UPIU, Local 14 v. International Paper ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 95-1075

    UNITED PAPERWORKERS INTERNATIONAL UNION,
    LOCAL 14, AFL-CIO-CLC, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs - Appellants,

    v.

    INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY,

    Defendant - Appellee.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

    [Hon. D. Brock Hornby, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________

    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Cyr, Circuit Judge. _____________

    _____________________

    Jeffrey Neil Young, with whom McTeague, Higbee, Libner, ____________________ __________________________
    MacAdam, Case & Watson was on brief for appellants. ______________________
    Jane B. Jacobs, with whom Andrew E. Zelman and Klein, ________________ __________________ ______
    Zelman, Briton, Rothermel & Dichter, L.L.P. were on brief for _____________________________________________
    appellee.



    ____________________

    September 7, 1995
    ____________________















    TORRUELLA, Chief Judge. The plaintiff-appellants, TORRUELLA, Chief Judge ____________

    United Paperworkers International Union, Local 14, AFL-CIO, and

    International Brotherhood of Firemen and Oilers, Local 246, AFL-

    CIO (the "Unions"), appeal the district court's decision on

    summary judgment in favor of International Paper Company (the

    "Company"), ruling that a recall agreement between the Unions and

    the Company became unenforceable upon the Unions'

    decertification. For the following reasons, we affirm.

    BACKGROUND BACKGROUND

    The Unions and the Company agree that there are no

    material facts in dispute. The Company owns and operates a paper

    mill in Jay, Maine known as the Androscoggin Mill (the "Mill").

    Between 1965 and March 1993, employees at the Mill were

    represented for purposes of collective bargaining by the Unions.

    Throughout that time, the Unions and the Company have been

    parties to a series of collective bargaining agreements setting

    forth the terms and conditions of employment at the Mill. In

    June 1987, when the Company and the Unions could not reach an

    accord over a succeeding collective bargaining agreement, members

    of the Unions engaged in an economic strike. The Company hired

    replacement workers during the strike.

    In October of 1987, the Company laid off 151 striking

    employees (the "Employees"). All but three of these Employees

    had recall rights for twelve months after layoff.1 The twelve
    ____________________

    1 The other three employees resigned in 1989 pursuant to a
    pension offer negotiated by the Unions. Therefore, these three
    employees are not at issue in this case.

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    month period in which the Employees were eligible for recall

    expired before the parties began strike settlement negotiations.

    On November 16, 1987, certain Mill employees petitioned

    the National Labor Relations Board (the "NLRB") to hold a

    decertification election to determine whether the Mill employees

    desired continued representation by the Unions. The actual

    election was delayed for over a year.

    On October 9, 1988, the Unions ended their strike and

    made an unconditional offer to return to work. Between October

    18 and October 26, 1988, the Unions and the Company negotiated

    and executed an agreement setting forth terms and procedures

    under which former strikers would be recalled as replacement

    workers left and their positions became available. During

    negotiations, the Unions raised the issue of the 151 Employees

    who had been laid off in October 1987 and whose recall rights had

    technically expired. The final recall agreement provided, with

    limited exceptions, that the 151 laid off Employees would be

    among the employees recalled under the agreement.

    In April 1989, at the Unions' request, portions of the

    recall agreement were renegotiated and amended to include lists

    setting forth the order in which employees were to be recalled.

    The 151 laid off Employees were included on these lists. Both

    the October 1988 agreement and the April 1989 amended agreement

    were silent as to its duration or termination. The

    decertification petition was pending throughout the negotiations.




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    In July 1989, the NLRB conducted a decertification

    election at the Mill. Of the employees eligible to vote, 616

    voted for decertification, and 361 voted against. After

    investigating and holding a hearing on the Unions' challenge to

    the election, the NLRB issued a decision upholding the election

    results and dismissing the Unions' objections. The Unions thus

    became decertified as of March 30, 1993. Both parties

    acknowledge that upon decertification, the then-existing

    collective bargaining agreement, which would otherwise have been

    effective until September 30, 1993, became null and void.

    In August 1993, the Company advised the Unions and

    several of the 151 laid off Employees that as a result of the

    Unions' decertification, the Employees no longer had recall

    rights. The Unions thereafter filed this action in the United

    States District Court for the District of Maine, contending that

    the recall agreement, unlike the collective bargaining agreement,

    survived the Unions' decertification and thus remained binding on

    the Company.

    Following cross-motions for summary judgment, the

    district court issued its decision on December 1, 1994. The

    district court found that there was no indication in the recall

    agreement itself that the parties intended it to survive

    decertification, despite the fact that the decertification

    petition had been filed and was pending during the negotiation of

    the agreement. The court explained that because the recall

    agreement establishes rights for a category of represented


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    employees, and explicitly specifies that its terms are to prevail

    if there is any conflict with "other provisions of the labor

    agreement," the recall agreement is "tied directly to the

    collective bargaining agreement," such that it contemplates

    "ongoing union involvement." Because the recall agreement would

    affect the Company's negotiations with a new union seeking to

    represent a majority of employees, and would "perpetuate a

    limited portion of the elements ordinarily covered by a

    collective bargaining agreement," the recall agreement cannot be

    said to be independent of the collective bargaining agreement.

    Therefore, the court reasoned, the recall agreement did not

    survive decertification. Accordingly, the court granted summary

    judgment in the Company's favor.

    DISCUSSION DISCUSSION

    A. Standards of Review A. Standards of Review ___________________

    In general, summary judgment is proper only if no

    genuine issue of material fact exists and the movant is entitled

    to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).

    Therefore, a party seeking summary judgment must make a

    preliminary showing that no genuine issue of material fact

    exists. Once this showing is made, the non-movant must point to

    specific facts demonstrating that there is a trialworthy issue.

    National Amusements, Inc. v. Town of Dedham, 43 F.3d 731, 735 _________________________ _______________

    (1st Cir. 1995). An issue is "genuine" when the evidence

    relevant to it, viewed in the light most flattering to the non-

    moving party, is "sufficiently open-ended to permit a rational


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    factfinder to resolve the issue in favor of either side." Id. __

    (citation omitted). Because the summary judgment standard

    requires the trial court to make a legal determination rather

    than to engage in factfinding, appellate review is plenary.

    Equal Employment Opportunity Comm'n v. Steamship Clerks Union _____________________________________ _______________________

    1066, 48 F.3d 594, 602 (1st Cir. 1995). ____

    This standard is the norm. Having stated it, however,

    we must note that under our precedent, in certain, somewhat

    unusual cases, this standard does not apply. In a nonjury case,

    when the basic dispute between the parties concerns only the

    factual inferences that one might draw from the more basic facts

    to which the parties have agreed, and where neither party has

    sought to introduce additional factual evidence or asked to

    present witnesses, the parties are, in effect, submitting their

    dispute to the court as a "case stated." Steamship Clerks, 48 ________________

    F.3d at 603 (citing Federaci n de Empleados del Tribunal Gen. de ____________________________________________

    Justicia v. Torres, 747 F.2d 35, 36 (1st Cir. 1984) (Breyer, ________ ______

    J.)). The district court is then "freed from the usual

    constraints that attend the adjudication of summary judgment

    motions," and may engage in a certain amount of factfinding,

    including the drawing of inferences. Id. __

    By the same token, the appellate court may assume that

    the parties considered the matter to have been submitted to the

    district court as a case ready for decision on the merits. Id. __

    The standard for appellate review consequently shifts from de __

    novo review to clear-error review; that is, the district court's ____


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    factual inferences should be set aside only if they are clearly

    erroneous. Id. (citing United States v. Ven-Fuel, Inc., 758 F.2d __ _____________ ______________

    741, 744 n.1 (1st Cir. 1985)).

    In the instant case, the parties cross-moved for

    summary judgment, yet both agreed that there was no dispute over

    the basic facts of the case.2 Nor did either party give any

    indication that it intended to present additional evidence or

    witnesses, or request a jury trial. The only dispute in the case

    stems from the inferences that the parties claim must be drawn

    from those basic facts -- what legal significance should be

    ascribed to those facts. In effect, therefore, the parties

    submitted their case to the district court as a case stated. See ___

    Steamship Clerks, 48 F.3d at 603 (holding same in virtually _________________

    identical procedural circumstances). Similarly, the parties both

    state in their appeal briefs and during oral argument that they

    agree upon the basic material facts of the case. Accordingly, we

    are bound to apply the more deferential clear-error standard of

    review when examining the inferences drawn by the district court.

    Id. The district court's legal conclusions nevertheless engender __



    ____________________

    2 Of course, the mere fact that the parties moved simultaneously
    for summary judgment does not automatically change the district
    court's analysis or render the customary standard of appellate
    review obsolete. Unless the special circumstances described here
    are present, "the nisi prius court must consider each motion ____ _____
    separately, drawing inferences against each movant in turn, and
    the court of appeals must engage in de novo review." Steamship __ ____ _________
    Clerks, 48 F.3d at 603 n.8 (citing El D a, Inc. v. Hern ndez ______ _____________ _________
    Col n, 963 F.2d 488, 492 n.4 (1st Cir. 1992); Griggs-Ryan v. _____ ___________
    Smith, 904 F.2d 112, 115 (1st Cir. 1990)). _____

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    de novo review. Id. (citing McCarthy v. Azure, 22 F.3d 351, 354 __ ____ __ ________ _____

    (1st Cir. 1994)).



    B. The District Court's Decision B. The District Court's Decision _____________________________

    The Unions' primary contention on appeal is that the

    district court erred as a matter of law, and that its ruling is

    contrary to the Supreme Court's decision in Retail Clerks ______________

    Internat'l Ass'n Local 128 v. Lion Dry Goods, 369 U.S. 17 (1962). __________________________ ______________

    Specifically, the Unions argue that the Lion Dry Goods decision _______________

    compels the legal conclusion that the recall agreement in the

    instant case is an enforceable contract. We think that the

    Unions' argument ascribes too much to the Lion Dry Goods case and ______________

    too little to the district court's decision here.

    In addressing the issue of whether the recall agreement

    survived the Unions' decertification, the district court began by

    noting that "decertification ends the enforceability of any

    collective bargaining agreement," and observing that both parties

    concede that the Company is no longer obliged to negotiate or

    bargain with the Unions or to honor the terms and conditions of

    the previous collective bargaining agreements. Going on to

    discuss the issue of the recall agreement's continued viability,

    the court explained:

    [The recall agreement was] [d]rafted
    at a time when the Unions were still
    certified as majority bargaining
    representatives, [and] it requires that
    the Unions receive a copy of any recall
    notice sent to unreinstated strikers.
    The recall contract establishes rights
    for this category of represented

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    employees and affects their seniority.
    Indeed, it specifies that its terms are
    to prevail if there is any conflict with
    "the other provisions of the labor
    agreement" . . . . Thus, the recall __________________
    agreement is tied directly to the _________________________________________
    collective bargaining agreement: it __________________________________
    supersedes or amends any conflicting
    portions of the collective bargaining
    agreement; it affects seniority rights
    under the collective bargaining
    agreement; and its notice requirement
    contemplates ongoing union involvement.
    To say that this contract survives, then,
    would affect any negotiations with a new
    union that might seek to represent a
    majority of International Paper employees
    and in the meantime would perpetuate a
    limited portion of the elements
    ordinarily covered by a collective
    bargaining agreement . . . . The
    conclusion is therefore unavoidable that
    this recall and seniority contract does
    not survive decertification.

    I do not need to decide whether a ______________________________________
    company and a union can ever make an _________________________________________
    agreement that will be enforceable after _________________________________________
    a decertification. Here, there is no _________________________________________
    indication in the recall agreement that _________________________________________
    the parties intended it to survive _________________________________________
    decertification . . . . I conclude that _______________
    on the undisputed record the recall
    agreement became unenforceable upon
    decertification of the Unions.

    (Emphasis added)(footnotes omitted). In a footnote to this

    discussion, the district court noted that Lion Dry Goods ________________

    "suggests that contracts with minority unions may be enforceable,

    but the only matter actually decided there was that jurisdiction

    existed under 301 [of the LMRA]."

    We agree with the district court that Lion Dry Goods is ______________

    not dispositive of the issue in the instant case. Our reading of

    that case indicates that the Supreme Court was only addressing


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    the narrow issue of whether a strike settlement agreement between

    a minority union and an employer constitutes a "contract" as that

    term is employed in 301(a) of the LMRA, 29 U.S.C. 185(a).

    Lion Dry Goods, 369 U.S. at 27. Reasoning that the language, _______________

    purpose, and legislative history of the statute do not support

    the exclusion of such agreements from the purview of 301(a),

    id. at 26-28, the Court held that claims for alleged violations __

    of such agreements are "cognizable" under 301(a). Id. at 29- __

    30.3

    The parties in the instant case disagree over the scope

    of the Court's holding in Lion Dry Goods; the Company contends ______________

    that it is merely a grant of jurisdiction, while the Unions

    contend that it stands for the proposition that contracts between

    unions and employers remain enforceable even after the union has

    lost its majority representative status.

    We need not resolve this dispute, however. Even

    assuming arguendo that Lion Dry Goods holds, as the Unions claim, ________ ______________

    that contracts between unions and employers are enforceable after

    decertification, it cannot by any stretch be said to require that

    all such contracts must be enforced regardless of the intentions ____ ____________________________

    of the parties to the contract. Indeed, the district court did ______________________________

    not hold that recall agreements were as a general matter

    unenforceable after decertification. It merely analyzed the
    ____________________

    3 In so holding, the Court rejected arguments that the language
    of 301 contemplated only those contracts between employers and
    unions representing a majority of employees, explaining that the
    language and history of the statute did not support such a narrow
    construction. Id. at 28-29. __

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    agreement before it, and inferred from the undisputed facts that

    the agreement had not been intended to survive decertification. ________

    The Lion Dry Goods case, regardless of the scope of its holding, ______________

    is therefore inapposite, and the Unions' reliance on it

    misplaced.4

    Having disposed of this argument, we are left only with

    the Unions' contentions that the district court drew

    impermissible inferences in concluding, based on the undisputed

    factual record before it, that the parties did not intend the

    recall agreement to survive decertification. As we explained

    supra, however, we review these inferences only for clear error. _____

    After carefully examining the record, we can discern no such

    clear error on the part of the district court.

    The Unions challenge the district court's finding that

    the recall agreement contemplated an "ongoing relationship"

    between the parties and therefore could not have been intended to

    ____________________

    4 Contrary to the Unions' arguments, the district court's
    decision did not hinge on the fact that the Unions no longer had
    majority representative status. Rather, the court explained that
    because it found that the recall agreement, by its very terms,
    was "tied directly" to the unenforceable collective bargaining
    agreement, it had not been intended to survive the Unions'
    decertification. In other words, the court's decision rested not
    on the status of the Unions, but upon indicia of the parties'
    intentions in negotiating the agreement.

    We also reject the Unions' arguments that the district court's
    concern that the recall agreement would affect a successor
    union's ability to represent Company employees is "ill-founded"
    in light of the Lion Dry Goods case. The parties in Lion Dry ______________ _________
    Goods explicitly agreed that their contract would have effect _____ _________________
    even after the Union lost its majority representative status, 369
    U.S. at 22-23, a crucial fact markedly absent in the instant
    case.

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    remain in effect after the Unions' decertification. The Unions

    concede that the provisions cited by the district court are

    characterized accurately; the Unions urge, however, that "it

    could just as equally be said" that the agreement was intended to

    survive decertification. The Unions offer no facts or evidence

    in support of this argument, nor do they claim that this actually

    was the parties' intent. They also do not indicate how the

    district court's inference was unreasonable or erroneous; they

    merely claim that the opposite conclusion could have been made in _____

    interpreting the agreement. We think that the district court's

    inferences based on the undisputed record were well-supported and

    reasonable. We certainly cannot say that they rise to the level

    of clear error, so we must reject the Unions' argument on this

    score.

    Similarly, we are not persuaded by the Unions' argument

    that the district court erred in concluding that the absence of

    an expiration date in the agreement, among other indicia,

    supported the inference that it was not intended to survive

    decertification. We agree that the absence of an expiration date

    could be interpreted to mean that the parties intended the _____

    agreement to remain in effect until all employees' recall rights

    were exhausted, regardless of the Unions' representative status.

    We do not see, however, nor do the Unions point to, any reason

    that the district court's conclusion to the contrary was

    unreasonable. The decertification petition was pending

    throughout the parties' negotiations, and neither party could


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    have accurately predicted when it would take place. Certainly,

    if the Unions had intended for the recall agreement to survive

    their possible decertification, they could have bargained for

    such a provision. We think that the absence of such a provision

    or expiration date, under these circumstances, just as reasonably

    supports the inference that the parties had not intended the ___

    agreement to survive. We therefore find no error in the

    district court's conclusion to this effect.

    CONCLUSION CONCLUSION

    Finding no clear error, we affirm. ______


































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