A depressingly large number of recent cases grows out of refusals to use or abide by the grievance-arbitration machinery of collective bargaining agreements. E.g.,
Hill v. Norfolk & Western Ry.,
In May 1982 Bicknell Minerals, Inc., a mining firm, signed a collective bargaining agreement with Locаl No. 1979A of the Progressive Mine Workers of America (the Union). It was supposed to last three years. In 1984 Bicknell asked the Union to accept lower wages. The Union’s negotiators put a package of reductions before the members for a vote on August 9, 1984.-The vote of the members present at the meeting was a tie; the Union’s “pit committee” then accepted two votes by telephone, both favoring the reductions. The committee told Bicknell that the proposed agreement had been ratified, and Bicknell immediately put into effect the changes (еxpressed as an 11-page addendum to the collective bargaining agreement).
On August 19 Paul Bailey, the President of the Union, filed a grievance under the collective bargaining agreement, сontending that because the acceptance of telephoned votes was irregular, Bicknell had not received authorization to implement the addendum. Bicknell rejected the grievance because, in its view, the Union is bound by its agents’ declaration that the members had approved the proposal. Neither Bailey nor the Union asked for arbitration under the agreement, § 6.1 of which provides: “Whenever any dispute arises between the Company and the Union as to the meaning and application of the provisions of this Contract, or should any local trouble of any kind or character arise at the mine,” the dispute will proceed through three steps followed by arbitration. Bailey instead pursued his complaint within the Union, which decided not to accept the telephonic votes and in December 1984 asked Bicknell to rescind the addendum. Bicknell refused. No employee filed a grievance from this decision or askеd for arbitration. Instead Bailey and 22 other employees filed this suit under § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, contending that the implementation of the addendum violated the colleсtive bargaining agreement.
The parties consented to final disposition of the case by a magistrate under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c). The magistrate granted Bick-nell’s motion to dismiss, concluding that the 23 employeеs had not exhausted the contractual grievance resolution machinery. Under
Del Costello v. Teamsters,
On appeal the plaintiffs have abandoned their argument in the district court in favor of a new one: that Bicknell “repudiated” the agreement, which makes a request for arbitration futile and therefore allows a direct suit. See
Vaca v. Sipes,
Bicknell did not say that it would refuse to arbitrate. The addendum negotiated in 1984 did not modify § 6.1 of the collective bargaining agreement, although it modified many other sections. The plaintiffs’ contention amounts to the assertion that any breach of contract (here the refusal to pay the wages agreed on in 1982) is a “repudiation” of the commitment to arbitrate. But the purpose of the arbitration clause is to resolve disputes about contractual terms. In the plaintiffs’ eyes, every dispute would allow the complainant to bypass arbitration because the other side’s failurе to do as the complainant wishes “repudiates” the agreement. From this perspective, the circumstances that call for arbitration also make arbitration unnecessary. It is hard tо see how a reasonably careful lawyer could miss the difference between repudiating the agreement to arbitrate (which excuses a demand for arbitration) and disagreeing about the continued effect of some substantive provision of the contract (which does not).
Plaintiffs also maintain that pursuing the grievance-arbitration machinery would have been futile because Bicknell enforced the addendum in bad faith. Plaintiffs believe that they could show at trial that Bicknell implemented the addendum despite knowing of the telephonic votes, which amounts to “bad fаith”. The arbitrator would have been a neutral, however, so that Bicknell’s truculence would not
The plaintiffs' obduracy-more accurately, the obtuseness of their lawyer-has prolonged a case that should not hаve been filed. The claims made on appeal were neither preserved in the district court nor plausible as original matters. Bick-nell's brief in this court asked for an award of attorneys' fеes under Fed.R.App.P. 38. The plaintiffs had an opportunity to file a reply brief demonstrating that their appellate arguments have substance or that an award of fees is inappropriаte for some other reason. They elected not to file a reply brief. An award is appropriate here, as in Hill, Clearing, and Dreis & Krump, because the arguments are frivolous on an оbjective standard. They have consumed the resources of Bicknell and the time of the court, which leaves less time for other litigants whose claims belong here. See Weinstein v. University of Illinois,
AFFIRMED, WITH SANCTIONS
