The plaintiffs-appellees in this case are employees of the defendant Los Angeles Unified School District. They are represented by the defendant and appellant union, United Teachers — Los Angeles. That union represents approximately 35,000 teachers in the Los Angeles School District under an agency shop agreement duly certified pursuant to the California Educational Employment Relations Act, Cal.Gov’t Code §§ 3540-3549.3 (West 1980 & Supp. 1992). The agreement contains an agency fee provision which authorizes a payroll deduction on behalf of the union for all employees, regardless of union membership or nonmembership, in an amount not to exceed normal union membership dues and assessments. It is that agency fee provision which is at issue in this appeal.
The named plaintiffs in this case are nonunion members of the bargaining unit. They filed this action against the school district and the union challenging various aspects of the operation of the agency fee provision. The district court’s opinions in the case are reported at
These are the procedures that were followed. In November of 1989, a greater than two-to-one majority of the affected employees voted in favor of a mandatory agency fee arrangement. The election was conducted and the results were certified by the California Public Employment Relations Board. The union then sent a notice to all nonmembers in the bargaining unit. That notice advised the nonmembers of their obligation to pay an agency fee equal to the full amount of union dues unless the nonmember informed the union in writing within 30 days that the nonmember objected to paying for non-representational union activities. The notice further informed the nonmembers that the cost of the union’s representational activities accounted for 84.6 percent of the full agency fee and that those nonmembers objecting to the full agency fee would be obligated to pay only a reduced agency fee based solely on the cost of the union’s representational activities. Approximately a week after the first notice, the union sent all nonmembers a second notice containing the same information. A majority of the nonmembers, including the named plaintiffs, did not respond to either notice.
After the payroll deductions began, the named plaintiffs filed this action seeking to represent a class of all nonunion employees in the bargaining unit. They contended that to ensure adequate protection of their First Amendment rights, the union could lawfully deduct the full amount of dues from their paychecks only if they affirmatively consented to contribute to the activities of the union not related to representation. The district court agreed, certified the class, and entered an injunction enjoining the union from collecting any more than the reduced agency fee from nonunion employees “unless the employee affirmatively consents to deduction of full union dues.”
Mitchell II,
In its appeal, the union readily acknowledges that when a union collects fees under a union or agency shop agreement authorized by state law, there may be employees who object to the union’s political activities. The Supreme Court has held that under the First Amendment, employees must be given an opportunity to make such objections known and the fees these dissenting employees pay must be reduced by the amount the union spends on activities not necessary to its role as collective bargaining representative.
Abood v. Detroit Bd. of Educ.,
The union’s position is supported by a long line of Supreme Court cases beginning with
International Ass’n of Machinists v. Street,
Following the precedent set in
Street,
the Supreme Court in
Brotherhood of Ry. and S.S. Clerks v. Allen,
In
Abood,
the Supreme Court considered the contention that a union shop arrangement affecting public employees violated the constitutional rights of those employees who objected to “public-sector unions as such or to various union activities financed by the compulsory service fees.”
In
Ellis v. Brotherhood of Ry., Airline and S.S. Clerks,
The most recent Supreme Court decision in the area of agency fees is
Lehnert v. Ferris Faculty Ass’n,
— U.S. —,
There is, accordingly, no support for the plaintiffs’ position in this case that affirmative consent to deduction of full fees is required in order to protect their First Amendment rights. The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that nonunion members’ rights are adequately protected when they are given the opportunity to object to such deductions and to pay a fair share fee to support the union’s representation costs. Indeed, this court has expressly articulated the plaintiffs’ burden in
Grunwald v. San Bernardino City Unified Sch. Dist.,
The California Supreme Court reached the same conclusion in a case which decided an issue similar to that raised here but arising directly under the California Educational Employment Relations Act (EERA).
Cumero v. Public Employment Relations Bd.,
The only limit expressly imposed by the EERA on the amount of the nonmember fee the union may collect is that the fee may not exceed the union’s standard initiation fee, periodic dues, and general assessments. (§ 3540.1, subd. (i)(2).) That limitation implies a general prohibition against putting the service fees to any use to which the union could not properly put the funds voluntarily paid by its members.
In addition to rights stemming from that general constraint, each nonmember has a right to prevent the use of his or her service fee for purposes beyond the union’s representational obligations. Since ... that additional right is an aspect of the right of an employee to refuse to participate in a union’s activities (§ 3543), it must be affirmatively asserted or else it is waived.
Id.
at 590,
Plaintiffs have endeavored to distinguish their case from the United States Supreme Court decisions, particularly from Abood, which most closely addresses their situation and most clearly rejects their position. Plaintiffs point out that their case is the first to involve a class consisting entirely of nonmembers. They contend that this characteristic of the class requires us to conclude that these plaintiffs must be assumed to disagree with the union’s political activities. It is true that the class in Abood consisted of both union and nonunion employees. The Court, however, was dealing with an issue of individual constitutional rights and held that all plaintiffs, not just those who were union members, were required to voice their objection to payment of the full agency fee.
The district court in granting the plaintiffs relief analogized to the waiver of constitutional rights in the criminal context to conclude that the plaintiffs had not expressly waived their right to object and were thus effectively “compelled” to pay more than their fair share.
Mitchell II,
The closest civil analogy to this case may be the “opt out” procedure utilized in class action lawsuits.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(c)(2). This rule provides that each class member is bound by the result of the litigation unless the member individually objects to being in the class. Ironically, it is this very device that plaintiffs utilize to represent the class of all nonunion members in whose name they advance the principal contentions in this appeal. In its most recent discussion of class action “opt out” procedures, the Supreme Court considered whether protections beyond the opportunity to opt out were constitutionally required to safeguard the rights of a class plaintiff who was out-of-state.
Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts,
The procedures followed by the union to give plaintiffs the opportunity to object to the full agency fee complied with the applicable standard to ensure protection of their First Amendment rights. The district court’s injunction mandating affirmative consent to the full deduction is REVERSED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs in this case and in the district court objected to a number of features of the union's collection procedures under Hudson, but on appeal, neither party has asked us to decide any of these issues arising under Hudson.
