBA. Nemsky was required to establish sufficient evidence of both claims in order to proceed to trial on his hybrid suit. We therefore Affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment. We also Affirm the district court’s denial of Rule 11 sanctions to Local 399.
Notes
. Machino's testimony regarding plaintiffs statements to him are the statements of a party-opponent, which are not hearsay. See Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2).
. The parties' briefs do not indicate the outcome of these charges.
. Moreover, although we look only to “the legal landscape at the time1' of the union’s decision to determine arbitrariness,
see O'Neill, 499
U.S. at 79,
. Plaintiff argues that an employee suing his union under Section 301 for breach of the duty of fair representation in negotiations need not prove that his employer breached the CBA (although he admits that he must prove a breach of the CBA if his fair representation claim hinges on the union’s alleged failure to arbitrate). Because plaintiff has not shown that the union breached its duty of fair representation in negotiating the MOA (as explained, supra), plaintiff’s contention that he need not prove a violation of the CBA in this particular context is not relevant. However, even if we were to consider that argument, plaintiff provides no case law or other authority to support his suggestion that we recognize an exception to settled precedent in these circumstances. We thus reject Nemsky's argument as without merit.
