LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.
Prior to being laid off, Alan Clukey served as a police dispatcher for the Town of Camden ("the Town") for thirty-one years. The sole issue on appeal, the second one in this case, is whether the collective bargaining agreement governing Clukey's employment contained an unambiguous condition precedent requiring Clukey to submit his address and phone number to the Town after his layoff in order to assert his recall rights.
Because we conclude that the pertinent contract provision is ambiguous, we vacate the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the Town and remand for further proceedings.
Alan Clukey was an employee of the Camden police department from 1976 until he was laid off in June 2007, at which time he was the department's most senior dispatcher. The collective bargaining agreement ("the CBA") between the police union and the Town permitted the layoff of dispatchers "for any reason" and provided for recall of qualified employees based on seniority.
The CBA's recall provision, Article 19, Section 3, states, in pertinent part:
It is undisputed that Clukey did not "file in writing" his address or phone number with the Town Manager after his layoff, but it is also undisputed that the Town had that information in its employment records. During the twelve-month period after Clukey was laid off on June 30, 2007, vacancies opened in the Camden Police Department for a parking enforcement officer and an administrative position, both of which Clukey was qualified to fill. However, the Town neither recalled Clukey to employment nor notified him that he was not being selected for the positions.
In 2012, Clukey and his wife, Dera Clukey, brought this lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the Town had deprived him, without due process of law, of his property interest in his right to be recalled. The Town moved to dismiss the complaint, arguing that Clukey did not have a constitutionally protected property interest in his asserted recall right. The magistrate judge held that Clukey had a property interest in his right to be recalled, but ultimately ruled that our decision in Ramírez v. Arlequín, 447 F.3d 19 (1st Cir.2006), compelled the conclusion that Clukey's claim was not cognizable under § 1983. In particular, the magistrate judge's recommendation relied heavily on our conclusion that
Id. at 25 (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted). Finding that Clukey, like the plaintiff in Ramírez, had asserted a breach of contract claim rather than a federal due process claim, the magistrate judge recommended dismissal. The district
In Clukey v. Town of Camden, 717 F.3d 52 (1st Cir.2013) ("Clukey I"), we held that "the plain language" of the seniority provision contained in Article 19, section 3 of the CBA,
Id. at 58 (emphasis in original). We agreed with the district court that "Clukey ha[d] stated facts which, if true, establish that he has a constitutionally protected property interest in his right to be recalled to employment with the police department of the Town of Camden." Id. at 59. We further held that
Id. at 62. We therefore vacated the dismissal of Clukey's action and remanded the case to the district court.
When proceedings resumed in the district court, both parties moved for summary judgment on the basis of a stipulated factual record. In its motion, the Town argued that the address and phone number notification required by the recall provision is a condition precedent for an employee's right to be recalled. The Town asserted that, because Clukey did not file his address and phone number in writing during the twelve-month period after his layoff (i.e., between June 30, 2007, and July 1, 2008), he had no right to be recalled. Clukey argued in response that the recall provision required only that he file his address and phone number with the Town "at some time in history," which he had done. He claimed that his recall right was contingent only on his obligation to alert the Town to any change in the information it had on file, and no such change had occurred. Thus, the Town violated his right to recall by failing to contact him when positions became available.
The magistrate judge recommended judgment for the Town, concluding that the CBA's notification requirement is a condition precedent to the right to be recalled. Although the Town already had the specified information for Clukey, the magistrate judge determined that the requirement's purpose was to "indicate the employee's intent to initiate the 12-month recall period" and thereby relieve the Town of the burden to "search out all employees who have been laid off (or `affected') during the immediately preceding 12 months" regardless of their interest in recall. The district court accepted the recommended decision on the basis of the
This appeal turns on the construction of the CBA recall provision. Specifically, the sole issue before us is whether the recall provision creates the condition precedent argued by the Town, i.e., whether it "defines an event which must occur before a contract becomes effective or before an obligation to perform arises under the contract." Sands v. Ridefilm Corp., 212 F.3d 657, 661-62 (1st Cir.2000) (internal citation omitted) (applying Massachusetts contract law). If, as the Town asserts and the district court held, the CBA conditions an employee's recall right on the written submission, after layoff, of the employee's mailing address and telephone number, this case would necessarily come to an end. It is undisputed that Clukey did not submit information post-layoff and, if he failed to meet such a condition precedent, he would never have acquired a right to recall. See Id. at 661 (holding that "an otherwise enforceable contract will be defeated by the non-occurrence of a condition precedent"); Irving v. Town of Clinton, 711 A.2d 141, 142 (Me. 1998) ("An elementary rule of contract law is that the nonoccurrence of a condition discharges the parties from their duties under the contract.").
As the issue before us is thus a matter of contract interpretation, our review of the district court's ruling is de novo. See Grand Wireless, Inc. v. Verizon Wireless, Inc., 748 F.3d 1, 6 (1st Cir.2014). Both parties accept that the contract should be interpreted according to Maine law.
Although some courts have required "quite emphatic words ... to create a condition precedent forfeiting or limiting rights," Midwest Precision Servs., Inc. v. PTM Indus. Corp., 887 F.2d 1128, 1136 (1st Cir.1989), the parties' intention to impose such a condition is what governs, see, e.g., Loyal Erectors, Inc. v. Hamilton & Son, Inc., 312 A.2d 748, 753 (Me.1973) (stating that whether a contract provision creates a condition precedent depends upon the intention of the parties, "to be determined by considering not only the words of the particular clause, but also the language of the whole contract as well as the nature of the act required and the subject matter to which it relates"); Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 226 cmt. (a) ("No particular form of language is necessary to make an event a condition.").
To determine whether the CBA recall provision — Article 19, Section 3 — creates a condition precedent, we necessarily must focus closely on its specific language. We thus reproduce here its pertinent sentence:
(Emphasis added.) The significant difference between the two independent clauses in this sentence is immediately apparent. Although the second clause expressly conditions
Thus, as a matter of plain language, the parties to this agreement appear to have made a conscious choice to include the condition precedent language only in the second independent clause. If they had been so inclined, the condition easily could have been placed at the start of the sentence, advising that, "As a condition of his/her recall right," the affected employee shall both submit his/her current address in writing and keep the Town updated about changes during the twelve-month recall period. That is not, however, what the provision says. We construe contracts so as "to give force and effect to all of its provisions," and we will "avoid an interpretation that renders meaningless any particular provision in the contract." Acadia Ins. Co. v. Buck Const. Co., 756 A.2d 515, 517 (Me.2000) (internal citation omitted). Some significance may be attached, therefore, to the choice of the contracting parties to link the "as a condition" language only to the affected employee's obligation to keep the Town up to date on any changes to his or her contact information.
Discounting this difference between the two parts of the sentence, the Town maintains that the only reasonable interpretation of the provision is that an employee acquires no right to recall unless he or she submits the required contact information in writing subsequent to layoff. The Town emphasizes that the provision applies only to "affected" employees — i.e., those who have been laid off — and the Town posits that the command to submit a mailing address and telephone number thus can be met only by a post-layoff filing. That timing makes sense, the Town argues, because the required filing would serve as notice of the individual's continuing interest in employment with the Town.
Clukey, however, maintains that the differing language in the two clauses reflects an important distinction between the obligations they describe. In his view, the first clause obliges laid-off employees only to provide the Town with current contact information so as to ensure that they can be recalled when appropriate positions become available. Because the Town had his address and phone number in his personnel file, Clukey asserts that he was not required to make a pro forma re-submission of that information. By contrast, the express conditional language prefacing the second clause emphasizes the obligation to keep the Town informed of changes in the employee's whereabouts if the employee wishes to remain subject to recall. While the second phrase clearly imposes a condition to recall, the first phrase merely announces a need for contact information. If the Town already has that information, the employee does not forfeit his valuable right to recall because he did not make a redundant filing of that information.
Thus, the parties' dispute over the timing of the filing requirement of the recall provision is really a dispute over the purpose of the requirement. The Town insists that the provision requires an "affected employee" to submit his or her contact information only after layoff, i.e., when he or she has become "affected," because the filing serves as a notice of interest in recall. In Clukey's view, the purpose of the filing requirement is informational, and the only question is whether the "affected employee" has submitted the requested information in writing to the Town manager at some point so that the Town can notify the employee of the recall possibility. It is undisputed that the Town had the information
We consider both of these constructions of the language of the CBA to be plausible. Indeed, Clukey's interpretation benefits from the contrast in language used in setting out the provision's two independent requirements. As we have explained, ordinary contract principles assign meaning to that difference in language. Hence, a reasonable person could conclude that the parties to the CBA expressly conditioned one obligation, but not the other, because they believed that emphatic language was unnecessary for the initial filing requirement. In other words, the absence of "as a condition" language for the first obligation may reflect the view of the signatories to the agreement that employers ordinarily possess current contact information for their employees.
Moreover, because the first clause does not refer to timing at all, its purpose may be reasonably understood as solely information-gathering, and not — as the Town argues — to provide notice of the individual's interest in continuing employment. An exclusive information-gathering purpose is reinforced when the sentence under scrutiny is considered in context. While that sentence says nothing about notice, the following sentence directs an employee who is recalled to notify the Town within ten days if he/she wishes to accept the position. See supra n. 1. The provision thus contains only one plainly stated notice obligation — after recall. Hence, the provision is readily subject to the reading that Clukey proposes: as an "affected employee," his obligation is to be certain he has at some point submitted his current contact information to the Town in writing.
Indeed, while no explicit language is required to create a condition precedent, see Bucksport & B.R. Co. v. Inhabitants of Brewer, 67 Me. 295, 299 (Me.1877), there are indications that a contractual ambiguity should be reasonably interpreted, where possible, to avoid the forfeiture that would result from finding a condition precedent. See Cantillon v. Walker, 146 Me. 160, 78 A.2d 782, 784 (1951) ("The difficulty lies in the construction to be placed upon the particular language used by the testatrix. The rule has been well stated ... as follows: `Whether there has been a performance or breach of a condition precedent or a condition subsequent depends upon a construction of the condition, and a reasonable construction is to be given to such condition in favor of the beneficiary and against a forfeiture, and such construction is dependent upon the circumstances of each particular case.'" (quoting La Rocque v. Martin, 344 Ill. 522, 176 N.E. 734, 735-736 (1931))).
Nonetheless, we cannot exclude as a matter of law the notification purpose that the Town attributes to the filing requirement. Although the first clause lacks the emphatic "as a condition" wording, it does use language — "shall file in writing" — that we ordinarily would view as signaling an inflexible obligation to perform. See Black's Law Dictionary 1499 (9th ed.2009) (noting that the meaning of "shall" — "[h]as a duty to" or "is required to" — is "the mandatory sense that drafters typically intend and that courts typically uphold"); see also Webster's Third New International Dictionary 2085 (3d ed.1993) (noting that "shall" as "used in directives ... express[es] what is mandatory"); Claudio-De León v. Sistema Universitario Ana G. Méndez, 775 F.3d 41, 46-47 (1st Cir.2014) (noting that "it is axiomatic that the word `shall' has a mandatory connotation"). That obligation is imposed on "[t]he affected employee." Thus, even absent language expressly articulating a condition precedent, the first clause reasonably may
Our discussion thus demonstrates that the purpose of the recall provision's initial filing requirement is not apparent from its plain language and, hence, as a matter of language, the timing of that obligation is left ambiguous. We have also demonstrated that reasonable rationales support the competing purpose arguments of the parties. See Coastal Ventures v. Alsham Plaza, LLC, 1 A.3d 416, 424 (Me. 2010) ("[A] contractual provision is considered ambiguous if it is reasonably possible to give that provision at least two different meanings." (internal quotation marks omitted) (alteration in original)). Although the question whether a contract term is ambiguous is one of law, id., discerning the meaning of an ambiguous contractual provision is a task assigned to a factfinder, Schindler v. Nilsen, 770 A.2d 638, 643 (Me.2001). In performing that task, the factfinder may consider extrinsic evidence "casting light upon the intention of the parties with respect to the meaning of the unclear language." Hilltop Cmty. Sports Ctr., Inc. v. Hoffman, 755 A.2d 1058, 1063 (Me.2000) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Skowhegan Water Co. v. Skowhegan Vill. Corp., 102 Me. 323, 66 A. 714, 718 (1906) (stating that the existence of a condition precedent under Maine law is "purely a question of intent").
Fact-finding is thus necessary in this case.
With reluctance, therefore, we must again remand this case to the district court for further proceedings, including the consideration of any extrinsic evidence that might be useful and appropriate in determining the intent behind the filing requirement of the recall language of Article 19, Section 3. We offer no view of the Town's obligations to Clukey under the CBA if the factfinder concludes that post-layoff submission of an employee's contact information is not a condition precedent to his right to recall. Because the district court, adopting the recommendation of the magistrate judge, held that Clukey forfeited his right to recall by failing to file his address and phone number after his layoff, it did not address Clukey's procedural due process claim or an issue raised on remand concerning his seniority status under the CBA.
These outstanding issues reflect the piecemeal approach to this litigation pursued by the parties. There is the potential for more appeals in a case where we have already had two. This is a regrettable situation that drains the resources of everyone involved. We urge the parties to seriously consider settlement on remand.
Vacated and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Costs to appellant.
(Emphasis added.)