Joseph Zino, Jr. v. Whirlpool Corp. ( 2019 )


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  •                        NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    File Name: 19a0079n.06
    Nos. 17-3851/3860
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    FILED
    JOSEPH ZINO, et al.,                                    )                     Feb 15, 2019
    )                 DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,                            )
    )
    ON APPEAL FROM THE
    v.                                       )
    UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    )
    COURT FOR THE NORTHERN
    WHIRLPOOL CORP., et al.,                                )
    DISTRICT OF OHIO
    )
    Defendants-Appellants.                           )
    )
    BEFORE: SILER, GRIFFIN, and STRANCH, Circuit Judges.
    GRIFFIN, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which SILER, J., concurred.
    STRANCH, J. (pp. 5–13), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
    GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge.
    In this class action by Hoover Company retirees, the district court ruled that numerous
    collective-bargaining agreements vest plaintiffs with unalterable lifetime healthcare benefits.
    Because we find that the CBAs’ general durational clauses (which say when the agreements end)
    control when healthcare benefits end, we reverse.
    I.
    Plaintiffs built vacuum cleaners for the Hoover Company at its plant in Canton, Ohio, and
    retired between 1980 and 2007. Over the years, a succession of CBAs governed employment
    terms and aspects of retirement, including healthcare benefits. As to those benefits, the agreements
    contained one of three promises:
    Nos. 17-3851/3860, Zino, et. al. v. Whirlpool Corp., et. al.
    ▪     The Company “assumes responsibility for paying premiums . . . for future
    retiree’s [sic] medical insurance in accordance with the terms and conditions of
    the [Welfare Benefit] Plan”;
    ▪     An eligible “employee who retires . . . shall have the opportunity to continue
    elements of the medical insurance in accordance with [specified] principles”;
    and
    ▪     “[A]vailable medical benefits” for eligible retirees “shall be” for “pre-65
    coverage only” with “no change in current coverage” except for increased cost
    sharing.
    A series of acquisitions left Whirlpool responsible for providing healthcare benefits to
    plaintiffs. After the company announced drastic reductions to those benefits, plaintiffs sued the
    company and its Group Benefits Plan under the Labor Management Relations Act and the
    Employee Retirement Income Security Act, seeking a ruling that the CBAs vest retiree healthcare
    benefits at unalterable levels.
    The parties litigated amidst an earthquake in our case law in which the Supreme Court
    upended our approach to interpreting the relationship between a CBA’s general durational clause
    and the vesting or non-vesting of healthcare benefits. See M & G Polymers USA, LLC v. Tackett,
    
    135 S. Ct. 926
    , 930 (2015) (overruling UAW v. Yard-Man, Inc., 
    716 F.2d 1476
    (6th Cir. 1983)).
    After both phases of a bifurcated bench trial, but before our case law ceased its transformation, the
    district court ruled that the CBAs vest retiree healthcare benefits at unalterable levels to all
    plaintiffs.
    II.
    Defendants now appeal the district court’s judgment in plaintiffs’ favor. We review the
    district court’s findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo. Little Caesar v.
    OPPCO, 
    219 F.3d 547
    , 550 (6th Cir. 2000).
    To succeed below, plaintiffs needed to prove that defendants violated a union contract that
    vests lifetime healthcare benefits. See 29 U.S.C. § 185 (providing a cause of action for violations
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    Nos. 17-3851/3860, Zino, et. al. v. Whirlpool Corp., et. al.
    of a contract between an employer and a union), §§ 1002, 1132 (providing a cause of action to
    enforce rights under the terms of an employee welfare-benefit plan). Thus we must determine
    whether the CBAs in this case vest plaintiffs with such benefits. We look first to what each
    contract says; if its plain language lacks ambiguity, we stop there. See Fletcher v. Honeywell Int’l,
    Inc., 
    892 F.3d 217
    , 228 (6th Cir. 2018).
    We’ve previously recounted the many twists and turns our case law has taken in the past
    few years, see Cooper v. Honeywell Int’l, Inc., 
    884 F.3d 612
    , 616–18 (6th Cir. 2018), but we need
    not re-map the journey because we recently distilled a rule that dictates the outcome of this case.
    In Fletcher, we held that “a CBA’s general durational clause applies to healthcare benefits unless
    [the CBA] contains clear, affirmative language indicating the 
    contrary.” 892 F.3d at 223
    .
    Here, none of the CBAs contain such language; they state that the company will pay
    insurance premiums “in accordance with the terms and conditions of the [Welfare Benefit] Plan,”
    that retirees “shall have the opportunity to continue” healthcare coverage, or that coverage for
    retirees “shall be” for “pre-65 coverage only.” None of these statements says clearly and
    affirmatively that the relevant general durational clause doesn’t control the termination of
    healthcare benefits—whether by reference to the general durational clause itself or by other
    language stating explicitly that healthcare benefits continue past the relevant agreement’s
    expiration. And nowhere else in any of the CBAs does such language appear. This means the
    general durational clauses control the termination of Whirlpool’s obligation to provide healthcare
    benefits to plaintiffs, which means the obligation ended when the last CBA expired.
    At argument, counsel for plaintiffs contended that Fletcher doesn’t control because no case
    to date has required a CBA to contain clear vesting language in order to vest benefits. But vesting
    language differs from language disconnecting specific benefits from a general durational clause,
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    Nos. 17-3851/3860, Zino, et. al. v. Whirlpool Corp., et. al.
    and Fletcher requires the latter, not the former. Put differently, Fletcher outlines a threshold
    requirement: either a CBA says clearly and affirmatively—that is, unambiguously—that its
    general durational clause doesn’t control the termination of healthcare benefits, or the clause
    controls.
    And this threshold requirement is just that: a threshold. If a CBA does unambiguously
    disconnect certain benefits from the agreement’s general durational clause, the agreement might
    well vest those benefits—even absent clear vesting language. Or ambiguity as to vesting might
    exist. To make the call, a court would need to examine any “clues” that “spring from the CBA.”
    See 
    Cooper, 884 F.3d at 620
    . Although plaintiffs point to a number of clues they say show that
    the parties intended to vest healthcare benefits, those clues carry no clout here because no CBA
    unambiguously disconnects healthcare benefits from the governing general durational clauses.
    And that means the CBAs unambiguously do not vest lifetime healthcare benefits, which ends our
    inquiry. 
    Fletcher, 892 F.3d at 224
    .
    III.
    For these reasons, we reverse the district court’s ruling that the CBAs vest retiree healthcare
    benefits at unalterable levels to all plaintiffs, vacate the district court’s judgment, and remand for
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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    Nos. 17-3851/3860, Zino, et. al. v. Whirlpool Corp., et. al.
    JANE B. STRANCH, Circuit Judge, dissenting. I respectfully dissent from our recent
    line of cases denying lifetime healthcare benefits that employers clearly intended—and
    promised—to provide. I acknowledge that the Supreme Court corrected our Yard-Man case and
    its progeny, telling us to interpret collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) “according to ordinary
    principles of contract law.” M&G Polymers USA, LLC v. Tackett (Tackett II), 
    135 S. Ct. 926
    , 933
    (2015). But in doing so, the Court instructed that “[i]n this endeavor, as with any other contract,
    the parties’ intentions control.” 
    Id. (quoting Stolt–Nielsen
    S.A. v. AnimalFeeds Int’l Corp., 
    559 U.S. 662
    , 682 (2010)).
    The goal of contract interpretation is to give effect to the parties’ intentions. We are failing
    that test. The district court decision that we reversed in Cole v. Meritor, Inc., 
    855 F.3d 695
    (6th
    Cir. 2017), found that the employer repeatedly sent letters to employees that either “expressly
    use[d] the word ‘lifetime’” or “use[d] the words ‘life,’ ‘will continue’ and ‘for life.’” Cole v.
    ArvinMeritor, Inc., 
    515 F. Supp. 2d 791
    , 806 (E.D. Mich. 2006). Decades of benefits booklets and
    plan summaries issued under numerous CBAs “promise[d] that company-paid retiree health
    benefits [were] ‘for life.’” 
    Id. The district
    court decision that we reversed in Fletcher v. Honeywell
    International, Inc., 
    892 F.3d 217
    (6th Cir. 2018), found that during collective bargaining a union
    negotiator “specifically stated that the Greenville retirees already had lifetime healthcare benefits,”
    and “none of the [company] negotiators voiced any objection to [his] statement.” 
    238 F. Supp. 3d 992
    , 1001 (S.D. Ohio 2017). The district court decision that we reversed in Gallo v. Moen, Inc.,
    
    813 F.3d 265
    (6th Cir. 2016), found that “Defendant Moen’s representative told the UAW that
    future retirees would only need to pay the co-premium set in the agreement and they would be
    covered for life.” 
    27 F. Supp. 3d 832
    , 852 (N.D. Ohio 2014). And in IUE-CWA v. GE, company
    “managers and human resources representatives advised union-represented employees to retire
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    Nos. 17-3851/3860, Zino, et. al. v. Whirlpool Corp., et. al.
    before a new CBA took effect” to ensure their benefits would remain guaranteed for life. 745 F.
    App’x 583, 600 (6th Cir. 2018) (Stranch, J., concurring). Hundreds did so, suffering a lifetime of
    reduced pensions to maintain the promised healthcare coverage—which was then taken away from
    them. Id.; see also 
    Gallo, 813 F.3d at 281
    (Stranch, J., dissenting) (“One employee, for example,
    qualified for and took early retirement at age 58 and testified to suffering a 23% reduction in his
    lifetime monthly pension benefit.”). In each case, we held that the CBAs were not ambiguous and
    so declined to look at the painfully clear evidence of what the parties intended—and what the
    employers promised.
    Tackett II instructed us to remove our thumb from the scale, not move it to the other 
    side. 135 S. Ct. at 935
    . Citing hornbook law, Justice Ginsburg noted that, “[u]nder the ‘cardinal
    principle’ of contract interpretation, ‘the intention of the parties, to be gathered from the whole
    instrument, must prevail’”; she explained that in determining “what the contracting parties
    intended, a court must examine the entire agreement in light of relevant industry-specific ‘customs,
    practices, usages, and terminology.’” 
    Id. at 937–38
    (Ginsburg, J., concurring) (quoting 11 Richard
    A. Lord, Williston on Contracts §§ 30:2, 30:4 (4th ed. 2012) (Williston)). But our cases have not
    adequately examined the whole of the contractual language, much less how the parties applied that
    language. “Gallo v. Moen has installed duration clauses as the new absolute determiner of intent,
    regardless of the actual intent of the parties.” 
    Cole, 855 F.3d at 702
    (White, J., concurring) (citation
    omitted). We were instructed to focus on the records before us and to disregard our personal
    suppositions as “too speculative and too far removed from the context of any particular contract to
    be useful in discerning the parties’ intention.” Tackett 
    II, 135 S. Ct. at 935
    . We have not heeded
    this charge. Instead, we have engaged in suppositions that favor employers, such as assuming
    “that employers provided decades of benefits to retirees based on a heady mixture of altruism and
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    Nos. 17-3851/3860, Zino, et. al. v. Whirlpool Corp., et. al.
    optimism,” IUE-CWA v. GE, 745 F. App’x at 599 (Stranch, J., concurring); see also 
    Gallo, 813 F.3d at 281
    (Stranch, J., dissenting), while ignoring their on-the-record acknowledgements of
    contractual obligations.
    I recognize that underlying all these cases is the drastic and unanticipated increase in the
    cost of healthcare benefits. See IUE-CWA v. GE, 745 F. App’x at 593 (Stranch, J., concurring).
    Realistically, lifetime healthcare benefits are a dead letter for employees of today and tomorrow.
    But when yesterday’s employees have given consideration in return for a contractual promise of
    future benefits, unanticipated cost in making good on that promise is not a legal justification for
    denying the promise’s existence. Nor is it an answer to say that parties now know what they must
    do in the future to vest benefits. The working men and women in these cases gave up pay and
    other benefits decades ago in a bargain for healthcare benefits in their old age. They are now
    retirees who need that healthcare, and they are not going to get it. For these retirees, there is no
    such thing as an opportunity to return to the negotiating table. I can only conclude that we have
    failed to heed “the principles of ERISA that command us to honor the fundamental duties of the
    law of trusts.” 
    Id. at 601.
    If our interpretive rules and presumptions are not helping us discern what the parties
    intended, those rules and presumptions are broken. I do not think, however, that an interpretive
    solution is impossible under the parameters established by the Supreme Court. This case provides
    an example of how, operating within the proper parameters, one can find ambiguity in a CBA,
    specifically, the 2003 CBA at issue here.
    AMBIGUITY
    In Gallo, we said that Tackett II did not create a “clear-statement 
    rule.” 813 F.3d at 274
    .
    Our later cases have unnecessarily moved toward such a requirement. This trend in our caselaw
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    Nos. 17-3851/3860, Zino, et. al. v. Whirlpool Corp., et. al.
    resulted in the conclusion that where a CBA contains a general durational clause, it applies to
    healthcare benefits absent “clear, affirmative language” that indicates otherwise. 
    Fletcher, 892 F.3d at 223
    . This case follows suit. But virtually all CBAs have a general durational clause. CBAs
    expire because collective bargaining is, by its nature, periodic. See 29 U.S.C. § 158(d) (requiring
    collective bargaining “at reasonable times”). On remand after Tackett II, we determined that the
    Supreme Court “declined to adopt an ‘explicit language’ requirement in favor of companies” and
    instead looked to ordinary contract principles. Tackett v. M&G Polymers USA, LLC (Tackett III),
    
    811 F.3d 204
    , 209 (6th Cir. 2016). And “ordinary contract principles, shorn of presumptions”
    allow for the possibility of ambiguity. Tackett 
    II, 135 S. Ct. at 937
    (Ginsburg, J., concurring).
    Those principles instruct that “when the contract is ambiguous, a court may consider extrinsic
    evidence to determine the intentions of the parties.” 
    Id. at 938
    (citing 11 Williston § 30:7); see
    also CNH Indus. N.V. v. Reese, 
    138 S. Ct. 761
    , 765 (2018) (per curiam).
    Governing Caselaw
    Supreme Court precedent does not require us to disclaim ambiguity. Nor does our own
    precedent reject ambiguity. See Tackett 
    III, 811 F.3d at 208
    –09 (“When the contract is ambiguous,
    a court may consider extrinsic evidence to determine the intentions of the parties.” (alterations
    omitted) (quoting Tackett 
    II, 135 S. Ct. at 937
    –38 (Ginsburg, J., concurring))). Our published
    cases decided in the wake of Tackett looked for ambiguity—albeit unsuccessfully. See 
    Gallo, 813 F.3d at 273
    –74 (“Absent ambiguity from this threshold inquiry, no basis for going beyond the
    contract’s four corners exists.”); see also 
    Cole, 855 F.3d at 700
    .
    We came close to disclaiming the possibility of ambiguity in Fletcher, which purported to
    “distill a clear rule—a CBA’s general durational clause applies to healthcare benefits unless it
    contains clear, affirmative language indicating the 
    contrary.” 892 F.3d at 223
    . But Fletcher did
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    Nos. 17-3851/3860, Zino, et. al. v. Whirlpool Corp., et. al.
    not actually apply this rule. Fletcher framed its inquiry as a search for ambiguity: “Plaintiffs can
    succeed on their claims only if they prove one of two things: (1) the CBAs unambiguously provide
    retirees with lifetime healthcare benefits, or (2) the CBAs are ambiguous, and the extrinsic
    evidence demonstrates that the parties intended to vest retiree healthcare benefits.” 
    Id. at 221–22.
    Fletcher also stated that “the absence of specific vesting language does not automatically signify
    intent to terminate those benefits when the agreement expires,” 
    id. at 225,
    and then canvassed the
    CBAs for clues that could support a finding of ambiguity, 
    id. at 224–27.
    The only way to reconcile
    Fletcher’s broad statement with its own interpretive approach, the caselaw that came before it, and
    the Supreme Court’s requirements for contractual interpretation is to conclude that Fletcher did
    not reject out of hand the possibility of ambiguity.
    The CBA Context
    The Supreme Court’s instruction in Tackett II included a caveat—we are to “interpret
    collective-bargaining agreements, including those establishing ERISA plans, according to
    ordinary principles of contract law, at least when those principles are not inconsistent with federal
    labor 
    policy.” 135 S. Ct. at 933
    (citing Textile Workers Union of Am. v. Lincoln Mills of Ala., 
    353 U.S. 448
    , 456–57 (1957)). CBAs are creatures of federal labor policy, long “regarded as the
    effective instrument of stabilizing labor relations and preventing, through collective bargaining,
    strikes and industrial strife.” H.J. Heinz Co. v. NLRB, 
    311 U.S. 514
    , 524 (1941). The language in
    CBAs governs not just the parties who sat at the negotiating table but also the hundreds or
    thousands of employees who approve the negotiated contracts. Ordinary principles of contract
    law are more than capable of accounting for this unusual context. “To determine what the
    contracting parties intended, a court must examine the entire agreement in light of relevant
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    Nos. 17-3851/3860, Zino, et. al. v. Whirlpool Corp., et. al.
    industry-specific ‘customs, practices, usages, and terminology.’” Tackett 
    II, 135 S. Ct. at 937
    –38
    (Ginsburg, J., concurring) (quoting 11 Williston § 30:4); see also 
    Reese, 138 S. Ct. at 765
    .
    Application to this CBA
    The question that should be asked—without applying any presumptions tilting the scales
    in either direction—is whether the CBA is “reasonably susceptible to at least two reasonable but
    conflicting meanings” and therefore ambiguous. 
    Reese, 138 S. Ct. at 765
    . Here, I look specifically
    to the 2003 CBA.
    The 2003 CBA does not contain any clear statements about provision of benefits after the
    agreement expires. It does not provide for “lifetime” or “vested” healthcare benefits. Nor does it
    state that retirees’ medical coverage will continue only “at their own expense,” as did the 1977
    CBA, or that benefits are terminable after the CBA expires.
    In fact, the 2003 CBA does not clearly state much at all about retiree healthcare. The key
    benefits provisions are found in a table written in shorthand:
    Neither the 2003 CBA nor any of its predecessor agreements explains what critical terms like
    “Regular Retirement” or “Grandfathered” mean. Without even the minimal context that would be
    provided by complete sentences, no court can know what the parties intended those words to mean.
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    Nos. 17-3851/3860, Zino, et. al. v. Whirlpool Corp., et. al.
    A cryptic riddle in this table implies that the 2003 CBA might vest benefits for life. All
    employees in Group 3 were under the age of 55 in early June 2005.1 When the 2003 CBA expired
    at the end of June 2008, the members of Group 3 were at most 59 years old—and yet the CBA
    takes care to note that they are entitled to “Pre-65 coverage only.” We have previously explained
    that language providing benefits “until age 65” does not vest benefits until that age but merely
    “provide[s] for the expiration of those benefits even before the CBA itself expires.” Cooper v.
    Honeywell Int’l, Inc., 
    884 F.3d 612
    , 619 (6th Cir. 2018). An “until age 65” provision, we held,
    operates to terminate benefits for “a hypothetical 64-year-old” who is not entitled to coverage even
    for the full term of the CBA. 
    Id. Here, no
    64-year-old could be a member of Group 3. Every
    member of Group 3 was, by definition, at least six years short of turning 65 when the CBA
    expired—so if the parties intended benefits to expire with the CBA, the “Pre-65” limitation is
    meaningless. That reading contravenes the classic principle of ordinary contractual interpretation
    that “a contract ‘should be read to give effect to all its provisions and to render them consistent
    with each other.’” 
    Gallo, 813 F.3d at 270
    (quoting Mastrobuono v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc.,
    
    514 U.S. 52
    , 63 (1995)).
    In addition, a piece of key evidence, a letter incorporated into the 2003 CBA, states that
    retirees in Group 3 “shall have until 6/29/08”—the day the CBA expires—to “waiv[e] retiree
    medical insurance in exchange for a $10,000 lump sum payment.” If the CBA provided for
    benefits only during its term, then on the day the contract expired, the benefits were effectively
    worthless. But the company thought that each employee’s benefits were worth $10,000 even on
    1
    Any employee with 10 or more years of pension credit who is over the age of 55 by that
    date must be in either Group 1 or 2; employees in Group 3 have well over 10 years of pension
    credit, so the only way they could be ineligible for membership in Group 1 or 2 is if they do not
    meet the age requirements.
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    the very last day the contract was in place. When the Fourth Circuit interpreted a CBA that
    required the employer “to make a $1.585 million contribution to [a benefits trust] on the very last
    day of the 2005 CBA’s term,” the court determined that it would “require[] an overactive
    imagination” to contend that the trust expired with the CBA. Quesenberry v. Volvo Trucks N. Am.
    Retiree Healthcare Benefit Plan, 
    651 F.3d 437
    , 441 (4th Cir. 2011). The employer here committed
    to making a substantial payment to buy out an employee’s retiree medical insurance up until the
    very day that the CBA expired. It would take an expansive imagination to explain that payment
    as anything except the employer’s acknowledgment that health insurance would continue to be a
    cost to it—and a benefit to its employees—after the CBA expired.
    When read in combination, these provisions render the 2003 CBA reasonably susceptible
    to the interpretation that it vested benefits for life.
    INTENT
    Because I think the 2003 CBA is ambiguous, I would look to the abundant record evidence
    to determine the intent of the parties. Viewing the evidence that the district court collected over
    the course of its five-day bench trial and considering the deferential standard of review applicable
    to this fact-based inquiry, see Byrne v. United States, 
    857 F.3d 319
    , 326 (6th Cir. 2017), this is an
    easy case.
    Every union witness told the same story: The company’s position “was always, what a
    person went out with is what they would have for life.” “Their position was that that is a lifetime
    benefit, and you’d better be happy with what you have when you go out, because that’s what you
    will have the day you pass away. It will never change.” The company’s lead negotiator, who
    testified so credibly that the district court said that “there could hardly have been a more
    trustworthy witness,” appears to have agreed. He acknowledged that during negotiations, he stood
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    in front of a group of employees and said, “Everybody in this room, we made a promise that when
    you retire, you’re going to have retiree medical insurance.”
    That same company negotiator explained that after the terms of the 2003 CBA were
    decided, he and a union representative would meet with groups of 100 employees at a time, and
    the union representative “would pronounce that these—these benefits for the retiree go on for the
    rest of your life.” The company negotiator would never contradict that promise; he would only
    clarify that “welfare benefits do not enjoy the same protection that pension benefits do. For
    instance, in case of bankruptcy, there’s no telling that you would have those benefits.” He testified
    under oath that he “believe[d]” that “the intent of [himself] and the Union” was to give retirees
    “benefits for life.” He was not alone in that belief; internal company documents from 2002
    described the retirees’ medical plans as “Lifetime.” That evidence more than suffices to show that
    the parties intended the 2003 CBA to vest benefits for life.
    CONCLUSION
    This case is not an aberration. Over and over again, companies promised their retirees
    lifetime healthcare benefits. But now, over and over again, we find that the contracts they
    negotiated unambiguously state the opposite. We thereby avoid the mountains of evidence that
    the parties intended exactly what they promised. I think that we have moved beyond the
    parameters articulated by the Supreme Court when we presume the necessity of a clear statement
    rule. And I find that requirement sadly ironic. In these cases, the contractual language was
    negotiated in a legal environment in which everyone understood it to constitute an ongoing
    promise, the employer publicly and repeatedly reiterated that promise in word (both spoken and
    written) and in deed, and working men and women relied on that promise. Because we changed
    the rules of the game after the game was over, I respectfully dissent.
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