SANTA MONICA COLLEGE FACULTY ASSOCIATION еt al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. SANTA MONICA COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT, Defendant and Respondent.
No. B262360
Court of Appeal, Second District, Division Two, California
Dec. 30, 2015
243 Cal.App.4th 538
Fagen Friedman & Fulfrost, Howard A. Friedman, Wesley King and Stephanie S. Baril for Defendant and Respondent.
Opinion
HOFFSTADT, J.—
The district revoked the preferential status of three part-time, temporary faculty and told them they would not be re-employed in the future. The district gave them written notice that they had engaged in misconduct, but during the arbitration that grew out of the grievances they filed, refused to produce any evidence to support its finding of misconduct on the ground that
This appeal therefore presents the following question: Is a community college district‘s authority to revoke a part-time, temporary faculty member‘s annual reappointment rights governed by
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I. Facts
For several years prior to 2011, Gary Strathearn (Strathearn), Shane Moshiri (Moshiri) and Joel Druckman (Druckman) were part-time faculty at Santa Monica College (college), a public community college. All three had taught at the college for more than five consecutive semesters with satisfactory evaluations. This made them “associate faculty” under the collective bargaining agreement between the district and plaintiff-appellant Santa Monica College Faculty Association (faculty association). Although the part-time, temporary faculty who attained associate faculty status were not guaranteed re-employment if the “need for assignments” they taught ceased, this status entitled them to re-employment as long as that “need” “continue[d]” and to preferential treatment in assignments over those part-time, temporary faculty who were not associate faculty.
The district received complaints of misconduct by Strathearn, Moshiri, and Druckman, and after investigation concluded that the complaints had merit. Accordingly, in March 2011, the district sent letters informing them that their “Associate Faculty status w[ould] be terminated at the end of the Spring 2011 semester” and that “they w[ould] not receive additional teaching assignments from Santa Monica College.” Citing article 6.6.8 of the collective bargaining agreement, the letters further informed them that the district‘s “non-renewal of [their] temporary employment” was due to their “fail[ure] to perform the normal and reasonable duties of [their] assignment[s] and [because they] were guilty of misconduct as defined by
II. Procedural History
The three teachers invoked their right under the collective bargaining agreement to file a grievance contesting the revocation of their associate faculty status because, in their view, they were not guilty of any qualifying misconduct. The grievances proceeded to three separate arbitrators, with the faculty association representing each faculty mеmber. The parties stipulated to submit three issues to each arbitrator: (1) whether the district “violated] Article 6.6.8 ... by the removal of [the instructors‘] associate faculty status at the end of the ... academic year“; (2) whether the “collective bargaining agreement require[d] anything more than notice to terminate ... associate faculty [status]“; and (3) the appropriate remedy for any violation of the collective bargaining agreement. The district took the position that article 6.6.8 obligated the district only to give written notice of its decision to revoke associate faculty status, and not to prove up the actual misconduct that underlay that decision. Based on that position, the district presented no
The arbitration in Strathearn‘s case was first. The arbitrator concluded that article 6.6.8‘s requirement that a part-time, temporary faculty member be “guilty of misconduct” implied a requirement that the district‘s finding of misconduct have some evidentiary basis, and that the district‘s refusal to present any evidence on this question dictated a ruling in Strathearn‘s favor. (Italics added.) The arbitrators in Moshiri‘s and Druckman‘s cases followed this reasoning and also ruled for those faculty members. In each case, the arbitrator awarded reinstatement of associate faculty status retroactive to the date of removal as wеll as retroactive lost wages and benefits.
The district filed a petition to correct or vacate all three arbitration awards in the Los Angeles County Superior Court on April 17, 2012, and served that petition nine days later, on April 26, 2012. This petition was filed 99 days and served 108 days after a signed copy of Strathearn‘s arbitration award was served; filed 67 days and served 76 days after Moshiri‘s; and filed 36 days and served 45 days after Druckman‘s. The faculty association filed and served a petition to confirm all three awards on May 3, 2012. Forty-one days later, the district filed a memorandum of points and authorities that supported its motion to vacate and opposed the faculty association‘s petition to confirm. The district‘s and faculty association‘s petitions were filed as limited jurisdiction matters. The limited jurisdiction court confirmed all three arbitration awards, but the superior court‘s appellate division vacated those orders on the ground that they should not have been adjudicated in a limited jurisdiction court.
The district then moved to reclassify its petition to vacate as an unlimited jurisdiction matter. For its part, the faculty association filed and served a second petition to confirm the awards as an unlimited jurisdiction matter. The district filed a demurrer to the faculty association‘s petition on procedural grounds 30 days after being served with the second petition, and filed a response to the faculty association‘s second petitiоn 92 days after being served.
The trial court granted the district‘s petition to vacate all three arbitration awards. The court determined that the arbitrators’ conclusion that the collective bargaining agreement required the district to substantiate its conclusion that a part-time, temporary faculty member was “guilty of misconduct” before revoking that member‘s associate faculty status conflicted with
The faculty association timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
The faculty association urges three reasons why the trial court‘s ruling should be overturned; two are procedural, the last is substantive. We consider the procedural arguments first.
I. Procedural Arguments
The faculty association argues that (1) the trial court lacked jurisdiction to vacate the arbitrator‘s award in Strathearn‘s case because the district missed the statutory deadlines for challenging that award, and (2) the court lacked the statutory authority to vacate or correct any of the arbitration awards because the arbitrators at worst committed an unreviewable error of law but did not “exceed[] their powers,” which is the pertinent prerequisite for judicial review under
A. Timeliness of District‘s Request to Vacate Strathearn‘s Award
As a general matter, a party seeking to vacate an arbitration award must either (1) file and serve a petition to vacate that award “not later than 100 days after the date of the service of a signed copy of the award” (
The district‘s efforts to vacate Strathearn‘s award did not comply with this general rule. The district filed its petition to vacate that award 99 days after being served with the signed award in Strathearn‘s case, but the district did not serve its petition until 108 days after the award was served. This was eight days late. The district also challenged the award in Strathearn‘s case in its responses to the faculty association‘s first and second petitions to confirm that award, but all of its responses were untimely: Under the rules for service and filing of a response under
The district offers three arguments in response. First, it contends that a trial court may excuse a late-filed petition to vacate an arbitration award under its general authority to relieve a party from its “mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect” under
Second, the district asserts that United Firefighters of Los Angeles v. City of Los Angeles (1991) 231 Cal.App.3d 1576 (United Firefighters) vests courts with some authority to disregard jurisdictional time limits for challenges of arbitration awards. To be sure, United Firefighters drew a distinction between petitions to vacate that “attack[] the authority of the trial court to compel [the objecting party] to submit the matter to arbitration” and petitions to vacate that attack “the correctness of the [arbitration] award,” and held that the former are not subject to the jurisdictional
Lastly, the district argues that South Bay Radiology, supra, 220 Cal.App.3d 1074 empowers a trial court to entertain a challenge to an arbitration award based on the award‘s illegality, even when the challenging party missed the 100-day filing and service deadline. This is what South Bay Radiology says, but the court proceeded to hear the untimely challenge because the objecting party had raised that challenge in a timely response to a petition to confirm. (South Bay Radiology, supra, 220 Cal.App.3d at p. 1081.) We read South Bay Radiology as a restatement of the general rule set forth above. We decline to construe South Bay Radiology as authorizing judicial review of untimely challenges to arbitration awards whenever those challengers assert that the award contravenes a statute; to do so would create an exception that would swallow the general rule hinging jurisdiction on the timeliness of the challenge.
Consequently, we conclude that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the district‘s challenge to the arbitration award in Strathearn‘s case. We vacate the court‘s order overturning that award.
B. Propriety of Judicial Review
The California Arbitration Act (CAA),
We now turn to the merits of the faculty association‘s challenge to the trial court‘s vacation of the arbitration awards.
II. The Merits
The faculty association argues that the trial court erred in evaluating the propriety of the district‘s actions against the three part-time, temporary faculty members under
A. Background
1. Statutory scheme
Our Legislature has enacted statutes governing the relationship between community college districts and their faculty.4 (
The different categories of community college faculty enjoy different degrees of statutory protection. Regular and contract employees may be “dismissed” only for “cause” as that term is defined in
In 2001, the Legislature added
2. Collective bargaining agreement between the district and the faculty association
At the time pertinent to this litigation and pursuant to the mandate of
B. Analysis
1. Arbitrators’ construction of article 6.6.8
Consistent with thе narrow scope of judicial review of arbitration awards described above, the trial court‘s review—and, consequently, our review—of the arbitrators’ construction of the collective bargaining agreement is circumscribed. “A trial court may vacate an award interpreting a contract if and only if it ‘rests on a “completely irrational” construction of the contract [citations] or . . . amounts to an “arbitrary remaking” of the contract.’ (California Dept. of Human Resources v. Service Employees Internat. Union, Local 1000 (2012) 209 Cal.App.4th 1420, 1430 (California Dept. of Human Resources), quoting Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. v. Intel Corp. (1994) 9 Cal.4th 362, 376-377.) This principle applies to an arbitrator‘s construction of a collective bargaining agreement. (See Social Services Union v. Alameda County Training & Employment Bd. (1989) 207 Cal.App.3d 1458, 1463 [” ‘[a] court must affirm an arbitrator‘s award if it can in any ratiоnal way be derived from the [collective bargaining] agreement, and can only reverse if there is a manifest disregard of the agreement, totally unsupported by principles of contract construction . . .‘“].)
Article 6.6.8 explicitly provides that, “[b]efore termination of Associate Faculty status, the associate faculty member shall be given written notice of the reason for such termination.” The district contends that this is the sole requirement. The arbitrators found that article 6.6.8 also obligates the district, at least when revoking associate faculty status for being “otherwise guilty of
2. Conflict between section 87665 and section 87482.9 as interpreted by the collective bargaining agreement
Analytically, whether a community college district‘s authority to “terminate the employment” of temporary employees under
As to the first question, we are guided by two principles of statutory construction. First, “‘[a] court must, where reasonably possible, harmonize statutes, recоncile seeming inconsistencies in them, and construe them to give force and effect to all of their provisions. [Citations.]‘” (Pacific Palisades Bowl Mobile Estates, LLC v. City of Los Angeles (2012) 55 Cal.4th 783, 805.) Second, all “‘“presumptions are against a repeal by implication“‘” (ibid.), including partial repeals that occur when one statute implicitly limits another statute‘s scope of operation (Schatz v. Allen Matkins Leck Gamble & Mallory LLP (2009) 45 Cal.4th 557, 573). Thus, “‘“we will find an implied repeal ‘only when there is no rational basis for harmonizing . . . two potentially conflicting statutes [citation], and the statutes are “irreconcilable, clearly repugnant, and so inconsistent that the two cannot have concurrent operation.“‘“‘” (Even Zohar Construction & Remodeling, Inc. v. Bellaire Townhouses, LLC (2015) 61 Cal.4th 830, 838.)
The implicit premise of this argument is that the termination of employment and the revocation of reappointment rights are the same thing. They are not. To be sure, the revocation of reappointment rights can, as it did here, effectively result in a part-time, tempоrary employee‘s loss of employment. But the California courts have repeatedly declined to treat them as synonymous; to the contrary, the courts have distinguished between them and recognized that they may have different procedures and still peaceably coexist. In Round Valley, supra, 13 Cal.4th 269, our Supreme Court, in the context of K-12 teachers, expressly rejected “[t]he notion that the term ‘dismissal’ historically encompasses procedures for a decision against reelection [that is, the reappointment of probationary faculty].” (Id. at p. 283.) Along the same lines, the court in Sunnyvale Unified School Dist. v. Jacobs (2009) 171 Cal.App.4th 168, 176 (Sunnyvale) held that “‘nonreelection’ [of probationary K-12 teachers for employment in the ensuing school year] is different from ‘dismissal,’ which is the term used when a probationary teacher is terminated during the school year for unsatisfactory performance [citation] or when permanent employees are terminated for cause [citation]. . . .” As it did with K-12 probationary teachers, our Legislature enacted separate statutes governing the dismissal of temporary faculty at community colleges and the reappointment of part-time, temporary faculty at community colleges. As did the courts in Round Valley and Sunnyvale, we must also honor this distinction and reject the district‘s entreaty to conflate the two concepts and thereby create a conflict between the two statutes governing these two distinct personnel actions.
Even if we were to conclude that the two statutes did conflict (and thus were to reach the second question), we disagree with the district that
Because we can harmonize sections 87482.9 and 87665 (and, alternatively, because
The district offers four arguments in response. First, it argues that Round Valley, supra, 13 Cal.4th 269 dictates a ruling in its favor. We disagree. In Round Valley, the court confronted a conflict between a collective bargaining agreement provision requiring a finding of “‘just cause‘” before a school district could refuse to reelect a probationary K-12 teacher to teach the next year, and
Third, the district argues that
Lastly, and somewhat at odds with the prior argument, the district contends that sections 87665 and 87482.9 are not inconsistent and can be harmonized by reading
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed. The faculty association is entitled to costs on appeal.
Boren, P. J., and Ashmann-Gerst, J., concurred.
Notes
“(a) Immoral or unprofessional conduct.
“(b) Dishonesty.
“(c) Unsatisfactory performance.
“(d) Evident unfitness for service.
“(e) Physical or mental condition that makes him or her unfit to instruct or associate with students.
“(f) Persistent violation of, or refusal to obey, the school laws of the state or reasonable regulations prescribed for the government of the community colleges by the board of governors or by the governing board of the community college district employing him or her.
“(g) Conviction of a felony or of any crime involving moral turpitude.
“(h) Conduct specified in Section 1028 of the Government Code [that is, belonging to the Communist Party or any other organization that advocates the overthrow of the government].” (
