Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge KAREN LeCRAFT HENDERSON.
Teamsters Local Union No. 61 (Local 61) seeks reversal of the district court’s grant of summary judgment to United Parcel Service, Inc. (UPS), affirming two
I.
Local 61, an unincorporated labor organization, challenged in district court the Committee’s decision to affirm the discharge of Mark Thompson, a UPS package pickup and delivery driver. Local 61 and UPS are bound by collective bargaining agreements known as the National Master United Parcel Service Agreement (NMA) and the Atlantic Area Supplemental Agreement (Supplement). The agreements mandate that if a grievance cannot be resolved on the job by management, it must be submitted to the Committee for arbitration. See generally Supplement, Article 49, section 2. The Committee meets monthly for a three-day period. See Supplement, Article 49, section 4(b). Each monthly Committee is to consist of an equal number of representatives from management and the union — no fewer than two and no more than three members each. See Supplement, Article 49, section 2(e). The Supplement requires in a discharge or suspension case that an “impartial arbitrator” serve as the fifth or seventh member and further provides that he “shall render a bench decision on [sic] all deadlocked cases.” Supplement, Article 49, section 4(c).
The January 1999 Committee designated to consider the Thompson grievance consisted of seven members — three management members, three union members and the impartial arbitrator, Joseph Shar-noff. Shortly after the January 19 hearing began, Local 61 questioned the Committee’s authority to hear the case in view of an alleged agreement between the parties that discharge cases involving productivity were not to be resolved by arbitration. Raising a point of order, 1 Local 61 argued that UPS was precluded from defending Thompson’s discharge on the ground that he had failed to meet production standards. The Committee then considered the issue in executive session. During the session, one management member moved to deny Local 61’s point of order. Before the motion was seconded, however, the three union members left the room. They did not return that day.
The Committee reconvened on January 20, recommenced its executive session and resumed discussions regarding the productivity issue. Once again a management member moved to deny the point of order. The motion was seconded but, once again, the three union members left the room before a vote could be taken. When the arbitrator’s efforts to get the three to return were unsuccessful, he ruled that their
When the Committee reconvened on January 21 to hear the merits, two of the three union Committee members refused to participate in the hearing and remained instead in an adjoining room. Local 61 then raised a point of order that there was no quorum. The arbitrator again attempted to get the union members to participate and again he failed. Upon returning to the hearing room, the arbitrator stated that “we do not have, to my view, a properly constituted panel ... [bjecause there are two [u]nion members absent, for whatever reason.” JA 48. He recommended that “we proceed to put the record on tape ... [a]nd at such point as everybody’s finished stating what their positions are we’ll proceed, I guess, with however [UPS] determines that we can proceed.” JA 48. UPS then raised a point of order asserting that the union Committee members’ refusal to proceed violated Article 7 of the NMA, which provides in part that “[t]he [u]nion agrees it will not unreasonably delay the processing of [discharge or suspension] cases.” NMA Article 7. UPS threatened to remove Thompson from the payroll but the remaining union Committee member objected that doing so would violate both the NMA and the Supplement. The Committee did not rule on the Article 7 point of order before adjourning.
A different five-member Committee convened on February 16 with two management members, two union members and the same arbitrator in attendance. When the Committee called the Thompson case, one union member refused to participate. Local 61 again raised a point of order that there was no quorum, although four of the five Committee members (two management members, one union member and the arbitrator) remained present. In executive session, the Committee denied Local 61’s point of order. Local 61 then stated that it would not participate any further or be bound by any Committee decision, again insisting — in spite of the Committee’s ruling to the contrary — that there was no quorum. When UPS began presenting its case, the remaining union Committee member left the hearing, echoing Local 61’s objection that there was no quorum. After UPS’s presentation, “the Panel ruled in favor of the Company,” JA 64, and upheld Thompson’s discharge, JA 120.
Local 61 sought in district court to vacate the Committee’s decisions, arguing that both the January 20 decision to proceed and the February 16 decision on the merits were invalid because they were made without a quorum. On September 7, 2000 the district court granted UPS’s motion for summary judgment.
II.
Our review of a district court’s decision on a summary judgment motion is
de novo. See Shields v. Eli Lilly & Co.,
First, Local 61 argues that the district court had the “broad authority” and even the duty to “scrutinize strictly” the Committee’s January 20 decision to proceed because that decision was substantive, not procedural, and because it “seriously undermined the integrity of the arbitral process.” Br. of Appellant at 17. We reject this contention.
It is well-settled that “the courts play only a limited role when asked to review the decision of an arbitrator.”
United Paperworkers Int’l Union, AFL-CIO v. Misco, Inc.,
As the district court observed, there is no dispute that a quorum existed at the outset of the January 20 hearing during which the Committee decided to proceed to the merits.
See
JA 252;
see also
Oral Arg. Tr. at 4 (Local 61- stating that “[a]t the beginning of the hearing, all three members of each side were present and the neutral arbitrator was presént”). Neither the collective bargaining agreements nor the Committee’s Rules of Procedure (Committee Rules)
2
clearly address
Whether the provisions require an equal number of management and union Committee members
at the time of voting
and whether the union members’ walkout prevented further proceedings — that is, “whether [these] grievance procedures or some part of them apply to [Thompson’s discharge arbitration], whether such procedures have been followed or excused [here], or whether the unexcused failure to follow them avoids the [union’s] duty to arbitrate,” Wiley,
Moreover, even if the arbitrator’s decision to proceed were substantive, 3 as Local 61 contends, the holding in Garvey would still counsel deference. It is at least “arguabl[e]” under the Garvey standard that because there was a quorum at the beginning of the January 20 session, any quorum requirement that existed was met. As the district court put it:
If an arbitration [decision] ... draws its essence from the collective bargaining agreement, the Court will uphold the [decision],... Article 7 of the National Master Agreement states that “The [u]nion agrees it will not unreasonably delay the processing of [discharge] cases.” ... The arbitrator’s decision to go forward after repeated and unexplained departures by the [u]nion [Committee] members is consistent with this provision of the collective bargaining agreement.
JA 254 (citations omitted).
Like the district court, we conclude that the arbitrator was “within the scope of his authority,”
Garvey,
532 U.S. at -,
Local 61 is mistaken in its assertion that the union Committee members’ conduct in absenting themselves constituted misconduct that serves as a basis for vacating the Committee’s decision to proceed. Local 61 did not challenge the union Committee members’ conduct at any time before this appeal. Here, Local 61 alleges for the first time that the union members’ alleged misconduct in walking out should be attributed to the Committee as a whole. Because this argument was not raised in the district court, it is not properly before this court.
See United States v. Wider,
More importantly, if we were to accept this argument, the practical result would be perverse at best — whenever union members believed a grievant’s discharge was wrongful, they could simply refuse to participate in the arbitration, claim the Committee was “biased” and by default the grievant would retain his job with pay. See NMA Article 7. This is not the arbitration procedure for which UPS bargained. Article 7 prevents both sides from derailing the arbitration process. Under that provision, UPS agreed to allow the discharged employee to remain on the job, without loss of pay, “unless and until the discharge or suspension is sustained under the grievance procedure” and, in return, the union agreed that it “will not unreasonably delay the processing of [discharge] cases.” Id. We decline to deny UPS the benefit of its bargain by holding that the union Committee members’ tactics provide a basis for vacating the Committee’s January 20 decision to proceed.
Local 61’s second ground of appeal is that the district court committed reversible error in failing to scrutinize the Committee’s January 20 decision to proceed under a narrow “public policy” exception that denies enforcement of an arbitration award if it “violates established law or seeks to compel some unlawful action.”
Am. Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO v. United States Postal Serv.,
We have explained that the public policy exception to the enforceability of an arbitration award “is
extremely
narrow[,]
Local 61’s third challenge goes to the Committee’s February 16 merits decision to uphold Thompson’s discharge. The union asserts, simply, that a merits decision made in the absence of a quorum is void per se. This claim can be disposed of in short order.
Neither the NMA nor the Supplement nor any of the Committee Rules uses the word “quorum.” As we mentioned, the Supplement and Rules do state that each monthly Committee is to consist of an equal number of management and union members. See Supplement, Article 49, section 2(e); Committee Rules, Article IV, section 2. Nevertheless, it is at least “ar-guabl[e]” under Garvey deference that whatever “quorum” requirement the Supplement and Rules may impose was met when all five Committee members were present at the commencement of the February 16 proceeding. Moreover, Article 7 of the NMA at least suggests that Committee action in the absence of a quorum is appropriate if union Committee members “unreasonably delay the processing” of a discharge case by subsequently boycotting the proceeding. 5
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s grant of summary judgment to UPS is
Affirmed.
Notes
. A point of order, in Committee parlance, appears to be the arbitration equivalent of an objection in a trial court proceeding. See, e.g., Br. of Appellant at 6 (describing Local 61's productivity point of order); Br. of Ap-pellee at 7 (same).
. Pursuant to an agreement between "[t]he Local Unions party to the Atlantic Area Sup-plemenl” and UPS, the Rules of Procedure "implement the provisions set forth in the
. Local 61 asserts that "substantive” questions include "whether non-parties to the contract may be compelled to arbitrate a dispute" and whether "fundamental procedural irregularities [have tainted] the arbitration proceeding.” Br. of Appellant at 19 (citations omitted). It cites no authority, however, for its proposition that a quorum vel non is a "substantive” issue. See id.
. Moreover, Local 61 does not, and cannot, dispute the district court's finding that the vote to proceed caused it no harm because the arbitrator decided to count the union Committee members' absence as three votes to uphold Local 61's point of order. See JA 253.
. The only support Local 61 can muster for its claim is Robert's Rules of Order, which state that "[i]n the absence of a quorum, any business transacted ... is null and void.” Robert's Rules of Order, Newly Revised 341 (9th ed.1990). These, of course, are no support at all. The parties' collective bargaining agreements (and the arbitrator's interpretations thereof) determine Committee procedure. Nowhere do the agreements or the Committee Rules (or the arbitrator’s interpretations thereof) suggest that Robert's Rules apply. Therefore, like the district court, we are unpersuaded by Local 61’s "analogy between the proceedings before the [Committee] and proceedings before Congress.” JA 255.
