This is the third appeal in the instant case to reach this Court. Appellant William Ruzicka (Ruzicka) here appeals from the order of Chief Judge Feikens which dismissed his unfair representation suit against his union (Union) upon the factual finding that the bargaining representative’s failure to timely file Ruzicka’s grievance with the employer (GM) was due to union reliance upon the prevailing practice between the Union and GM of freely granting extensions of the contract date for filing the grievance. Pursuant to finding that the Union breached no duty to' Ruzicka, Judge Feikens concluded that GM was entitled to rely upon the termination of Ruzicka’s claim under the grievance clause of the contract and so could not be liable for breach of contract.
The salient facts of this controversy, and the law of the case established at the two previous appeals, are thoroughly delineated in the prior decisions of this Court and those of the district court.
Ruzicka v. General Motors Corp.,
This Court’s mandate on the second remand was to “conduct a hearing on [the]
narrow issue”
of “whether there was,
in fact,
actual reliance by Panter or other union officials on the prevailing practice of freely granting extension.”
Ruzicka seeks to avoid applying the clearly erroneous test herein by shifting the focus of the proceedings below from the narrow issue specified in the mandate to (1) the broader issue of determining the scope of the “past” or “prevailing practice”; and (2) the legal issue of defining “reliance”.
By his first argument, Ruzicka contends that since the record does not show a “well-defined, recurring practice [of granting extensions of time] that is clearly understood by all parties”, “there can be no past practice within the legal meaning of the term.” It would follow, therefore, that where there is, in fact, no “past practice” within the meaning of that labor law term of art, the Union would have acted upon a good faith, but mistaken, belief that such a practice obtained. The case law is clear that such good faith errors do not insulate unions from liability in section 301 cases. 29 U.S.C. § 185. See Ruzicka I.
The short answer to this first objection is that the existence of a clear and definite practice of not insisting on contractual deadlines when an extension was requested *261 has been the law of this case for over ten years. As our Court noted in Ruzicka II:
In its initial memorandum opinion, the district court had found that extensions of exchange deadlines were freely given by both the Union and GM during Panter’s term as committee chairman. This finding was reinforced by testimony received on remand that the prevailing practice was for both parties to grant extensions at will if one party was not prepared to exchange statements, even after the exchange date had passed.
Ruzicka’s second attempt to shift away from the “narrow issue” considered on the second remand is the assertion that the definition of “reliance” involves conducting an inquiry into the reaction of a reasonable man to the past practice and not whether the individual union officials herein actually relied upon prevailing practice.
The Supreme Court in the recent case of
Pullman-Standard v. Swint,
A review of the record on second remand, particularly the testimony of Union representative Panter and of the evidence from the original trial cited at
An additional issue concerning the continuing viability of an arbitration award, originally litigated below as a Union counterclaim against GM, has not been appealed by the Union and is therefore not before this Court on review. Accordingly, the decision of the district court is hereby AFFIRMED.
