Newell Window Furnishings, Inc. v. International Union, United Automobile and Aerospace Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW
Filing
57
OPINION ; signed by Judge Robert J. Jonker (Judge Robert J. Jonker, ymc)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
NEWELL WINDOW FURNISHINGS, INC.,
Plaintiff,
CASE NO. 1:11-CV-1080
v.
HON. ROBERT J. JONKER
THE INTERNATIONAL UNION,
UNITED AUTOMOBILE, AEROSPACE,
AND AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT
WORKERS OF AMERICA (“UAW”),
Defendant.
__________________________________/
OPINION
Introduction
This is a saga of three interrelated lawsuits affecting healthcare for union retirees from a
predecessor of Newell Window Furnishings, Inc. The union retirees have claimed from the start that
lifetime medical care was a part of their vested retirement package. They ultimately won that issue
on summary judgment because even the company representatives agreed. See Bender v. Newell
Window Furnishings, Inc., 725 F. Supp. 2d 643 (W.D. Mich. 2010), aff’d, 681 F.3d 253 (6th Cir.
2012) (“Newell II”). The journey to that result was not as simple as the conclusion sounds. And this
lawsuit is an indication that the journey is not yet complete.
The opening round of litigation started in the Northern District of Illinois. Newell filed suit
there against each and every one of its union retirees, seeking a declaratory judgment that no vested
healthcare benefits were owed. Newell joined not only each and every union retiree, but also the
UAW itself, as the former representative of those retirees when they were active employees of the
company. Newell Operating Company, Inc. v. International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace
& Agricultural Implement Workers of America, U.A.W., No. 06-cv-50010 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 12, 2006)
(“Newell I”). The retirees and the UAW responded to Newell I by filing their own action here in the
Western District of Michigan (Newell II).1 They ultimately won Newell II on the merits after the
Northern District of Illinois and the Seventh Circuit dismissed Newell I as nothing but a forum
shopping gambit by Newell. After losing in Newell II, Newell filed a third action – this one – against
only the UAW, seeking damages for an alleged breach by the UAW of a Shutdown Agreement that
included a covenant not to sue from the UAW in favor of Newell (“Newell III”). Newell seeks
recovery of the attorney fees and other losses incurred in its losing effort in Newell II. Newell’s
theory is that it would not have suffered the expenses and losses of Newell II if the UAW had not
joined in and supported the retirees in Newell II.
The Shutdown Agreement at the heart of Newell III is nothing new. The parties were well
aware of it throughout the earlier litigation. In fact, Newell invoked the Shutdown Agreement in
Newell II in a successful bid to have the UAW dismissed as a party plaintiff early in the case. Both
parties also used the Shutdown Agreement to support their positions on the merits in Newell II.
Newell also asserted in bare-bones form the core of the theory it now elaborates in its Newell III
Complaint, both before and after the UAW was dismissed as a party in Newell II. And obviously
Newell knew that the lawyers ultimately confirmed as class counsel in Newell II started out the case
as counsel for both the putative class and the UAW, but Newell made no effort to challenge the
adequacy of their ability to serve as class counsel on that basis.
1
The plaintiffs in Newell I – defendants in Newell II – were Newell Window Furnishings,
Inc., Kirsch Division; Newell Operating Company, Inc.; and Newell Rubbermaid Health and Welfare
Program 506.
2
In the Court’s view, the Shutdown Agreement claim that Newell is now asserting in this case
should have been litigated, if at all, in Newell II, where Newell itself first raised the theory. Newell
II went to judgment, and principles of claim preclusion merge any potential claim Newell may have
had into the Newell II judgment and bar Newell from bringing the new action for alleged breach of
the Shutdown Agreement.
Facts
The core dispute in all three Newell cases concerns healthcare benefits for bargaining unit
retirees. In Newell II, a plaintiff class contended that a series of collective bargaining agreements
entitled the class members, their spouses and dependents to vested, lifetime healthcare benefits,
including group insurance at various levels in effect at the time of retirement, and full reimbursement
of Medicare Part B insurance premiums. The plaintiff class won the issue on summary judgment,
Bender v. Newell Window Furnishings, Inc., 725 F. Supp. 2d 642 (W.D. Mich. 2010), and the Sixth
Circuit affirmed, Bender v. Newell Window Furnishings, Inc., 681 F.3d 253 (6th Cir. 2012).
The UAW had been a plaintiff in Newell II, but early in the case the District Court granted
a motion under FED. R. CIV. P. 12(b)(6) dismissing the UAW from the case (Newell II, docket # 31).
No one appealed the dismissal of the UAW. The District Court found that the UAW had no cause
of action because of a covenant not to sue in a Shutdown Agreement. The covenant provided:
By entering into this Shutdown Agreement it is the intent of the Company and
the Union to resolve all issues arising out of the employment relationship, including
those related to this shutdown and relocation of operations, all wage and benefit
issues, and all other disputes and to protect the Company against any and all claims
by the Union, its successors and assigns, except those specifically excepted by this
paragraph. To this end, the Union, on behalf of itself and its successors or assigns,
hereby makes the following waiver and release:
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(a)
In consideration of the agreements made herein, the Union, on behalf of
itself, its successors and assigns, and consistent with the individual Waiver
and Release (attached as “Appendix A”), on behalf of its active members
and/or other employees of the Company for whom it acts as the exclusive
representative under Section 9 of the National Labor Relations Act, hereby
waives, releases and forever discharges the Company from any and all
obligations, claims, causes of action, liabilities, grievance or arbitration
claims, unfair labor practice charges or actions of any kind (as of the effective
date of this Shutdown Agreement), and claims and demands of any kind
which the Union now has or ever may have against the Company arising out
of the employment relationship . . . except those claims which are based on
alleged violations of this Shutdown Agreement, and individual Workers’
Compensation and/or state unemployment insurance compensation claims.
(b)
The Union agrees not to initiate, solicit, encourage or finance any civil action,
litigation or administrative claim of any type against the Company covering
any matter other than enforcement of the terms of this Shutdown Agreement.
(Newell II, docket # 31, 7-8.) The District Court concluded that “[t]he Union’s broad release of
claims on its, or its successor’s, behalf precludes it from bringing any claim against Newell other
than claims based on violations of the Shutdown Agreement and/or state unemployment insurance
claims.” (Id. at 13.)
Newell had actually fired the opening shot that initiated the entire litigation odyssey.
Newell I began when Newell and several related entities filed a declaratory judgment action in the
Northern District of Illinois seeking to establish that the bargaining unit retirees were not entitled to
vested, lifetime healthcare benefits. Newell v. U.A.W., No. 06-cv-50010 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 12, 2006).
In the declaratory judgment action, Newell joined every retiree individually. Newell also joined the
UAW as a defendant. The UAW and the retirees responded by filing Newell II in the Western
District of Michigan. The District Court in Michigan waited for the District Court in Illinois to
decide if the case should proceed there. (Newell II, docket # 31, at 3.) Ultimately, the Northern
District of Illinois court dismissed the case in its entirety on jurisdictional grounds in favor of the
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action in the Western District of Michigan. Newell v. U.A.W., No. 06-cv-50010 (N.D. Ill. March 27,
2007). In dismissing the case, the court commented that “[Newell] brought this action here for the
sole purpose of choosing a forum by attempting to win a race to the courthouse by filing a
declaratory judgment action that anticipated the litigation to be filed by the retirees and the Union.”
Id. The Seventh Circuit affirmed the Northern District of Illinois court’s decision. Newell Operating
Co. v. UAW, 532 F.3d 583 (7th Cir. 2008) (overruled on other grounds by Envision Healthcare, Inc.
v. PreferredOne Ins. Co., 604 F.3d 983 (7th Cir. 2010) and NewPage Wisconsin System Inc. v.
United Steel, Paper & Forestry, Rubber, Mfg., Energy Allied Industrial and Service Workers
International Union, AFL-CIO/CLC, 651 F.3d 775 (7th Cir. 2011)). Accordingly, the case
proceeded on the merits in the Western District of Michigan.
The plaintiff class won summary judgment against Newell. The Court found that “the
language of the collective bargaining agreements, the extrinsic evidence of the actual negotiations
on both sides of the table, and Defendant’s own after-the-fact due diligence memorandum all agree
on the key point of lifetime vesting of healthcare benefits for qualified retirees.” Bender, 725
F. Supp. 2d at 645. The Court found “the contract language . . . so plain that when Defendants were
investigating purchasing the Sturgis plant, their own attorneys reviewed the collective bargaining
agreements and concluded that the retirees were entitled under them to vested lifetime benefits.” Id.
The Sixth Circuit affirmed:
The district court found that the parties unambiguously intended that retiree health
insurance benefits would vest for bargaining unit retirees (and their eligible spouses
and dependents) who retired prior to January 1, 1994, but that, even if the CBAs were
deemed to be ambiguous, ‘the entire review of extrinsic evidence demonstrates,
without a single contradictory voice, that the parties intended to vest lifetime retiree
healthcare benefits.’” We agree.
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Bender v. Newell Window Furnishings, Inc., 681 F.3d 253, 267 (6th Cir. 2012).
While Newell II was pending on appeal, one of the losing defendants, Newell Window
Furnishings, Inc. (“Newell”), filed another lawsuit – Newell III – against the UAW alone. The theory
of the new lawsuit was that the UAW breached a Shut-Down Agreement with Newell by joining as
a plaintiff in Newell II in the first place. This was a “Back to the Future” lawsuit, because Newell
had already raised the theory in the pleadings in Newell II. In the original answer in Newell II,
Newell asserted as an affirmative defense the same claim against the UAW it now brings in this case.
(Newell II, docket # 33, at ¶ 46.) In its Eighth Defense, Newell stated:
Under the terms of the Shut-Down Agreement, which the Court held in its Order and
Judgment issued July 9, 2008, that the UAW had breached, this Court should . . .
order the UAW to cease paying for the costs of the lawsuit, and order the UAW to
reimburse defendants for the costs incurred, including legal fees, in this lawsuit and
in the action filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of
Illinois.
(Id.) Newell asserted the point again in a response to a class certification motion: “The filing of this
action was not initiated primarily by Plaintiffs; rather, the UAW (in violation of its Shut-Down
Agreement with Newell Window under which Newell Window left this district) initiated and initially
maintained this litigation.” (Newell II, docket # 93, at 11.) And Newell raised the issue as an
affirmative defense in its Amended Joint Answer to the Third Amended Complaint: “Under the
terms of the Shut-Down Agreement, which this Court held in its Order and Judgment, issued July 9,
2007, that the UAW had breached, this court should dismiss the Complaint and order Plaintiffs to
pay personally for the filing and pursuit of this lawsuit.” (Newell II, docket # 115.)
Ultimately, after the District Court granted the motion to dismiss the UAW, nothing else was
actually adjudicated in Newell II between the UAW and the losing defendants. Neither the dismissal
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of the UAW from the case nor Newell’s claim that the UAW should pay all the attorney fees was
raised on appeal. After prevailing on appeal on the merits of the case, class counsel sought fees. At
that point, Newell argued, among other things, that the Court should not award fees because the
UAW would “benefit from any fee award based on the UAW’s financing of this action or any other
action in violation of [the] Shutdown Agreement.” The Court disagreed and awarded fees to the
plaintiff class. (Newell II, docket # 324.) The Sixth Circuit affirmed, finding that the Court “did not
abuse its discretion in awarding fees to [the plaintiff class] that will ultimately go to the UAW.”
Bender v. Newell Window Furnishings, Inc., No. 12-2059, slip op. (6th Cir. March 17, 2014).
In the case now before the Court, Newell reiterates the claims it made in Newell II that the
UAW breached the Shutdown Agreement by pursuing the Newell II litigation, and again argues that
Newell is entitled to attorney fees incurred in Newell II, as well as attorney fees incurred in Newell
I and Newell III. Newell also claims it is entitled to damages because it has been forced to incur
liability to the retiree class. In essence, using the Shutdown Agreement theory, Newell asks to shift
the financial costs of its loss on the merits to the UAW. The UAW moves for judgment on the
pleadings under FED. R. CIV. P. 12(c).
Legal Standard
The standard of review for a motion under Rule 12(c) is the same as for a motion under Rule
12(b)(6). Fritz v. Charter Tp. of Comstock, 592 F.3d 718, 722 (6th Cir. 2010). “For purposes of a
motion for a judgment on the pleadings, all well-pleaded material allegations of the pleadings of the
opposing party must be taken as true, and the motion may be granted only if the moving party is
nevertheless clearly entitled to judgment.” JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. v. Winget, 510 F.3d 577,
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581 (6th Cir. 2007) (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court “need not accept as true legal
conclusions or unwarranted factual inferences.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Discussion
In asserting anew its claim that the UAW breached the Shutdown Agreement, Newell in
essence seeks “to put aside the first disposition of [its] dispute[] so as to pursue again [its] own
notion of absolute truth and justice.” 18 Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H.
Cooper, Federal Practice & Procedure § 4401 (2d ed. 2002). The doctrine of res judicata has
developed to preclude such repetitious litigation, “respond[ing] to the perception that ‘[a] lawsuit
is not a laboratory experiment for the discovery of physical laws of universal application but a means
of settling a dispute between litigants.’” Id. Clear rules of res judicata “make it possible for a dispute
to be settled by a single litigation” and for the parties “to rely on the judgment, to measure a sense
of repose against it, and to avoid repetitive litigation that tests its limits.” Id. Res judicata serves
the crucial purpose of “finally ending private disputes,” recognizing that “[t]he central role of
adversary litigation in our society is to provide binding answers[,] . . . free[ing] people from the
uncertain prospects of litigation, with all its costs to emotional peace and the ordering of future
affairs.” Id. at § 4403. Indeed, “[r]epose is the most important product of res judicata.” Id. Res
judicata “precludes not only relitigating a claim previously adjudicated; it also precludes litigating
a claim or defense that should have been raised, but was not, in the prior suit.” Mitchell v. Chapman,
343 F.3d 811, 819 (6th Cir. 2003). “Under res judicata, a final judgment on the merits of an action
precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in
that action.” Allen v. McCurry, 449 U.S. 90, 94 (1980).
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“Claim-preclusion rules addressed to plaintiffs are mirrored by preclusion rules addressed
to defendants.” Wright, Miller & Cooper, supra, § 4410. Such rules address situations, among
others, in which a former defendant seeks to advance a claim against the original plaintiff. Id. Claim
preclusion rules applied to defendants arise out of the same logic and promote the same policy
objectives as res judicata. FED. R. CIV. P. 13(a), the principal claim preclusion rule applicable to
defendants, provides that
[a] pleading must state as a counterclaim any claim that – at the time of its service
– the pleader has against an opposing party if the claim:
(A) arises out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the
opposing party’s claim; and
(B) does not require adding another party over whom the court cannot acquire
jurisdiction.
Thus, to constitute a compulsory counterclaim, a “claim must bear a logical relationship to the
opposing party’s claim.” Ashbrook v. Block, 917 F.2d 918, 923 (1990) (internal quotation marks
omitted). However, “there need not be a precise identity of issues and facts between the claim and
the counterclaim.” Transamerica Occidental Life Ins. Co. v. Aviation Office of America, 292 F.3d
384, 389 (2002) (Alito, J.). Rule 13(a) exists to promote judicial economy, and “the term
‘transaction or occurrence’ is construed generously to further this purpose.” Id. at 390.
While Rule 13(a) is the principal rule of claim preclusion addressed to defendants, cases also
“show the need for additional defendant rules of preclusion.” Wright, Miller & Cooper, supra,
§ 4410. For example, in a Seventh Circuit case the court found that although Rule 13(a) did not
apply to the claim raised in that case, the claim was still barred, because it fell within “a narrowly
defined class of ‘common law compulsory counterclaims.’” Martino v. McDonald’s System, Inc.,
598 F.2d 1079, 1083 (7th Cir. 1979) (citing Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 56.1(2)(b),
9
Reporter’s Note on Comment f (Tent. Draft No. 1, 1973)). Martino emphasizes that “the wellsettled rule for the purpose of determining the res judicata effect of a judgment is that a ‘cause of
action’ comprises defenses . . . that were or might have been raised.” Id. at 1084.
Whether viewed through the lens of res judicata, Rule 13(a), or common law compulsory
counterclaim, principles of claim preclusion dictate dismissal of Newell III.
In determining whether res judicata bars an action, courts in the Sixth Circuit consider
whether the following four factors are present: (1) the prior decision was a final decision on the
merits; (2) the present action is between the same parties or their privies as those to the prior action;
(3) the claim in the present action should have been litigated in the prior action; (4) an identity exists
between the prior and present actions. Mitchell, 343 F.3d at 819. All four factors are present in
Newell III. The first two are very straightforward. Newell II was a final decision on the merits of
the contract dispute between Newell and the plaintiffs in that case. Final judgment entered for the
plaintiffs and against Newell. The parties were the same too. Newell itself named the UAW as a
defendant in Newell I. In Newell II, the UAW was a plaintiff, and Newell was a named defendant.
The actions were, to this extent, mirror images of each other, and the same parties are now facing
each other in Newell III.
The third and fourth elements of the res judicata test get at the same fundamental point: is
the relationship between the earlier case and the present case sufficiently close so that it is fair to
expect the parties to have raised and resolved the issue, if at all, in the earlier action? Here, the
answer is “yes.” In the first place, Newell itself made the decision to bring the UAW directly into
the controversy by suing the UAW in Newell I.
More importantly, in Newell II, Newell
demonstrated that the present issue should have been raised, if at all, in that earlier case, because
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Newell actually did raise the claim muliple times in Newell II, not only as the linchpin of a motion
to dismiss, but also as an affirmative defense both before and after Newell won the motion to
dismiss. In addition, the claim Newell raises here also was fairly part of the class certification
process, at least on the question of the adequacy of class counsel. Moreover, both sides in Newell II
referenced and analyzed the Shutdown Agreement – the contractual basis of Newell III – in the
litigation of the merits of that case. Finally, the damages theory Newell now asserts would essentially
shift every economic consequence of the Newell II decision from the defendants in that case to the
UAW. This would entirely undo Newell II, making it clear that an identity exists between the prior
and present actions, which involve the very same Shutdown Agreement language.
Looking at the issue through the narrower lense of Rule 13(a) yields the same result.
Newell’s claim here to shift the economic consequences of Newell II to the UAW arises directly out
of subject matter of the Newell II plaintiffs’ claim. Indeed, Newell acknowledged as much by
naming the UAW in the original action Newell brought in the Northern District of Illinois. The
Michigan action and the Illinois action were, as a practical matter, mirror images of each other.
Newell also acknowledged the logical relationship between the claims by asserting as an affirmative
defense in Michigan that the Court should order the UAW to cease funding the litigation and
reimburse defendants for their legal fees and costs in both Newell II and the action Newell itself filed
in the Northern District of Illinois. The claim Newell raises in Newell III should have been asserted
as a counterclaim in Newell II and is now barred.
Newell contends that Rule 13(a) does not apply here, because the Court granted its motion
to dismiss the UAW in Newell II before Newell answered the complaint. Newell posits that once
the UAW was dismissed, there was no “opposing party” against which to counterclaim. Newell’s
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own pleadings show otherwise. Newell raised as an affirmative defense in Michigan the very theory
it now raises. More than that, it did so after the District Court granted its motion to dismiss the
UAW. It then did nothing to pursue the claim despite ample opportunity to do so as the Newell II
litigation proceeded in the District Court and on appeal. Having actually asserted the theory as an
affirmative defense, Newell cannot now be heard to argue it should be held to the consequences of
choosing not to pursue it in Newell II. The labels of “affirmative defense” or “counterclaim” are not
controlling; the question is whether Newell put the matter at issue in Newell II. It plainly did.
But even if the claim Newell now raises was not a compulsory counterclaim in Newell II
under the strictest reading of Rule 13(a), it would still be precluded under the kind of common law
compulsory counterclaim logic Martino articulates. The Sixth Circuit recognized as much in Dryvit
Systems, Inc. v. Great Lakes Exteriors, Inc., 96 F. App’x 310 (6th Cir. April 20, 2004). Dryvit was
the second litigation between the same parties concerning the same contract, a distributorship
agreement. Dryvit, 96 F. App’x at 311. In the first litigation, GLE sued Dryvit for breach of contract
and lost. Id. In the second litigation, Dryvit sought to enforce a contractual right to attorney fees
under the same distributorship agreement, which included a provision for reimbursement of attorney
fees and costs to the prevailing party. Id. The Sixth Circuit found that under these circumstances,
attorney fees and costs were not “collateral to the merits,” and Dryvit should have brought its claim
for attorney fees in the original action. Id. at 311-12. This was true even though Dryvit had not
prevailed until it won in the trial court on the merits. The court applied Michigan law, but the same
rationale applies in this case. The damages Newell seeks are in no way “collateral to the merits” of
Newell II. And even though Newell prevailed to the extent of having the UAW dismissed as a party,
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it should not have waited for a new lawsuit to raise the claims it is now making against the UAW
based on that win.
Conclusion
Claim preclusion is a doctrine that requires parties to litigate in one action the whole bundle
of claims and defenses they have against each other that bear a logical relationship to the subject
matter of the litigation. This case is an attempt by Newell to raise in a new case a theory of relief
that was integrally bound up with the issues adjudicated in the earlier case. Indeed, Newell even
asserted in its own pleadings in the earlier case the theory it now tries to advance here. In the Court’s
view, the time to test that theory was in Newell II, and the Final Judgment in that case bars Newell
from attempting to bring the claim now.
Dated:
June 19, 2014
/s/ Robert J. Jonker
ROBERT J. JONKER
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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