Lead Opinion
SUTTON, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BOGGS, C.J., GUY, BATCHELDER, DAUGHTREY, GILMAN, GIBBONS, ROGERS, COOK, McKEAGUE, and GRIFFIN, JJ., joined. CLAY, J. (pp. 425-37), delivered a separate dissenting opinion, in which MARTIN, MOORE, and COLE, JJ., joined.
OPINION
Does a dispute over the meaning of a time-limitation bar in a collective bargaining agreement present a threshold question for an arbitrator to resolve or for a judge to resolve? Under John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Livingston,
I.
Saint Gobain Ceramics makes refractory products for a variety of industrial clients. The United Steelworkers of America represents the Louisville-based workers of the company. The two parties signed a collective bargaining agreement that governed their relationship from February 14, 2002, to February 13, 2005.
On March 2, 2004, the company fired two union members for insubordination. The union immediately filed grievances over both discharges.
The collective bargaining agreement contains a four-step process for resolving grievances. The union’s grievances proceeded without complication through steps one, two and three. On March 29, 2004, the company issued a written denial of both step-3 grievances, which the union received on April 8, 2004. The agreement gave the union 30 days, excluding weekends and holidays, to appeal the company’s decision to step 4 — arbitration. If the union failed to appeal within the time limit, the agreement provided that the union forfeited its right to arbitrate the grievance. The union appealed the denials by letter dated May 19, 2004, and the company received the appeals on May 24, 2004. The company informed the union that the appeals could not proceed to arbitration (step 4) because it had received them after the 30-day deadline.
The union filed an action in federal district court under § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, to compel arbitration of the two grievances under the collective bargaining agreement. Faced with cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court (1) held that General Drivers, Warehousemen & Helpers, Local Union 89 v. Moog Louisville Warehouse,
Bound by Moog, a panel of this court affirmed. United Steelworkers v. Saint Gobain Ceramics & Plastics, Inc.,
II.
A.
When an employer and a union agree to submit grievances arising from a collective bargaining agreement to arbitration, the “limited” function of the federal courts is “to ascertain! ] whether the party seeking arbitration is making a claim which on its face is governed by the contract.” United Steelworkers v. Am. Mfg. Co.,
Two Supreme Court cases illustrate this dichotomy and show how it should be applied to debates about the application of a time — limitation provision. The “threshold question” in John Wiley & Sons, as in today’s case, was “who shall decide” a series of disputes arising under a collective bargaining agreement-an arbitrator or a judge?
The Court reached a different conclusion about two other disputes presented in the case — (1) whether the union had satisfied steps 1 and 2 of the agreement’s multi-step grievance procedure, which preceded the company’s “duty to arbitrate” in step 3, and (2) whether the union had complied with a time-limitation bar. Id. at 556 & n. 11,
Nearly 40 years later, the Court addressed a similar issue and followed a simi
“Linguistically speaking,” the Court began, “one might call any potentially dispos-itive gateway question a ‘question of arbi-trability/ for its answer will determine whether the underlying controversy will proceed to arbitration on the merits.” Id. at 83,
Giving content to this distinction, the Court gave two examples of threshold questions of arbitrability that courts should decide — “whether the parties are bound by a given arbitration clause” and “whether an arbitration clause ... applies to a particular type of controversy.” Id. at 84,
Consistent with this reasoning, the Court held that “the applicability of the NASD time limit rule is a matter presumptively for the arbitrator, not for the judge.” Howsam,
What emerges from John Wiley & Sons and Howsam is a fairly straightforward rule: A time-limitation provision involves a matter of procedure; it is a “condition precedent” to arbitration, id. (internal quotation marks omitted); and it thus is “presumptively” a matter for an arbitrator to decide, id. In the absence of an agreement to the contrary, in the absence in other words of language in the agreement rebutting the presumption, arbitrators rather than judges should resolve disputes over time-limitation provisions.
B.
Under this rule, the time-limitation bar in this collective bargaining agreement should be resolved by the arbitrator. Here is what the provision says:
Both parties mutually agree that grievances to be considered must be filed promptly as set forth above after the occurrence thereof. Grievances not appealed within the time limits set forth in Steps 1, 2, 3, or k shall be considered settled on the basis of the decision last made and shall not be eligible for further discussion or appeal. Grievances not answered by the Company within the time limits specified in any step of this procedure shall be allowed without precedent.
JA 20 (emphasis added). The highlighted language plainly amounts to a time-limitation bar, and there is no “statement to the contrary in the arbitration agreement,” Howsam,
That a party’s failure to satisfy the time-limitation requirement means that the grievance “shall not be eligible for further discussion or appeal,” JA 20 (emphasis added), does not alter this conclusion. The same could have been said in John Wiley & Sons and in Howsam. In John Wiley & Sons, the language was to the same effect, as it said that failure to satisfy the time limitation “shall ... be deemed to be an abandonment of the grievance.”
Far from rebutting the presumption that this time-limitation provision should be decided by an arbitrator, other provisions of the collective bargaining agreement support it. The introductory sentence to all of the alternative-dispute-resolution provisions in Article 28 of the collective bargaining agreement, including the time-limitation provision, says: “Should disagreements arise as to the meaning and application of or compliance with the provisions of this agreement, there shall be no cessation of work at any time but the matter shall be settled promptly in the following manner....” JA 19. This language is quite consistent with the underlying assumption of John Wiley & Sons and Howsam that parties to collective bargaining agreements would anticipate that disputes over conditions precedent to arbitration, like disputes over the merits of a grievance, would be resolved by the arbitrator. Instead of rebutting the presumption that an arbitrator should decide the meaning of a time-limitation provision, in short,
What gave the district court and the original panel pause about this case was not the meaning of the Supreme Court’s decisions in this area, and it was not the language of the collective bargaining agreement. It was the existence of our 1988 decision in Moog and the question whether it could co-exist with John Wiley & Sons and Howsam. Since Moog, the Supreme Court has decided Howsam, which reinforces the presumption that questions about the meaning of a time-limitation bar are for arbitrators to decide. And since Moog, two panels of this court, one of them the panel that heard this case, have expressly concluded that Moog was wrongly decided, see Raceway Park, Inc. v. Local 47, Serv. Employees Int’l Union,
A brief description of Moog shows why the criticism of these two prior panels and the skepticism of the third panel are on the mark. After the employer discharged one of its workers, it refused the union’s demand to submit the matter to arbitration under the collective bargaining agreement because the union had not filed the arbitration request within the 15-day period provided in the agreement. “[I]f,” the time-limitation rule said, “the Union fails to notify the Company ... within 15 calendar days after the Company gives its answer in writing to a grievance at Step (b) of the grievance procedure, ... then the Union shall be conclusively presumed to have accepted the Company’s answer thereto and said grievance shall not thereafter be arbitrable.”
There is no difference, however, between the clarity of the consequences' of failing to file the grievance on time in Moog on the one hand and John Wiley & Sons and Howsam on the other. All three provisions came to the same clear end: In Moog, the “grievance shall not thereafter be arbitrable,” id. at 873; in the other two cases, the dispute shall not “be eligible for submission to arbitration,” Howsam,
Also unavailing is Saint Gobain’s related attempt to distinguish Article 28 from the clauses at issue in John Wiley & Sons and Howsam. Article 28, the company says,
The problem with Moog is not the existence of some unusual feature of the collective bargaining agreement or of the time-bar provision in that case but that Moog turned on its head the presumption that time-limitation disputes should be resolved by an arbitrator. Instead of treating a dispute over the meaning of a time-limitation rule as a “condition precedent to arbi-trability” that is “presumptively for the arbitrator, not the judge,” to decide, Howsam,
There is more common ground between the dissent and our opinion than the dissent suggests. We do not establish a bright-line rule that timeliness questions must inexorably go to the arbitrator. As with all arbitration matters, the matter is one of contract: Just as two parties need not enter an arbitration contract in the first place, they need not enter an arbitration agreement that submits questions of timeliness to arbitration. Parties who wish to steer timeliness disputes to the courts remain free to do so, and nothing in this opinion is to the contrary.
The problem here is what happens when the parties are silent on the point — when they set up an arbitration procedure to resolve their grievances, as was true here, but when they do not indicate a preference for judicial or arbitral resolution of a dispute over the meaning of a timeliness provision in the collective bargaining agreement, as was also true here. In that setting, there is nothing unusual about courts establishing default rules or presumptions about the meaning of such silence for the purposes of the case before them and for the purposes of future cases. That is all we have done.
In embracing a presumption that disputes over a timeliness provision are for an arbitrator to decide, we take some comfort from the following: (1) that is what John Wiley & Sons and Howsam did; (2) that is what the Supreme Court has said we should do, see Howsam,
Nor do the two cases cited by the dissent—Philadelphia Printing Pressmen’s Union No. 16 v. International Paper Co.,
III.
For these reasons, we reverse and remand the case to the district court to enter an order referring the grievance to arbitration.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority unjustifiably attempts to reduce the dissent to a concern about questions of timeliness, but the legal and factual issues addressed here cannot be so narrowly confined. Instead of improperly reframing the issues in an attempt to diminish the dissent, the majority should have meaningfully engaged the merits of the arguments presented by this opinion. The majority insists on imposing an obli
The principal difficulty with the majority opinion is that it wrongfully insulates decisions regarding arbitrability from judicial adjudication even when there is no basis for believing that the parties have contractually agreed to submit the subject matter of a particular dispute to arbitration. In addition to being unrestrained and over-broad in its implications, the majority opinion is problematical on two levels — namely, it improperly determines when a matter should be subject to arbitration, and whether the parties have agreed that there should be a judicial or arbitrable decision to adjudicate the dispute.
BACKGROUND
The facts of this case are relatively simple. Plaintiff United Steelworkers of America, AFLCIO-CLC, is a union which represents employees of Defendant Saint Gobain Ceramics & Plastics, Inc. The parties entered into a collective bargaining agreement which sets forth a four-step grievance appeal process. In pertinent part, the collective bargaining agreement contains a thirty-day period to appeal a grievance decision from step 3 to arbitration:
Article 28
Adjustment of Grievances
1. Should disagreements arise as to the meaning and application of or compliance with the provisions of this agreement ... the matter shall be settled promptly in the following manner:
STEP 4:
It is agreed that the Union shall have thirty (30) days from the time of the written Step 3 decision to notify the Company in writing that it is appealing a grievance to arbitration.
(J.A. 19) (formatting added). The thirty-day period excludes “Saturdays, Sundays, [hjolidays and off days (including vacations [or] [s]hutdown for repairs).” (J.A. 20) Article 28 of the collective bargaining agreement limits the authority of the arbitrator:
An arbitrator to whom any grievance shall be submitted shall be authorized only to interpret and apply the provisions of the agreement insofar as shall be necessary to the determining of such grievances, but he shall not have authority to alter in any way the provisions of this agreement.
(J.A. 19) The parties also conditioned the right to arbitrate a grievance decision on strict compliance with the time limits set forth in the collective bargaining agreement:
Article 28
Adjustment of Grievances
4. Both parties mutually agree that grievances to be considered must be filed promptly as set forth above after the occurrence thereof. Grievances not appealed within the time limits set forth in Steps 1, 2, 3, or k shall be considered settled on the basis of the decision last made and shall not be eligible for further discussion or appeal.
On March 2, 2004, the Defendant employer terminated two employees “for multiple, severe and willful violations of Company Work Rules in disregard of the Company’s business interest.” (J.A. 42; see also J.A. 43 (same)). Plaintiff filed grievances alleging that the employees were subject to “unjust suspension [and] discharge [ ] for a verbal altercation” with a supervisor. (J.A. 37; see also J.A. 38 (same)). On March 29, 2004, Defendant issued a written step 3 decision denying Plaintiffs “grievance[s] and requests] for reinstatement and back pay.” (J.A. 42; see also J.A. 43 (same)). Plaintiff received the employer’s decision on April 8, 2004, and appealed the decision on May 19, 2004. Defendant received notice of Plaintiffs appeal on May 24, 2004, and denied the request to refer the grievances to arbitration because the thirty day period to request an appeal had expired. In turn, Plaintiff filed an action to compel arbitration of the grievances under the collective bargaining agreement in the Western District of Kentucky. The district court, applying Gen. Drivers, Warehousemen and Helpers, Local Union 89 v. Moog Louisville Warehouse,
DISCUSSION
I. Legal Framework
In this ease, the district court’s summary judgment decision is reviewed de novo, “as is the district court’s decision to [deny Plaintiffs] motion to compel arbitration.” McMullen v. Meijer, Inc.,
The Supreme Court has clearly established that “[a]rbitration ... is a matter of consent, not coercion.” EEOC. v. Waffle House, Inc.,
Generally, under the presumption of ar-bitrability, “a court, not an arbitrator, will ordinarily decide an ‘arbitrability’ question,” Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
The rationale that underlines the presumption of arbitrability is that arbitrators are “well situated to answer [ ] question^]” related to “contract interpretation and arbitration procedures,” Green Tree Fin. Corp. v. Bazzle,
The Supreme Court has recognized that whether a court or an arbitrator “has the primary authority to decide whether a party has agreed to arbitrate can make a critical difference to a party resisting arbitration.” First Options,
II. Analysis
Essentially, the issue in this case is whether, under the collective bargaining agreement, the thirty day period to refer a grievance to arbitration begins to run as of the date of receipt of Defendant’s written decision — as Plaintiff contends, thus, making the grievance timely and therefore ar-bitrable — or the date of its issuance, as Defendant argues, thereby rendering the grievance untimely and therefore not arbi-trable. The facts in this case are analogous to the facts in Moog. The defendant in Moog
discharged a member of the plaintiff union who protested his discharge through the procedurally defined grievance steps up to the final stage of arbitration. [Defendant] refused the demand for arbitration, contending that the request made was untimely and therefore rendered the grievance not ar-bitrable. The union brought [an] action to compel [defendant] to arbitrate.
if the Union fails to notify the Company ... within 15 calendar days after the Company gives its answer [to the grievance] ..., then the Union shall he conclusively presumed to have accepted the Company’s answer thereto and said grievance shall not thereafter be arbitra-ble.
Id. at 873 (emphasis added). The collective bargaining agreement in Moog stipulated that an untimely grievance was not arbitrable. The plain language of the agreement shows that submitting disputes concerning timeliness to arbitration was simply never contemplated by the parties.
In light of the language contained in the collective bargaining agreement, “Moog held that a grievance was not properly arbitrable because the union had not submitted its grievance within the time frame dictated in the collective bargaining agreement.” Armco Employees Indep. Fed’n v. AK Steel Corp.,
Under Moog, courts are charged with reviewing the collective bargaining agreement to determine whether the time limitations are procedural or substantive provisions based on the language contained therein. Moog,
In Green Tree Fin. Corp. v. Bazzle, a “case eoncern[ing] contracts between a commercial lender and its customers, each of which contain[ed] a clause providing for arbitration of all contract-related disputes,” the parties disputed whether the contracts “forbid class arbitration.”
[t]hese limited instances typically involve matters of a kind that “contracting parties would likely have expected a court” to decide. Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,537 U.S. 79 , 83,123 S.Ct. 588 ,154 L.Ed.2d 491 (2002). They include certain gateway matters, such as whether the parties have a valid arbitration agreement at all or whether a con-cededly binding arbitration clause applies to a certain type of controversy. See generally Howsam, supra. See also John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Livingston,376 U.S. 543 , 546-47,84 S.Ct. 909 ,11 L.Ed.2d 898 (1964) (whether an arbitration agreement survives a corporate merger); AT & T, supra, at 651-52 (whether a labor-management layoff controversy falls within the scope of an arbitration clause).
Id. The Court found that
[t]he question here — whether the contracts forbid class arbitration-does not fall into this narrow exception. It concerns neither the validity of the arbitration clause nor its applicability to the underlying dispute between the parties. Unlike First Options, the question is not whether the parties wanted a judge or an arbitrator to decide whether they agreed to arbitrate a matter:514 U.S. at 942-945 ,115 S.Ct. 1920 . Rather the relevant question here is what kind of arbitration proceeding the parties agreed to.
The majority cites a plethora of cases in support of its position in this case. However, the cases are plainly distinguishable from this matter. See, e.g, Local 285, Serv. Employees Int’l Union, AFL-CIO v. Nonotuck Res. Assocs., Inc.,
Notably, cases the majority purportedly relies on clearly support a finding that not all disputes should be submitted to arbitration. See Smith Barney Shearson, Inc. v. Boone,
Contrary to the majority’s averments, as illustrated in the cases cited above, the circuit courts of appeals are divided on the question of whether a union may compel a company, or vice versa, to arbitrate a grievance appeal filed after the time period set forth in the collective bargaining agreement. It is clear, however, that at least two courts have found that disputes concerning the interpretation of collective bargaining agreement provision may be properly presented to a court. See, e.g., Philadelphia Printing Pressmen’s Union No. 16 v. Int’l Paper Co.,
In Philadelphia Printing, a case where a union waited for approximately ten months to submit a written grievance challenging the termination of an employee, the parties were not in agreement that the underlying dispute was arbitrable. When the employer denied the grievance, the union sued to compel arbitration. The Third Circuit found that in order to rule on whether “the parties [] are obligated to submit the [] matter to arbitration,” it must first determine “whether, or not the company was bound to arbitrate, as well as what issues it must arbitrate.” Philadelphia Printing,
[w]hat the Union seeks is to skip the entire grievance machinery established by the collective bargaining agreement and to proceed directly to arbitration of a controversy that has not ripened into a grievance. This it may not do.
Id. at 904 (footnote omitted). Contrary to the majority’s averments, the Court simply did not base its decision on the timeliness of the grievance; rather, the Court found that the parties never agreed to arbitrate the underlying dispute. Id. at 904 n. 7.
In Cherokee, a case where a grievance was not filed within the time frame stipulated in a collective bargaining agreement, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed the district court’s finding that a dispute concerning the timeliness of a grievance was not arbi-trable. Contrary to the majority’s arguments, timeliness was not the principal issue in Cherokee; rather, “[t]he issue before th[e] court [wa]s whether the parties to the Collective Bargaining Agreement intended to arbitrate all grievances or whether, because of an express exclusion or other ‘forceful evidence,’ [the employer] intended to exclude from arbitration those grievances that are untimely filed.” Cherokee,
The parties’ collective bargaining agreement stipulated that “[a]ny grievance not reported within five (5) working days of first knowledge of the occurrence causing
Contrary to the majority’s contention, Moog can be reconciled with Wiley. In Wiley, a union sued to compel a company to arbitrate pursuant to a “collective bargaining agreement [that] provides for arbitration as the final stage of grievance procedures which are stated to be the ‘sole means of obtaining adjustment’ of ‘any diferences, grievance or dispute between the Employer and the Union arising out of or relating to this agreement,’ or its interpretation or application, or enforcement.”
labor disputes of the kind involved here cannot be broken down so easily into their ‘substantive’ and ‘procedural’ aspects. Questions concerning the procedural prerequisites to arbitration do not arise in a vacuum; they develop in the context of an actual dispute about the rights of the parties to the contract or those covered by it.
Id. at 556-57,
In Howsam, a ease concerning whether a court or an arbitrator of the National Association of Securities Dealers (“NASD”) should enforce a NASD time limit rule for the submission of arbitration claims, the Supreme Court found that
the applicability of the NASD [arbitration] time limit rule is a matter presumptively for the arbitrator, not for the judge. The time limit rule closely resembles the gateway questions that this Court has found not to be “questions of arbitrability.” E.g., Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital, supra, at 24-25,103 S.Ct. 927 , (referring to “waiver, delay, or a like defense”). Such a dispute seems an “aspec[t] of the [controversy] which called the grievance procedures into play.” John Wiley, supra, at 559,84 S.Ct. 909 .
Admittedly, the Supreme Court expressly held that the NASD time limit rule is a procedural inquiry that is properly presented to an arbitrator. However, nothing in Howsam supports the majority’s proposition that all time limit rules — regardless of parties’ intent and the language contained in the parties’ collective bargaining agreement — are procedural issues. As in Moog, the holding in Howsam is fact specific. Unlike this case, in Howsam the parties expressly agreed to submit all disputes to arbitration:
[A]ll controversies ... concerning or arising from ... any account ..., any transaction ..., or ... the construction, performance or breach of ... any ... agreement between us ... shall be determined by arbitration before any self-regulatory organization or exchange of which Dean Witter is a member.
Id. at 81,
The majority is wrongfully attempting to expand Howsam to this case. The Supreme Court’s guidance with respect to NASD time limit rules simply cannot be imposed and grafted onto this case because there are special policy considerations that apply in NASD arbitrations. See, e.g., Howsam,
The majority misconstrues Wiley and Howsam to improperly create an across-the-board rule to govern the arbitrability of time limitation provisions in labor arbitration cases. As explained above, this approach is misplaced. Unless the parties have clearly and unmistakably agreed that an arbitrator is to determine issues of arbitrability, courts should be able to determine whether a dispute is subject to arbitration. See, e.g., Warrior,
Contrary to the majority’s holding, this Court is charged with giving effect to the parties’ intent as reflected by the language in the parties’ collective bargaining agreement. In this case, the plain language of the collective bargaining agreement stipulates that the union’s failure to adhere to the time limit provisions constitutes forfeiture of the right to arbitrate the grievance decisions. The parties simply did not agree to submit disputes surrounding timeliness to an arbitrator. Based on the express terms of the collective bargaining agreement, the parties contractually agreed that failure to pursue a timely appeal constitutes a substantive bar to proceeding to arbitration. Based upon the plain language in the parties’ agreement, the district court in the instant case correctly found that the parties never contemplated presenting to an arbitrator an untimely request for arbitration.
The majority’s holding in this case is anything but narrow and is not limited in any principled way. Because the holding could be logically extended to any threshold or procedural issue, the majority’s holding presents the threat of sweeping within its ambit matters that the parties intended to reserve for the court. More specifically, the majority’s holding is fundamentally flawed because it opens the door to having nonarbitrable disputes improperly resolved by an arbitrator from the inception of an arbitration demand. This holding would extend Congress’ policy in favor of arbitration where the parties have agreed to arbitrate beyond anything Congress reasonably intended, and would impose an obligation on parties to arbitrate disputes where the parties have not agreed to arbitrate. See, e.g, Waffle House,
In other words, the majority opinion as written, and certainly by implication, will compel arbitration, including the decision whether a matter is arbitrable, even where the parties have not contractually agreed to resolve a dispute in an arbitral forum. Furthermore, under the majority’s approach, since arbitrators will be asked to resolve threshold and procedural issues, arbitrators will be able to define and determine the scope of their own jurisdiction even with respect to matters that are not arbitrable. The majority would require matters of contract interpretation intended for the court to be reduced to substantive law governing the arbitrator, which he can ignore or not as he pleases, subject only to this Court’s review of the arbitrator’s final award. This approach is fundamentally at odds with Supreme Court precedent, First Options,
As a result of the majority opinion herein, the precarious future of labor arbitration cases in this Circuit is predictable: because of the holding in this case, district courts will send matters to the arbitrator from the onset; the arbitrator will interpret the collective bargaining agreement and render a decision; the decision may be appealed by a party; but the courts, instead of performing an independent review of the arbitrator’s decision even where circumstances warrant, will affirm the arbitrator’s decision. Essentially, there will be no independent or meaningful review of an arbitrator’s jurisdictional determination. This is particularly problematical to the extent that courts have an incentive to minimize judicial review of arbitration decisions in order to conserve judicial resources and avoid delaying or complicating a case, and that this same motivation exists to close the courthouse doors to litigants and deprive them of their rights.
This case creates a thinly-veiled conduit to divert matters to arbitration notwithstanding that the parties have never expressed an intent to arbitrate. This outcome has a strong potential to substantially erode — and ultimately eliminate — appropriate judicial adjudication in arbitration cases. The majority essentially deprives parties of their right to have their disputes settled by a court, even though the parties have not waived that right. This is simply not what the Supreme Court envisioned in Howsam or Wiley; the Supreme Court clearly did
The issue of arbitrability simply cannot be insulated from judicial review where not justified by the law, the particular circumstances of the dispute, or the parties’ arbitration agreement. Again, the outcome of this case broadly insulates arbitration decisions from judicial adjudication even in the absence of any appropriate legal justification. This outcome is particularly troublesome because this Court has so sweepingly overruled Moog that parties’ express intent with respect to arbitration will often be rendered meaningless. Under the majority’s formulation, arbitration •will be ordered so long as a party to the dispute can point to the existence of an arbitration agreement and demand arbitration even though the dispute at issue is not remotely covered by the express terms of the arbitration provision in the parties’ contract. Furthermore, under the majority’s approach, the arbitrator himself gets to decide the issue of arbitrability as a threshold matter — with little or no likelihood of judicial review or correction — even when the parties’ dispute is not one which is even arguably covered by the arbitration agreement.
CONCLUSION
The parties in this ease did not agree to submit a dispute concerning timeliness to an arbitrator. The majority improperly compels the Defendant company to arbitrate where nothing in the collective bargaining agreement suggests that the parties intended an arbitrator to determine the arbitrability of the underlying dispute. For the foregoing reasons, I would affirm the district court’s decision. I therefore respectfully dissent.
Notes
. The district court properly found that Plaintiff's appeal to arbitration was untimely. The plain language of the contract indicates that the clock begins to run on the date of the written Step 3 decision. See J.A. 19 (The parties "agreed that the Union shall have thirty (30) days from the time of the written Step 3 decision to notify the Company in writing that it is appealing a grievance to arbitration.”) (emphasis added). Defendant had to receive notice of Plaintiff's appeal to arbitration within thirty days. The step 3 decision for Plaintiff’s grievances was issued on March 29, 2004. Defendant received the notice of appeal to arbitration on May 24, 2004. As the district court aptly noted, "[ejxcluding holidays and weekends, there were 39 business days between these two dates.” United Steelworkers of America, AFL CIO-CLC v. Saint Gobain Ceramics & Plastics Inc., No. 304CV603S,
