Lewis v. Communication Worker of America et al
Filing
21
OPINION on Partial Dismissal. (Signed by Judge Lynn N. Hughes) Parties notified. (ghassan, 4)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
United States District Court
Southern District of Texas
ENTERED
December 11, 2015
David J. Bradley, Clerk
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Plaintiff,
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1!crsus
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Communication Workers of America, ct al., §
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Defendants.
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Heather Lewis,
Civil Action H-I5-I138
Opinion on Partial Dismissal
Introduction.
1.
A woman claims that she was fired either because (a) of her union activities or
IS
(b) she
black. She sues her employer for wrongful termination and her union for unfair
representation. The claims for wrongful termination because of union activities and for unfair
representation will be dismissed with prejudice. The claim of racial discrimination by the
employer will survive. The employee will take nothing from the union.
2.
Background.
In September of 2000, Heather Lewis began working for ATf.ifr, Inc. On October
20 I 3,
it suspended Lewis. On November I I,
20 I 3,
28,
it terminated Lewis for misconduct. Lewis
brought a grievance against ATf.ifr through her union - the Communication Workers of
America. The Union prosecuted the claim through two levels of grievances before deciding
against arbitration. AT&T offered to change Lewis's status with the company from not rehireable to re-hireable. Lewis declined the offer because she would lose her seniority.
3.
According
to
Lcwis.
Lewis believes that she was fired in retaliation for union activities or because she is
black. She also believes that the union did not represent her interests.
While at AT&T, Lewis was also a representative for the Communication Workers of
America for nine years. Lewis learned that AT&T had begun interviewing employees who had
taken time for family or medical reasons. Lewis was concerned that the interviewed employees
were not aware of their rights. She told the employees their rights and investigated AT&T's
actions. Some time after that union activity, AT&T disciplined Lewis when a customer
complained that Lewis cursed her while on a call. AT&T ultimately fired Lewis for misconduct.
Lewis with the Union filed a grievance against AT&T. The Union was initially
optimistic about her chances. An initial hearing was held on March of 2014- At a second phase,
the Union continued to represent Lewis. The Union did not communicate frequently with
Lewis, investigate the possibility she was fired for union activity, or make that argument in the
grievance hearings. The Union chose not to arbitrate Lewis's claim. All of this is what she
pleaded.
4-
Retaliation for Union Activities.
Lewis claims that AT&T breached its contract with the Union by firing her for union
activities and that the Union did not fairly represent her." Because she does not describe
sufficient facts to show that the Union wronged her, both claims will be dismissed. 2
In her complaint, Lewis was required to show how the Union undermined the fairness
of the grievance process by acting in bad faith. 3 If the Union believes a grievance has merit, it
must diligently investigate and prosecute the grievance. The law defers to the Union's
discretionary decisions - even when its decisions are wrong as some will inevitably be.
The few facts interspersed in the eighteen page legal brief that Lewis files as her first
amended complaint do not describe actions that undermined the grievance process. Lewis
names four problems with the Union's representation of her: (a) she had to make numerous,
unreturned, phone calls to "move the process along;" (b) the Union caused "months of delay;"
(c) the Union did not investigate or raise Lewis's allegation that she was fired for union
activities; and (d) the Union initially viewed her claims as meritorious only to conclude after
two levels of procedure that arbitration would be unsuccessful.
I
29 U .s.C. § 18 5.
2
3
19 89).
DelCostello v. Int'l Bhd. of Teamsters, 462 U.s. 151, 164-65 (1983)'
Landry v. The Cooper/T. Smith Stevedoring Co., 800 F.2d 846,852 (5th Cir.
Lewis correctly argues that the Union cannot arbitrarily ignore a meritorious grievance
or perfunctorily process it. Not returning phone calls show bureaucratic inefficiencies, not
unfair t'epresentation. Lewis does not plead any facts to support her claim that the Union caused
months of delay. All she knows is that the process took months. Lewis pleads that the Union
initially viewed her claims as meritorious and took her claims through not one but two levels
of grievance procedures before concluding that arbitration would not be successful. The
Union's behavior evinces more than perfunctory consideration, investigation, and prosecution
of Lewis's grievance.
The fact that the Union chose to focus on AT&T's recorded reason for termination
rather than bring up Lewis's belief that she was fired for union activities is a strategic choice.
In her complaint, Lewis neither denies her misconduct nor that it was sufficient to fire her. In
that light, the Union's discretionary decisions must stand.
5.
Conclusion.
Lewis does not state facts to overcome the presumption that the Communication
Workers of America fairly represented her. Thus, her claim against the Union will be dismissed
with prejudice. Because the claim against the Union is a predicate to her claim for breach of
contract by firing for union activity against AT&T, that claim will be dismissed with prejudice.
Lewis's claim against AT&T for racial discrimination will subsist.
Signed on December 10,
2015,
at Houston, Texas.
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