PER CURIAM.
Plaintiff Township of Neptune appeals from a June 1, 2010 order of the Law Division that denied its motion to vacate an arbitration award entered pursuant to the parties' collective negotiation agreement (CNA) providing for binding arbitration, and granted the motion of defendant AFSCME Council 73, Local 1844 AFL-CIO (the Local), on behalf of Michelle Bivens, to confirm the award. We affirm.
Bivens, an assistant purchasing agent for the Township, was suspended without pay, effective January 20, 2009, pending a disciplinary hearing after she forged her supervisor's signature on a payment voucher which she then submitted for processing. The voucher represented that she was entitled to compensation time (comp time) she had not earned. Bivens, who had no prior history of misconduct, insisted she never intended to collect money on the voucher, and she presented it as a joke and to bring attention to what she believed were ongoing abuses of comp time.
The Township Administrator conducted an investigation of Bivens's submission of the voucher. He also contacted the police, who concluded there was no basis to charge Bivens with criminal conduct. The Township filed disciplinary charges against Bivens in the form of a Personal Violation Notice charging her with "[d]isorderly or immoral conduct, serious breech of discipline, [n]egligence and willful waste of public funds, misconduct and harassment." Discipline consisted of thirty days suspension and reassignment to another Township department. However, as the disciplinary hearing proceeded, the charges were amended to encompass claims of insubordination, harassment of other employees and creation of a hostile work environment. Ultimately, the Township modified its intended sanctions to include termination, and at the conclusion of its disciplinary hearing, it terminated Bivens's employment.
Pursuant to the CNA, the Local grieved Bivens's dismissal through binding arbitration. At the arbitration, the parties presented testimony, evidence, and arguments. The arbitrator concluded that Bivens had committed serious offenses in the exercise of bad judgment constituting just cause for the Township to impose severe discipline against her. Nevertheless, in light of articulated mitigating factors, including her long and satisfactory employment record and concepts of progressive discipline, Arbitrator Susan Wood Osborn concluded that termination could not be upheld. Instead, she directed that Bivens, whose suspension without pay had lasted for a year, should be reinstated to her former position, without back pay, or at the option of the Township, transferred to another department within Township government. By order to show cause, the Township sought to vacate the arbitration award, which the Local, by counterclaim, sought to confirm.
The Township contended the award was in violation of public policy and that the arbitrator exceeded her authority. Rejecting those contentions, Judge John R. Tassini noted in a written opinion the strong preference for judicial confirmation of arbitration awards. He found "[t]he suspension for one year without pay (consistent with the arbitrator's award) was substantial discipline." The judge framed the issue before him as "not what a judge would have imposed as discipline, but whether the arbitrator's award should be vacated." Though recognizing Bivens "certainly violated public policy[,]" Judge Tassini concluded the "Township has not shown that the award is contrary to a statute, regulation or precedent. Consequently, under [
In this appeal, the Township argues reinstatement is against public policy and the arbitrator's award should be vacated under a public policy exception to public sector arbitration awards. It further argues the criminal code sets forth public policy mandates against misconduct that preclude the arbitrator's award. The Township also argues the arbitrator exceeded her scope of authority under the agreement, as the reinstatement of Bivens to any position at her previous salary is contrary to public policy. Based on our review of the record and applicable law, we are not persuaded by any of the Township's arguments and affirm the arbitrator's award substantially for the reasons articulated by Judge Tassini.
At the outset, we acknowledge that we engage "in an extremely deferential review when a party to a collective bargaining agreement has sought to vacate an arbitrator's award."
We will not substitute our judgment for that of a labor arbitrator, and we will uphold an arbitral decision so long as the award is "reasonably debatable."
The Township first argues it is being constrained to violate public policy by either returning Bivens to her former position or transferring her outside of the Finance Department at her previous salary. We disagree.
We recognize the New Jersey Arbitration Act,
The United States Supreme Court has also stated that courts may not enforce public sector collective bargaining agreements that are contrary to "well defined and dominant public policy."
On the other hand, the "public policy exception requires `heightened judicial scrutiny' when an arbitration award implicates `a clear mandate of public policy[.]'"
Significantly, in determining whether the public policy exception applies, the court should concentrate on the award, not the conduct which gave rise to the dispute.
"[F]or purposes of judicial review of labor arbitration awards, public policy sufficient to vacate an award must be embodied in legislative enactments, administrative regulations, or legal precedents," not "amorphous considerations" of the public's well-being.
The Township points to
The Township asserts these statutory provisions demonstrate returning Bivens to her former position as an assistant purchasing agent would be inconsistent with public policy. These cited statutes are examples of the general prohibition of misconduct in office, but they do not relate specifically to Bivens's conduct. Moreover, without suggesting that a criminal conviction is required, we note that Bivens was never convicted, let alone charged with a crime. The argument overlooks the fact that the arbitrator found Bivens never intended to collect on the voucher. Hence, one cannot conclude Bivens acted "with purpose to obtain a benefit for [her]self or another or to injure or to deprive another of a benefit."
The Township's arguments suggest the arbitrator could not supplant the sanction and the arbitrator overstepped her bounds when she directed the reinstatement of Bivens to her former position or to some other position outside of the financial department. Not only is that remedy not shown to be prohibited by any statute, regulation or other clear mandate of public policy, it is not shown to be beyond the CNA. That agreement specifically provides for binding arbitration, without limiting the power of the arbitrator to fashion an appropriate remedy. Moreover, the Court has observed that "deference to an arbitrator's award reinstating an employee to his former position following admittedly serious misconduct is consistent with arbitration jurisprudence across the nation."
The Township also argues the arbitrator's award violates public policy because the statute which governs purchasing agents was amended, effective in 2011, to include good moral character as a requirement. Even if it were appropriate to apply a statute which became effective after the date of the acts for which disciplinary charges are filed — a highly doubtful proposition — the Township's argument that the after-the-fact amendment would strengthen the law governing the punishment of purchasing agent misconduct is simply not persuasive.
The Township further argues that the term "regulations," as stated in
By comparison, in addressing the public policy exception affecting challenges to public sector arbitration awards, the Court has stated the exception should only apply to public policy embodied in legislative enactments, administrative regulations, or legal precedents.
The Township also argues that, based on well-settled decisional law, a public official owes a fiduciary duty to the public which should not be diluted by self-interest. The Township points out that the arbitrator specifically found that Bivens violated the public trust. The arbitrator, however, determined, under the totality of the circumstances, that the employee's conduct did not warrant termination of her employment. We reiterate that the focus of the court's inquiry is not upon the grievant's conduct, but upon the award and whether it violates public policy.
The Township maintains that the reinstatement of Bivens at her previous pay rate, even in a separate department, is contrary to the public policy against waste and abuse of taxpayer money. The Township therefore contends the arbitrator was required to consider the fiscal impact of her decision, citing
In
In
The Township argues this is against public policy because the fiscal impact results in waste which adversely affects the residents of the Township. The record does not contain evidence of service reduction or overt detriment to the public by Bivens's reinstatement that is comparable to the obvious effect in
The Township next argues the arbitration award exceeded the arbitrator's scope of authority under the agreement. Courts are required to vacate an arbitration award where "the arbitrators exceeded or so imperfectly executed their powers that a mutual, final and definite award upon the subject matter submitted was not made."
Here, the Township fails to explain how the award is separated from the essence of the CNA, except to make the bald assertion that Bivens's reinstatement at her previous pay grade exceeded the arbitrator's scope. Contrary to the Township's assertion, reinstatement without back pay is a common remedy in CNA cases.
Therefore, without a more definitive showing of the arbitrator's excess, our review is confined to a consideration of whether the award is reasonably debatable, in light of the suspension without pay for a year, which the Court has described as "a considerable penalty that recognized economic realities and social norms."
Finally, the Township argues that the arbitrator made three mistakes of fact which materially undermined her reasoning, causing the award to be rendered by undue means. The Township asserts the mistakes of fact are that: (1) the voucher used by Bivens was not the appropriate voucher used by Finance Department employees when requesting comp time, (2) the arbitrator failed to recognize Bivens's accusation that current employees are stealing gas could not be applied to the identified co-employee, and (3) the arbitrator incorrectly stated that another identified employee did not testify about telling Bivens that a supervisor's assistant came in late and changed her time.
"`Undue means,' as used in
The Township asserts the arbitrator made mistakes of fact. We have reviewed the arbitrator's written analysis of the facts, as well as the analysis by the Law Division. We perceive no mistakes that are material, and we conclude these asserted errors lack sufficient merit to warrant further discussion in a written opinion.
Affirmed.