1 Conn. App. 207 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1983
The plaintiff town of Trumbull has appealed1 from the trial court's confirmation of an award by the Connecticut state board of mediation and arbitration ordering the enforcement of a provision of a collective bargaining agreement which required the town to discharge summarily nonunion employees who failed to pay to the union an agency shop fee equal to union dues.2
Early in 1978, the parties to this action entered into collective bargaining. After failing to reach an agreement, the parties submitted to fact finding proceedings by the board of mediation and arbitration pursuant to General Statutes
The fact finder's report was neither accepted nor rejected within the time limit applicable under General Statutes
The town, however, refused to enforce article XXX which was the agency shop provision of the contract. Section 2 of article XXX states: "Upon the effective date of this Agreement all members of the Bargaining Unit who are covered by the terms of this Agreement shall, as a condition of continued employment, either join the Union or pay a service fee equal to the dues paid by a Union member. Employees who fail to comply with the provisions of this section [shall be discharged by the employer within thirty days after the receipt of written notice to the employer from the Union that the employee has not complied]."
On March 13, 1979, the union president notified the first selectman of Trumbull that the town's acceptance of the fact finder's report resulted in making the agency shop provision operative and, therefore, the union president requested that the provision be enforced.4 After the plaintiff's continued refusal to enforce the provision, *210 the union filed a grievance.5 The grievance, which sought enforcement of article XXX, was submitted to the arbitrators pursuant to the collective bargaining agreement.6
The resulting arbitration award, rendered on June 3, 1980, found that the town had violated article XXX of the agreement and directed the town to discharge the affected employees within thirty days unless their agency shop fees were paid.7 The plaintiff sought to have the award vacated pursuant to General Statutes (Rev. to 1981)
On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the court erred in confirming the arbitration award. The plaintiff appealed pursuant to General Statutes (Rev. to 1981)
Courts favor arbitration as a means of settling differences and expediting the resolution of disputes. Bridgeport v. Bridgeport Police Local 1159,
Judicial review of an arbitration award is limited in its scope by the provisions of General Statutes
If the submission does not contain limiting or conditional language, then the submission is unrestricted. Id., 584-85; see Bridgeport v. Bridgeport Police Local 1159, supra, 106-107."'Where the submission is unrestricted, *213
"the award is . . . final and binding and cannot be reviewed for errors of law or fact." Milford Employees Assn. v. Milford,
By agreeing to the unrestricted submission, the town and the union authorized the arbitrators to exercise their own judgment in resolving the dispute and granting a remedy. "If the question has been entrusted to the arbitration tribunal, then the court should not rule upon the merits of the issue and it should not usurp the function conferred upon that tribunal by the parties to the agreement." Hartford v. Local 308,
In the present case, the parties agreed to submit disputes concerning the interpretation and application of the collective bargaining agreement to arbitration.9 The parties voluntarily submitted the issue to the arbitrators and the submission did not contain limiting or conditional language.10 The submission, therefore, was unrestricted. In essence, the submission asked the arbitrators to determine whether the plaintiff violated the agreement by failing to discharge the nonunion employees whose agency shop fees were not paid, and to fashion a remedy if such a violation were found. The arbitrators' award found that the town had violated the agency shop provision and they fashioned a remedy whereby the town was directed to terminate nonunion employees who had not paid the agency shop fee.11 It is clear that the award conformed to the submission. The arbitrators, therefore, did not exceed or imperfectly execute their powers within the meaning of General Statutes (Rev. to 1981)
Recently, the Supreme Court was presented with a situation very similar to the present case. In Carroll v. Aetna Casualty Surety Co.,
The plaintiff's claims in the present case similarly seek an enlargement of the scope of review. The plaintiff asserts that it is prohibited from summarily discharging its employees without respecting the due process rights of those employees and, if this court 80 finds, that the plaintiff has standing to contest the award which compels it to contravene those rights. The plaintiff also claims that enforcement of the award would compel the plaintiff to violate provisions of its own charter as well as public policy.12 It appears, however, *216
that the plaintiff effectively seeks a second determination of the underlying dispute on the merits after being unsuccessful in arbitration and in the Superior Court. See Carroll v. Aetna Casualty Surety Co., supra, 23. As stated earlier, the courts will not permit such a tactic. See Caldor, Inc. v. Thornton,
The plaintiff had certain options available to it. It could have restricted the submission itself or included in the submission the issues which have now been raised subsequent to the award,13 or submitted the questions that arose to a designated court pursuant to General Statutes
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.