Opinions of the United
2005 Decisions States Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit
11-8-2005
United Steelworkers v. PPG Ind Inc
Precedential or Non-Precedential: Non-Precedential
Docket No. 04-4363
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NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
Case No: 04-4363
UNITED STEELWORKERS OF AMERICA, AFL-CIO-CLC,
a labor organization
v.
PPG INDUSTRIES, INC.,
Appellant
On Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Pennsylvania
District Court No.: 03-cv-00513
District Judge: The Honorable Joy F. Conti
Argued September 15, 2005
Before: SLOVITER, BARRY, and SMITH, Circuit Judges
(Filed: November 8, 2005)
Counsel: William T. Payne (Argued)
Schwartz, Steinsapir, Dohrmann & Summers
1007 Mount Royal Boulevard
Pittsburgh, PA 15223
Melvin P. Stein
Daniel M. Kovalik
United Steelworkers of America
Five Gateway Center
Pittsburgh, PA 15222
Counsel for Appellee
Richard J. Antonelli (Argued)
Joseph Mack, III
Rebecca J. Dick-Hurwitz
Spilman, Thomas & Battle
301 Grant Street
One Oxford Centre, Suite 3440
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
Counsel for Appellant
OPINION
SMITH, Circuit Judge.
PPG Industries, Inc. (“PPG”) appeals from the order of the District Court granting
summary judgment to United Steelworkers of America, AFL-CIO-CLC (“USWA”) in an
action arising from an ongoing labor dispute.1 This appeal requires us to decide whether
the doctrine of res judicata bars USWA from bringing the current suit after a previous suit
between these parties, involving part of the same overall labor dispute, was decided in
favor of PPG. The District Court concluded that USWA’s second suit presented a
different cause of action from its first suit against PPG and, therefore, was not barred by
res judicata. For the reasons that follow, we will affirm the judgment of the District
Court.
1
The District Court exercised jurisdiction over the case pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 185,
which establishes jurisdiction over actions against labor organizations in the district in
which such organizations maintain their principal offices. We have jurisdiction to review
the District Court’s entry of summary judgment under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we review
such decisions de novo. See, e.g., Vitalo v. Cabot Corp., 399 F.3d 536, 542 (3d Cir.
2005).
2
USWA first sued PPG seeking specific performance of an alleged agreement to
arbitrate the claims of employees of multiple PPG plants. USWA asserted that in October
of 2000, PPG agreed to engage in expedited, multi-plant arbitration of particular transfer-
right related grievances of its employees. When USWA filed a formal grievance seeking
multi-plant arbitration of the transfer-right claims, however, PPG rejected it as non-
arbitrable. In July, 2001, PPG wrote a letter withdrawing what it described as its
conditional October 2000 agreement to multi-plant arbitration on the ground that USWA
failed to file a proper grievance over the relevant dispute and also failed to meet the
conditions of PPG’s prior proposal to submit the multi-plant claims to a single arbitrator.
USWA filed suit in August, 2001. In August, 2002, District Judge Robert J. Cindrich
adopted the Report and Recommendation of Magistrate Judge Robert Mitchell that
summary judgment be granted to PPG on the ground that no multi-plant arbitration
agreement existed.
Later in 2002, USWA sent a letter to PPG requesting arbitration of several single-
plant claims, pursuant to a single-plant arbitration agreement (“the Greensburg
agreement”), and on behalf only of those employees covered by that agreement. In
addition to raising other single-plant issues, the letter referenced a grievance included in
the earlier, multi-plant dispute seeking to recover back-pay and resolve seniority issues
under the Greensburg agreement. PPG refused to arbitrate all claims by an October, 2002
letter, and USWA filed a second suit in April of 2003 to compel arbitration. In the
3
second action, the District Court (per Conti, J.) granted USWA’s motion for summary
judgment, rejecting PPG’s arguments that the action was barred under the doctrine of res
judicata.
In ruling for USWA, the District Court found that only one prong of the three-
prong test for res judicata 2 was at issue – whether USWA’s cause of action was the same
in both suits. PPG argues on appeal that USWA’s current suit should be barred either
because it presents the same cause of action as did the first suit between the parties, or
because, at the least, USWA had a reasonable opportunity to sue on the Greensburg
agreement in the first action. USWA counters that not only were the causes of action in
the two suits analytically distinct, but also that, at the time of the first suit, the factual
predicate required to compel arbitration under the Greensburg agreement did not exist
because PPG had not yet refused to arbitrate under that specific, single-plant agreement.
In U.S. v. Athlone Industries, Inc., 746 F.2d 977, 984 (3d Cir. 1984), this Court
articulated a multi-factor test3 to determine whether two causes of action are identical for
2
An action will be barred if: (1) there has been a final judgment on the merits in the
first of the two actions; (2) the two actions involve the same parties or their privies; and
(3) both suits involve the same cause of action. See, e.g., General Elec. Co. v. Deutz AG,
270 F.3d 144, 158 (3d Cir. 2001).
3
The elements of the original Athlone test are:
(1) whether the acts complained of and the demand for relief are the same
(that is, whether the wrong for which redress is sought is the same in both
actions); (2) whether the theory of recovery is the same; (3) whether the
witnesses and documents at trial are the same (that is, whether the same
evidence necessary to maintain the second action would have been
4
res judicata purposes. We most recently reiterated that test in the bankruptcy case of In re
Eastern Minerals & Chemical Co. v. Mahan, 225 F.3d 330, 337-38 (3d Cir. 2000).
Although we acknowledged in Eastern Minerals that the bankruptcy context presented
some unique issues in applying the res judicata doctrine, we expressly reiterated and
applied the Athlone test, holding that “a claim should not be barred unless the factual
underpinnings, theory of the case, and relief sought against the parties to the proceeding
are so close to a claim actually litigated . . . that it would be unreasonable not to have
brought them both at the same time . . . .” Id. at 337-38.
Applying the Athlone test, as clarified in Eastern Minerals, we agree with the
District Court that the facts of this case require the conclusion that the causes of action in
the two suits are distinct. As the District Court found, the factual underpinnings of the
first action primarily involved the negotiations leading up to the putative multi-plant
agreement, not the arbitration clause in the Greensburg agreement.4 Nor did USWA
sufficient to support the first); and (4) whether the material facts alleged are
the same.
U.S. v. Athlone Industries, Inc., 746 F.2d 977, 984 (3d Cir. 1984).
4
We note that although USWA raised arbitration under the Greensburg agreement as
possible alternative relief in the first suit, that prayer for relief was not addressed in the
first action and is not significant for purposes of our “same cause of action” analysis here.
USWA built no argumentative predicate in its complaint for the alternative relief it
requested, neither party dealt with the substance of the request for single-plant arbitration
in the first action, and the ruling of the district court in the first action made no mention
whatever of USWA’s request for alternative relief. What is more, PPG itself argued
before the District Court in the instant action that USWA unreasonably failed to raise the
single-plant claim in the first action – a proposition the District Court accepted in ruling
5
complain of the same acts in both suits. USWA’s complaint in the first action clearly
indicates that its theory of the case was that PPG breached the ad hoc multi-plant
arbitration agreement. In the second suit, the complaint alleges specifically that PPG
breached the arbitration clause of the single-plant Greensburg agreement. The documents
and evidence at issue in the two actions also differ. The letters and other evidence
suggesting a temporary or ongoing offer on the part of PPG to arbitrate multi-plant
grievances were critical in the first action and irrelevant to USWA’s claims in the second.
Finally, and although USWA’s first complaint does make the aforementioned request for
alternative relief under the Greensburg agreement, it is clear that USWA primarily sought
specific performance of the supposed multi-plant agreement in the first suit, and it sought
specific performance of the single-plant Greensburg agreement as its primary relief in the
second. In short, the two causes of action are distinct in every material respect.
PPG nonetheless argues that USWA acted unreasonably by not pressing its claim
under the Greensburg agreement in the first action. This argument is unavailing. Res
judicata does not punish a litigant for failing to prosecute a claim in an earlier suit if that
claim had not yet accrued at the time of the initial action. See CoreStates Bank, N.A. v.
Huls America, Inc., 176 F.3d 187, 203 (3d Cir. 1999). Further, the parties agree with the
District Court that an arbitration claim does not accrue until the employer issues an
unequivocal refusal to arbitrate. Applying that standard, we conclude that USWA’s
that the causes of action in the two suits were distinct.
6
Greensburg claim had not accrued as of the first suit.
PPG argues that it issued an unequivocal refusal to arbitrate under the Greensburg
agreement in its July 11, 2001 letter written in advance of the first suit, but the context of
that letter does not admit of such a reading. The letter stated PPG’s position that USWA
“has not met” and “has no intention of accepting all the terms and conditions of PPG’s
prior offer to arbitrate these matters before a single arbitrator.” The letter also indicated a
withdrawal of the offer to arbitrate the matters at hand before a single arbitrator. Having
said that, the District Court correctly found that, taken in context, the 2001 letter rejected
merely multi-plant, multi-party arbitration. Nothing in the 2001 letter speaks to a single-
plant arbitration under the Greensburg agreement, let alone rejects such an arbitration.
The request for single-plant arbitration under the Greensburg agreement alone arose for
the first time in USWA’s letter to PPG dated October 10, 2002. Therefore, PPG’s
October 15, 2002 letter, taken in its context, unequivocally rejected arbitration under the
Greensburg agreement by flatly stating “PPG is under no duty to arbitrate.” USWA’s
Greensburg claim accrued on October 15, 2002.5 Thus, USWA acted reasonably in
failing to fully litigate that claim as part of the 2001 suit.
Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment of the District Court.
5
As the District Court held, the finding that USWA’s Greensburg claim did not accrue
until October 15, 2002 also disposes of PPG’s argument before the District Court that
USWA’s second suit was barred by the six-month statute of limitations governing claims
under the Labor Management Relations Act. USWA timely filed its second action.