The plaintiff brought this action to compel the defendant authority, his employer, to arbitrate a grievance pursuant to the procedure set out in the collective bargaining agreement between the authority and the employee’s union, Local Division 589, Amalgamated Transit Union (Union). The judge found that the Union did not request arbitration of the employee’s grievance and that there was no agreement by the authority to arbitrate a grievance between it and the plaintiff individ *2 ually. He ruled that the plaintiff had no right, acting independently of the Union, to compel arbitration and dismissed the action. We affirm.
The authority had no obligation to arbitrate a grievance which the employee, but not the Union, wished to arbitrate. The arbitration provision of the collective bargaining agreement gave the Union sixty days to request arbitration of a dispute which was not resolved at the conclusion of the fourth step in the grievance procedure. The Union made no such request. Indeed the record does not show that the employee made such a timely request, and, in the absence of such a request, this action to compel arbitration must fail.
Even if the plaintiff had made such a timely request, the general rule in such circumstances is that an employee, unsupported by his union, may not compel arbitration. See
Vaca
v.
Sipes,
Judgment affirmed.
