IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
September 2021 Term FILED
_______________ November 5, 2021
released at 3:00 p.m.
EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
No. 20-0486 OF WEST VIRGINIA
_______________
CONSTELLIUM ROLLED PRODUCTS
RAVENSWOOD, LLC,
Petitioner Below, Petitioner
v.
EARL B. COOPER, et al., and
WORKFORCE WEST VIRGINIA BOARD OF REVIEW,
Respondents Below, Respondent
____________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kanawha County
The Honorable Jennifer F. Bailey, Judge
Civil Action Nos. 13-AA-44 and 13-AA-45
REVERSED IN PART AND AFFIRMED IN PART
AND REMANDED
____________________________________________________________
Submitted: September 15, 2021
Filed: November 5, 2021
Ancil G. Ramey, Esq. Thomas P. Maroney, Esq.
Christopher L. Slaughter, Esq. Patrick K. Maroney, Esq.
Steptoe & Johnson PLLC Maroney, Williams, Weaver & Pancake
Huntington, West Virginia PLLC
Rodney L. Bean, Esq. Charleston, West Virginia
Steptoe & Johnson PLLC Counsel for Respondents-Claimants
Morgantown, West Virginia
Counsel for Petitioner Patrick Morrisey
Attorney General
Charleston, West Virginia
Counsel for Respondent Workforce West
Virginia Board of Review
JUSTICE WALKER delivered the Opinion of the Court.
JUSTICE WOOTON dissents and reserves the right to file a separate opinion.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
1. “The findings of fact of the Board of Review of the West Virginia
Department of Employment Security are entitled to substantial deference unless a
reviewing court believes the findings are clearly wrong. If the question on review is one
purely of law, no deference is given and the standard of judicial review by the court is de
novo.” Syllabus Point 3, Adkins v. Gatson, 192 W. Va. 561, 453 S.E.2d 395 (1994).
2. “The term ‘stoppage of work’, within the meaning of the
unemployment compensation statutes of this state refers to the employer’s operations rather
than to a mere cessation of employment by claimants of benefits under the provisions of
such statutes; and, in order that employees may be disqualified from receiving
unemployment compensation benefits because of ‘a stoppage of work’ resulting from a
labor dispute, it must appear that there has resulted a substantial curtailment of the
employer’s normal operations.” Syllabus Point 2, Cumberland & Allegheny Gas Co. v.
Hatcher, 147 W. Va. 630, 130 S.E.2d 115 (1963), overruled on other grounds by Lee-
Norse Co. v. Rutledge, 170 W. Va. 162, 291 S.E.2d 477 (1982).
3. Syllabus Point 1 of Homer Laughlin China Co. v. Hix, 128 W. Va.
613, 37 S.E.2d 649 (1946), does not require an employer to show at least a 75-percent
curtailment in its normal operations in order to establish a “work stoppage,” for purposes
of West Virginia Code § 21A-6-3(4) (2012).
i
4. “W.Va.Code, 21A–6–3(4) (1984), disqualifies employees from
receiving unemployment compensation benefits if they are involved in ‘a work stoppage
incident to a labor dispute,’ unless they can satisfy one of three statutory exceptions: (1)
the employees are ‘required to accept wages, hours or conditions of employment
substantially less favorable than those prevailing for similar work in the locality’; (2) the
employees ‘are denied the right of collective bargaining under generally prevailing
conditions’; or (3) ‘an employer shuts down his plant or operation or dismisses his
employees in order to force wage reduction, changes in hours or working conditions.’”
Syllabus Point 1, Roberts v. Gatson, 182 W. Va. 764, 392 S.E.2d 204 (1990).
5. “A refusal to engage in the collective bargaining process or to
negotiate on those mandatory subjects that traditionally form the basis of the collective
bargaining agreement so frustrates the process as to constitute a denial of the right of
collective bargaining under W.Va.Code, 21A–6–3(4) (1984).” Syllabus Point 2, Roberts
v. Gatson, 182 W. Va. 764, 392 S.E.2d 204 (1990).
ii
WALKER, Justice:
In 2012, Constellium Rolled Products of Ravenswood, LLC employed 860
workers at its production plant, 680 of whom were represented by United Steelworkers
Local 5668. In the spring and summer of that year, representatives of Constellium and the
Union met twenty-six times to negotiate a new collective bargaining agreement. By
August 5, 2012, two contract extensions had come and gone and Constellium and the Union
still could not come to terms. So, Earl B. Cooper and other Union members employed at
the plant (Claimants) stopped working and went on strike. The strike ended a few weeks
later and Claimants applied for unemployment compensation benefits. Constellium
contested the applications under West Virginia Code § 21A-6-3(4) (2012) (labor dispute
provision). 1 A Labor Dispute Tribunal decided that Claimants were not disqualified for
benefits under that provision. The Board of Review affirmed that decision, and the Circuit
Court of Kanawha County affirmed the Board.
Constellium now argues that the lower tribunals erroneously held that
Claimants were not disqualified for unemployment compensation benefits under the labor
dispute provision. We agree. The facts found by the lower tribunals clearly demonstrate
that a stoppage of work occurred at Constellium’s plant during the 2012 labor dispute, and
1
We apply the version of the statute in effect at the time of the strike. The statutory
language is set out, below, in section III.A. The Legislature rewrote the labor dispute
provision in 2017. 2017 W. Va. Acts 245 (eff. July 2, 2017).
1
those tribunals clearly erred by concluding otherwise. And, we find no error in the lower
tribunals’ conclusions that Claimants have not satisfied the exceptions to disqualification
under the labor dispute provision and that the provision is not preempted by federal labor
law. For those reasons, we reverse in part and affirm in part the Circuit Court of Kanawha
County’s order of June 12, 2020, and remand this case for entry of an order denying
Claimants’ applications for unemployment compensation benefits.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Constellium produced aluminum plate and coil products at its Ravenswood
plant in 2012. Plate is used primarily in the aerospace industry while the coil goes to a
more diverse customer base. The Union represented the hourly workers at the Ravenswood
plant, who then accounted for approximately 80 percent of the Ravenswood plant’s
workforce (680 employees out of 860, total).
In 2010, the Union and Constellium had entered into a two-year collective
bargaining agreement. That agreement was set to expire in July 2012, 2 so the Union and
Constellium began negotiations for a new agreement in May 2012 and met over twenty
times between May and August 2012. A dispute over healthcare pervaded the negotiation
of economic contract terms. 3 Constellium worked to walk back the first-dollar health
2
The 2010 agreement was extended twice after its expiration in July 2012.
3
“Economic” terms include health care, wages, bonuses, show allowances, extra
vacation days, and holidays.
2
coverage workers had enjoyed under the 2010 agreement and to put a medical necessity
clause into the agreement. 4 The Union opposed both changes. Constellium and the Union
could not come to terms, so union members went on strike at midnight on August 5, 2012. 5
Constellium continued to operate the plant during the strike by shifting
approximately 180 salaried employees from their usual assignments to bargaining unit
work. Those salaried employees performed bargaining unit jobs six or seven days a week
during the strike, in two, twelve-hour shifts, so that Constellium continued to produce and
ship plate and coil, and generate revenue during the strike, although at levels far below
normal. Negotiations on health and welfare benefits continued during the strike.
Eventually, Constellium proposed revisions to the medical necessity clause that found
traction. Union members accepted the revised proposal on September 20, 2012, and
returned to work four days later.
Claimants applied for unemployment compensation benefits for the period
of the labor dispute. Constellium contested the applications, and the dispute was referred
4
The 2010 agreement did not contain the medical necessity clause but the third-
party administrator of Constellium’s health plan implemented the requirement, anyway.
Bargaining unit members successfully grieved the denial of medical treatment due to the
medical necessity requirement while the 2010 agreement was in effect.
5
The parties do not contest that the strike is a “labor dispute” for purposes of
§ 21A-6-3(4).
3
to a three-member Labor Dispute Tribunal. 6 During the pre-hearing conference, the
Tribunal granted-in-part Constellium’s motion to quash a subpoena duces tecum that
Claimants had previously caused to be served upon representatives of Constellium. 7 That
subpoena sought, among other things, “All communications, memos, emails, text
messages, videos and pictures between [Constellium] employees or its agents, including [a
Constellium parent entity], regarding union members of [Constellium], regarding the labor
dispute between [the Union] and [Constellium].” 8 The Tribunal found that request plus
two similar ones to be “vague, general and unnecessarily cumbersome.”
6
See W. Va. Code § 21A-7-4(c) (1994) (directing deputy to investigate all claims
for unemployment compensation benefits and requiring that, “[i]f it appears from the
deputy’s investigation and from all of the information before him, that a claim relates to a
labor dispute or to a disqualification under [§ 21A-6-3(4)], the claim shall be transferred to
the board for full hearing and initial determination by an appeal tribunal”).
7
See W. Va. Code § 21A-4-12 (1936) (“The board, appeal tribunal, or examiner
shall have the power to issue subpoenas for the production of persons and papers in all
proceedings within their jurisdiction.”).
8
Specifically, Claimants sought production of:
1. All communications, memos, emails, text messages,
videos and pictures between Constellium Rolled Products
Ravenswood, LLC employees or its agents, including
AFIMAC, regarding union members of Constellium Rolled
Products Ravenswood, LLC, regarding the labor dispute
between United Steelworkers (“USW”) Local Union 5668 and
Constellium Rolled Products Ravenswood, LLC.
2. All internal communications, memos, emails, text
messages or videos between Constellium Rolled Products
Ravenswood, LLC between union and non-union employees
regarding contract negotiations, replacement workers, or any
4
The Tribunal conducted a two-day evidentiary hearing in early November
2012. 9 Constellium presented testimony and documents to support its position that a
stoppage of work had occurred at the Ravenswood plant during the August-September
2012 labor dispute. 10 Claimants offered evidence to support their position that Constellium
had denied them their right of collective bargaining by insisting on including the medical
other information regarding the formation of contract
proposals for a collective bargaining agreement between
Constellium Rolled Products Ravenswood, LLC and USW
Local 5668.
3. All communications, memos, emails, text messages or
videos between Constellium Rolled Products Ravenswood,
LLC employees and its agents or any of its affiliates, and
Appollo Global Management, LLC, or any of its affiliates,
including Appollo Investment Fund VII, LP, Rio Tinto, Funds
Strategique d’Investment FSI, Constellium France SAS,
Constellium Switzerland AG, and other companies, affiliates
or agents, regarding the proposed collective bargaining
agreement between Constellium Rolled Products Ravenswood,
LLC and USW Local 5668, including the use of replacement
workers.
9
See W. Va. Code § 21A-7-7a (1972) (stating that “[u]pon transfer to the board of
a case relating to a labor dispute or to disqualification under [§ 21A-6-3(4)], for hearing
and initial determination by an appeal tribunal, the parties shall be entitled to a full and
complete hearing and opportunity to present evidence before an appeal tribunal”).
10
See Peery v. Rutledge, 177 W. Va. 548, 552, 355 S.E.2d 41, 45 (1987) (stating
general rule that “the burden of persuasion is upon the former employer to demonstrate by
the preponderance of the evidence that the claimant’s conduct falls within a disqualifying
provision of the unemployment compensation statute”).
5
necessity clause in the 2012 agreement and by putting leaders of a parent company located
in Paris, France, in charge of bargaining on economic terms. 11
On December 14, 2012, the Tribunal decided that the Claimants were not
disqualified for unemployment compensation benefits because a stoppage of work had not
occurred at Constellium’s Ravenswood plant due to the strike. The Tribunal found that
operations had continued at the plant during the strike, albeit by the efforts of salaried
employees working bargaining unit jobs. The Tribunal found that decreases in production,
product shipped, and revenue did not indicate that Constellium’s normal operations had
been “substantially curtailed,” so that no stoppage of work had occurred during the labor
dispute and Claimants were not disqualified for unemployment compensation benefits.
The Tribunal then analyzed and rejected the parties’ remaining arguments for purposes of
appellate review, including arguments put forth by Claimants to counter their
disqualification from benefits, had the Tribunal found in Constellium’s favor. The Board
of Review affirmed the Tribunal’s decision in February 2013. The Circuit Court of
11
See W. Va. Code § 21A-6-3(4) (2012) (setting out four exceptions to
disqualification for unemployment compensation benefits under labor dispute provision).
Below, Claimants also asserted that they had been required to accept terms of employment
substantially less favorable than those prevalent in the area. Claimants do not pursue that
theory on appeal.
6
Kanawha County entered an order affirming the Board’s order affirming the Tribunal’s
decision on June 12, 2020. 12
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Our standard of review of decisions by the Board of Review is well-settled:
The findings of fact of the Board of Review of the West
Virginia Department of Employment Security are entitled to
substantial deference unless a reviewing court believes the
findings are clearly wrong. If the question on review is one
purely of law, no deference is given and the standard of judicial
review by the court is de novo.[13]
DISCUSSION
We first consider Constellium’s appeal of the lower tribunals’ conclusion
that Claimants are not disqualified for unemployment compensation benefits because a
stoppage of work did not occur at the Ravenswood plant in 2012. We then take up
12
In September 2013, the circuit court consolidated Constellium’s appeal and
Claimants’ “limited appeal” of the Board of Review’s decision into a single proceeding.
Delays plagued the consolidated cases. Briefing before the circuit court concluded in
December 2013. Claimants filed proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law with
their reply. Constellium did not supply the court with a proposed order until 2015. In
2019, Constellium petitioned this Court for relief in mandamus to compel the circuit court
to rule on the parties’ appeal and “limited appeal.” This Court issued a rule to show cause
in January 2020. The circuit court entered its final order affirming the Board of Review’s
order adopting the findings of the Labor Dispute Tribunal on June 12, 2020. This Court
then dismissed Constellium’s petition for mandamus relief as moot later that month.
13
Syl. Pt. 3, Adkins v. Gatson, 192 W. Va. 561, 453 S.E.2d 395 (1994).
7
Claimants’ cross-appeal. Finally, Constellium’s federal preemption argument is briefly
considered.
A. Disqualification for Benefits
West Virginia Code § 21A-6-3(4) (2012) controls the determination of
whether Claimants were properly paid unemployment compensation benefits for the period
of the 2012 strike. Under this statute, also called the labor dispute provision, a claimant
“is disqualified for benefits . . . [f]or a week in which his or her total or partial
unemployment is due to a stoppage of work which exists because of a labor dispute at the
factory, establishment or other premises at which he or she was last employed.” 14 This
Court has explained that for the purposes of the labor dispute provision, a “stoppage of
work” does not mean that the lights must be turned off and the doors to the factory locked
to trigger disqualification. Instead, the analysis is fact specific and turns on whether there
is a substantial curtailment of normal operations:
[t]he term “stoppage of work”, within the meaning of
the unemployment compensation statutes of this state refers to
the employer’s operations rather than to a mere cessation of
employment by claimants of benefits under the provisions of
such statutes; and, in order that employees may be disqualified
from receiving unemployment compensation benefits because
of ‘a stoppage of work’ resulting from a labor dispute, it must
14
W. Va. Code § 21A-6-3(4) (2012) (emphasis added).
8
appear that there has resulted a substantial curtailment of the
employer’s normal operations.[15]
“A determination of the existence or nonexistence of a stoppage of work in a case of this
nature must necessarily depend upon the facts of each case.” 16
Constellium argues that the Tribunal erroneously found that a stoppage of
work did not occur at the Ravenswood plant during the 2012 labor dispute. Constellium
objects that the Board (1) ignored the fact that salaried workers reassigned to bargaining
unit jobs were unable to complete their regular, assigned tasks during the labor dispute; (2)
mismeasured the impact of the strike upon Constellium’s normal operations by comparing
output during the strike to an incomparable, historical period; and (3) failed to account for
15
Syl. Pt. 2, Cumberland & Allegheny Gas Co. v. Hatcher, 147 W. Va. 630, 130
S.E.2d 115 (1963) (emphasis added), overruled on other grounds by Lee-Norse Co. v.
Rutledge, 170 W. Va. 162, 291 S.E.2d 477 (1982).
As noted above, the Legislature rewrote the labor dispute provision in 2017. In part,
the 2017 amendments to W. Va. Code § 21A-6-3(4) provide that,
Upon the determination of the facts by the
commissioner, an individual is disqualified for benefits . . .
[f]or any week or portion thereof in which he or she did not
work as a result of: (a) A strike or other bona fide labor dispute
which caused him or her to leave or lose his or her
employment; (b) . . . the operation of a facility by non-striking
employees of the company, contractors or other personnel is
not a reason to grant employees of the company on strike
unemployment compensation benefit payments.
The Legislature made two stylistic changes to the labor dispute provision in 2020. 2020
W. Va. Acts 203.
16
Cumberland & Allegheny Gas Co., 147 W. Va. at 639, 130 S.E.2d at 121.
9
those days during the months of August and September 2012 when the plant ran at full
capacity. Constellium also argues that even if one accepts the Board’s arguably flawed
findings as to Constellium’s output levels during the 2012 labor dispute, those findings still
show that the labor dispute substantially curtailed its normal operations.
Claimants respond that the meaning of “work stoppage” in West Virginia is
settled, and that this Court has held that a substantial curtailment of operations would be in
the 75- to 80-percent range. Claimants contend that the Tribunal carefully and thoroughly
interpreted the production, shipping, and revenue figures offered by both parties to reach
its factual findings regarding the impact of the labor dispute on Constellium’s normal
operations. According to Claimants, those findings do not support a conclusion that
Constellium’s normal operations were substantially curtailed due to the labor dispute
because they fall well short of the 75- to 80-percent threshold adopted by this Court.
Finally, Claimants attempt to distinguish out-of-state cases cited by Constellium in support
of its argument that the Tribunal improperly ignored evidence regarding the impact of the
labor dispute upon non-output metrics of Constellium’s performance during the strike.
(1) The Tribunal’s Calculations
We begin with Constellium’s contention that the Tribunal erroneously
calculated the rates at which the 2012 strike impacted the Company’s “normal operations.”
The Tribunal used prestrike rates of production, shipping, and revenues to describe
Constellium’s normal operations. So, broadly, the Tribunal compared Constellium’s rates
10
of production, shipping, and revenues during the strike to those before the strike to
determine the rate at which the strike curtailed Constellium’s normal operations.
Constellium argues that the Tribunal erred when it relied, in part, on Claimants’ proposed
lookback period of roughly two-and-a-half years to establish Constellium’s normal
operations, which, in turn resulted in the erroneous determination of the impact of the strike
upon them.
Constellium asserts that the appropriate period of comparison was February
to July 2012. Those were “up” months, according to Constellium, and it expected strike-
months August and September 2012 to be “up” months, too. Constellium argues that the
Tribunal was bound to compare up months to up months, so comparison of August and
September 2012 rates of production, shipping, and revenues to those rates in the five
months before provides the accurate rate of curtailment of its operations due to the strike.
Faced with this argument, the circuit court found that it was “not clearly
wrong or unreasonable to conclude that a longer, more comprehensive time frame captures
a more reliable picture of what is ‘normal business’ and more accurately reflects the
cyclical nature of Constellium Ravenswood’s business.” Like the circuit court, we see
nothing clearly wrong in the Tribunal’s effort to account for the admitted variances in
Constellium’s business environment by relying, in part, on a lengthier timeframe to assess
the company’s normal operations. The Tribunal heard testimony that supported
Constellium’s position that Claimants’ lengthier lookback period was incomparable to the
11
company’s anticipated performance in August and September 2012. But that same
testimony could also have led the Tribunal to conclude that Constellium’s five-month
comparison period was too short to represent the variability of the company’s operations.
On this issue, we are reluctant to second-guess the Tribunal’s assessment of the testimony
and its choice to rely in part on Claimants’ lengthier lookback period to determine
Constellium’s normal operations.
We say “in part” because as the Tribunal explained, “[t]o calculate the
average monthly percentages of [Constellium’s] normal business activity, [it] gave similar
weight to the claimant’s recommended time period of January 2010/July 2012 and the
employer’s recommended time period of March 2012/July 2012.” The Tribunal did not
adopt Claimants’ position to the exclusion of Constellium’s; it considered both. Again, we
see nothing clearly wrong in that approach and for the same reason articulated by the circuit
court:
[T]he ALJ Tribunal averaged the output values during the time
frames proposed by both parties to determine an average
between the two positions. While there may be merit in
choosing a different time frame for other types of comparisons,
the time frames chosen by the ALJ Tribunal for comparison to
the issues raised in these proceedings were reasonable, and
likewise took into account the positions of both parties.
Constellium also argues that the Tribunal erred by failing to account for the
eleven, non-strike days during the months of August and September 2012 during which
Constellium operated at full capacity (approximately 18 percent of the days in those
12
months). Had that step been taken, Constellium asserts, its comparative rates of strike-
time production, shipping, and revenue would have been lower (and more accurate) than
those ultimately found by the Tribunal. Again, we see nothing clearly wrong in the
Tribunal’s calculation of Constellium’s performance during the strike at the month level,
rather than day-by-day. As Constellium acknowledges, daily output metrics were not
available at the administrative hearing. The Tribunal declined to approximate the daily
performance metrics for August and September—to, in its words, “extrapolate, assume,
estimate and guess the amount, difference, and significance of the strike and non-strike
business activity in the August/September 2012 period[.]” There are multiple ways the
Tribunal could have sliced and diced the month-level measurements to arrive at daily
output levels. The circuit court outlines one approach in its order, Constellium advocates
a different one its brief, and others are certainly available. We do not fault the Tribunal for
staying out of the fray, given the numerous possible approaches. Ultimately, we cannot
say that the Tribunal’s calculations are clearly wrong, so we leave them alone.
(2) Substantial Curtailment
Two Constellium arguments remain: that the Tribunal overlooked the
curtailment of non-output related activities during the strike 17 and that even the Tribunal’s
17
Given the ensuing analysis of the Tribunal’s finding of no work stoppage, we do
not address Constellium’s first assignment of error—that contrary to the Tribunal’s order,
a stoppage of work did occur during the 2012 strike because the labor dispute affected
nearly 80 percent of the company’s employees and Constellium’s salaried employees were
unable to complete their own, regularly assigned tasks during the strike because they were
reassigned to bargaining unit positions.
13
erroneously calculated output measurements show a substantial curtailment of
Constellium’s normal operations due to the 2012 labor dispute. Claimants respond that the
law regarding substantial curtailment is well-settled. Cumberland & Allegheny Gas Co. v.
Hatcher 18 and Homer Laughlin China Co. v. Hix, 19 they represent, establish a rule that an
employer demonstrates substantial curtailment by showing a 75 to 80 percent decrease in
output, and Constellium did not do that, here.
We first dispel the notion that Cumberland & Allegheny and Homer Laughlin
establish that an employer’s normal operations must be curtailed by at least 75 percent to
establish a stoppage of work under § 21A-6-3(4). To be clear: Cumberland & Allegheny
and Homer Laughlin do not establish a 75-percent threshold. In Cumberland & Allegheny,
this Court considered whether a gas utility’s normal operations were substantially curtailed
when 80 percent of the utility’s employees went on strike but the amount of gas supplied
and sold by the utility did not fall. 20 This Court found that the utility’s normal operations
were not substantially curtailed due to the labor dispute, apparently based on the utility’s
steady production and in spite of the fact that only 20 percent of the workforce remained
on the job. 21
18
Cumberland & Allegheny, 147 W. Va. at 630, 130 S.E.2d at 115.
19
Homer Laughlin China Co. v. Hix, 128 W. Va. 613, 37 S.E.2d 649 (1946).
20
Cumberland & Allegheny, 147 W. Va. at 636, 638, 130 S.E.2d at 119.
21
Id. at 639, 643−44, 130 S.E.2d at 123.
14
Notably, in Cumberland & Allegheny this Court did not originate a syllabus
point enshrining an 80-percent reduction in an employer’s normal operations as a
substantial curtailment of those operations. Instead, we held that “in order that employees
may be disqualified from receiving unemployment compensation benefits because of ‘a
stoppage of work’ resulting from a labor dispute, it must appear that there has resulted a
substantial curtailment of the employer’s normal operations,” and left it at that. 22
Homer Laughlin v. Hix is not a 75-percent silver bullet, either. In Homer
Laughlin, this Court held that,
A strike, by employees of the operator of a factory,
which results in curtailment to the extent of approximately
seventy-five per cent of the production of one of its
departments, and arises from breach of a wage contract by the
striking employees, creates a stoppage of work which exists
because of a labor dispute, within the meaning of the statute,
Subsection 4, Section 4, Article 6, Chapter 76, Acts of the
Legislature, 1943.[23]
That syllabus point does not say that only a 75-percent curtailment of
production establishes a stoppage of work, an important distinction that left space for this
directive seventeen years later in Cumberland & Allegheny: “[a] determination of the
existence or nonexistence of a stoppage of work in a case of this nature must necessarily
22
Syl. Pt. 2, in part, id. at 630, 130 S.E.2d at 115.
23
Syl. Pt. 1, Homer Laughlin, 128 W. Va. at 613, 37 S.E.2d at 649.
15
depend upon the facts of each case.” 24 So, to put any confusion to rest, we now hold that
Syllabus Point 1 of Homer Laughlin China Co. v. Hix, 128 W. Va. 613, 37 S.E.2d 649
(1946), does not require an employer to show at least a 75-percent curtailment in its normal
operations in order to establish a “work stoppage,” for purposes of West Virginia Code §
21A-6-3(4) (2012).
Cumberland & Allegheny demonstrates that the determination of whether a
stoppage of work due to a labor dispute has occurred does not have to be made in a vacuum.
In that case, we surveyed decisions from Arkansas, Missouri, and Arizona before
determining that no work stoppage had occurred; likewise, it is appropriate in this case to
look to other states for guidance. And when we do that, we see that no court has established
a hard-and-fast rule that a certain percent reduction in the employer’s normal operations
amounts to a substantial curtailment. We will not make that rule, either, given the fact-
intensive nature of the substantial curtailment inquiry. But in reviewing the facts of the
cases before them, we cannot help but notice that other courts have recognized that a 20-
to 30-percent reduction in production would seem to be the “critical breaking point . . .
sufficient to establish a stoppage.” 25 These include Missouri (decrease in production by
24
Cumberland & Allegheny, 147 W. Va. at 639, 130 S.E.2d at 121.
25
Jerre S. Williams, The Labor Dispute Disqualification--A Primer and Some
Problems, 8 VAND. L. REV. 338, 340 (1955) (“The critical breaking point would seem to
be about a 20 to 30 percent cut in production as being sufficient to establish a stoppage.”)
(citing Milton I. Shadur, Unemployment Benefits and the Labor Dispute Disqualification,
17 U. CHI. L. REV. 294, 310, n.64 (1950)). See also Willard A. Lewis, The Stoppage of
Work Concept in Labor Dispute Disqualification Jurisprudence, 45 J. URB. L. 319, 327
16
20 to 30 percent), 26 Alaska (decrease in production by 20 to 30 percent), 27 Maryland
(decrease in production by 20 to 30 percent), 28 Massachusetts (decrease in production by
20 to 30 percent), 29 Nebraska (decrease in production by 20 percent), 30 and Hawaii
(decrease in production by 20 to 30 percent). 31
(1967) (“‘Stoppages’ have been found to exist where there has been a decrease of total
business in excess of 30 percent, and a decrease of 20 percent of normal production.”)
(hereinafter Lewis).
26
Tri-State Motor Transit Co. v. Indus. Comm’n Div. of Emp. Sec., 509 S.W.2d 217,
225 (Mo. Ct. App. 1974) (20 to 30% cut in production appears to be critical breaking point;
lower tribunal not clearly wrong in finding that stoppage of work ended where employer’s
revenues were 16.16% less than gross revenues in the months preceding the strike).
27
Twenty-Eight (28) Members of Oil, Chem. & Atomic Workers Union, Loc. No. 1-
1978 v. Emp. Sec. Div. of Alaska Dep’t of Lab., 659 P.2d 583, 592−93 (Alaska 1983)
(where lower tribunal found a substantial curtailment of employer operations based on
increased costs and labor dispute’s effect on employer’s tertiary business operations,
remanding for determination of whether employer’s main business operations were
substantially curtailed).
28
Emp. Sec. Admin. v. Browning-Ferris, Inc., 438 A.2d 1356, 1364 (Md. 1982)
(finding no stoppage of work where employer returned to 90% to 100% of prestrike
operations by “utilization of management personnel, replacement employees and
employees from other divisions of the company”).
29
Reed Nat’l Corp. v. Dir. of Div. of Emp. Sec., 446 N.E.2d 398, 400−01 (Mass.
1983) (reversing order awarding benefits and remanding for further factual findings by
administrative body).
30
Magner v. Kinney, 2 N.W.2d 689, 693 (Neb. 1942) (stoppage of work where
trucking company’s business operations decreased 30%).
31
Meadow Gold Dairies-Hawaii, Ltd. v. Wiig, 437 P.2d 317, 320 (Haw. 1968)
(lower tribunal did not err as a matter of law when it found that reduction of production at
two dairies (18.65% and 17.66%) was not a stoppage of work).
17
Depending on the facts presented in a particular case, “‘indicia of
substantialness’” other than production may be relevant, such as “‘decreases in business
revenue, services rendered, marketing, research, and maintenance, transportation, and
construction activities.’” 32 Production is enough in this case. The function of
Constellium’s Ravenswood plant in 2012 was to produce aluminum plate and coil.
Claimants went on strike and Constellium briefly stopped producing. Constellium then
restarted limited production after shifting salaried employees from their regularly assigned
tasks to bargaining unit, i.e., production, work. Regardless of Constellium’s business
decision to reassign salaried workers, normal plate production at the plant still fell by 38
percent and coil production by 51 percent—decreases beyond the 20- to 30-percent
decrease breaking point noted by other courts referenced above. 33
In Cumberland & Allegheny, we emphasized that whether a stoppage of work
has occurred “cannot be determined solely on the basis of the proportionate number of
employees affected,” and that
[i]t is conceivable that in some situations a strike or lockout
affecting relatively few employees would produce a stoppage
of work if such men were employed in the performance of
32
Browning-Ferris, Inc., 438 A.2d at 1364–65 (quoting Lewis at 332).
33
Cf. Wolford v. Gaston, 182 W. Va. 674, 676, 391 S.E.2d 364, 367 (1990)
(concluding that 25% reduction in wages was a “substantial, unilateral change” to terms of
employment so as to preclude disqualification from unemployment compensation
benefits); Brewster v. Rutledge, 176 W. Va. 265, 266, 342 S.E.2d 232, 233 (1986) (30%
reduction in wages ($3.35 to $2.25 per hour) was “substantial unilateral change” in
conditions of night watchman’s employment justifying resignation).
18
duties of such vital nature that their unemployment would
result in a substantial curtailment of the normal overall
activities or operations of the employer. On the other hand, in
other situations the unemployment of a proportionately greater
number of employees might have no substantial effect on the
normal activities of the employer. In some situations, a
substantial curtailment of work in a single category or
department of the employer’s operations might be of such a
vital nature as to result in a substantial curtailment of the
employer’s overall activities if all categories or departments
were of an interdependent nature; while, conceivably, in
another and different situation, a complete cessation of work in
a single category or department of some incidental or minor
nature might produce no appreciable curtailment of the overall
operations of the employer.[34]
The facts of this case are not like the theoretical close calls discussed in
Cumberland & Allegheny. Here, Constellium’s 680 hourly employees—80 percent of
Constellium’s available workforce—walked off the job and left 180 salaried employees to
maintain some level of production during the strike. Even with the salaried employees’
efforts, production of Constellium’s main product lines still dipped by 51 percent (coil)
and 38 percent (plate). Those figures—an 80-percent reduction in workforce, decrease in
production of plate by 38 percent, and decrease in production of coil by 51 percent—
demonstrate that Constellium’s normal operations were substantially curtailed during the
2012 labor dispute. The Tribunal and Board clearly erred when they found otherwise.
34
Cumberland & Allegheny, 147 W. Va. at 639–40, 130 S.E.2d at 121.
19
Constellium attempted to backstop the absence of bargaining unit employees
by reassigning salaried employees to bargaining unit positions. The Tribunal appears to
have taken Constellium’s ability to continue any operations by the efforts of salaried
employees as a strong indication that normal operations were not substantially curtailed.
That view does not comport with our statement in Cumberland & Allegheny that a work
stoppage “need not be complete” 35 to trigger disqualification under the labor dispute
provision. It also discounts the fact that even with its salaried employees’ extra hours
worked, “herculean effort, and smart, creative management of resources”—in the words of
the Tribunal—Constellium’s production levels fell sharply. 36
The Tribunal and Board’s factual findings are due substantial deference, and
“the disqualification provisions of the unemployment statutes must be narrowly
35
Id. at 638, 130 S.E.2d at 120 (internal quotation omitted).
36
Claimants also argue that Cumberland & Allegheny requires a showing of a
backlog of work or services, generally, to demonstrate that the employer’s operations were
substantially curtailed during the labor dispute. Again, Cumberland & Allegheny does not
say that. In that case, we discussed the need for a showing of a backlog of work in the non-
production categories of work cited by the employer, such as maintenance, meter tests, and
handling of service orders. See Cumberland & Allegheny, 147 W. Va. at 639, 130 S.E.2d
at 121 (following a lengthy list of categories of work that were curtailed during labor
dispute—none of which was the employer’s primary business of supplying and selling
gas—stating that “there was no showing of an accumulated backlog of work or services in
such categories sufficient in volume or nature to require employment of additional
personnel or to require overtime employment on the part of the regular employees after
normal operations were resumed”) (emphasis added).
20
construed.” 37 We do not defer to those tribunals, however, when we conclude that a factual
finding is clearly wrong. Considering that the 2012 labor dispute reduced production at
the plant by the rates discussed above and affected 80 percent of Constellium’s employees,
the Tribunal’s and Board’s finding that Constellium’s normal operations were not
substantially curtailed due to the labor dispute is clearly wrong. Thus, the lower tribunals’
decision that a disqualifying stoppage of work under § 21A-6-3(4) (2012) did not occur at
the Ravenwood plant due to the 2012 labor dispute is erroneous, as well.
B. Exceptions to Disqualification
Because a stoppage of work occurred at Constellium’s Ravenswood plant
during the 2012 labor dispute, Claimants are disqualified for unemployment compensation
benefits under § 21A-6-3(4) (2012) unless they can satisfy at least one of three exceptions.
We stated in Roberts v. Gaston that:
W.Va.Code, 21A–6–3(4) (1984), disqualifies
employees from receiving unemployment compensation
benefits if they are involved in “a work stoppage incident to a
labor dispute,” unless they can satisfy one of three statutory
exceptions: (1) the employees are “required to accept wages,
hours or conditions of employment substantially less favorable
than those prevailing for similar work in the locality”; (2) the
employees “are denied the right of collective bargaining under
generally prevailing conditions”; or (3) “an employer shuts
down his plant or operation or dismisses his employees in order
Smittle v. Gatson, 195 W. Va. 416, 422, 465 S.E.2d 873, 879 (1995) (citing Peery,
37
177 W. Va. at 551, 355 S.E.2d at 45).
21
to force wage reduction, changes in hours or working
conditions.”[38]
Based on the evidence offered by Claimants during the November 2012 hearing, the
Tribunal found that Claimants had not satisfied any of those exceptions. Neither the Board
nor the circuit court disturbed the Tribunal’s findings. Now, they are the subject of
Claimants’ cross-appeal.
Claimants argue that the Tribunal erred in two, general ways. First,
Claimants contend that the Tribunal violated their due process rights by blocking them (via
the order quashing portions of a subpoena for documents issued to Constellium) from
obtaining documents from Constellium that Claimants believe will support this theory:
Constellium’s collective bargaining in 2012 was controlled by a parent company in Paris,
France, which Claimants deem an unfair labor practice under federal labor law and a denial
of their right to collective bargaining under § 21A-6-3(4) (2012). Second, Claimants argue
that the Tribunal ignored several unfair labor practices committed by Constellium during
collective bargaining in 2012, and so also overlooked that Claimants had necessarily
satisfied at least one of the exceptions to disqualification under § 21A-6-3(4) (2012). We
consider these issues in turn.
38
Syl. Pt. 1, Roberts v. Gatson, 182 W. Va. 764, 392 S.E.2d 204 (1990).
22
(1) The Subpoena Duces Tecum
Claimants raise their due process argument for the first time on appeal. “Our
law is clear in holding that, as a general rule, we will not pass upon an issue raised for the
first time on appeal.” 39 So, we do not consider claimants’ argument that the Tribunal
violated their due process rights by quashing requests in the subpoena duces tecum. This
portion of Claimants’ cross-appeal contains, however, two arguments that Claimants made
to the circuit court. Perversely, Claimants have injected these old arguments into their
novel due process argument. Out of an abundance of caution, we briefly address those
arguments included in the due process portion of Claimants’ cross-appeal which they also
raised below.
Claimants argue the requests quashed by the Tribunal are very specific, not
“vague, general and unnecessarily cumbersome” as the Tribunal labelled them. The
Tribunal was correct: the requests are anything but specific. For example, in the first
request, Claimants demanded:
1. All communications, memos, emails, text messages,
videos and pictures between Constellium Rolled Products
39
Mayhew v. Mayhew, 205 W. Va. 490, 506, 519 S.E.2d 188, 204 (1999). Still, “[a]
constitutional issue that was not properly preserved at the trial court level may, in the
discretion of this Court, be addressed on appeal when the constitutional issue is the
controlling issue in the resolution of the case.” Syl. Pt. 2, Louk v. Cormier, 218 W. Va. 81,
622 S.E.2d 788 (2005). For the reasons discussed later in this opinion, Claimants’ ability
to present evidence to bolster their claim that in 2012, Constellium’s collective bargaining
was controlled by third parties in France does not control the ultimate issue of whether
Claimants have satisfied one of the exceptions to disqualification under § 21A-6-3(4)
(2012), so we do not exercise our discretion to consider Claimants’ due process argument.
23
Ravenswood, LLC employees or its agents, including
AFIMAC, regarding union members of Constellium Rolled
Products Ravenswood, LLC, regarding the labor dispute
between United Steelworkers (“USW”) Local Union 5668 and
Constellium Rolled Products Ravenswood, LLC.
The request is not limited in time. It does not identify the Constellium
employees whose communications are sought, such as those of the Chief Executive Officer
or the Vice President of Human Resources (Constellium’s chief negotiator in 2012). And,
it does not indicate the subjects of the communications sought, other than “union members”
and “the labor dispute,” which are both huge categories. If enforced by the Tribunal,
Constellium would have had to produce each communication by any of its employees (or
those of its affiliates) to any of its employees (or those of its affiliates) regarding union
members or the labor dispute. Requests 2 and 3 resemble the first. The Tribunal’s
assessment was not incorrect: the requests are vague, general and unnecessarily
cumbersome, as are the other two requests it quashed. 40
Second, Claimants appear to argue that the subpoena should have been
enforced so long as it might have produced some relevant evidence. They cite West
Virginia Rules of Evidence 401 (Test for Relevant Evidence), 402 (General Admissibility
40
Cf. Kahle’s Kitchens, Inc. v. Shutler Cabinets, Inc., 240 W. Va. 209, 217, 809
S.E.2d 520, 528 (2018) (naming “the breadth of the document request, the time period
covered by it, and the particularity of the documents described” as some of the “factors to
consider when assessing whether a subpoena duces tecum subjects a witness to an undue
burden”) (quoting Palmer & Davis, Litigation Handbook on West Virginia Rules of Civil
Procedure § 45(d) at 1132−33 (5th ed. 2017)).
24
of Relevant Evidence), and 403 (Excluding Relevant Evidence for Prejudice, etc.) for
support. But those rules do not address the question answered by the Tribunal: whether
the subpoena for documents subjected Constellium to an undue burden? 41 Importantly,
Claimants do not argue that the Tribunal lacks the authority to quash the requests, 42 but
only that it exercised its authority mistakenly. And, although the Tribunal told Claimants
why it was quashing the requests, it does not appear that Claimants recalibrated the requests
and tried again to obtain documents they maintain were vital to allow them to prove foreign
control over Constellium’s bargaining. For all those reasons, we will not say that the
Tribunal erred in quashing portions of the subpoena duces tecum as “vague, general and
unnecessarily cumbersome.”
(2) Exceptions to Disqualification
We turn to the Claimants’ argument that notwithstanding the quashed
requests in the subpoena duces tecum, the Tribunal ignored unfair labor practices
committed by Constellium during collective bargaining in 2012 so that Claimants
necessarily satisfied at least one of the exceptions to disqualification under § 21A-6-3(4)
(2012). Constellium responds that Claimants’ arguments rest on an inaccurate reading of
41
Cf. W. Va. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3)(A)(iv) (providing that, “[o]n timely motion, the
court by which a subpoena was issued shall quash or modify the subpoena if it . . . subjects
a person to undue burden”).
42
Cf. W. Va. C.S.R. § 84-1-5.3, Rules of Evidence and Procedure (providing that
the Board of Review and its subordinates are not required to follow the common law or
statutory rules of evidence or procedure, but not precluding them from considering those
rules in conducting the proceedings before them).
25
Roberts v. Gaston, a case in which we endeavored to put meat on the bones of the
exceptions to disqualification under § 21A-6-3(4). 43 Constellium is correct.
In Roberts, this Court was asked to review the Board’s denial of
unemployment compensation benefits to striking workers. 44 The workers argued that they
were not disqualified from benefits because the employer had denied them the right to
collective bargaining under generally prevailing conditions (exception 2) and required
them to accept contract terms that were less favorable than those in their old contract
(exception 1). 45
The meaning of “denied the right of collective bargaining under generally
prevailing conditions” was an issue of first impression. The Court observed that the
National Labor Relations Act 46 can guide interpretation of the phrase “denied the right of
collective bargaining,” under § 21A-6-3(4) and then went on to survey certain principles
of federal labor law. 47 Despite that discussion, this Court did not hold that a violation of
43
Roberts, 182 W. Va. at 764, 392 S.E.2d at 204.
44
Id. at 766, 392 S.E.2d at 206.
45
Id.
46
29 U.S.C. §§ 151−169.
47
Roberts, 182 W. Va. at 768−71, 392 S.E.2d at 208−10 (quoting 29 U.S. Code §
158(d) (defining collective bargaining)).
26
federal labor law is necessarily a denial of the right to collective bargaining under West
Virginia’s labor dispute provision. Instead, this Court said the opposite:
It is obvious that these general principles [regarding the
denial of the right of collective bargaining under § 21A-6-3(4)]
are substantially different from the ordinary inquiry that is
made under federal labor law in order to find an unfair labor
practice based on the duty to bargain collectively. Under our
unemployment compensation statute, the test is not whether the
employer may have committed an unfair labor practice, but
whether his actions amounted to the denial of the right of
collective bargaining.[48]
This Court then held that, “[a] refusal to engage in the collective bargaining process or to
negotiate on those mandatory subjects that traditionally form the basis of the collective
bargaining agreement so frustrates the process as to constitute a denial of the right of
collective bargaining under W.Va.Code, 21A–6–3(4) (1984).” 49
With that in mind, we turn to the Tribunal’s discussion regarding Claimants’
arguments that Constellium denied them their right of collective bargaining under
§ 21A-6-3(4):
In this case, the claimants’ union and the employer met and
exchanged proposals. There was give and take, concessions by
each party on different issues, and meaningful negotiations.
The parties were able to resolve the non-economic issues in
controversy. The parties struggled to resolve the economic
issues, in part because of each party’s positions on the “medical
48
Id. at 771, 392 S.E.2d at 211.
49
Syl. Pt. 2, id. at 764, 392 S.E.2d at 204.
27
necessity” term of the medical insurance coverage provided by
the employer.
....
However, considering the entire record, including that the
employer met with the claimants[’] union many times and there
were concessions and exchange on different issues, it is
considered there were meaningful negotiations between the
parties.
Claimants do not argue that the Tribunal’s account of the parties’ bargaining
is inaccurate. Instead, they argue that Constellium’s lead negotiators lacked final authority
to bind the company on economic proposals—an alleged unfair labor practice—and
engaged in bad faith bargaining by insisting on the medical necessity clause—another
alleged unfair labor practice. 50 As the Tribunal observed, whether an employer has
committed an unfair labor practice under federal law is not the inquiry to determine whether
its “actions amounted to the denial of the right of collective bargaining;” 51 it is whether
there is “[a] refusal to engage in the collective bargaining process or to negotiate on those
mandatory subjects that traditionally form the basis of the collective bargaining agreement
50
Claimants also include a single sentence argument that a communique from
Constellium’s CEO to union members establishes bad faith bargaining under § 21A-6-3(4).
“Although we liberally construe briefs in determining issues presented for review, issues
which are not raised, and those mentioned only in passing but are not supported with
pertinent authority, are not considered on appeal.” State v. LaRock, 196 W. Va. 294, 302,
470 S.E.2d 613, 621 (1996). We do not, therefore, address Claimants’ assertion.
51
Roberts, 182 W. Va. at 771, 392 S.E.2d at 211.
28
so frustrates the [collective bargaining] process as to constitute a denial of the right of
collective bargaining under W.Va.Code, 21A–6–3(4) (1984).” 52
Here, there is simply no dispute that the parties engaged in the collective
bargaining process and negotiated on subjects that are traditionally the basis of collective
bargaining agreements. Again, as the Tribunal related,
[t]he negotiations between the union representatives
and the employer representatives to review the collective
bargaining agreement began in May 2012. There were 26
sessions before the labor dispute began August 5, 2012.
During the sessions, there were concessions made by the
employer and the claimants’ union on non-economic issues
and economic issues. The parties agreed to first address the
noneconomic issues before the economic issues were
addressed. The parties resolved the non-economic issues. The
parties were not able to resolve the disagreements of [sic]
economic issues, so a strike ensued August 5, 2012.
....
As regard [sic] the economic issues, the employer was
willing to make concessions or adjustments to other wage,
bonus, or economic issues, if the claimants would agree to the
medical necessity clause being included in the new contract.
Since the claimants insisted the new contract not have a
medical necessity clause, the parties struggled to agree or
negotiate on the other economic issues. The employer created
and perpetuated the medical necessity issue and controversy
which prevented an agreement or resolution of other economic
issues.
The parties continued to meet in negotiating sessions
after the strike began. The parties met at the governor’s
52
Syl. Pt. 2, id. at 764, 392 S.E.2d at 204.
29
mansion to forge an agreement. The employer agreed to add
language to the medical necessity paragraph which included
“medical necessity is not intended to deny access to health care
services or care to our employees or their dependents.” With
the additional or supplemental language added to the medical
necessity paragraph, the employees agreed to vote favorably
upon the collective bargaining agreement on September 20,
2012, and returned to work September 24, 2012.
The Tribunal’s undisputed account of the parties’ negotiations in 2012 does
not evince “[a] refusal [by Constellium] to engage in the collective bargaining process or
to negotiate on those mandatory subjects that traditionally form the basis of the collective
bargaining agreement [that] so frustrate[d] the [collective bargaining] process as to
constitute a denial of the right of collective bargaining under W.Va.Code, 21A–6–3(4)
(1984).” 53 As this Court observed in Roberts, “not every event that may constitute a federal
unfair labor practice will constitute a denial of the right of collective bargaining under
W.Va.Code, 21A–6–3(4).” 54 Considering the frequency and constancy of the parties’
bargaining sessions, the progress made on non-economic matters and, later, on economic
matters, plus each parties’ eventual willingness to compromise, we cannot say that the
alleged control of Constellium’s collective bargaining in 2012 by a third-party or
53
Syl. Pt. 2, id. at 764, 392 S.E.2d at 204.
54
Id. at 771, 392 S.E.2d at 211.
30
Constellium’s position regarding the medical necessity clause establishes a deprivation of
Claimants’ rights to collective bargaining. 55
Claimants also contend that the company’s insistence on the medical
necessity clause was an attempt to force a wage reduction under § 21A-6-3(4) (exception
number 3). Contrary to Claimants’ position, an employer’s pursuit of a wage reduction,
changes in hours or working conditions during collective bargaining is not itself an
exception to disqualification under § 21A-6-3(4). The statute in effect at the time of the
2012 labor dispute states: “No disqualification under [§ 21A-6-3(4)] is imposed . . . if [1]
an employer shuts down his or her plant or operation or dismisses his or her employees [2]
in order to force wage reduction, changes in hours or working conditions.” Claimants’
argument—that by pursuing the medical necessity clause during collective bargaining
Constellium sought a de facto wage reduction—ignores the necessary first component of
this exception to disqualification: “that the employer acted to shut down the work site.” 56
Here, Claimants walked out on August 5, 2012. Constellium did not “act to shut down
[its] plant, operation or to dismiss [its] employees,” 57 so Claimants cannot satisfy the
requirements of the third exception in § 21A-6-3(4). In sum, contrary to Claimants’
55
Cf. Smittle, 195 W. Va. at 429, 465 S.E.2d at 886 (reasoning that where “the
record show[ed] that [employer] did negotiate with its employees before the contract
expired, the letter incident standing alone was not a denial of the right to bargain
collectively”).
56
Syl. Pt. 4, in part, id.
57
Id. at 424, 465 S.E.2d at 881.
31
argument in their cross-appeal, we do not find that the Tribunal erred when it quashed
certain requests for documents in the Claimants’ subpoena duces tecum, nor do we find
that the Tribunal erred regarding the exceptions to disqualification in § 21A-6-3(4) (2012).
C. Preemption
We quickly dispose of Constellium’s argument that the labor dispute
disqualification is preempted by federal labor law. 58 The employer in Roberts made a
similar argument:
PPG appears to argue that if we attempt to determine
whether a failure to bargain has occurred under our
employment security statutes by reference to whether an unfair
labor practice has been committed, we would be pre-empted
from doing so under the principles announced in New York Tel.
Co. v. New York State Dep’t of Labor, 440 U.S. 519, 99 S.Ct.
1328, 59 L.Ed.2d 553 (1979). This case holds that a state is
not precluded by the doctrine of federal labor law pre-emption
from authorizing the payment of unemployment compensation
benefits to persons while they are out of work on strike.[59]
We then stated that we found “nothing in [New York Tel. Co.] which prevents us or the
state unemployment agency from referring to the federal labor law to determine whether
there is either a failure to bargain collectively or to determine if unfair labor practices rise
58
See Wisconsin Dep’t of Indus., Lab. & Hum. Rels. v. Gould Inc., 475 U.S. 282,
286 (1986) (stating that “[c]entral among [principles of the NLRA’s preemptive scope] is
the general rule set forth in San Diego Building Trades Council v. Garmon . . . that States
may not regulate activity that the NLRA protects, prohibits, or arguably protects or
prohibits”).
59
Roberts, 182 W. Va. at 769 n.5, 392 S.E.2d at 209 n.5.
32
to this level.” 60 The circuit court relied on Roberts and its endorsement of New York
Telephone to reject Constellium’s preemption argument.
Constellium concedes that a state may categorically grant or deny
unemployment compensation during labor disputes under New York Telephone without
inserting itself into the federally regulated collective bargaining process. Instead,
Constellium argues that a state “may not use its unemployment compensation statutes to
regulate bargaining behavior by the employer or the union.” 61 Constellium contends that
the Tribunal and the Board did that in this case by applying the labor dispute provision in
a such a way as to penalize “employers who resort to lawful self-help techniques during a
strike,” i.e., by finding that Constellium’s resort to a contingency plan to maintain some
level of operations during the labor dispute justified payment of unemployment
compensation benefits to Claimants under §21A-6-3(4).
We have rejected the Tribunal’s apparent conclusion that Constellium’s
continued production during the labor dispute, however far reduced, established that its
normal operations were not substantially curtailed and that a work stoppage had not
occurred. Consequently, Constellium’s main preemption argument—that the Tribunal
used the labor dispute provision to regulate Constellium’s conduct and to level the parties’
positions during the labor dispute—is moot. Further, as we stated in Roberts, “[u]nder our
60
Id.
61
Emphasis in original.
33
unemployment compensation statute, the test is not whether the employer may have
committed an unfair labor practice, but whether his actions amounted to the denial of the
right of collective bargaining.” 62 As demonstrated above, the inquiries are not coextensive,
and our consideration of the exceptions to disqualification in § 21A-6-3(4) may be guided
by federal law, but they are not controlled by it. For those reasons, we affirm the circuit
court’s order insofar as it denied Constellium’s appeal on preemption grounds.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the final order of the Circuit Court of
Kanawha County entered on June 12, 2020, is reversed in part and affirmed in part, and
the case is remanded for entry of an order denying the claimants’ applications for
unemployment compensation benefits.
Reversed in part and affirmed in part and
remanded with directions.
62
Roberts, 182 W. Va. at 771, 392 S.E.2d at 211.
34