United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
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No. 04-4080
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Electrolux Home Products, *
*
Plaintiff - Appellant, *
* Appeal from the United States
v. * District Court for the Northern
* District of Iowa.
The United Automobile Aerospace and *
Agricultural Implement Workers of *
America; The United Automobile *
Aerospace and Agricultural Implement *
Workers of America, Local No. 442 *
*
Defendants - Appellees. *
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Submitted: June 23, 2005
Filed: August 5, 2005
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Before MELLOY, HEANEY, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges.
___________
MELLOY, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiff-Appellant Electrolux Home Products (“Electrolux”) appeals the
district court’s1 denial of its motion for summary judgment on a claim to vacate an
industrial arbitration award. Electrolux also appeals the district court’s grant of
summary judgment in favor of the defendant-appellees on a claim for enforcement of
the arbitration award. We affirm.
I. Factual Background
Electrolux owns and operates a production facility in Webster City, Iowa. The
United Automobile Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (the
“Union”) and the United Automobile Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers
of America, Local No. 442 (“Local 442”) (collectively the “UAW”) are the collective
bargaining unit representatives for the hourly workers at the Iowa facility. This case
involves an arbitrator’s interpretation of a collective bargaining agreement (the
“Agreement”) between UAW and Electrolux and application of the Agreement to a
collective bargaining unit employee, Deborah Cook.
Under the Agreement, Electrolux has the right to terminate employees for
cause. Also, the Agreement provides, “Attendance related disciplinary action shall
be in line with the provisions of the plant’s Attendance Policy.” The Agreement
further provides that Electrolux:
[S]hall establish and publish a Family and Medical Leave of Absence
Policy consistent with the provisions of the Family and Medical Leave
Act of 1993 [“FMLA”]. The Company may, from time to time, amend
the policy, but under no circumstances shall an employee receive less
benefits than those provided under the Family and Medical Leave Act
of 1993 .
1
The Honorable Mark W. Bennett, Chief Judge, United States District Court
for the Northern District of Iowa.
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Electrolux has such a policy under which employees are required to document their
absences:
Any leave forms not returned within the required time frame, incomplete
or improperly completed leave forms, or leave requests which are
denied, could result in the loss of attendance points and employees could
be subject to other applicable contractual language regarding unexcused
absences from work.
...
Any eligible employee applying for FMLA leave must obtain a form
from Human Resources.
...
If circumstances occur where the employee cannot reasonably provide
the required thirty (30) day notice, the employee must notify [Human
Resources] as soon as possible. The employee must obtain the required
form and return the completed document as soon as reasonably possible.
“Attendance points” refer to credits in a merit/demerit system that Electrolux
established as its attendance policy. Under the attendance policy, an employee starts
with eight attendance points. The employee earns points for sufficient periods
without unexcused absences and loses points for unexcused absences. Absences that
qualify under the provisions of the FMLA are excused and do not result in a loss of
attendance points. It has been a practice at the Iowa facility to presume that absences
of three or more consecutive days involve situations that qualify under the FMLA.
Also, it has been a practice at the facility to demand medical certification to explain
absences from work for periods of less than three days. It is undisputed that it is
cause for termination if an employee uses all of his or her attendance points.
Electrolux fired Deborah Cook on August 2, 2002 for exhausting all eight of
her attendance points. Ms. Cook does not dispute earlier determinations related to the
loss of her first seven points. She disputes only the decision to subtract an attendance
point for a one-day absence on July 31, 2002. We discuss that day, her subsequent
attempts to document her absence, and, to a limited extent, her medical history.
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Ms. Cook left work early on July 31, 2002 after telling her supervisor that her
stomach hurt and after receiving permission to leave. Her regular physician could not
see her that day. On August 1, after her regular work shift, she was able to see a
physician’s assistant in nearby Fort Dodge, Iowa. She reported nausea to the
physician’s assistant who diagnosed her with gastroesophageal reflux disease
(“GERD”) and prescribed a proton pump inhibitor. The physician’s assistant was
neither designated nor approved by Electrolux to make FMLA determinations, but the
physician’s assistant was, in fact, qualified under the FMLA. The physician’s
assistant refused Ms. Cook’s request to certify the ailment as incapacitating or as
protected by the FMLA. When representatives from Electrolux contacted the
physician’s assistant after August 1, the physician’s assistant said that she would not
recognize the event as an FMLA occurrence.
On August 2, 2002, Electrolux terminated Ms. Cook’s employment because she
had not submitted a leave form certifying the absence as an FMLA occurrence. Ms.
Cook asked for more time so that she could see her regular doctor, but Electrolux
denied her request. Ms. Cook claims that she contacted the Department of Labor and
was told that she could obtain a second opinion. She also claims that she contacted
her regular doctor’s office and was told by someone at that office (not her regular
doctor) that her doctor could see her in the future but that he would not override
another person’s decision.2
On August 5, 2002, a nurse practitioner in Gowrie, Iowa, examined Ms. Cook.
The nurse practitioner was neither designated nor approved by Electrolux to make
FMLA determinations, but the nurse practitioner was, in fact, qualified under the
FMLA. Ms. Cook did not tell the nurse practitioner that she had been examined by,
2
Electrolux characterizes this statement from someone at the doctor’s office as
an adverse medical opinion. This characterization goes beyond any facts found by
the arbitrator.
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or received a prescription from, the physician’s assistant three days earlier. Ms. Cook
also did not tell the nurse practitioner that the physician’s assistant had refused to
certify the July 31 absence. The nurse practitioner wrote Ms. Cook a prescription for
a different proton pump inhibitor and filled out an FMLA leave form. On the form,
in response to the question, “[d]escribe the medical facts which support your
certification, including a brief statement as to how the medical facts meet the criteria
of one of these categories [of FMLA qualifying conditions],” the nurse practitioner
answered, “Chronic gastritis including episodes of acute epigastric pain. This
condition may cause episodic absence due to the illness.” In response to the question,
“[i]f medical leave is required for the employee’s absence from work because of the
employee’s own condition (including absences due to pregnancy or a chronic
condition), is the employee unable to perform any kind of work,” the nurse
practitioner answered, “During times of acute onset of symptoms, employee unable
to work.”
Ms. Cook offered these papers from the nurse practitioner to Electrolux. The
company told her that it did not have to accept documentation provided from a health
care provider who was not her treating physician and who saw her that many days
after the absence.
Ms. Cook then filed a grievance under the collective bargaining agreement. It
was undisputed that the collective bargaining agreement mandated arbitration of the
grievance. An arbitration hearing took place on July 24, 2003. At the hearing, the
physician’s assistant who had treated Ms. Cook testified that, on July 31, 2002, Ms.
Cook was not incapacitated, did not suffer from a serious health condition within the
meaning of the FMLA, and did not qualify for FMLA leave. The nurse practitioner
who treated Ms. Cook also testified. She stated that she had not examined Ms. Cook
until days later and could not state under oath that Ms. Cook had been incapacitated
on July 31, 2002. The nurse practitioner stated that Ms. Cook had not told her of the
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prior examination by, and attempt to obtain certification from, the physician’s
assistant.
The arbitrator questioned the nurse practitioner about GERD. The nurse
practitioner stated that GERD is basically heartburn and that Ms. Cook reported
severe epigastric pain. The arbitrator questioned the nurse practitioner about whether
there would be any way to test the severity of the pain, whether the pain could be
severe enough to be incapacitating, and whether treatment with over-the-counter
medicines could or would work. The nurse practitioner explained that there is no real
way to test or verify the level of pain. The nurse practitioner also answered that “it’s
possible” that treatment by over-the-counter medicines would work and permit
someone with GERD to avoid seeing a physician. She also stated that she made her
diagnosis and prescribed medicine based on Ms. Cook’s complaints and that she
would have treated Ms. Cook the same way if Ms. Cook had visited her earlier.
Relevant to the issues presented in this case are the following facts from Ms.
Cook’s medical history. In July 2001, a physician diagnosed Ms. Cook with
gastroenteritis. On an April 2002 leave form, a physician described her illness as
gastritis. On a June 2002 leave form, a physician described her illness as “Abd. Pah,
Diarrhea.” On each of these occasions she missed more than three consecutive days
of work: three days of work in 2001, five days in April 2002, and three days in June
2002. Electrolux did not require certification for these absences and treated the
events as FMLA occurrences that did not result in attendance point losses.
On November 23, 2003, the arbitrator issued a written opinion concluding that
the only issue to be decided was whether the July 31, 2002 absence was an FMLA
qualified absence. He found that the evidence was sufficient to show that Ms. Cook’s
absence was an FMLA occurrence. He stated:
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Had [Ms. Cook] had fair warning of the danger she was in, she might
well have decided to force herself to stay at work to save her job.
...
[T]he papers submitted by the Grievant constituted a proper medical
certification under the FMLA. They were prepared by a Nurse
Practitioner, who is specifically recognized as a “health care provider”
under the regulations of the Department of Labor. The certification
explicitly found that the Grievant’s medical condition qualified as a
“serious health condition.” Although she did not specifically state that
Grievant’s condition incapacitated her on July 31, the Nurse Practitioner
did certify that her absence on July 31 was “related to her GERD.” This
is close enough to qualify.
The arbitrator also rejected the argument by Electrolux that an employee cannot rely
on a subsequent opinion from someone other than the original health care provider:
The Company’s primary argument is that the August 5 certification
should be disregarded because it is a “second opinion” resulting from
“doctor shopping,” which the statute does not allow. However, there is
no basis in the statute or regulations for this contention. The statute
requires only that the certification be made by the “health care provider
for the employee;” it does not differentiate between the treating
physician and any other health care provider. The Nurse Practitioner did
examine, diagnose and treat the Grievant on August 5, and that is
enough to qualify her. The company did cite to a prior arbitration
decision and several court opinions expressing preference for the
opinion of the treating physician. However, none of those cases
concerned a situation where there were conflicting opinions by different
health care providers and therefore they provide no guidance for the
resolution of this case.
The arbitrator ordered Electrolux to reinstate Ms. Cook to her former position and to
award her back wages and benefits.
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Electrolux did reinstate Ms. Cook, but did not award her back wages or
benefits. Electrolux brought this action seeking to vacate the arbitration award.
Electrolux filed a motion for summary judgment in which it presented various
arguments alleging that the arbitrator misinterpreted the requirements of the FMLA,
incorporated by reference into the collective bargaining agreement. The UAW, on
Ms. Cook’s behalf, brought an action to enforce the award and moved for summary
judgment. Under the deferential standards applicable to the enforcement of labor
arbitration awards, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the UAW
and denied Electrolux’s motion to vacate the award.
II. Discussion
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment and all of its legal
determinations de novo. Bureau of Engraving, Inc. v. Graphic Comm. Int’l Union,
284 F.3d 821, 824 (8th Cir. 2002). In contrast, we extend “‘an extraordinary level of
deference’” to the decision of the arbitrator. Boise Cascade Corp. v. PACE Local 7-
0159, 309 F.3d 1075, 1080 (8th Cir. 2002) (quoting Keebler Co. v. Milk Drivers &
Dairy Employees Union, Local No. 471, 80 F.3d 284, 287 (8th Cir. 1996)). In fact,
we “are not authorized to reconsider the merits of an award even though the parties
may allege that the award rests on errors of fact or on misinterpretation of the
contract.” United Paperworkers Int’l Union, AFL-CIO v. Misco, Inc., 484 U.S. 29,
36 (1987). Accordingly, we must uphold an arbitrator’s award “[a]s long as the
arbitrator’s award ‘draws its essence from the collective bargaining agreement,’ and
is not merely ‘[the arbitrator’s ] own brand of industrial justice.’” Id. (quoting United
Steelworkers v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp., 363 U.S. 593, 597 (1960)). Further,
“as long as the arbitrator is even arguably construing or applying the contract and
acting within the scope of his authority, that a court is convinced he committed
serious error does not suffice to overturn his decision.” United Paperworkers, 484
U.S. at 38. Relevant to the present appeal, “‘we “do not sit to hear claims of factual
or legal error by an arbitrator as an appellate court does in reviewing decisions of
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lower courts.”’” Bureau of Engraving, 284 F.3d at 824-25 (emphasis added) (quoting
Homestake Mining Co. v. United Steelworkers of America, 153 F.3d 678 (8th Cir.
1998) (in turn quoting United Paperworkers, 484 U.S. at 38)).
While this standard may seem harsh to parties who lose in arbitration, this
standard is justified because it is exactly what the parties mutually agreed upon by
electing arbitration over judicial resolution of their conflicts. See United
Steelworkers v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp., 363 U.S. at 599 (“It is the arbitrator’s
construction which was bargained for.”). The fact that contract interpretation requires
the arbitrator to interpret law that is incorporated by reference does nothing to change
our standard of review. See, e.g., American Postal Workers Union v. United States
Postal Service, 789 F.2d 1, 6 (D.C. Cir. 1986) (“When construction of the contract
implicitly or directly requires an application of ‘external law,’ i.e., statutory or
decisional law, the parties have necessarily bargained for the arbitrator’s
interpretation of the law and are bound by it.”).
The Agreement in this case expressly incorporates the requirements of the
FMLA, setting the FMLA as a floor for employees’ leave-related benefits. Electrolux
claims the arbitrator exhibited a manifest disregard for the requirements of the
FMLA, and in doing so, issued a decision that did not draw its essence from the
contract. Specifically, Electrolux argues that: (1) it was a violation of the FMLA to
permit an employee to rely upon a second opinion that was not solicited by the
employer because the FMLA contains detailed provisions that govern the use of
“second opinions”; and (2) the certification was insufficient as a matter of law given
the FMLA’s clear requirement that the medical condition render the employee unable
to work. Electrolux, however, fails to acknowledge the distinction between a possible
factual or legal error in an arbitrator’s decision, on the one hand, and a manifest
disregard for the law, on the other.
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Regarding the first issue, the admissibility of the employee-procured second
opinion, it is not even clear that the arbitrator committed an error. As a result we
cannot find that he acted in manifest disregard of the law. The FMLA does not
expressly prohibit an employee from tendering second opinions not requested by the
employer. In fact, the FMLA is silent regarding an employee’s ability to rely on such
opinions. In contrast, the FMLA provides a structured method that permits an
employer to obtain second opinions to challenge an employee’s favorable
certification documents:
In any case in which the employer has reason to doubt the validity of the
certification provided under subsection (a) of this section for leave
under subparagraph (C) or (D) of section 2612(a)(1) of this title, the
employer may require, at the expense of the employer, that the eligible
employee obtain the opinion of a second health care provider designated
or approved by the employer concerning any information certified under
subsection (b) of this section for such leave.
29 U.S.C. § 2613(c)(1). Electrolux argues that because this provision grants specific
rights to the employer, but does not grant corresponding rights to the employee, an
employee may not rely on second opinions other than those requested by the
employer.
None of our cases have addressed this issue. The Seventh Circuit has
addressed this issue and rejected Electrolux’s argument, holding that it is permissible
for an employee to submit second opinions not solicited by the employer:
The FMLA circumscribes the employer’s right to challenge a
physician’s certification that leave is FMLA-qualifying, see 29 U.S.C.
§ 2613, but nothing in the Act or regulations limits the employee’s
ability to produce a medical opinion that contradicts a prior negative
certification originally provided by the employee.
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Stoops v. One Call Communications, Inc., 141 F.3d 309, 313 (7th Cir. 1998). Given
the absence of direct authority to contradict the arbitrator’s legal conclusion and
given another circuit’s adoption of the arbitrator’s position, we find no manifest
disregard for the law. We need not, and do not, determine whether the Seventh
Circuit’s approach is the proper interpretation of the FMLA. We decide only that the
arbitrator’s decision related to an employee’s tender of a second opinion is not such
a grave misreading of the FMLA (as incorporated in the Agreement) as to comprise
a manifest disregard of the law and justify our disturbance of the labor arbitration
award.
Regarding the second issue, the arbitrator’s determination that Ms. Cook’s
absence was an FMLA occurrence, we understand Electrolux’s concern. Here,
Electrolux has a much stronger argument regarding the presence of error. In fact, our
review suggests that, under a de novo standard, Electrolux might be entitled to relief.
Our review, however is not de novo. It is merely to determine whether the arbitrator
acted in manifest disregard of the law and acted outside the scope of his authority by
reaching a decision that failed to draw its essence from the collective bargaining
agreement. For the reasons discussed below, we do not find that any error by the
arbitrator reached this level.
Electrolux argues first that the arbitrator acted in manifest disregard of the law
by finding that the FMLA required only a showing of a “serious” medical condition
and not a showing of incapacity or inability to work. To support its position,
Electrolux focuses on the arbitrator’s statement, “This is close enough to qualify.”
Electrolux also focuses on the arbitrator’s statement that Ms. Cook could have forced
herself to remain at work. We do not interpret the arbitrator’s statements in the
manner urged by Electrolux.
The arbitrator said “close enough” immediately after, and in reference to, his
discussion of the nurse practitioner’s certification. In the certification she identified
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the ailment, described the epigastric pain as “acute,” and described the ailment as
incapacitating during “acute onset of symptoms.” We understand the arbitrator’s
statement to mean that although the nurse practitioner did not expressly state that Ms.
Cook was incapacitated, she implied as much in her answers to the questions on the
certification form and through her statement that the absence was related to the
ailment.
Further, the arbitrator’s statement that Ms. Cook might have forced herself to
remain at work does not demonstrate the arbitrator’s rejection of an incapacity
requirement. With decreased or no productivity, we are convinced many people
could force themselves to stay on the job even though seriously ill. The fact that the
arbitrator believed someone could be incapacitated and yet still force themselves to
remain at work for a portion of a day is a reasonable interpretation of the term
incapacitated. To hold otherwise would be to withhold FMLA protection unless an
employee is taken from the workplace on a stretcher.
The harder question is whether the ultimate determination as to incapacity was
such a grievous error as to show that the arbitrator acted in manifest disregard of the
law and to place the arbitrator’s award outside the “essence of the collective
bargaining agreement.” The balance of the evidence—the opinion of the physician’s
assistant and the nurse practitioner’s apparent contradiction in her 2003
testimony—strongly suggests that Ms. Cook was able to work on July 31, 2003.
This, however, shows at most that the arbitrator committed an error in judgment, and
mere error by the arbitrator is not a basis for reversal. Bureau of Engraving, 284 F.3d
at 824-25 ( “we do not sit to hear claims of factual or legal error by an arbitrator as
an appellate court does in reviewing decisions of lower courts” ) (internal quotation
marks omitted). The record does not suggest bad faith, dishonesty, or partiality on
the part of the arbitrator. In fact, as recognized by the district court, the record
demonstrates clearly that the arbitrator considered the evidence, identified the
controlling FMLA provisions that were incorporated into the contract and carefully
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applied the law to the facts. In short, he was “construing or applying the contract and
acting within the scope of his authority.” United Paperworkers, 484 U.S. at 38.
Accordingly, we believe that his decision, while possibly erroneous, drew its essence
from the collective bargaining agreement, and we must enforce his award.3 United
Steelworkers, 363 U.S. at 596.
We affirm the judgment of the district court.
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3
At oral argument, counsel for Electrolux commented on the apparent economic
irrationality of appealing the present decision given the facts that damages were low,
back pay for Ms. Cook was relatively small, Electrolux had reinstated Ms. Cook, and
Electrolux had subsequently fired Ms. Cook after she missed work again and depleted
her attendance points. Counsel explained that this case carried greater significance
than Ms. Cook’s individual case because it would stand as precedent concerning what
the company must accept from employees under the FMLA and what the FMLA
requires for certification. This is a mischaracterization of the present case. All that
we decide today is that Electrolux and the UAW agreed to be bound by an arbitrator’s
interpretations of the collective bargaining agreement and that his interpretation in
Ms. Cook’s case was not so gravely in error as to demonstrate an abrogation of his
duty to interpret the contract. Since Electrolux and the UAW agreed to incorporate
the terms of the FMLA into the agreement, they are bound by the arbitrator’s
interpretation of the FMLA’s requirements (as long as those interpretations are not
in manifest disregard of the law) in the same manner that they are bound by his
interpretation of the rest of the agreement.
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