May 14, 2018
Supreme Court
No. 2017-186-Appeal.
(PM 16-5833)
Town of Cumberland :
v. :
Cumberland Town Employees Union et al. :
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before
publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to
notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island,
250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone
222-3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that
corrections may be made before the opinion is published.
Supreme Court
No. 2017-186-Appeal.
(PM 16-5833)
(Dissent begins on Page10)
Town of Cumberland :
v. :
Cumberland Town Employees Union et al. :
Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
OPINION
Justice Indeglia, for the Court. Before the Court is an appeal from a Providence
County Superior Court hearing justice’s decision granting a motion to vacate an arbitration
award in favor of the defendants, the Cumberland Town Employees Union and Norman
Tremblay (Tremblay) (collectively, the union), brought by the plaintiff, the Town of Cumberland
(the town), and denying the union’s cross-petition to confirm the same.1 This matter came
before the Supreme Court on March 8, 2018, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear
and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After
considering the arguments set forth in the parties’ memoranda and at oral argument, we are
convinced that cause has not been shown. Thus, further argument or briefing is not required to
decide this matter. For the reasons outlined below, the Superior Court judgment in favor of the
town is vacated, and the case is remanded with instructions to confirm the arbitration award.
1
While the action below named both the union and Tremblay, the notice of appeal to this Court
indicates that only the union—and not Tremblay—is appealing the hearing justice’s decision.
-1-
I
Facts2 and Travel
Tremblay was employed by the town’s highway department as a light equipment operator
for nearly thirteen years. At all relevant times, a collective bargaining agreement (the CBA)
entered into between the town and the union governed his employment. On August 5, 2014,
Tremblay “rolled” his ankle at work, tearing tendons and ligaments. As a result, he could not
work, and he required surgery to repair the damage before he could resume his position. After
encountering numerous health insurance delays, on June 24, 2015, Tremblay underwent his long-
awaited surgery, but did not return to work while he was recovering.
During his absence, Tremblay remained a town employee, continuing to pay his union
dues and contributing toward his health insurance benefits. Throughout that time, he maintained
regular contact with the union, as well as with the town by way of its human resources
department. At no point did the town inform Tremblay that he should request a leave of absence,
and thus he did not do so.
On November 10, 2015, Tremblay received a letter from the town’s human resources
department notifying him that his right to seek reinstatement to his position was terminated
pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 28-33-47(c)(1)(vi)3 of the Workers’ Compensation Act (the WCA). In
2
These facts are uncontested.
3
That statute reads, in relevant part: “Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this section * * * [t]he
right to reinstatement to the worker’s former position under this section terminates upon * * *
[t]he expiration of thirty (30) days after the employee reaches maximum medical improvement
or concludes or ceases to participate in an approved program of rehabilitation, or one year from
the date of injury, whichever is sooner * * *.” General Laws 1956 § 28-33-47(c)(1)(vi)
(emphasis added).
-2-
support of that notice of termination, the town relied on the fact that a period in excess of one
year had elapsed since his injury.
Three days after Tremblay received the letter, the union filed a grievance on his behalf,
arguing that he had been terminated without just cause, in violation of Article 13.1 of the CBA.4
His grievance was held in abeyance until the conclusion of a separate workers’ compensation
suit. Once that suit resolved, Tremblay followed the procedure for filing a grievance dictated in
Article 4 of the CBA;5 based on that article, he brought his grievance first to the town’s human
resources department and then to the mayor. Each denied his grievance. Dissatisfied, the union
4
Article 13.1 recites, in relevant part: “Disciplinary action may be imposed upon an employee
only for just cause.”
5
Article 4.2 reads, in relevant part: “Any employee(s) who have a grievance must submit the
grievance in writing to the Union within seven (7) calendar days of the aggrieved’s knowledge of
said violation, or it shall not be considered a grievance under the terms of this Agreement.”
Article 4.3 continues:
“There shall be a grievance procedure as follows:
“1. Any employee who is aggrieved has the right to discuss his/her
grievance with his/her immediate supervisor with or without
his/her Union Representative present. * * *.
“2. In the event the grievance is not resolved with his/her
immediate supervisor, the aggrieved and or [sic] his/her Union
Representative shall submit his/her grievance in writing to the
official and send a copy to the Human Resources Department. * *
*.
“3. In the event the grievance is not satisfactorily resolved with the
department head, the aggrieved and/or his/her Union
Representative shall submit the grievance to the Mayor. * * *.”
-3-
filed an arbitration demand on Tremblay’s behalf pursuant to Article 4.4 of the CBA.6 In the
interim, on May 4, 2016, Tremblay was formally cleared to return to work.
An arbitrator conducted a hearing regarding Tremblay’s grievance on August 11, 2016,
framing the relevant issues as (1) whether the grievance should be sustained; and (2) if so, what
should be the appropriate remedy? The town argued primarily that the grievance was not
arbitrable because § 28-33-47(d) grants the Workers’ Compensation Court exclusive jurisdiction
over reinstatement disputes. Further, the town maintained that, per the WCA, Tremblay had lost
his right to reinstatement as a matter of law when his absence exceeded one year, thus he no
longer had an arbitrable claim for reinstatement. It continued that because “the termination
actually occurred by operation of law and not by action of the [t]own, * * * Tremblay’s quarrel is
with the law, not the [t]own.” Based on that contention, the town asserted that, to dispute his
termination, Tremblay must challenge § 28-33-47(c)(1)(vi) in Workers’ Compensation Court to
restore his reinstatement right because, absent that right, there was no contract right upon which
the town could infringe.
The union countered that the town violated the CBA by terminating Tremblay without
just cause because Article 20.2 of the CBA7 contemplated a leave of absence of up to two years.8
The union avowed that the WCA “specifically preserves superior contractual rights, and leaves
intact contractual claims to enforce those right[s].” Moreover, the union asserted that, while the
6
Article 4.4 reads, in relevant part: “If the grievance is not satisfactorily resolved with the
Mayor, it may be submitted to the American Arbitration Association in accordance with its rules
then obtaining unless the parties mutually agree to an alternative method of resolution.”
7
Article 20.2 provides, in pertinent part, that: “Seniority shall be retained and shall accumulate
during all leaves without pay, provided however, that in no case shall a leave of absence be
granted for a period of more than two (2) years.”
8
Further, the union cites Article 3.8 of the CBA, which provides, in relevant part: “Seniority
shall be considered lost for the following reasons: * * * When an employee has been discharged
for just cause.”
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WCA grants a one-year reinstatement right, “it does not trump the more generous provision of
the CBA[,]” citing to § 28-33-47(b) of the WCA in support of that principle.9
In a written decision on December 13, 2016, the arbitrator concluded that Tremblay’s
grievance was arbitrable. His decision explained that the grievance had merit because “[b]efore
November 10 there [was] no indication that the [t]own did not consider Tremblay covered by the
[CBA] and entitled to the protections of the [CBA].” He opined that Tremblay was still entitled
to the benefits that the CBA afforded him because he “never ceased to be regarded as an
employee and was not seeking reinstatement as contemplated by the statute.” In closing, he
directed the town to reinstate Tremblay with full back pay and without the loss of benefits.
In Providence County Superior Court, the town petitioned to stay and to vacate the
arbitration award, and the union filed a cross-petition to confirm and to enforce the same. On
January 31, 2017, a Superior Court hearing justice heard argument on the motions. On February
23, 2017, he issued a written decision granting the town’s motion to vacate the award,
explicating that the language of the statute clearly and unambiguously gave the Workers’
Compensation Court exclusive jurisdiction over reinstatement disputes. He further explained
that the CBA’s seniority provision protected only an injured worker’s right to return to the same
level of seniority and did not serve as authority whereby the CBA could supersede the WCA’s
jurisdictional grant. The union timely appealed to this Court.
9
That statute reads as follows:
“The right of reinstatement shall be subject to the provisions for
seniority rights and other employment restrictions contained in a
valid collective bargaining agreement between the employer and a
representative of the employer’s employees, and nothing shall
exempt any employer from or excuse full compliance with any
applicable provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42
U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., and chapter 87 of title 42.” Section 28-33-
47(b).
-5-
II
Standard of Review
Although “judicial authority to review or to vacate an arbitration award is limited, [this
Court] must * * * [vacate] the award * * * [when] the arbitrator or arbitrators exceed * * * their
powers.” State v. Rhode Island Alliance of Social Services Employees, Local 580, SEIU, 747
A.2d 465, 468 (R.I. 2000) (quoting Rhode Island Council 94, AFSCME, AFL-CIO v. State, 714
A.2d 584, 587-88 (R.I. 1998)). “One sure way for an arbitrator to exceed his or her powers is to
arbitrate a dispute that is not arbitrable in the first place.” Id. In analyzing whether an issue is
arbitrable, “[a] more searching standard of judicial review governs * * * than our limited review
of the substantive arbitration award.” State Department of Corrections v. Rhode Island
Brotherhood of Correctional Officers, 866 A.2d 1241, 1247 (R.I. 2005). Arbitrability is a
question of law that we review de novo. Id.
In cases where arbitrability precipitates a question of statutory interpretation, it is also
relevant to note that “when a statutory section is clear and unambiguous, we apply the plain and
ordinary meaning of the statute and we need not delve into any further statutory interpretation.”
Grasso v. Raimondo, 177 A.3d 482, 489 (R.I. 2018).
III
Discussion
In properly focusing our inquiry, we must carefully narrow the issue that is before us. To
do so, we turn to the salient language of the relevant WCA provision.10
10
Although it was not argued either below or before us, to be clear, we note that the WCA’s
exclusivity provision, which is set forth by G.L. 1956 § 28-29-20, does not bar Tremblay’s
grievance. In pertinent part, that provision reads:
-6-
The entirety of § 28-33-47(d) reads as follows:
“Any violation of this section is deemed an unlawful employment
practice. If the employee applies for reinstatement under this
section and the employer in violation of this section refuses to
reinstate the employee, the workers’ compensation court is
authorized to order reinstatement and award back pay and the cost
of fringe benefits lost during the period as appropriate.
Determinations of reinstatement disputes shall be rendered by the
workers’ compensation court in accordance with this section and
chapters 29 – 38 of this title, and the rules of practice of the
workers’ compensation court.” (Emphasis added.)
“When * * * statutory language is ‘clear and unambiguous, this Court must interpret the statute
literally and must give the words of the statute their plain and ordinary meanings.’” McCain v.
Town of North Providence ex rel. Lombardi, 41 A.3d 239, 243 (R.I. 2012) (quoting State v.
“The right to compensation for an injury under chapters 29 – 38 of
this title, and the remedy for an injury granted by those chapters,
shall be in lieu of all rights and remedies as to that injury now
existing, either at common law or otherwise against an employer,
or its directors, officers, agents, or employees * * *.”
“[T]he scope of the exclusive-remedy doctrine as embodied in workers’ compensation law
depends upon whether the alleged work-related injury is one for which the applicable workers’
compensation statute provides a compensation remedy.” Nassa v. Hook-SupeRx, Inc., 790 A.2d
368, 372 (R.I. 2002). Further, “[t]he underlying purpose of the [WCA] is to compensate most
injured employees adequately on the basis of a calculation of their actual wages.” Bailey v.
American Stores, Inc./Star Market, 610 A.2d 117, 119 (R.I. 1992). However, the WCA’s
remedial purpose has no footing when the grievant’s claim is based upon a CBA, and not the
WCA. For that same reason, we sever our discussion of the exclusivity provision from the body
of this opinion to assure the reader that it, in fact, is not as the dissent indicated “the very issue
before the Court.”
As discussed at length herein, the union asserted that Tremblay was terminated in
violation of the CBA, not the WCA. Moreover, we have held that the Workers’ Compensation
Court “is not authorized to sit as a labor court and interpret the provisions of a collective
bargaining agreement.” Peloquin v. ITT Hammel-Dahl, 110 R.I. 330, 332, 292 A.2d 237, 239
(1972). Because the union’s claim would require the Workers’ Compensation Court to do just
that, the WCA’s exclusivity provision does not estop his grievance. The dissent’s desired
resolution of this case—that is, for us to hold that the Workers’ Compensation Court is the
appropriate body to determine whether an employee was terminated for just cause—would
nullify bargained-for rights of the CBA and treat the issue before us as a claim for compensation,
and not as a labor dispute.
-7-
Gordon, 30 A.3d 636, 638 (R.I. 2011)). As emphasized in the aforementioned statute, its
application is triggered when an employee applies for reinstatement “under this section.”
Section 28-33-47(d) (emphasis added). Yet, the union asserted that Tremblay was terminated
without just cause in violation of the CBA. Specifically, the union argued that the CBA’s two-
year allotted absence, rather than the one-year absence afforded by the WCA, applied to
Tremblay.
In fact, it would have been fruitless for the union to bring Tremblay’s reinstatement
action under § 28-33-47(d). Before the hearing justice, the union’s counsel agreed with the
town’s counsel that reinstatement rights under the WCA expired after one year. The union’s
counsel continued that, based on that one-year limit, it would have been “absurd” for the union to
argue that Tremblay was entitled to relief in Workers’ Compensation Court. We echo that, had
the union claimed that Tremblay was entitled to reinstatement under the WCA, that action would
have been legally dead on arrival.
As such, the union did not seek Tremblay’s reinstatement “under this section” of the
WCA, but rather based on rights that the union insisted the CBA afforded Tremblay beyond
those delineated in the WCA. Thus, because the union did not bring Tremblay’s grievance in
reliance on this statute, we hold that the statute has no bearing on the decision to arbitrate the
dispute.
Still, we must address whether the union’s contention—that the CBA granted Tremblay
greater rights than the WCA—was one that the arbitrator could properly decide. As it stands, our
caselaw highlights that an arbitrator “exceed[s] his or her powers by interpreting a CBA in such a
way that it contravenes state law * * *.” Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers v.
State Department of Corrections, 707 A.2d 1229, 1234 (R.I. 1998). We have held that “state law
-8-
will trump contrary contract provisions when the statute provides for nondelegable or
nonmodifiable duties and responsibilities in connection with the functions of state government.
* * * But there must be a direct conflict between the statutory language and a competing
contractual provision.” State (Department of Administration) v. Rhode Island Council 94,
A.F.S.C.M.E., AFL-CIO, Local 2409, 925 A.2d 939, 945 (R.I. 2007) (emphasis added).
In the case before us, we are of the opinion that the WCA and the CBA can coexist in that
the provisions at issue are not mutually exclusive. We have never held that a CBA cannot afford
more rights than state law; in fact, quite the opposite is true. If “there exists ‘a valid and an
enforceable collective-bargaining agreement whose terms provide greater * * * benefits than is
afforded by the special legislation,’ * * * [then] the provision of the collective bargaining
agreement takes precedence over the special act.” Webster v. Perrotta, 774 A.2d 68, 81-82 (R.I.
2001) (quoting Chester v. aRusso, 667 A.2d 519, 521 (R.I. 1995)). That the CBA grants
employees—like Tremblay—greater benefits than the WCA is an exhibition of the parties’
freedom of contract, which should not be statutorily abridged in this case.11
In sum, applying § 28-33-47(d) as written, our conclusion is that the union necessarily
sought Tremblay’s reinstatement under the CBA. See McCain, 41 A.3d at 243. Accordingly,
11
While recognizing the paucity of cases having precedential value, we find comfort in knowing
that the Appellate Division of the Workers’ Compensation Court has similarly held that “when a
collective bargaining agreement exists, the statute shall not apply.” Turcotte v. Stop & Shop
Companies, Inc., W.C.C. No. 95-01307 (App. Div. 1995); see also Rossi v. State of Rhode
Island, W.C.C. No. 97-05577 (App. Div. 1998) (“This Appellate Division, in a recent case,
specifically considered whether or not a trial judge could adjudicate a dispute regarding the
collective bargaining rights of the employee in the context of a workers’ compensation case.
Overturning the trial judge, this appellate panel held it could not[.]”).
-9-
because the union did not seek Tremblay’s reinstatement under § 28-33-47(d), we hold that the
action was arbitrable.12
IV
Conclusion
For these reasons, we vacate the judgment of the Superior Court. The case is remanded
to Superior Court with instructions to reinstate the arbitrator’s decision.
Justice Goldberg, with whom Chief Justice Suttell joins, dissenting. Because I am of
the opinion that the issues in this case have been exclusively and unequivocally committed by
the General Assembly to the Workers’ Compensation Court, I respectfully dissent. This is a
workers’ compensation case, not an arbitrable labor dispute between the Town of Cumberland
and the Cumberland Town Employees Union. The employee, Norman Tremblay (Tremblay),
suffered a work-related injury to his ankle on August 5, 2014. Surgery to correct the injury was
not performed until June 2015, allegedly because of the recalcitrance of the town’s insurer in
approving the surgery. In any event, on November 10, 2015, fifteen months after the date of the
injury and five months after the surgery, Tremblay was notified by the town that his right to
reinstatement terminated in accordance with G.L. 1956 § 23-33-47(c)(1)(vi) because more than
one year had elapsed since the date of his injury and, according to the town, Tremblay remained
12
Although the bulk of the parties’ argument focused on arbitrability, we pause briefly to remark
that we agree with the hearing justice that the town did not assert any argument other than
arbitrability that would justify setting aside the award. See State Department of Corrections v.
Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers, 115 A.3d 924, 928 (R.I. 2015) (reiterating
that we have “no authority to vacate [an] arbitrator’s award absent a manifest disregard of a
contractual provision, a completely irrational result, a decision that is contrary to public policy,
or an award that determined a matter that was not arbitrable in the first place.” (quoting State
Department of Corrections v. Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers, 64 A.3d 734,
739 (R.I. 2013))).
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“unable to return because of his injury.” It is undisputed that the employee suffered a
compensable work-related injury and did not seek reinstatement at any time before the
November 2015 letter from the town.
The law is quite clear. The statute is unambiguous: “Determinations of reinstatement
disputes shall be rendered by the workers’ compensation court in accordance with this section
and chapters 29–38 of this title, and the rules of practice of the workers’ compensation court.”
Section 28-33-47(d) (emphasis added). This provision and the exclusivity provision of the
Workers’ Compensation Act render this dispute nonarbitrable as a matter of law.
Section 28-29-20, the exclusivity provision of the Workers’ Compensation Act, provides
as follows:
“The right to compensation for an injury under chapters 29–38 of
this title, and the remedy for an injury granted by those chapters,
shall be in lieu of all rights and remedies as to that injury now
existing, either at common law or otherwise against an employer,
or its directors, officers, agents, or employees; and those rights and
remedies shall not accrue to employees entitled to compensation
under those chapters while they are in effect, except as otherwise
provided in §§ 28-36-10 and 28-36-15.” (Emphasis added.)
In my opinion, the language “all rights and remedies” means just that—“remedies * * *
existing * * * at common law or otherwise * * * shall not accrue to employees entitled to
compensation” under the Workers’ Compensation Act. The General Assembly has not
promulgated any exception to this time-honored provision.13
13
In a footnote, the majority seeks to avoid the mandate of the exclusivity provision, § 28-29-20,
by concluding that the grievant’s claim was based on the collective bargaining agreement. I
respectfully suggest that the authority of the arbitrator to entertain that grievance or whether it
belongs in the Workers’ Compensation Court is the very issue before the Court and should not be
resolved in a footnote.
Moreover, the Court’s citation to Peloquin v. ITT Hammel-Dahl, 110 R.I. 330, 292 A.2d
237 (1972), is misplaced. In 1992, the Legislature enacted a comprehensive reform of the
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In its filings in this case, the town indicated that it relied upon § 28-33-47 of the Workers’
Compensation Act when it denied the grievance, and asserted that it was not arbitrable. The
town continues to reiterate its position that the resolution of reinstatement disputes arising from
the termination of an employee’s right to reinstatement is confined to the Workers’
Compensation Court according to the plain language of § 28-33-47(d). The trial justice
concluded that “[t]he plain and ordinary meaning of § 28-33-47(d) is inescapable:
‘Determinations of reinstatement disputes shall be rendered by the workers’ compensation
court.’” (Emphasis in original.) The word “shall” is mandatory; there are no exceptions. Shine
v. Moreau, 119 A.3d 1, 13 (R.I. 2015).
One need only look to the decision of the arbitrator to discern the error in the majority’s
de novo finding that this is an arbitrable controversy. In his award, the arbitrator declared that
the town “shall reinstate Norman Tremblay to his position in the Highway Department with full
back pay and no loss of benefits commencing from the date he was medically released to return
to his position.” (Emphasis added.)
This Court has steadfastly held that statutory responsibilities may not be bargained away
because the parties to a collective bargaining agreement “have no legal authority to contravene
state law by word or deed.” State v. Rhode Island Alliance of Social Services Employees, Local
580, SEIU, 747 A.2d 465, 469 (R.I. 2000). Simply put, to the extent that the collective
bargaining agreement between the parties even addresses the right to reinstatement after a work-
related injury—which it does not—state law trumps “contrary contract provisions, contrary
practices of the parties, and contrary arbitration awards.” Id. The mandate set forth in
Workers’ Compensation Act and textually committed the resolution of reinstatement disputes to
the Workers’ Compensation Court, to be decided in accordance with chapters 29 through 38 of
title 28, which includes the time-honored exclusivity provision.
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§ 28-33-47(d) is inescapable—reinstatement determinations arising from a compensable work-
related injury “shall be rendered by the workers’ compensation court[,]” the arbitrator’s factual
gyrations notwithstanding.
The arbitrator’s decision finding that the grievance was arbitrable is baffling.
Arbitrability is a question of law that is reviewed de novo. See State, Department of Corrections
v. Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers, 866 A.2d 1241, 1247 (R.I. 2005).
Although this Court accords great deference to an arbitrator’s factual conclusions, no one, not
even an arbitrator, is entitled to his own facts. The arbitrator found that the town’s letter to
Tremblay “purporting to terminate his employment is premised on the claim that Tremblay was
seeking reinstatement or claimed reinstatement rights under the statute.” It is undisputed that the
employee was disabled from a work-related injury, was receiving workers’ compensation
benefits, and made no claim for reinstatement, timely or otherwise. The arbitrator also made the
remarkable declaration that,
“I read the law as presupposing that the employee has already lost
the status of an employee after her [sic] injury and is seeking
reinstatement rights under the provisions of the statute. I do not
read the statute as expressly authorizing the termination of an
employee’s rights under a labor agreement where the agreement
expressly protects the employee’s seniority rights, has negotiated
leave provisions and allows employees to supplement their
worker’s [sic] compensation income with sick leave pay in some
fashion.”
For an arbitrator to declare that an injured worker has lost the status of an employee after
an on-the-job injury in order to pigeonhole an otherwise nonarbitrable dispute into an arbitrable
labor controversy points to the correctness of the trial justice’s well-reasoned decision. Workers
do not lose their status as employees because they sustain a work-related injury. In enacting
- 13 -
§ 28-33-47(d), the General Assembly declared its intention to protect the rights of injured
workers in the labor force. That section provides:
“Any violation of this section is deemed an unlawful employment
practice. If the employee applies for reinstatement under this
section and the employer in violation of this section refuses to
reinstate the employee, the workers’ compensation court is
authorized to order reinstatement and award back pay and the cost
of fringe benefits lost during the period as appropriate.
Determinations of reinstatement disputes shall be rendered by the
workers’ compensation court in accordance with this section and
chapters 29–38 of this title, and the rules of practice of the
workers’ compensation court.”
The trial justice also soundly rejected the union’s contention that the seniority rights
provision of § 28-33-47(b) renders the grievance arbitrable. That section provides that an injured
worker’s “right of reinstatement shall be subject to the provisions for seniority rights and other
employment restrictions contained in a valid collective bargaining agreement * * *.”
Section 28-33-47(b) (emphasis added). The trial justice declared that § 28-33-47(b) “simply
protects employees’ seniority rights during any absence stemming from a compensable injury if
the collective bargaining agreement so provides.” The trial justice carefully examined the
seniority provision in conjunction with § 28-33-47 in its entirety, namely: (1) “A worker who has
sustained a compensable injury shall be reinstated * * *.” (§ 28-33-47(a)); (2) “The right to
reinstatement * * * terminates upon” specified conditions (§ 28-33-47(c)(1)); (3) “Any violation
of this section is deemed an unlawful employment practice.” (§ 28-33-47(d)); and (4)
“Determination of reinstatement disputes shall be rendered by the workers’ compensation court
* * *.” (§ 28-33-47(d)).
The trial justice then concluded that this dispute was nonarbitrable because the seniority
provision of a collective bargaining agreement does not “supersede the Workers’ Compensation
Court’s jurisdiction over reinstatement disputes or extend the [o]ne [y]ear [l]imit.” I agree.
- 14 -
Finally, the majority “find[s] comfort” in two unpublished and unappealed decisions of
the Appellate Division of the Workers’ Compensation Court that made passing reference to
collective bargaining agreements in the workers’ compensation context. In Rossi v. State of
Rhode Island, W.C.C. No. 97-05577 (App. Div. 1998), the Appellate Division, citing the
exclusivity provision, declared that this Court “has made it plain beyond dispute that the
Workers’ Compensation Court is the forum for workers’ compensation controversies between
the employer and the employee.” In Turcotte v. Stop & Shop Companies, Inc., W.C.C. No. 95-
01307 (App. Div. 1995), the Appellate Division held that the reinstatement provision of the
Workers’ Compensation Act was subordinate to a collective bargaining agreement that provided
less protection to the injured worker; that agreement read:
“In the event that an employee is unable to work due to sickness,
pregnancy or accident, the employee shall be re-employed at such
time as the employee is able to resume his normal duties, provided
that the employee is able to resume such duties within 6-months.”
Although this provision fails to address work-related injuries, the Appellate Division decreed
that § 28-33-47(b), which provided that the “right to reinstatement shall be subject to * * *
employment restrictions contained in a valid collective bargaining agreement,” was subordinate
to the contract. What is most important about these cases, however, is that they were decided in
the Workers’ Compensation Court, where they belonged.
There is another unpublished decision, from the Superior Court, that was relied upon by
the town at the arbitration hearing and was soundly rejected by the arbitrator in light of this
Court’s pronouncements that unpublished opinions have no precedential value. Nonetheless,
Catholic Cemeteries v. R.I. Laborers District Council, No. 04-6148, 2005 WL 957734 (R.I.
Super. Ct. Apr. 22, 2005), is directly on point and is a judicial declaration that harmonized an
employee’s right to reinstatement under the Workers’ Compensation Act and a collective
- 15 -
bargaining agreement. The employee in Catholic Cemeteries was terminated after a prolonged
absence from work for a work-related injury and was also accused of making threats against his
employers. An arbitrator ordered his reinstatement and rejected the employer’s argument that
the dispute was not substantively arbitrable. The arbitrator found that the employee was
terminated without just cause, and he was reinstated to his position. The Superior Court justice
vacated the award on the ground that the grievance was not arbitrable. He found unpersuasive
the arbitrator’s reliance on the seniority provision set forth in § 28-33-47(b). The Superior Court
justice rejected the arbitrator’s interpretation of § 28-33-47(b) that a grievant’s right to
reinstatement “shall be determined solely by the provisions of the collective bargaining
agreement between the relevant parties.” The trial justice cogently reasoned that the employee
failed to act within the time requirement of the Workers’ Compensation Act, and that his failure
to do so was fatal. “Reading § 28-33-47 in its entirety, it is apparent to this Court that
reinstatement of an injured worker is arbitrable under a collective bargaining agreement only if
the grievant has followed the procedures set forth in the Workers’ Compensation Act.” Catholic
Cemeteries, 2005 WL 957734, at *4. The Superior Court justice concluded that “there was no
right of reinstatement that could be subject to the terms of the collective bargaining agreement
because any such right had already expired.” Id. He vacated the arbitration award.
Accordingly, because I am of the opinion that Tremblay’s right to reinstatement to his
position with the Town of Cumberland terminated when he failed to seek reinstatement after one
year from the date of his injury, and because I am satisfied that reinstatement decisions must be
resolved in the Workers’ Compensation Court, I conclude that the grievance was not arbitrable
and that the trial justice’s decision should be affirmed. Consequently, I dissent.
- 16 -
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS
SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
OPINION COVER SHEET
Town of Cumberland v. Cumberland Town
Title of Case
Employees Union et al.
No. 2017-186-Appeal.
Case Number
(PM 16-5833)
Date Opinion Filed May 14, 2018
Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and
Justices
Indeglia, JJ.
Written By Associate Justice Gilbert V. Indeglia
Source of Appeal Providence County Superior Court
Judicial Officer From Lower Court Associate Justice Richard A. Licht
For Plaintiff:
Dylan B. Conley, Esq.
Attorney(s) on Appeal For Defendants:
Elizabeth A. Wiens, Esq.
Marc B. Gursky, Esq.
SU-CMS-02A (revised June 2016)