Android Industries Belvidere LLC v. UAW Local 1268
Filing
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ORDER: Plaintiff's application and motion to vacate arbitration award 1 is denied. Defendant's motion to enforce arbitration award 11 is granted. The arbitration award is enforced and this case is closed. [See STATEMENT] Signed by the Honorable Frederick J. Kapala on 12/20/2018. Mailed notice (jp, )
Case: 3:18-cv-50055 Document #: 15 Filed: 12/20/18 Page 1 of 8 PageID #:199
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
Android Industries, Inc.,
Plaintiff,
v.
UAW Local 1268,
Defendant.
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Case No: 18 C 50055
Judge Frederick J. Kapala
ORDER
Plaintiff’s application and motion to vacate arbitration award [1] is denied. Defendant’s motion to
enforce arbitration award [11] is granted. The arbitration award is enforced and this case is closed.
STATEMENT
Plaintiff, Android Industries, Inc. (“Android”) has filed an application and motion pursuant
to Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (“LMRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 185, seeking to
vacate the November 15, 2017 Arbitration Award issued by an arbitrator selected pursuant to the
parties’ collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”). In response, defendant, UAW Local 1268
(“Union”), has moved to enforce the arbitration award. For the reasons that follow, Android’s
application and motion is denied and the Union’s motion is granted.
I. FACTS
The material facts are not in dispute. Android and the Union were parties to a CBA
governing the terms and conditions of the employment of bargaining unit employees at Android’s
Bel-II suspension plant in Belvidere, Illinois. On December 23, 2016, due to a change in vehicle
production lines at Chrysler’s Belvidere Assembly Plant, Android closed its Bel-II suspension plant
and terminated all bargaining unit employees. Prior to the plant closing, the parties entered into a
Closing Agreement which provided that “[e]mployees actively at work who are released as a direct
result of the plant closing or on lay off or medical leave status as of the date of the plant closing will
be eligible for vacation pay pursuant to the Collective Bargaining Agreement.”
On January 3, 2017, the Union filed a grievance asserting that Android violated Article 15,
Section 5 of the CBA, which deals with unused vacation, by failing to pay bargaining unit employees
their unused 2017 vacation pay which they had earned and accrued based on hours worked in 2016.
Android denied the grievance taking the position that the bargaining unit employees were not entitled
to 2017 vacation pay which had been earned and accrued in 2016 because they were no longer
actively employed by Android during the calendar year 2017.
An arbitration hearing was held on August 15, 2017, before arbitrator Jeanne M. Vonhoff.
On November 15, 2017, the Arbitrator issued a written Opinion and Award sustaining the Union’s
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grievance. The Arbitrator began by delineating the relevant provisions of the CBA. Article 15,
Section 1 of the CBA is styled “vacation” and provides:
Vacation is a benefit calculated and earned yearly based on the amount of hours a
Team Member worked in the prior calendar year. . . . In the year of hire, vacation
will be pro-rated as follows, and able to be used upon achieving seniority:
When (Hired)
Vacation Days
January - March
5 -days
April - June
4 - days
July - September
2 - days
October - December 0 - days
Based on the employee’s seniority during the vacation year, active full-time Team
Members shall be eligible for:
When
Vacation Days
Year of 1st Anniversary
10 Days (80 hrs.)
Year of 2nd Anniversary
15 Days (120 hrs.)
Year of 10th Anniversary
17 Days (136 hrs.)
Year of 20th Anniversary
20 Days (160 hrs.)
Article 15, Section 2, is styled “accruing vacation days” and provides:
All eligible team members accrue vacation beginning January 1 and ending
December 31 (the calendar year). . . .
Vacation hours are accrued per the following formula:
Vacation = (Total Number of Straight Time Hours Worked/1600) x Vacation
Hours Allotment = Vacation available in new calendar year. Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary, all seniority Team Members will be granted five (5)
vacation days per year. Earned vacation hours not equal to a full day or four (4) hour
increment of vacation time will be paid for actual earned vacation time but will be
scheduled as if they were rounded up to the nearest increment.
Article 15, Section 5, is styled “unused vacation” and provides:
Earned but unused vacation will be paid to team members at the end of the year. All
vacation values will be calculated at the team member’s base rate of pay at the time
of use or payout. Upon separation of employment, Android will pay unused and
accrued vacation in the team member’s final paycheck.
Next, the arbitrator stated the positions of the parties as follows:
[T]he Union relies primarily upon the last sentence of Article 15, Section 5
which states,
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“Upon separation of employment, Android will pay unused and
accrued vacation in the team member’s final paycheck.”
According to the Union, the vacation hours that the employees accrued in 2016
constitute “unused and accrued vacation” and therefore, under the plain language of
Article 15, Section 5, vacation pay for these hours should have been included in the
Grievants’ final paychecks.
The Employer relies primarily upon language in Section 1 of Article 15 which
states,
“Vacation is a benefit calculated and earned yearly based on the
amount of hours a Team Member worked in the prior calendar year…
Based on the employee’s seniority during the vacation year, active
full-time Team Members shall be eligible for:”
This language is followed by a chart which sets forth numbers of vacation days,
based upon the employee’s tenure with the Company. Employees with one year of
seniority receive 10 days of vacation under this chart, and this amount rises to 15
days of vacation after two years, 17 days after 10 years, and 20 days after twenty
years.
The Employer argues that under this language, active employment in 2017 is
an eligibility requirement for an employee to collect any vacation benefit based upon
hours worked in 2016. Because there were no active full-time Team Members in
2017, the Company argues that no one was eligible for vacation, based on the 2016
hours. As employees were terminated at the end of 2016, the Company paid them
for what it considers unused “2016 vacation,” based upon hours worked in 2015, and
argues that no further vacation benefits are due to employees, based upon the hours
they worked in 2016.
The arbitrator then reasoned in pertinent part as follows:
Section 1 is general in nature and does not specifically address the issue of
how vacation benefits are to be handled upon separation. In contrast, the language
of Section 5 specifically addresses the situation of how vacation benefits are to be
paid “upon separation from employment.” It requires that upon separation, “Android
will pay unused and accrued vacation.” The question in this case is whether the
Parties intended the situation at issue here–where the employees have been separated
from employment, through the Employer’s action, before they can use certain
vacation benefits–to require payment of those benefits as “unused and accrued
vacation” specified in Section 5.
....
Article 15, Section 5 of the collective bargaining agreement here specifically
uses the term “unused and accrued vacation” to describe a monetary sum which is
due to employees in their final paycheck. The term does not exist in a vacuum, but
rather is contained within an Article of the Agreement which defines how vacation
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benefits are earned or accrued. The Arbitrator concludes that the Parties intended the
term “accrued vacation” under Section 5 to refer back to the term “accruing vacation
days” in Section 2, which sets out the basic formula for the accrual. Once an
employee earns or accumulates vacation days by working over a period of time, the
vacation days are referred to as “accrued,” under Section 2. Once accrued, benefits
are generally due to an employee under the normal meaning of the word “accrued:”
the definition of “accrue” is “to accumulate or have due after a period of time,”
according to the online version of the Merriam Webster Dictionary. The example
provided in the Dictionary to explain this meaning of “accrue” is “accrue vacation
time.” Thus, the normal meaning of the word “accrued” and a straightforward
reading of the language of Sections 2 and 5 of this Agreement, support the position
that the “unused and accrued” vacation benefits due upon separation under Section
5 includes payment for the “unused” vacation days which have been “earned” or
“accrued” under Section 2. There is no limitation in the language of Section 5 with
regard to the “unused and accrued” vacation time, thus suggesting that the Parties
intended to include all the unused vacation time accrued up until the point of
“separation.”
The Company argues, however, that other language in the Agreement
supports its position that the “computation formula” in Section 2 is not absolute, but
is subject to other eligibility requirements set forth in Section 1. Thus, even though
Section 2’s computation formula would appear to require 104 hours of vacation pay
for an employee with one year’s seniority, Section 1 makes clear that only 80 hours
are due. Union Local President Welitschinsky readily acknowledged that this reflects
the intent of the Parties, as demonstrated in the chart in Section 1, which sets out 2
weeks’ vacation for employees with one year of seniority. This is the remedy the
Union seeks in the grievance. The Company also points out that employees receive
some vacation in their first year of employment, and that all employees receive a
minimum of one week of vacation, even though these benefits are not strictly based
on the Section 2 computations.
These are specific exceptions, agreed to by the Parties, where employees are
granted either more or less favorable vacation benefits than would otherwise be
granted under strict application of the formula for accruing vacation benefits set forth
in Section 2. However, these exceptions do not establish that there is no connection
between the language of Section 5, which requires the payment of “unused and
accrued” vacation benefits, and Section 2, which sets forth the general method for
“accruing” such benefits. The language of Section 5 refers simply to “unused and
accrued vacation,” and the plain language of this broad formulation suggests an intent
to include the hours “accrued” under Section 2, subject to any limitations or
enhancements on those amounts set forth in other sections of the Agreement.
The Company argues, however, that employees generally are not permitted,
under this collective bargaining agreement, to collect vacation benefits in the year
that they are accrued. It is true that normally an employee would not be able to take
the time off which was accrued in 2016 until 2017, under the new “pay it backward”
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terms of this Agreement, subject to the two exceptions discussed above for new hires.
As the Employer notes, the end-of-year payouts of unused vacation benefits under
Section 5 typically do not include benefits for vacation days accrued in that year.
However, up until now, the employee still retained the opportunity to receive the
benefit in the following year of his hours accrued in the prior year, by either taking
the vacation or the payout of vacation benefits at the end of that year. The question
before the Arbitrator is how the Parties intended to interpret the language of Section
5, in conjunction with other language in Article 15, in the situation where the
employee cannot take in 2017 the vacation time that he accrued in 2016, because he
is no longer employed at that point.
....
Under this Agreement, the language of Section 5 establishes what is to
happen with vacation benefits when employees are separated from employment:
unused and accrued benefits are to be paid to employees in their final paychecks.
Therefore, the Parties have agreed to explicit contract language which covers the
issue raised by the Grievants here. Contract language which is specific to the issue
raised by the grievance controls over more general contract language, and in this case
the specific language of Section 5 controls over the more general provisions of
Article 15. How Arbitration Works, Elkouri & Elkouri, 6th ed. p. 471.
There are no limitations on the terms “unused and accrued” in Section 5 or
upon the term “separation.” The evidence establishes that vacation is “accrued”
under Section 2, subject to a few limitations and enhancements contained in other
parts of the Agreement. The Parties used the broad term “unused and accrued” to
describe the vacation benefits due upon separation and therefore, the Grievants here
were due, in their final paychecks, the full amount of the unused vacation benefits
they had accrued during their employment, including those accrued in 2016. The fact
that they may also have received “unused and accrued” benefits based upon 2015 in
their final paychecks does not change this result, or constitute “double counting.” In
this case, the normal end-of-the-year vacation payout set forth in the first sentence
of Section 5, based upon 2015 hours, coincided with a payment triggered by the
requirement in the last sentence of Section 5 to pay all unused and accrued vacation
benefits upon separation, which includes 2016 accrued hours. This interpretation
does not constitute “double counting” of any vacation benefits; it simply includes
unused hours earned and accrued over two years, due to the unusual situation in
which all employees were separated at the end of 2016. And, as the Union points
out, all of these benefits were “costed out” in the current labor Agreement, during
bargaining. For all the reasons set forth above, the evidence establishes that the
Employer violated Article 15 of the Agreement when it failed to pay Grievants all of
their unused and accrued vacation benefits, including vacation days accrued during
2016.
The arbitrator concluded:
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The grievance is sustained. The Company violated Article 15, Section 5 when, upon
separating Grievants from employment in December, 2016, the Company failed to
pay unused vacation benefits accrued in 2016. The Company shall make the
Grievants whole for all unused and accrued vacation benefits. The Arbitrator shall
retain jurisdiction solely over the remedy portion of this Award.
On February 13, 2018, Android filed the instant action seeking to vacate the award. The Union
responded with a motion to enforce the arbitration award.
II. ANALYSIS
A federal court’s review of an arbitral award rendered pursuant to a collective bargaining
agreement is “extremely limited.” U.S. Soccer Fed’n, Inc. v. U.S. Team Players Ass’n, 838 F.3d
826, 831 (7th Cir. 2016); Amax Coal Co. v. United Mine Workers of Am., Int’l Union, 92 F.3d 571,
575 (7th Cir. 1996). This is due to the strong “federal policy of settling labor disputes by
arbitration,” which “would be undermined if courts had the final say on the merits of awards.”
United Steelworkers of Am. v. Enter. Wheel & Car Corp., 363 U.S. 593, 596 (1960). Thus, an
award should be vacated where it fails to “draw[ ] its essence from the collective bargaining
agreement.” Id. at 597. The Seventh Circuit has elaborated on the hyper-deferential review of
arbitral awards as follows:
[S]o long as the award is based on the arbitrator’s interpretation–unsound though it
may be–of the contract, it draws its essence from the contract. . . . It is only when the
arbitrator must have based his award on some body of thought, or feeling, or policy,
or law that is outside the contract . . . that the award can be said not to “draw its
essence from the collective bargaining agreement.”
Ethyl Corp. v. United Steelworkers of Am., AFL–CIO–CLC, 768 F.2d 180, 184-85 (7th Cir. 1985
(citations omitted)). The Supreme Court further underscored the narrowness of this standard as
follows: “as long as the arbitrator is even arguably construing or applying the contract and acting
within the scope of his authority, that a court is convinced he committed serious error does not
suffice to overturn his decision.” United Paperworkers Int’l Union, AFL–CIO, et al. v. Misco, Inc.,
484 U.S. 29, 38 (1987). It is only where “there is no possible interpretive route to the arbitrator’s
award” that a court should vacate. Amax, 92 F.3d at 576; see also Hill v. Norfolk & W. Ry. Co., 814
F.2d 1192, 1194-95 (7th Cir. 1987) (“[T]he question for decision by a federal court asked to set aside
an arbitration award . . . is not whether the arbitrator or arbitrators erred in interpreting the contract;
it is not whether they clearly erred in interpreting the contract; it is not whether they grossly erred
in interpreting the contract; it is whether they interpreted the contract. If they did, their interpretation
is conclusive.” (citations omitted)). Hence, the Seventh Circuit has made clear that the party seeking
to set aside the arbitrator’s final award has a “heavy burden.” Dexter Axle Co. v. Int’l Ass’n of
Machinists & Aerospace Workers, Dist. 90, Lodge 1315, 418 F.3d 762, 767 (7th Cir. 2005). Given
this hyper-deferential legal standard and the record before the court, it cannot be said that the
arbitrator in this case was not “even arguably construing or applying the contract and acting within
the scope of his authority.” United Paperworkers, 484 U.S. at 38.
Android offers various arguments to support its position. It contends that the arbitrator
exceeded her authority by deleting from the CBA the vacation-eligibility requirements within Section
1, and changing the payout terms. In particular, it is Android’s contention that the arbitrator deleted
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the eligibility clause in Section 1 of the CBA–which limited any vacation to “active full-time Team
Members” during the vacation year–and determined that vacation pay was a form of deferred
compensation earned in the prior year, while ignoring case law that limits this deferred compensation
theory to agreements that do not have unsatisfied eligibility clauses.
A fair reading of the arbitrator’s order does not show that she deleted the eligibility clause
of Section 1 which provides that “[v]acation is a benefit calculated and earned yearly based on the
amount of hours a Team Member worked in the prior calendar year. . . . Based on the employee’s
seniority during the vacation year, active full-time Team Members shall be eligible for” varying
amounts of vacation days. It is clear that this language conditions eligibility for vacation benefits
upon being an “active full-time Team Member,” but it does not clearly condition eligibility on
having that status during the “vacation year.” Consequently, it was reasonable to conclude from the
language of the CBA that the parties intended that “the employee’s seniority during the vacation
year” was to be determinative of the amount of vacation the employee would receive and only
required the employee to be an “active full-time Team Member” at the time he or she takes the
vacation time off or is paid out for the vacation. Under that reasonable interpretation, in December
2016 all active full-time Team Members at the Bel-II suspension plant were being paid-out for
accrued and unused vacation “upon separation from employment,” a circumstance Section 5
specifically addresses. Thus, the arbitrator did not delete the Section 1 eligibility requirement.
Instead, the requirement was satisfied and the arbitrator then applied Section 5 which specifically
addresses payment for unused and accrued vacation in the team member’s final paycheck upon
separation of employment.
In any event, even if the court disagreed with the arbitrator’s interpretation of the applicable
provisions of the CBA, it would not be permitted to vacate her award. See United Paperworkers,
484 U.S. at 38 (“[A]s long as the arbitrator is even arguably construing or applying the contract and
acting within the scope of his authority, that a court is convinced he committed serious error does
not suffice to overturn his decision.”). Consequently, Android has failed to satisfy its heavy burden
of showing that the arbitrator’s award exceeded the powers granted to her by the parties under the
CBA by demonstrating that “there is no possible interpretive route to [her] award.” See Amax, 92
F.3d at 576.
Android’s argument that the arbitrator ignored the eligibility clause of Section 1 and
erroneously relied on Infant Socks, Inc., 51 Lab. Arb. 402 (1968), to support the theory that vacation
time is a form of deferred compensation is also unpersuasive. In response to Android’s position that
Section 2 merely provides a vacation calculation formula utilized at the beginning of a vacation year
when the employee becomes eligible for vacation–and does not provide for the actual accrual of
vacation time–the Arbitrator found that the use of the term “accrued” in Section 2 demonstrated
otherwise based on the normal dictionary meaning of that term and that:
Paying employees a monetary sum for unused vacation time every year and tying
vacation benefits to hours worked and to wage rates all demonstrate an intent by the
Parties to treat vacation benefits as deferred income or compensation, which they
may collect if the accrued vacation is not used as paid time off.
The CBA clearly provides that unused vacation may be paid out at the employee’s normal rate of pay
under certain circumstances. Therefore, the court agrees that under those circumstances vacation
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benefits are fairly characterized as deferred compensation. Android maintains that the existence of
vacation earned and paid in an employee’s first year–as set forth in the CBA–belies any
interpretation that vacation is deferred compensation. The court disagrees, vacation is fairly
characterized as deferred compensation if not taking it as time off from work later results in a
monetary payout and the arbitrator reasonably interpreted the CBA as providing different payout
times depending on the circumstances. In any event, any misinterpretation in this regard or mistaken
reliance on Infant Socks does not take away from the arbitrator’s analysis keying on the normal
meaning of the word “accrue” used in Section 2. Further, even if this part of the arbitrator’s analysis
were erroneous, it would not result in vacature of the award for failure to interpret the contract. See
Ethyl Corp., 768 F.2d at 184-85 (holding that even an unsound interpretation of the contract is drawn
from the essence of the contract and therefore not subject to vacature).
Next, Android maintains that the arbitrator exceeded her authority by ignoring and changing
the unambiguous payout language in Section 5 making clear that earned and unused vacation is paid
at the end of the year. Android explains that employees’ earned but unused vacation was paid out
at the end of the year such that employees were “zeroed out” even in the year of hire. According to
Android, this practice shows that the language in Section 5 regarding payout for separated employees
is clearly referring to accrued vacation that was unused in the year of separation, here 2016. But
Android is merely reformulating its argument that CBA requires the separated employees to be active
full-time Team Members in 2017 in order to be paid out for vacation accrued in 2016. The court has
already found that the arbitrator had a different interpretation of the provisions of the CBA which,
right or wrong, must be allowed to stand under the hyper-deferential review of an arbitral award.
Android also contends that the arbitrator exceeded her authority by making the finding
without sufficient evidentiary support that Android had “costed-out” the vacation benefits at issue
during negotiation of the CBA. Even if that is true, Android does not explain how this remark shows
that the arbitrator did not interpret the CBA.
III. CONCLUSION
For all of these reasons, Android’s application and motion to vacate the arbitration award is
denied. The Union’s motion to enforce the arbitration award is granted. The arbitration award is
enforced.
Date: 12/20/2018
ENTER:
_________________________
FREDERICK J. KAPALA
District Judge
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