ORDER
This matter is before the court upon the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment under Fed.R.Civ.Pro. 56. Plaintiff seeks, pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 10(d), to vacate an arbitration award previously entered in accordance with the collective bargaining agreement between the parties. Defendant has responded with a motion seeking confirmation of the arbitrator’s award under 9 U.S.C. § 9.
SUMMARY OF FACTS
Raybestos-Manhattan, Inc., the plaintiff employer, and the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers International Union (AFL-CIO-CLC), are parties to a collective bargaining agreement, dated March 1,1980, that covers the terms and conditions of employment of production and maintenance workers at plaintiff’s plant in North Charleston, South Carolina. Defendant has been the duly certified bargaining agent for many years preceding the development of the present dispute.
One of the products of the North Charleston Plant is an expansion joint that is widely used in the ducting systems of various industrial facilities. Some time after this expansion joint was introduced, it became obvious that the joints, which are riveted and sewed, would require occasional repair and maintenance. In 1974, the employer began sending members of the bargaining unit represented by the union on such repair trips. As the arbitrator found, “[tjhere absolutely is no disagreement between the parties that almost from the beginning of
The current collective bargaining agreement between the parties was effeсtive March 1,1980. For the first several months of the new contract period, the company continued the practice of offering field trip work to bargaining unit employees represented by the union,
In reaching the award, the arbitrator carefully considered and discussed each of the principal arguments advanced by the company here, to wit, that the “Management Rights Clause” (Article IV) vested the right to change work assignments in management and that the “Inclusiveness Clause” (Article XXXIX)
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW Gеnerally speaking, “the question of interpretation of the collective bargaining
Both parties have agreed that this ease must be decided in light of the “backdrop of well-established federal labor policy favoring arbitration as the means of resolving disputes over the meaning and effect of collective bargaining agreements.” Nolde Bros., Inc. v. Bakery Workers,
When arbitration is provided for in the collective bargaining agreement, the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit has recently recognized that the arbitrator’s power is broad and that the primary responsibility of the arbitrator is to construe the agreement. Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Corp. v. Local No. 684, International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, etc.,
It is well established that the arbitrator has authority to construe ambiguous provisions of a contract and that his construction thereof is binding. Monongahela Power Co. v. Local No. 2332,1. B. E. W.,
As previously noted, the contract in question took effect on March 1,1980. Bargaining unit employees, represented by defendants, were offered the work in question through June, 1980. The employer relies
First, the arbitrator considered the employer’s contention that management had the exclusive right to change or reorganize duties or assign work, under the management rights clause. He noted, correctly, that this clause includes “a standard qualifier ... which reads ‘... except as specifically limited or otherwise рrovided in this Agreement ....’” Award at 8. The proven practice of offering field trips to bargaining unit employees, which had continued into this contract period, was, as the arbitrator construed it, such a limitation. Reference to such practice is not only proper, but virtually essential in labor arbitration matters. See, e.g., Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Corp. v. Local No. 684,
In this connection, it should be emphasized that the agreement does not enumerate the work tasks that the employees in the bargaining unit will perform. See note 2, supra. In argument, the employer conceded that it could not arbitrarily and unilaterally reassign “production and maintenance work,” or work performed exclusively by the unit, outside the unit.
Second, the arbitrator properly rejected the assertion that the inclusiveness clause could unambiguously resolve this dispute. The arbitrator’s view was that this clause could apply only if the agreement included “some language related to field trips.... ” Award аt 8. Since the agreement is silent on this point,
The arbitrator’s approach was clearly proper. In the employer’s view, any point that is not reflected within the four corners of the collective bargaining agreement is not subject to disposition by an arbitrator. This is precisely the philosophy rejected by the Supreme Court in the landmark United Steelworkers trilogy. United Steelworkers of America v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
The collective bargaining agreement states the rights and duties of the parties. It is more than a contract; it is a generalized code to govern a myriad of cases which the draftsmen cannot wholly anticipate. See Shulman, Reason, Contract, and Laws in Labor Relations, 68 Harv.L. Rev. 999, 1004-1005. The collective bargaining agreement covers the whole employment relationship. It calls into being a new common law — the common law of a particular industry or of a particular plant. As one observer has put it: “ ‘. .. [I]t is not unqualifiedly true that a collective-bargaining agreement is simply a document by which the union and employees have imposed upon management limited, express restrictions of its otherwise absolute right to maintain the enterprise, so that an employee’s claim must fail unless he can point to a specific contract provision upon which the claim is founded. There are too many people, too many problems, too many unforeseeable contingenсies to make the words of the contract the exclusive source of rights and duties. One cannot reduce all the rules governing a community like an industrial plant to fifteen or even fifty pages.’ ”
The employer relies most heavily upon the holding of the Fourth Circuit in Monongahela Power Co. v. Local No. 2382 International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
The arbitrator’s decision involved in this proceeding does not remotely resemble the one involved in Monongahela Power. The instant collective bargaining agreement does not contain language allowing the employer to remove job duties from the bargaining unit. The union claimed thаt the employer’s unilateral decision to use exclusively non-bargaining unit employees for field trips violated, inter alia, the “Recognition Clause” (Article I) of the collective bargaining agreement. The arbitrator examined the contract and the arguments of the parties and found no unambiguous language specifically allowing the Company to make the decision that had been made. Then, after applying all of the terms of the contract, as well as the “law of the shop,” the arbitrator found that plaintiff had violated the collective bargaining agreement and ruled in favor of the union. Thus, the holding in Monongahela Power is clearly not dispositive of this dispute.
Plaintiff also relies heavily on Torrington Company v. Metal Product Workers Union, Local 1645,
Subsequent decisions in that circuit have limited the holding of Torrington and other jurisdictions have questioned the logic of the decision. In Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Local 866, etc.,
In Torrington, we found nonarbitrability where an arbitrator had relied on а past unilateral practice of the company which the company had terminated two years before the arbitrated dispute arose. In the negotiations resulting in the applicable agreement in that case, there had been discussion of the possibility of reviving past practice to grant employees time off on election days. But the final agreement itself contained no provision remotely bearing on employee rights for election day timе off. Thus, in Torring-ton, the arbitrator relied not at all on specific language in the collective bargaining agreement.
Id. at 233. Similarly, in F & M Schaefer Brewing Co. v. Local 49, etc.,
Other jurisdictions have also limited Tor-rington to its facts. In Textile Workers Union of America v. Textile Paper Prod. Inc.,
Thus, a review of the pertinent decisional law indicates that the Second Circuit, as well as other jurisdictions, have limited the holding of Torrington to those situations in which the industry practices concern issues that are wholly outside the scope of the
Moreover, the factual distinction between prior industry practices and сontemporaneous industry practices, which has frequently been used by courts to distinguish Torring-ton, is also pertinent here. In the present case, unlike Torrington, the practice of offering field trips to bargaining unit employees continued for three months into the current contract period. Award at 5. Use of contemporaneous industry practices has been consistently approved by the courts. See, e.g., Textile Workers Union of America v. Textile Paper Prod., Inc.,
Finally, the mere fact that this dispute was the subject of unsuccessful contract negotiations does not preclude the use of pertinent industry practices in interpreting ambiguous contract provisions. E.g., Holly Sugar Corp. v. Distillery, Rectifying, Wine & A. W. I. U.,
Plaintiff’s additional claim that the arbitrator’s award must be vacated because it lacked factual basis clearly shows that plaintiff is seeking a substitution of this court’s judgment for that of the arbitrator. Under all of the relevant authority, the court cannot undertake this task. Amoco Oil Co. v. Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers,
For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motion for summary judgment is granted and plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment is denied, and the award of the arbitrator -is affirmed.
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The unit employees declined trips during this period because they were utilizing the grievance procedure and negotiations to clarify the pay rates applicable to these trips. In negotiations leading up to the 1980 contract, the union had made proposаls for a special premium pay rate for field trips; these specific pay proposals were rejected by the employer, but, as the arbitrator found, the employer did not repudiate field trips for unit employees during the negotiations nor did it repudiate the union’s right to negotiate about pay rates for field trips. Award at 12. Instead, the company continued to offer field trip work to bargaining unit employees under the new contract.
. The inclusiveness clause stаtes that the contract “constitutes the entire agreement between the parties .... ” It is admitted by the company, however, that nothing in the collective bargaining agreement describes what work was assigned to the production and maintenance employees. As is noted later in this order, this omission is an important example of the fact that the written terms of the agreement do not cover all aspects of the industrial employment relationship in the subject plant.
. In fact, unilateral assignment of work outside the bargaining unit has often been held to be an unfair labor practice. See, e.g., N. L. R. B. v. North Carolina Coastal Lines, Inc.,
. The employer argued at the hearing that there are no cases that authorize an arbitrator to construe a contract without reference to some specific provision that is found to be ambiguous. But the agreement that was referred to arbitration in Warrior & Gulf Nav. Co. was silent concerning the issue to be arbitrated therе and the union had sought unsuccessfully for years to include such language in the contract.
. Indeed, the court emphasized that “the question of the arbitrator’s authority to make a particular award was best left to the arbitrator initially, so that they could receive ‘the benefit of the arbitrator’s interpretive skills as to ... his contractual authority.’ ” Id., quoting Tor-rington Co.,
