PONTIAC FIRE FIGHTERS UNION LOCAL 376 v CITY OF PONTIAC
Docket No. 132916
Supreme Court of Michigan
July 23, 2008
482 Mich. 1
Argued November 7, 2007 (Calendar No. 6).
In an opinion by Justice YOUNG, joined by Chief Justice TAYLOR and Justices CORRIGAN and MARKMAN, the Supreme Court held:
The circuit court abused its discretion by granting injunctive relief. The plaintiff failed to meet its burden of establishing that irreparable harm without an adequate remedy at law would result if the injunction did not issue, and even if the plaintiff had satisfied its initial burden, it failed to carry its burden in light of the defendant‘s contrary proffered evidence relating to staffing and safety protocols.
- The circuit court erred by basing its decision to grant injunctive relief on its belief that the layoffs would inflict financial hardship on the laid-off firefighters. This alleged injury is not irreparable and not a proper subject of injunctive relief because it can be adequately remedied by damages at law.
A mere apprehension of reduced safety by the plaintiff is insufficient grounds for a court to grant equitable relief. The plaintiff bears the responsibility of submitting sufficiently persuasive evidence that particular, irreparable harm will result if an injunction does not issue. In this case, the plaintiff did not establish that the firefighters remaining after the proposed layoffs would face real and imminent danger resulting from the layoffs, and the defendant submitted contrary evidence relating to staffing and safety protocols that specifically refuted the plaintiff‘s allegations.
Reversed; preliminary injunction vacated.
Justice KELLY, joined by Justices CAVANAGH and WEAVER, dissenting, would hold that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion to the extent that it granted injunctive relief on the basis of the plaintiff‘s unrebutted allegation that the proposed layoffs would result in longer response times to fires and, therefore, more dangerous fires for the remaining firefighters.
- INJUNCTIONS — FIREFIGHTERS — LABOR RELATIONS — PROPOSED LAYOFFS — FINANCIAL HARDSHIP.
Financial hardship to firefighters is not a proper basis for granting injunctive relief against a proposed layoff of firefighters because the harm is not irreparable and can be adequately remedied by damages at law.
- INJUNCTIONS — FIREFIGHTERS — LABOR RELATIONS — PROPOSED LAYOFFS — SAFETY.
A mere apprehension that a proposed reduction in firefighting staff will result in reduced safety for those remaining is insufficient grounds for a court to grant injunctive relief; a plaintiff must make a particularized showing that there exists a real and imminent danger of irreparable harm if an injunction does not issue.
Gregory, Moore, Jeakle, Heinen & Brooks, P.C. (by Gordon A. Gregory and Emilie D. Rothgery), for the Pontiac Fire Fighters Union Local 376.
Keller Thoma, P.C. (by Bruce M. Bagdady and Jonathan A. Rabin), for the city of Pontiac.
Amici Curiae:
Dykema Gossett PLLC (by John A. Entenman, Melvin J. Muskovitz, and F. Arthur Jones II) for the Michigan Municipal League and the Michigan Association of Counties.
Sachs Waldman, Professional Corporation (by Mary Ellen Gurewitz), for the Michigan State AFL-CIO.
YOUNG, J. The issue in this case is whether the circuit court abused its discretion when it issued a preliminary injunction preventing defendant city of Pontiac from implementing its plan to reduce a budget shortfall by laying off members of plaintiff Pontiac Fire Fighters Union Local 376. We hold that the circuit court abused its discretion. Plaintiff failed to meet its burden of establishing that irreparable harm would result if the injunction did not issue, and even supposing plaintiff satisfied its initial burden, it failed to carry its burden in light of defendant‘s contrary proffered evidence. Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals and vacate the circuit court order granting the preliminary injunction.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiff and defendant are parties to a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) that was in effect from June 1, 2002, to June 30, 2004. Although the parties did not agree to a new CBA when that agreement expired, the existing agreement continued to govern the parties’ relationship after June 30, 2004, because under its own terms the agreement was automatically extended until a new contract was negotiated or ordered.1
On June 16, 2006, plaintiff filed a verified complaint in the Oakland Circuit Court seeking a preliminary injunction against defendant‘s proposed layoffs pending the resolution of an unfair labor practice charge, collective bargaining, or interest arbitration.3 Several days earlier, plaintiff had filed an unfair labor practice charge against defendant with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC). The verified complaint alleged that the proposed layoffs would necessitate a dramatic reorganization of the fire department and that this reorganization threatened firefighter safety. Specifically, plaintiff alleged that the layoffs would increase response time to a fire emergency, which would allegedly allow fires to escalate, making them more difficult and more dangerous to extinguish. Moreover, plaintiff claimed that this problem would be compounded by the smaller number of firefighters present at the scene of a fire.
In his affidavit, McAdams addressed many of plaintiff‘s allegations that the proposed layoffs threatened firefighter safety. The affidavit noted that the “great majority” of calls received by the fire department are medical runs rather than fire runs. McAdams contended that minimum staffing levels would be maintained at all times and that in the event staffing reached critically low levels, firefighters would only respond to fires and not medical runs, which would be handled by private ambulance services.
McAdams further averred that firefighter safety at the site of a fire would not be jeopardized by the layoffs. The department‘s remaining 89 firefighters would continue to adhere to basic safety protocols such as the “incident command system”4 and the “two in, two out” rule.5 Moreover, the affidavit asserted that the number of firefighters at the scene of a fire would be unaffected. McAdams claimed that the number of firefighters on each rig would actually increase from three or four to four firefighters. Finally, McAdams averred that the fire
In a written opinion issued on June 30, 2006, the circuit court granted the preliminary injunction after ruling that plaintiff satisfied the four traditional elements for injunctive relief.6 The court found that both the laid-off firefighters and those who would remain faced a threat of significant, irreparable harm in the absence of injunctive relief. With respect to the laid-off firefighters, the court found that they would “los[e] their jobs, salary and benefits and create a current hardship that cannot be compensated even if a subsequent arbitration decision would award those laid off a reinstatement of their positions and back wages.” As to the remaining firefighters, the court found that they
may be irreparably harmed since a reduction in the workforce and the closing of several City fire stations would result in a significant increased risk of harm for the remaining firefighters. Fewer firefighters would be available to respond to fires and the closing of stations caused by the [layoff] would result in the firefighters having to cover
a larger territory. The remaining firefighters would thus not be able to respond as quickly as they used to[,] which means that they would be faced with fires that have increased in intensity or size and as a result are more dangerous.
Defendant appealed the circuit court‘s order to the Court of Appeals, which upheld the preliminary injunction in a split, unpublished decision.7 The majority held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it granted the injunction, particularly its findings that plaintiff would suffer irreparable harm and that plaintiff demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits. The dissenting member of the panel argued that the trial court abused its discretion because plaintiff did not meet its burden of demonstrating irreparable harm. With respect to the laid-off firefighters, the dissent noted that injunctive relief was inappropriate to remedy economic injuries. With respect to the remaining firefighters, the dissent observed that in view of defendant‘s proffered evidence that the layoffs would not jeopardize firefighter safety, the record did not support the trial court‘s conclusion to the contrary.
Defendant filed an application with this Court seeking leave to appeal, which we granted.8
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a trial court‘s decision to grant injunctive relief for an abuse of discretion.9 We have recently offered the following articulation of the abuse of discretion standard. There are circumstances where a trial court must decide a matter and there will be no single correct outcome; rather, there may be more than one reasonable and principled outcome.10 The trial court abuses its discretion when its decision falls outside this range of principled outcomes.11
ANALYSIS
The Court of Appeals has succinctly stated that “‘[i]njunctive relief is an extraordinary remedy that issues only when justice requires, there is no adequate remedy at law, and there exists a real and imminent danger of irreparable injury.‘”12 In the context of labor disputes, this Court has observed that “it is basically contrary to public policy in this State to issue injunctions in labor disputes absent a showing of violence, irreparable injury, or breach of the peace.”13 This Court
With these general precepts in mind, we must consider whether the circuit court abused its discretion
In the second half of its irreparable-harm analysis, the circuit court found that the layoffs would deplete the number of available firefighters, which would increase the remaining firefighters’ workload and lengthen their response time, which in turn would require firefighters to fight larger, more intense, and more dangerous fires. Thus, firefighter safety would be jeopardized. To support this chain of logic, the circuit court appeared to adopt without reservation plaintiff‘s factual assertions.
In reaching this conclusion, we do not trivialize the dangers accompanying firefighting. However, because firefighting is a dangerous job, every managerial decision in the abstract might touch on a safety issue. A mere apprehension of reduced safety by the union is insufficient grounds for a court to grant equitable relief. Otherwise, the extraordinary nature of a preliminary injunction would be trivialized. Plaintiff bears the responsibility of submitting sufficiently persuasive evidence that particular, irreparable harm will result if an injunction does not issue.
Further, even if we assumed arguendo that plaintiff initially succeeded in demonstrating particularized, irreparable harm, it failed to carry its burden of proof in the face of contrary evidence submitted by defendant that specifically refuted plaintiff‘s allegations. For instance, in response to plaintiff‘s allegation that the number of firefighter personnel at a fire scene would be limited and reduced to unsafe levels, Fire Chief McAdams stated that the number of firefighters present at a fire would not be reduced by the layoffs and that the
In the face of this conflicting evidence that blunted the force of plaintiff‘s safety allegations, it behooved plaintiff to do more than rely on its initial factual allegations. Plaintiff did not do so. Thus, for this additional reason, it failed to carry its burden of demonstrating irreparable harm under
We are not second-guessing the circuit court‘s discretion to substitute the outcome we prefer. For reasons that are unclear, the circuit court in its written opinion
Reversed; preliminary injunction vacated.
TAYLOR, C.J., and CORRIGAN and MARKMAN, JJ., concurred with YOUNG, J.
KELLY, J. (dissenting). I disagree with the majority‘s conclusion that the Pontiac Fire Fighters Union failed to meet its burden of showing that the proposed layoff of 28 firefighters would cause irreparable harm to the remaining firefighters.1 The union alleged that the layoffs would lead to the closing of fire stations and would lengthen the time for responding to fires. The
The union alleged in counts 9, 24, and 25 of the verified complaint that the layoffs would affect firefighter safety:
9. Plaintiff is informed and believes that if the unilateral layoff decision is implemented, the Pontiac Fire Department will undergo substantial adverse reorganization which will include the closing of fire stations, the reduction of staffing on fire apparatus, the elimination of EMS-ALS rescue units, the realignment and expansion of fire territories, the elimination of mutual aid participation for hazardous materials and technical rescue responses, and other unilateral changes many of which will constitute violations of the Agreement in such matters as staffing, reduction of personnel on vacation, and use of Kelly days.
* * *
24. The layoff of 28 fire fighters and fire fighter paramedics will reduce the fire extinguishment and medical/rescue capability of the Fire Department to unacceptable levels posing a threat and hazard to fire fighters and citizens alike.
25. The reorganization of the Fire Department, the substantial reduction of personnel, and the closing of fire stations will increase response time to a fire scene and/or medical/rescue run. Increased response time of emergency
equipment poses a hazard to responding fire fighters and citizens on the route. As a consequence of delay in responding to a fire scene, the fire escalates making extinguishment more difficult and increasing the danger to fire fighters and possibly occupants of a dwelling. The number of personnel at a fire scene will be limited and reduced to unsafe levels.
The city countered these allegations with an affidavit from Fire Chief Wilburt McAdams, which stated in relevant part:
2. That the great majority of calls to which the department responds are medical runs.
3. That the department will continue to maintain minimum staffing levels. In the event the department is at the minimum level of seventeen firefighters on a given day, private ambulance services will be used to respond to medical runs, and the City‘s firefighters will be used solely for fighting fires.
4. That, even after the layoff of the 28 firefighters, the department will have 89 firefighters, and will continue to operate utilizing both an incident command system and the “two in two out” rule which forbids any firefighter from entering a structure fire unless he/she is accompanied by another firefighter and there are two firefighters outside the structure. In addition, the department will continue to assign a safety officer to each fire. The number of firefighters at a fire scene will not be impacted.
5. Using the incident command system, firefighters will not enter a burning structure until there has been a careful assessment of the fire and the incident commander allows entry.
4. [sic] That, in addition, the department will continue to be in compliance with all applicable departmental rules and regulations of the City of Pontiac and State of Michigan, including all OSHA regulations. The statements of the NFPA are not binding rules and have not been adopted in Michigan.
5. [sic] The number of firefighters per rig will actually increase from 3-4 currently to 4 for all engines. In addition, the department will continue to participate in mutual aid, under which firefighters from other departments . . . can be called for assistance if needed.
The union‘s complaint alleged both that fewer firefighters would be available to fight fires and that their response time would be increased. The fire chief averred that the number of firefighters available to fight fires would remain the same, and so would the safety rules. However, the fire chief did not offer a solution to the problem of increased response time. Nor did he explain how existing safety rules would protect the firefighters who would confront more intense fires.
The circuit court issued a preliminary injunction specifically on the basis of the union‘s allegation that the closing of fire stations would affect the remaining fire stations’ response time:
. . . Plaintiff may be irreparably harmed since a reduction in the workforce and the closing of several City fire stations would result in a significant increased risk of harm for the remaining firefighters. Fewer fire fighters [sic] would be available to respond to fires and the closing of stations caused by the lay off would result in the firefighters having to cover a larger territory. The remaining firefighters would thus not be able to respond as quickly as they used to which means that they would be faced with fires that have increased in intensity or size and as a result are more dangerous.
The majority faults the circuit court for not considering the fire chief‘s affidavit, and it faults the union for not offering additional evidence in response to the affidavit. At the show-cause hearing, the union did offer to present additional testimony and diagrams of the
The circuit court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that irreparable harm to the remaining firefighters called for injunctive relief.4 I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals and the preliminary injunction.
WEAVER and CAVANAGH, JJ., concurred with KELLY, J.
Notes
With respect to these three remaining factors, the circuit court in the present case concluded (1) that the balance of harm favored plaintiff notwithstanding defendant‘s financial difficulties, (2) that plaintiff demonstrated a substantial likelihood of success on the merits, and (3) that the public faced less harm if the injunction issued than if it did not.
(1) whether the circuit court had jurisdiction to grant a preliminary injunction with respect to the breach of contract claim (count I) and the unfair labor practice claim (count II), and (2) if the circuit court had jurisdiction: (a) whether it abused its discretion in issuing an injunction to prevent layoffs based on alleged irreparable harm to the laid-off employees; (b) whether the plaintiff presented sufficient evidence to support its claim of an increased risk of harm to the firefighters who would not be laid off;
