JOHN W. SEDWICK, Senior District Judge.
At docket 31 defendants International Longshore and Warehouse Union ("ILWU"), Alaska Longshore Division and ILWU Unit 223 (collectively, "the Union") move pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for an order dismissing the Amended Complaint of plaintiffs Alaska Maritime Employers Association, American President Lines, LTD, and Matson Lines (collectively, "AMEA"). AMEA opposes at docket 41;
AMEA is an association of two companies that conduct maritime shipping and dock operations in Dutch Harbor and other Alaska ports. The Union represents AMEA's employees. AMEA and the Union have entered into a collective bargaining agreement ("CBA") known as the All Alaska Longshore Agreement ("AALA"). The AALA contains a no-strike clause.
AMEA brings this action for damages under § 301(a) of the National Labor Relations Act ("NLRA").
Rule 12(b)(6) tests the legal sufficiency of a plaintiff's claims. In reviewing such a motion, "[a]ll allegations of material fact in the complaint are taken as true and construed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party."
To avoid dismissal, a plaintiff must plead facts sufficient to "`state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.'"
"[A]rbitration is a matter of contract and a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to submit."
Courts apply federal common law principles of contract interpretation when construing a CBA.
The Union's interpretation of this run-on sentence focuses on its first clause, which states that the AALA's grievance procedure is the exclusive remedy with respect to "any disputes" between the Union/any employee and any employer. Because AMEA's grievance is a dispute between the employers and the Union, this action is covered under Section 11.5's first clause.
AMEA focuses on the second clause, which states that "the person" may not use any remedies other than those found in the AALA until "the grievance procedure has been exhausted." According to AMEA, this language limits the scope of the arbitration clause to "the person," which it interprets as "the person working under the AALA," because it does not state that "the Union" or "the Employer" are prohibited from using other remedies until contractual remedies are exhausted.
The court finds AMEA's interpretation unpersuasive for three reasons. First, the word "and" separates the first and second clauses, meaning that the second clause adds to the first, not limits it. Second, the first clause is broad—it covers all of an employer's grievances against its employees/the Union and vice versa. It is unlikely that the parties intended to negate this sweeping language by mere inference in the next clause, as AMEA argues. And third, the crux of AMEA's argument is that "the person" excludes both the Union and the employers because "the person" means "the employee." But when both clauses of Section 11.5 are considered together, a more natural interpretation is that "the person" means "the person who initiated the dispute." Under this interpretation, the arbitration clause provides that the grievance procedure is the exclusive remedy for all disputes between labor and employer, and no one may utilize other remedies without first exhausting that procedure.
AMEA challenges this interpretation by pointing to two other sections of the AALA that, it argues, shows that the parties intended to exclude employer-brought grievances from mandatory arbitration. AMEA first draws the court's attention to Subsection 59 of Section 11, which states that "[t]he Union representative on the job shall take the grievance or dispute promptly to the Employer representative in charge of the operations. Such dispute shall immediately be set forth by both parties in writing, stating the adjudication thereof, if any."
This argument relies on the doctrine that an employer is not bound to follow a CBA's grievance procedure where that procedure is wholly employee oriented.
The AALA's grievance procedure is nothing like the grievance procedure in Standard Concrete. It can involve up to five different levels of review, before: (1) the Employer representative;
AMEA's second argument is similarly unpersuasive. AMEA argues that because Section 7.64 merely states that a party "may" submit Section 7 disputes directly to the Alaska Arbitrator, this means that the entire grievance procedure is optional for employers. This argument is unpersuasive because it begs the question; its premise is that Section 11.5 applies only to employees. Section 7.64 is equally consistent with the Union's interpretation of the arbitration agreement as meaning that an employer "may" submit a Section 7 dispute directly to the Alaska Arbitrator, or it "may" submit the dispute to the JPLRC, but Section 11.5 requires the employer to utilize one of these two options.
In sum, the court finds that Section 11.5 of the AALA requires labor and employers alike to utilize the grievance procedure set out in Section 11. To the extent this provision is ambiguous, AMEA has not rebutted the presumption of arbitrabilty.
For the reasons set forth above, defendants' motion at docket 31 is GRANTED. Plaintiffs' complaint is dismissed with prejudice.