In the
Missouri Court of Appeals
Western District
INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD
OF ELECTRICAL WORKERS LOCAL WD82179
UNION NO. 53, OPINION FILED:
Respondent,
September 3, 2019
v.
THE CITY OF INDEPENDENCE,
MISSOURI,
Appellant.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri
The Honorable James F. Kanatzar, Judge
Before Division Three:
Gary D. Witt, Presiding Judge, Edward R. Ardini, and Thomas N. Chapman, Judges
The City of Independence, Missouri (City) fired Ryan Saunders (Saunders) following a
workplace incident. The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local Union No. 53
(Local 53) filed a grievance on Saunders’s behalf, and the grievance proceeded to arbitration in
the manner agreed upon in the parties’ collective bargaining agreement. The arbitrator reduced
Saunders’s punishment and conditionally reinstated his employment, subject to the arbitrator’s
continued supervision. Citing a provision in the parties’ collective bargaining agreement, the
City Manager set aside the arbitrator’s award. Local 53 sued for breach of the collective
bargaining agreement. The circuit court entered summary judgment in favor of Local 53, and
ordered the City to comply with the arbitrator’s award (but eliminated continued supervision by
the arbitrator). The City filed its timely appeal. We affirm.
Procedural Summary
Ryan Saunders (Saunders) had been employed by the City of Independence, Missouri
(City), since 2006, as an equipment operator. Saunders’s employment was governed by a
collective bargaining agreement (CBA) entered into between the City and The International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local Union No. 53 (Local 53). On December 17, 2016,
Saunders directed inappropriate language at his supervisor; and was later discharged from his
employment as a result of his conduct on that date.
Pursuant to the CBA, Local 53 filed a grievance protesting Saunders’s discharge, and the
matter proceeded through the grievance procedure to arbitration. The parties were represented
by counsel and presented testimony and other documentary evidence at the arbitration hearing.
In her award the arbitrator concluded that Saunders’s misconduct did not constitute “just cause”
for his discharge. The arbitrator’s award conditionally reinstated Saunders, required his
participation in an employee assistance program, and subjected the parties to the arbitrator’s
supervision to ensure that the terms of reinstatement were met.
Under a provision of the CBA, the arbitrator’s award is subject to review by the City
Manager in certain limited circumstances. Relying upon the authority granted by this provision,
the City Manager rejected the arbitrator’s award and upheld the order terminating Saunders’s
employment. The City Manager found that the arbitrator’s award was contrary to the
overwhelming weight of the evidence and a “misinterpretation of the law.” The arbitration
proceedings were not transcribed, and the City Manager was not present for the entire arbitration
2
hearing.1 Local 53 filed suit in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, alleging that the
City breached the CBA by rejecting the award of the arbitrator. The circuit court entered
summary judgment in favor of Local 53 and ordered the City to comply with the arbitration
award to conditionally reinstate Saunders; but found that the arbitrator was without authority to
supervise compliance with the award. The City appeals. We affirm.
Factual History
At the time of his discharge, Saunders was working for the City as a heavy equipment
operator in the City’s Water Pollution Control Department, and had been employed by the City
since 2006. Saunders, along with other employees of the City's Water Pollution Control
Department, were allowed to elect to work additional hours as snow plow drivers for the City’s
Public Works Department. On December 17, 2016, Saunders was working as a snow removal
driver; and was involved in a motor vehicle accident when his truck slid on an icy road and
collided with a utility pole, downing attached power lines. Saunders called his supervisor to
advise him of the accident and to warn him that electrical lines were on the road. Saunders
stayed at the scene of the accident because he felt it was unsafe to leave with the power lines
strewn across the road.
Saunders had some knowledge of the area where the accident occurred, as he had
previously been shot in the same neighborhood. While he was awaiting assistance from the City,
several men approached his vehicle. Saunders again called his supervisor and apparently stated
1
As there is no transcript of the arbitration hearing, our recital of the facts is taken from the Summary Judgment
record, which includes the arbitrator’s award cited by both parties in their respective summary judgment motions.
There is nothing in the record that indicates whether or not the City Manager attended any portion of the arbitration
hearing. The arbitrator’s award notes who was present representing the City (its counsel) and does not note the
presence of the City Manager. At oral argument counsel for the City acknowledged that the City Manager did not
attend the entire arbitration hearing.
3
that “it would not be his fault if ‘things got physical.’” Saunders asked his supervisor for “back
up,” a request which his supervisor misunderstood to mean “traffic back-up.” Saunders then told
the men to return to their vehicles, but one of the men continued to approach; and in the course
of the ensuing confrontation, Saunders and the other man slipped and fell to the ground.
While the supervisor had told Saunders that he was on his way to assist him with traffic
cones and road blocks, he experienced delays while addressing other traffic incidents and never
made it to the scene of Saunders’s accident. Angered by the City’s handling of the accident,
Saunders made statements to his supervisor that were disrespectful and profane, but none which
directly threatened violence toward his supervisor or anyone else.2 Several employees were
concerned that a physical confrontation might ensue. Saunders was then told he was “done for
the day” and was directed to leave the workplace. The City alleged that Saunders was notified
(via text message) to report for work the following day, and that he failed to appear. Saunders
denied ever receiving the alleged text message.3
After an investigation by the City and two pre-disciplinary hearings, the City terminated
Saunders’s employment citing “insubordination, failure to perform assigned duties,
abuse/violence, acts detrimental to the public interest, fighting with a citizen, and leaving a City
vehicle unsecured” as reasons for his firing.
The parties’ CBA provides that the City has the right to discharge its employees for “just
cause.” CBA, Art. 3, Section 3.2. The CBA further provides for a “grievance procedure” when
2
During the verbal altercation with his supervisor, Saunders exclaimed that he was “done with this fucking place”
and “not coming back to this mother-fucking place.”
3
In determining that the City did not have just cause for firing Saunders, the arbitrator observed that “without some
evidence that [Saunders] knew he was to report for snow removal, discharge for that alleged wrongdoing cannot be
sustained.”
4
Local 53 disagrees with the City’s “application or interpretation of the terms and provisions of
[the CBA].” CBA, Art. 15, Section 15.1. Following a multi-step appeals process, the grievance
proceeds to arbitration. The arbitrator’s award is subject to limited review by the City Manager
as follows:
(f) Decisions of the arbitrator regarding [sic] shall be subject to review by the City
Manager. Where the arbitrator's decision resolves issues of fact, the City Manager
is not authorized to substitute his or her own judgment for the judgment of the
arbitrator if the arbitrator's findings of fact are supported by competent and
substantial evidence. The City Manager is authorized to reject the arbitrators [sic]
decision only when the arbitrator's findings of fact and decision based thereon are
clearly contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence viewed in its
entirety, together with all legitimate inferences which may be reasonably drawn
from that evidence, and in the light most favorable to the findings of fact and
decision of the arbitrator based thereon. Where the arbitrator's decision is based
upon an application or interpretation of law, the City Manager may review the
award to determine if it is in violation of constitutional provisions; if it is for any
reason unauthorized by law, or if it is made upon unlawful procedure without a
fair hearing. The City Manager can exercise his or her own judgment on these
matters after receiving advice from the City Counselor or an authorized designee.
Notwithstanding any of the foregoing, the City Manager may reject the decision I
[sic] of the arbitrator if such rejection results in a disposition more favorable to
the bargaining unit member than the decision of the arbitrator.
CBA, Art. 15, Section 15.3, Step 4(B)(2)(f).
In this matter, Local 53 filed a grievance contesting Saunders’s discharge, which
proceeded through the grievance procedure to arbitration. An evidentiary hearing was held, and
the arbitrator issued her award finding that the City did not have “just cause” to fire Saunders
and conditionally reinstating his employment (without back pay) subject to his successful
completion of an employee assistance program. Following his completion of the program, the
“conditional” element of his reinstatement was to be removed. The arbitrator also retained
jurisdiction over the dispute to ensure the parties’ compliance for a period not to exceed 120
days.
5
In support of her award, the arbitrator found that there was insufficient evidence to
determine whether Saunders should have been faulted for engaging in a physical confrontation at
the scene of accident or whether he was merely defending himself.4 The arbitrator found that the
language Saunders directed at his supervisor was “disturbing” and not to be condoned.
Nevertheless, the arbitrator determined Saunders’s conduct warranted less severe discipline,
citing his long history of courteous behavior while working for the City, as well as supervisory
evaluations which described him as “above average” in his “working relationships and
cooperation.” The arbitrator also considered stressors in Saunders’s personal life as factors in
mitigation. Specifically, Saunders had noted in his 2014-2015 evaluation that he had been
required to use more sick leave than usual because his wife had been diagnosed with cancer.
Additionally, he expressed anxiety about his children at the arbitration hearing. In light of these
findings, the arbitrator concluded that Saunders should be allowed to return to work provided he
also underwent counseling so that he could learn to better respond to stressful events. 5
Following the arbitrator’s decision, the City Manager rejected the award, asserting that it
was (1) contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence; (2) a misinterpretation of the law
in that the arbitrator “chose to fashion a remedy about which the City had no notice or
opportunity for hearing….”; and (3) a misinterpretation of the law in that the award allowed the
arbitrator “to substitute her judgment for that of the City on an on-going basis….”
4
She further noted that arbitrators typically consider it important “[i]n addressing issues involving ‘fights’” to
determine which party initiated the encounter. Due to “the lack of any eye-witness or any other persuasive evidence
pertaining to the…precipitating cause” of the confrontation, the arbitrator found that this incident could not properly
serve as a reason for Saunders’s firing.
5
Saunders was disciplined, however, in that he was reinstated to his former position without back pay.
6
Local 53 filed a petition in the Jackson County Circuit Court for breach of contract,
seeking a judgment reinstating the arbitrator’s decision. The parties then filed cross motions for
summary judgment. The circuit court entered judgment in favor of Local 53, finding that it
could not conclude that the arbitrator’s award was contrary to the overwhelming weight of the
evidence (citing the lack of a transcript of the arbitration proceedings). The circuit court also
ruled that the arbitrator’s decision was authorized by law except to the extent that it granted her
continuing jurisdiction over the parties to monitor their compliance with her award.
The City timely appeals.
Discussion
Our review of a circuit court’s grant of summary judgment is essentially de novo. ITT
Commercial Fin. Corp. v. Mid-Am. Marine Supply Corp., 854 S.W.2d 371, 376 (Mo. banc
1993). Our task in this appeal is to determine whether the City Manager properly exercised his
authority to set aside the arbitrator’s decision pursuant to the CBA, or whether this action
breached the CBA. See Int'l Ass'n of Firefighters, Local Union No. 42 v. Jackson Cty., 524
S.W.3d 217, 223 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017).6
At the heart of this case is the question of whether the City had “just cause” to fire
Saunders as “just cause” is a condition precedent to termination under the parties’ CBA. In
interpreting a collective bargaining agreement that permits discharge only for “just cause,” the
6
Throughout this opinion we rely on the opinions in Int'l Ass'n of Firefighters, Local Union No. 42 v. Jackson Cty.,
524 S.W.3d 217 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017) and Int'l Ass'n of Fire Fighters, Local Union No. 42 v. Jackson Cty., 527
S.W.3d 103 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017) which addressed post-arbitration review of employee discipline pursuant to a
collective bargaining agreement. Because the caption of each case citation is identical, for clarification we will refer
to each opinion by the name of the employee involved in each case. Int'l Ass'n of Firefighters, Local Union No. 42
v. Jackson Cty., 524 S.W.3d 217 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017) will be referred to as ("Mitchell") and Int'l Ass'n of Fire
Fighters, Local Union No. 42 v. Jackson Cty., 527 S.W.3d 103 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017) will be referred to as
("Krantz").
7
Eastern District of this Court determined the following definition of “just cause” submitted in a
jury instruction to be an accurate statement of the law:
[T]he term “just cause” means a real cause or basis for dismissal as distinguished
from an arbitrary whim or caprice—that is, a cause or ground that a reasonable
employer, acting in good faith under the collective bargaining agreement here in
question, would regard as good and sufficient reason for terminating the services
of an employee.
Roach v. Consol. Forwarding Co., 665 S.W.2d 675, 679 n.2 (Mo. App. E.D. 1984). “‘Just
cause’ in the context of collective bargaining agreements is a term of art which has developed its
meaning through labor arbitration hearings.” Id. at 680. This Court has recognized that an
employee’s misconduct may be sufficiently serious that it justifies “summary discharge” without
the need for progressive discipline; however, when the employee’s conduct is less egregious, a
less severe punishment is called for:
Offenses are of two general classes: (1) those extremely serious offenses such as
stealing, striking a foreman, persistent refusal to obey a legitimate order, etc.,
which usually justify summary discharge without the necessity of prior warnings
or attempts at corrective discipline; [and] (2) those less serious infractions of plant
rules or of proper conduct such as tardiness, absence without permission, careless
workmanship, insolence, etc., which call not for discharge for the first offense
(and usually not even for the second or third offense) but for some milder penalty
aimed at correction.
Mitchell, 524 S.W.3d at 225 (quoting Kenneth May, ELKOURI & ELKOURI: HOW ARBITRATION
WORKS § 15.3.F.i, at 15-44 to 15-45 (8th ed. 2016)).
In its first point on appeal, the City argues that the City Manager was required by the
CBA to set aside the arbitrator’s award because (as the circuit court found) the arbitrator
exceeded her authority insofar as she sought to retain jurisdiction over the parties to monitor
their compliance. The City argues further that the City Manager has no authority but to comply
with the whole decision or reject the whole decision – in other words, that he had no right to
8
excise an unauthorized portion of the decision and to order compliance with the rest of it. Local
53 argues that this “all or nothing” approach is unsupported by the CBA and that the City
Manager should have simply stricken the offending portion of the award and ordered compliance
with the remainder.
A collective bargaining agreement is simply a contract, “subject to the same rules of
interpretation as other contracts.” Allen v. Globe-Democrat Pub. Co., 368 S.W.2d 460, 463 (Mo.
1963). “The primary rule in the interpretation of a contract is to ascertain the intent of the parties
and to give effect to that intent.” Marshall v. Pyramid Dev. Corp., 855 S.W.2d 403, 406 (Mo.
App. W.D. 1993). In attempting to ascertain the parties’ intent, “we review the terms of a
contract as a whole, not in isolation.” Tuttle v. Muenks, 21 S.W.3d 6, 11 (Mo. App. W.D. 2000).
The CBA authorizes the City Manager to reject the arbitrator’s award “only when the
arbitrator's findings of fact and decision based thereon are clearly contrary to the overwhelming
weight of the evidence viewed in its entirety….” In the next sentence, the CBA permits the City
Manager to review the arbitrator’s award (when it is based upon an application or interpretation
of law) to determine whether the award is in any way unauthorized by law. The CBA then
expressly allows the City Manager to exercise his own judgment on such matters. Nothing in
this clause requires the City Manager to reject the award in toto when any portion of it (no matter
how insignificant) is unauthorized by law. We will not insert a requirement in the CBA which is
not there. Allen, 368 S.W.2d at 467 (“In interpreting a collective bargaining agreement we must
construe them as written, not as we may think they should have been written, and certainly not
by interpolating words in them which are not there.”). Instead, this Court must give the words
used by the parties in the CBA “their natural and ordinary meaning,” and we are not permitted to
9
“add provisions by judicial interpretation.” Goodman v. Goodman, 576 S.W.2d 747, 749 (Mo.
App. E.D. 1979).
Furthermore, adopting the interpretation advocated by the City would violate the plain
terms of the CBA. The parties’ contract indicates that Local 53 members may only be
discharged for “just cause.” In the instant case, the arbitrator heard testimony from Saunders, his
supervisor, and other City employees; examined his relevant employment history, including a
prior disciplinary incident7 and supervisory reviews praising his courtesy and cooperation;
considered significant stressors in his personal life as factors in mitigation; and ultimately
concluded that the City did not have “just cause” to fire him. The City’s interpretation of the
CBA would allow the City Manager to ignore this determination and reject the arbitrator’s
decision based upon a peripheral aspect of the award that has nothing to do with whether the City
had “just cause” to fire Saunders. Accepting this argument would mean that the City could reject
the entire award based upon a technicality and reinstate its termination of an employee without
demonstrating that the employee had been fired for “just cause.” This contravenes the plain
language of the CBA (which only allows the City to terminate an employee with “just cause”)
and produces an absurd result. Wildflower Cmty. Ass'n, Inc. v. Rinderknecht, 25 S.W.3d 530,
536 (Mo. App. W.D. 2000) (an appellate court endeavors to avoid an absurd outcome when
interpreting a contract).
The City Manager is permitted by the CBA to exercise his own judgment as to any
unauthorized portion of an arbitrator’s award. Implicit in this authorization is the obligation that
7
We are not provided any details regarding this disciplinary action, other than it occurred in January 2016, it arose
from an incident of insubordination (involving the same supervisor as the December 17, 2016, incident), and
Saunders was “contrite and deferential” in its aftermath.
10
he exercise such judgment in good faith and not in a way that undermines the spirit of the CBA.
Martin v. Prier Brass Mfg. Co., 710 S.W.2d 466, 473 (Mo. App. W.D. 1986) (the implied
covenant of good faith “prevents one party to the contract to exercise a judgment conferred by
the express terms of agreement in such a manner as to evade the spirit of the transaction or so as
to deny the other party the expected benefit of the contract.”). In this case, good faith required
the City Manager to excise the section of the arbitrator’s award that exceeded her powers and
uphold her central determination that the City lacked “just cause” to fire Saunders.
Point I is denied.
In its second point, the City argues that the arbitrator’s decision was contrary to the
overwhelming weight of the evidence and made without a fair hearing. The arbitrator found that
the City did not have “just cause” to fire Saunders. We afford a “high degree of deference” to
the arbitrator’s determination on this point. See Behnen v. A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc., 285
S.W.3d 777, 780 (Mo. App. E.D. 2009).
In ruling on the parties’ competing motions for summary judgment, the circuit court
noted that it was “severely limited in its review of the evidence because a transcript of the
arbitration hearing was never presented to the Court.” At oral argument, counsel for the City
confirmed that a transcript of the arbitration hearing was not provided to the City Manager
(because none was made) and that the City Manager did not attend the entire hearing. The CBA
allows the City Manager:
to reject the arbitrators [sic] decision only when the arbitrator's findings of fact
and decision based thereon are clearly contrary to the overwhelming weight of the
evidence viewed in its entirety, together with all legitimate inferences which may
be reasonably drawn from that evidence, and in the light most favorable to the
findings of fact and decision of the arbitrator based thereon.
CBA, Art. 15, Section 15.3, Step 4(B)(2)(f) (emphasis added).
11
In support of its argument, the City cites Mitchell and Krantz. In those cases, the parties’
collective bargaining agreement similarly allowed for modification of the arbitrator’s decision by
the county prosecutor and county executive when the decision was found to be “clearly contrary
to the weight of the evidence, viewed in its entirety[.]” Mitchell, 524 S.W.3d at 223; Krantz, 527
S.W.3d at 112. In both cases, we upheld the county prosecutor and county executive’s joint
decision to modify the arbitrator’s awards and reinstate termination of two assistant prosecutors.
Mitchell, 524 S.W.3d at 228; Krantz, 527 S.W.3d at 116. However, in those cases a transcript
was made of the arbitration hearing, the transcript was provided to the county prosecutor and
county executive (the parties authorized to review the arbitrator’s award), and the arbitration
transcript was relied upon extensively by the county prosecutor and executive8 in setting aside
the arbitrator’s awards.9
In this case, because the City Manager was not present for the entire arbitration hearing
and did not have a transcript of the hearing, he was precluded from viewing the evidence in its
entirety. Under the plain terms of the CBA, he could not possibly determine whether the award
was clearly contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence since he did not even have a
record of the arbitration hearing (much less the entire evidentiary record). In re K.S., 404
S.W.3d 900, 901 (Mo. App. E.D. 2013) (a transcript of the relevant proceedings is necessary to
8
In Mitchell, the county prosecutor and executive issued an 81-page modification of the arbitrator’s decision.
524 S.W.3d at 223. In Krantz, the modification decision was 57 pages in length. 527 S.W.3d at 112. It is
noteworthy that in the present case, the City Manager’s letter rejecting the arbitrator’s award barely exceeded a
single page. The terse and conclusory nature of the City Manager’s letter underscores the lack of evidentiary
support for his decision.
9
We glean these facts from the records on appeal contained in Mitchell and Krantz. We take judicial notice of the
legal files in those cases. Vogt v. Emmons, 158 S.W.3d 243, 247 (Mo. App. E.D. 2005) (“A court may take judicial
notice of its own records and may take judicial notice of the records of other cases when justice so requires.”).
12
adjudicate whether a judgment is “contrary to the weight of the evidence.”). Absent an ability to
view the entire record in order to adjudge the arbitrator’s findings, the City Manager was not
authorized under the CBA to reject the arbitrator’s award as being clearly contrary to the
overwhelming weight of the evidence.10
Under its second point, the City also argues that the arbitrator’s award conditionally
reinstating Saunders’s employment was entered without a fair hearing. Specifically, the City
contends the arbitrator “exceeded the evidence” by reinstating Saunders’s employment
conditioned upon his completion of a remedial counseling program because this outcome “was
neither presented nor requested by either party.” This argument echoes one of the City
Manager’s justifications for setting aside the award, in which he complained that the arbitrator
“chose to fashion a remedy about which the City had no notice or opportunity for hearing to
contribute to a discussion as to the feasibility of the remedy.” Again, because the City Manager
did not have a transcript of the arbitration hearing and was not present for the entire hearing, the
10
We also lack a sufficient record to determine whether the arbitrator’s factual findings were clearly contrary to the
overwhelming weight of the evidence. We observe ex gratia, that if we accept as true the arbitrator’s factual
findings and the other uncontroverted facts in the summary judgment record, after excising the provision for
continued supervision by the arbitrator, the arbitrator’s award conditionally reinstating Saunders was not otherwise
unauthorized by law. The City attempts to analogize the facts of the present matter to those at issue in Mitchell and
Krantz. However, Mitchell and Krantz are clearly distinguishable. Both cases involved the discharge of prosecutors
for violations of the Missouri Supreme Court Rules of Professional Conduct, including lying to the tribunal, which
we described as being “among the most serious acts of professional misconduct an attorney can commit” made
worse because the prosecutor’s office “wield[s] enormous power over the life and liberty of other persons.”
Mitchell, 524 S.W.3d at 221, 227; Krantz, 527 S.W.3d at 109-10, 113-14. We observed that the attorneys’
infractions justified summary dismissal without the need for progressive discipline or prior warnings. Mitchell, 524
S.W.3d at 227; Krantz, 527 S.W.3d at 115. Saunders’s insolence directed toward his supervisor certainly was
misconduct that, in combination with other misconduct, and in the absence of mitigating factors, could have
constituted “just cause” for his discharge. However, in light of the mitigating factors noted by the arbitrator
(including Saunders’s long work history of interacting well with his coworkers), his misconduct was not the sort of
egregious misconduct (as in Krantz and Mitchell) that necessarily constituted “just cause” requiring discharge.
13
City Manager lacked the ability to determine whether the hearing was unfair, and therefore
lacked authority under the CBA to reject the arbitrator’s award on that basis.11
Point II is denied.12
Conclusion
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
/s/ Thomas N. Chapman
Thomas N. Chapman, Judge
All concur.
11
To be clear, were the Court to address the City’s argument concerning the fairness of the hearing on the merits, it
would find the argument unpersuasive. The parties’ CBA gives the arbitrator discretion to reduce the discipline
imposed by the City, which is exactly what the arbitrator did. CBA, Art. 15, Section 15.3, Step 4(B)(2)(e). Pursuant
to the plain language of the parties’ contract, the City cannot reasonably argue that it was surprised by the
arbitrator’s decision to impose a less severe form of discipline.
12
The City stresses the administrative difficulties involved in monitoring Saunders’s progress in the employee
assistance program, specifically noting that records from the program are confidential. However, the City’s policies
and procedures manual states that a participant in the program may consent to the release of records kept by the
program administrator. The arbitrator’s award provides that Saunders’s employment is conditioned on his
participation in (and completion of) the program. Saunders is therefore required, as a condition of his employment,
to apprise the City of his participation in the program. Saunders’s consent to release of records would be a means to
apprise the City of his participation in (and completion of) the program.
14