OPINION
This сase arises out of a labor dispute between a railroad and a union that was initially submitted to arbitration. The railroad and union both agreed to submit to an arbitrator the question of whether the railroad could make unilateral severance offers to its clerical employees. The arbitrator decided in favor of the union. The railroad then sought to have the аrbitrator’s decision overturned in the district court, however, and the court entered summary judgment in favor of the railroad. In so doing, we think the district court failed to accord proper deference to the arbitrator and improperly deprived the union of the benefit of its agreement to submit the dispute to final resolution by an arbitrator. Accordingly, we reverse and remand with dirеctions to reinstate the arbitration award.
I.
In April 1990, the Richmond, Fredricks-burg & Potomac Railroad Co. (RF & P) offered to make severance payments to each clerical employee at its Potomac Yard facility who would agree to retire. The severance offer was designed to create room for clerks who, because of a decline in business, were being paid to sit at home under a lifetime labоr protection provision in their collective bargaining agreement. The clerks’ union, Transportation Communications International Union (TCU), contended that RF & P’s unilateral severance offer was invalid. The union argued that the railroad could not legally negotiate with individual employees, but was required to bargain with the union. TCU refused to assent to the severance offer 6350 35 1 unless RF & P would agree to higher severance payments.
RF & P refused to bargain with the union, but ultimately agreed to submit the dispute to expedited arbitration in order “[t]o avoid the unnecessary expense and possible delays that would result from litigation.” The parties agreed to submit to arbitration the question “whether the RF & P can unilaterally separate employees without an agreement with TCU.” The arbitrator reviewed the briefs of the pаrties and *278 conducted a hearing. 1 He found that RF & P had failed to establish any contractual authority to deal directly with employees over severance payments, and that there was no established practice between the parties on the matter. The arbitrator also cited federal district court opinions finding a duty under the Railway Labor Act (RLA) to bargain with the union over questions of “lump-sum buy-outs.” On these basеs, the arbitrator ruled in favor of the union.
RF & P then filed this suit seeking to set aside the arbitration award. The district court granted RF & P’s motion for summary judgment, holding that the arbitrator exceeded the scope of the parties’ submission in basing his award on the requirements of the RLA and suggesting that the arbitrator’s legal analysis was flawed.
The union now appeals that judgment.
II.
Our decision in this case rests upon a reluctance to undercut a prоcess whose importance to labor-management relations has been reaffirmed repeatedly by Congress and the courts. By submitting a dispute to arbitration, labor and management can secure a decisive resolution of their differences without the delay inherent in litigation or the disruption of a strike or lockout. Arbitration, in this sense, is “the substitute for industrial strife.”
United Steelworkers of America v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co.,
The courts have long recognized that arbitration can succeed in achieving these goals only to the extent it is accorded finality by the judiciary.
See United Steelworkers of America v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
In this case the district court offered twо reasons for overturning the strong presumption in favor of respecting the parties’ choice to have their dispute resolved conclusively by an arbitrator. First, the court held that the arbitrator exceeded his authority in relying on cases construing the RLA rather than on an interpretation of the collective bargaining agreement.
We shall address these two rationales in turn.
A.
We first consider the district court’s conclusion that the arbitrator lacked the authority to consider federal case law in arriving at his decision. The district court suggested that the arbitrator’s analysis contravened Supreme Court precedent holding that “[i]f an arbitral decision is based ‘solely upon the arbitrator’s view of the requirements of enacted legislation,’ rather than on an interpretation of the collective-bargaining agreement, the arbitrator has ‘exceeded the scope of the [parties’] submission,’ and the award will not be en
*279
forced.”
Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co.,
We disagree. First, we note that the Supreme Court cases relied on by the district court do not announce any sort of blanket prohibition on an arbitrator’s recourse to legal authority. Rather, the Court has recognized that the limits of an arbitrator’s authority are defined by the terms of the parties’ own submission.
AT & T Technologies, Inc. v. Communications Workers of America,
We thus conclude that it is up to the parties to define the issues submitted, and that there is no statutory barrier to submitting questions involving the interpretation of statutes or case law.
See High Concrete Structures, Inc. v. United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America, Local 166,
Unless the parties specifically limit the powers of the arbitrator in deciding various aspects of the issue submitted to him, it is often presumed that they intend to make him the final judge on any questions which arise in the disposition of the issue, including not only questions of fact but also questions of contract interpretation, rules of interpretation, and questions, if any, with respect to substantive law.
Elkouri & Elkouri,
supra,
at 366.
See also Jones Dairy,
In this case, RF & P and TCU submitted to the arbitrator the broad issue of *280 “whether the RF & P can unilaterally sepаrate employees without an agreement with TCU.’.’ The parties in no way confined the arbitrator’s authority to an examination of the collective bargaining agreement. In so doing, the parties made the arbitrator the “final judge” on all questions that might arise in the disposition of the dispute, including not only whether the collective bargaining agreement permitted the severanсe offer but also whether RF & P could legally make such an offer. The manifest purpose of the arbitration was to “avoid the unnecessary expense and possible delays that would result from litigation.” For courts to read unexpressed restrictions into the arbitrator’s authority — and thereby encourage litigation designed to overturn its exercise — is to deprive the parties оf the benefit of the arbitral judgment for which they had bargained.
By submitting such a broad issue without any limitations as to permissible sources of authority, the parties likewise ceded to the arbitrator the duty of defining the precise “contours of the issue[] submitted.”
Pack Concrete, Inc. v. Cunningham,
Finally, RF & P’s contention that the parties understood the submission to be limited to an interpretation of the collective bargaining agreement is undermined by the railroad’s own brief to the arbitrator. In that brief RF & P relied on the same kind of authority that it now criticizes the arbitrator for considering — the railroad rolled in its own battery of federal cases which assertedly established that “[individual contracts, particularly individual offers and acceptances of retirement or resignation,
are
lawful ... if they are not inconsistent with or have been authorized by the applicable collective bargaining agreement.”
Transportation-Communication Employees Union v. Grand Trunk W. R.R. Co.,
It would be odd if having consented to have the arbitrator decide what its legal rights ... were, [appellee] could then have the same question redetermined by two courts — the district court and this court.... Since [appellee], by submitting without a peep to the arbitrator’s jurisdiction, admitted the cоmpetence of the arbitrator to determine its “legal rights,” it cannot complain that the arbitrator exceeded his authority by determining them.
Jones Dairy,
*281 B.
We now turn to the district court’s conclusion — and RF & P’s contention — that the arbitrator’s legal analysis was irretrievably flawed. The district court reviewed four cases cited by the arbitrator,
J.I. Case Co. v. NLRB,
We think the district court applied too stringent a standard in its review of the arbitrator’s legal analysis. In arbitration cases, courts must break with their usual habit of scrupulously examining the underlying merits of the dispute. Ordinarily, the reviewing court's task is to enforce the bargained-for decision of the arbitrator and not to evaluate the arbitrator’s factual findings or legal analysis.
See Enterprise Wheel,
We thus examine the arbitrator’s decision to determine only “whether the arbitrators did the job they were told to do— not whether they did it well, or correctly, or reasonably, but simply whether they did it.”
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers v. Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Ry. Co.,
Under this standard, the arbitrator’s decision in this case passes muster. No one has suggested that the arbitrator’s decision was grounded in his own “personal notions of right and wrong,” or in anything other than a good faith assessment of what the law required. The arbitrator accurately cited the Suрreme Court’s directive that individual agreements not be used “as a waiver of any benefit to which the employee otherwise would be entitled under the trade agreement,”
J.I. Case,
RF & P argues that the arbitrator’s decision should nevertheless be set aside because its analysis was in manifest disregard of more recent Supreme Court authority. The railroad directs our attention to the Court’s decision in
Pittsburgh & Lake Erie R.R. Co. v. Railway Labor Executives’ Ass’n,
We cannot agree.
Pittsburgh & Lake Erie
includes no “explicit mandate” — it does not even purport to consider the legality of unilateral severance offers. It merely holds that a union may not interfere with a railroad’s decision to sell its assets and cease its operations where the collective bargaining agreement is silent as to such a sale.
Indeed, at least one circuit, in a decision subsequent to
Pittsburgh & Lake Erie,
has found that a unilateral severance offer may be inconsistent with the “principles stated in
J.I. Case.” See Brotherhood of Ry. Carmen v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry.,
III.
RF & P and the union agreed to submit this dispute to expedited arbitration, hoping to avoid the sort of delay that is nоw besetting them. RF & P vigorously argued before the arbitrator that its unilateral severance offer should be sustained. When that attempt failed, the railroad brought this litigation, seeking a second bite at the apple. To permit such attempts would transform a binding process into a purely advisory one, and ultimately impair the value of arbitration for labor and management alike. Nothing would be more destructive to arbitration than the perception that its finality depended upon *283 the particular perspectives of the judges who review the award.
We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand this case with directions to reinstate the arbitration award.
REVERSED.
Notes
. The "arbitrator" was actually a three-person arbitration board consisting of a management member, a union member, and a neutral member. In the briefs the parties have used the shorthand of the “arbitrator” and have referred to "his” decision, and for the sake of convenience we continue that practice here.
. RF & P would have us locate such a limitation in the terms of the parties' general agreement creating a standing arbitration board, which trаcks the language of the RLA, 45 U.S.C. § 153 First (i). This agreement does not, however, purport to establish any sort of "jurisdictional” limits on the sources of authority the arbitrator may consult. It authorizes the parties to submit to arbitration disputes "growing out of ... [the] application of agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, or working conditions,” but makes no attempt to dictate the proper bases for resolving such disputes. Here the parties’ dispute clearly “grew out of’ the collective bargaining agreement, so the arbitrator had authority to resolve it. Neither the agreement nor the statute prevents the arbitrator from consulting the requirements of the RLA. The arbitrator was thus entitled to conclude, as he did, that in the absence of any affirmative contrаctual authority for the offers, RF & P was required by .law to bargain with the union.
. It is important to place the arbitrator's use of federal decisional law in perspective. This was not a case in which the arbitrator overlooked the critical importance of the collective bargain *281 ing agreement or the common law of the industry as reflected in past arbitral decisions. Rather, the arbitrator notеd that "in a circumstance where the parties are in dispute, the Agreements are silent, and there is no persuasive past practice we feel it is proper to at least recognize the persuasive directives of various federal courts in the area.” We think this is a permissible means of proceeding to address a dispute which the parties wished to have resolved in its entirety by arbitration.
