Rochester Telephone Corporation appeals from an order of the District Court for the Western District of New York which granted summary judgment to Communication Workers of America in an action by the latter to compel Rochester to arbitrate, under a collective bargaining contract, a grievance arising out of the discharge of an employee. The district court had jurisdiction of the action under § 301(a) of the Taft-Hartley Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185(a); we have jurisdiction of the appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, Farr & Co. v. Cia. Intercontinental de Navegacion, etc.,
It is not disputed that the controversy over the discharge was within the collective bargaining agreement’s broad provisions for the arbitration of disputes. Appellant’s contention hinges on another clause:
“Notice of intention to arbitrate any grievance shall be given by either party to the other within sixty (60) calendar days of the date of the other party’s answer at Step 3 of the grievance procedure or the grievance will be considered closed and the grieving party foreclosed from taking the grievance to arbitration.”
The company’s answer at Step 3 was filed on August 27, 1962, but the union did not give written notice of its intention to arbitrate until June 17, 1963. An affidavit by the president of the local asserted that in October, 1962, within 60 days of August 27, it sought, seemingly not in writing, an extension of the 60-day period pending an appeal by the employee from the criminal conviction the arrest leading to which had been a basis for his discharge, and that it made a request for arbitration, also apparently oral, on March 26, 1963, some three weeks after the conviction was reversed. On these facts the district judge held that the question of timely demand was for the arbitrator.
Rochester seeks to distinguish the statement in John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Livingston,
The judge inserted a provision in the order making clear that the company “shall be entitled to present before the arbitrator its defense that the plaintiff did not notice the ease for arbitration in a timely manner * * The company asks us, if we should overrule its main contention, to direct the arbitrator to hear and determine the issue of timeliness in the first instance. Although such a course would, indeed, seem sensible, compare Arrowsmith v. United Press Int’l,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The company further calls attention in this context to the reference, in the preceding paragraph of the Wiley opinion, to “intertwined issues of ‘substance’ and ‘procedure’ growing out of a single dispute and raising the same questions on the same facts,” and to Western Automatic Mach. Screw Co. v. International Union, United Automobile, etc., Workers,
