IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
County of Berks and Berks County :
Prison Board, :
Appellants :
:
v. : No. 1199 C.D. 2020
: SUBMITTED: October 29, 2021
Teamsters Local Union 429 :
BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Judge1
HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
OPINION NOT REPORTED
MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
SENIOR JUDGE LEADBETTER FILED: March 30, 2022
The County of Berks and Berks County Prison Board (collectively, the
County) appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County that
denied the County’s petition to vacate an Act 1952 arbitration award sustaining the
grievance of correctional officer (CO) Ronald James (Grievant). We affirm.
The relevant background of this matter is as follows. In July 2018,
Grievant was seated at a desk in the common hall of the prison’s E-Unit when he
observed an inmate attempting to cover the cell door window with a towel in
violation of safety regulations. Grievant opened the cell door electronically from a
1
This matter was assigned to the panel before January 3, 2022, when President Judge Emerita
Leavitt became a senior judge on the Court.
2
Act of July 23, 1970, P.L. 563, as amended, 43 P.S. §§ 1101.101-1101.2301. Act 195, as it
is commonly referred to, is the Public Employe Relations Act.
control panel so that he could direct the inmate to take down the towel. The inmate
came out of his cell, became extremely agitated, and yelled “What, I can’t put up a
curtain?” (Nov. 21, 2019 Arb. Award at 1.) When Grievant replied “No, you
can’t[,]” the inmate began yelling obscenities. (Id.) As Grievant approached the
inmate and repeatedly ordered him to return to his cell, the inmate continued to argue
and yell profanities. (Id.) When Grievant came within a few feet of the inmate,
Grievant removed pepper spray from his holster, shook it, and once again ordered
the inmate to return to the cell. When the inmate refused, Grievant sprayed him.
However, the spray was ineffective because the inmate had turned his head and
covered his face with the towel. At that point, Grievant took the inmate down to the
floor. With fellow CO Landis now assisting, the pair applied physical force in an
attempt to subdue the inmate. The Arbitrator described the physical force as follows:
The inmate was on the floor, with [] Grievant over his left
side with [Grievant’s] right leg over the inmate’s left leg
while [Grievant] was attempting to free the inmate’s left
arm to be handcuffed. CO Landis was on the right side of
the inmate attempting to free [the inmate’s] right arm so
that [CO Landis] could apply his handcuffs. As [Grievant]
was unable to free the inmate’s hands from beneath him,
[] Grievant proceeded to strike the inmate two times at the
head and neck area with horizontal elbow strikes. []
Grievant then called for assistance. As [Grievant] and CO
Landis were still unable to pull the inmate’s arms out from
under him and the inmate was still actively resisting and
being combative, [] Grievant proceeded to administer four
more strikes to the [inmate’s] head and neck area. After []
Grievant administered the strikes, they were able to free
the inmate’s arms and place him in handcuffs. The two
[COs] then held the inmate down to the floor until [seven]
[COs] came to assist.
(Id. at 2-3.)
2
Following a review of the relevant reports and video evidence, the
County determined that Grievant used an unjustified and excessive level of force
exceeding that which was necessary to achieve the inmate’s compliance.
Consequently, the County cited Grievant for excessive use of force and violation of
other County policies. (Id. at 3.) As the matter moved through the disciplinary
process, Chief Deputy Warden Smith determined that a twenty-day disciplinary
suspension was appropriate. (Id.) Subsequently, Teamsters Local Union 429 (the
Union) filed a grievance. At the third step of the process, the County reduced the
suspension to five days due to “Grievant’s long tenure and generally good
performance . . . .”3 (Id.) After the Union grieved the five-day suspension, the matter
proceeded to a hearing before the Arbitrator. The Arbitrator concluded that the
County lacked just cause to impose the suspension, entering the following award:
On the basis of the record as a whole and for the reasons
discussed, the grievance is sustained. The County is
directed to make [] Grievant whole for all losses sustained
as a result of his suspension. [It is] also to remove all
references of this disciplinary action from his personnel
file.
(Id. at 16.)
In the County’s petition to vacate the arbitration award, the County
argued that the award does not draw its essence from the collective bargaining
agreement (CBA) between the County Commissioners and the Union, it violates
public policy, and it is contrary to law. (Dec. 20, 2019 Pet. to Vacate Arb. Award at
1-7.) The trial court denied the petition. The County raises the same three arguments
before this Court.
3
Grievant worked as a CO for eighteen years, with no disciplinary infractions for the last
sixteen of those years. (Nov. 21, 2019 Arb. Award at 7.)
3
When reviewing arbitration awards under Act 195, this Court’s role is
one of deference. State Sys. of Higher Educ. (Cheyney Univ.) v. State Coll. Univ.
Pro. Assoc. (PSEA/NEA), 743 A.2d 405, 413 (Pa. 1999) (Cheyney Univ.).
Recognizing the strong presumption that the legislature and the parties intended for
an arbitrator to be the judge of disputes under a CBA, we review an arbitration award
using the essence test. Id. Pursuant to the essence test, “if the issue as properly
defined falls within the scope of the parties’ CBA, the arbitration award may only
be vacated if the award ‘indisputably and genuinely is without foundation in, or fails
to logically flow from,’ the CBA.” Neshaminy Sch. Dist. v. Neshaminy Fed’n of
Teachers, 171 A.3d 334, 337 n.3 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017) (citation omitted). If the
essence test is met, then the award can be vacated only if it satisfies the narrow public
policy exception, which means that the award’s enforcement would contravene a
well-defined and dominant public policy. Shamokin Area Sch. Dist. v. Am. Fed’n of
State, Cnty., & Mun. Emps. Dist. Council 86, 20 A.3d 579, 582 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011).
In making these determinations, we are bound by the arbitrator’s findings of fact.
Blairsville-Saltsburg Sch. Dist. v. Blairsville-Saltsburg Educ. Ass’n, 102 A.3d 1049,
1050 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014).
I.
We first consider whether the Act 195 arbitration award draws its
essence from the CBA. In addressing the first prong of the essence test, whether the
issue as properly defined is within the terms of the CBA, we note that the issue as
stated by the Arbitrator was “whether the County had just cause to impose a [five]-
day disciplinary suspension on [] Grievant, and, if not, what shall the remedy be?”
(Nov. 21, 2019 Arb. Award at 9.) The CBA provides that “Employer shall not
demote, suspend, discharge, or take any disciplinary action against an employee
4
without just cause.” (Section 36.1 of the CBA at 37; Reproduced Record “R.R.” at
50a.) Consequently, the issue is plainly encompassed within the CBA. However,
the County maintains that the award does not satisfy the second prong of the essence
test because the Arbitrator’s interpretation cannot be rationally derived from the
CBA where he allegedly failed to follow prior, binding awards involving factually
similar situations and CBA provisions. See Sch. Dist. of Phila. v. Phila. Fed’n of
Teachers, Local 13, 651 A.2d 1152 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994) (arbitrator’s award did not
satisfy essence test where it contradicted prior decision involving same parties,
controlling issue, and substantially similar clauses of the CBA). In support, the
County cites two prior arbitration awards where grievances were denied.
In the 2011 award, the present Arbitrator determined that there was just
cause for the discharge of a CO who initiated physical contact with an inmate and
let a verbal altercation escalate into a physical altercation. During the incident, the
CO was assigned to the day room with approximately forty-five inmates and
observed the inmate in an inappropriate location on the second-floor tier. (2011 Arb.
Award at 5; R.R. at 98a.) The CO told him to come down, go to his cell, and lock-
in. As the CO approached the inmate, the CO continued to direct the inmate to lock-
in and he continued to refuse. (Id.) The CO then attempted to use the “forward
goose hold” as a means of physically escorting the inmate, which resulted in the CO
bringing the resisting inmate to the floor. The Arbitrator credited evidence that the
CO initiated the physical contact and that there was no need for him to have
intensified the situation by physically engaging the inmate. (Id. at 30; R.R. at 123a.)
“While there was no question that [the] inmate [] was less than responsive when the
[CO] directed him to lock in, . . . [the inmate] was moving toward his cell, albeit in
a circuitous path.” (Id.) In addition, the Arbitrator considered the fact that the CO
5
was aware of proper procedures and yet chose to engage the inmate. Finally, the
Arbitrator weighed the CO’s disciplinary record during his relatively short tenure of
four years. (Id. at 31; R.R. at 124a.)
In the 2017 award, a different arbitrator determined that there was just
cause for the discharge of a CO who was accused of exercising excessive force
against an inmate who approached the CO at lunchtime and inquired as to an
afternoon medication dosage. (2017 Arb. Award at 3; R.R. at 131a.) After the CO
confirmed with the medical department that no dose was scheduled, the CO directed
the inmate to take his lunch tray and return to his cell. However, the inmate persisted
with his inquiry, insisting that the medication was due. A videotape depicts the CO
talking toward the inmate and then “emerging from behind his desk, approaching
[the inmate], pinning him against the desk, and then punching [him] twice in the
head and once in the stomach while attempting to wrestle him to the ground.” (Id.)
At that point, the CO called for backup. The well-established protocol was to call a
supervisor before confronting an inmate who refused to lock in. (Id. at 9; R.R. at
137a.) The arbitrator found that the record “established persuasively that the [CO]
had no reasonable basis to construe [the] [i]nmate’s verbal perseveration,
argumentative conduct, or dawdling in returning to his cell as predictive of any
immediate physical confrontation.” (Id. at 13; R.R. at 141a.) In addition, the
arbitrator concluded that the CO “was culpable for his decision to grapple with [the
inmate] in an attempt to subdue and handcuff him simply because [he] was not
proceeding to take his food tray and return to his cell as quickly or quietly as the
[CO] wanted.” (Id. at 9; R.R. at 137a.) The arbitrator concluded that the CO of
nineteen years signaled his incorrigibility
by unambiguously announcing his intention to run his unit
as he sees fit, rather than in accordance with . . . reasonable
6
rules and policies designed to maintain a reasonable
balance between a [CO’s] right to protect himself and his
colleagues from harm and the [CO’s] concurrent
responsibility to control inmates other than by physical
force unless a situation reasonably can be construed as
imminently jeopardizing the [CO’s] safety.
(Id. at 15; R.R. at 143a.)
As the trial court herein determined, the prior two awards are factually
distinguishable such that they did not materially alter the meaning and purposes of
the relevant provisions of the CBA. The 2011 award involved a CO initiating
physical contact with a non-combative inmate who was slowly but circuitously
moving toward his cell and unnecessarily exacerbating a verbal altercation into a
physical one. Similarly, the 2017 award involved a CO who unnecessarily
exacerbated a situation by initiating physical contract with an inmate who was
dawdling in returning to his cell but did not exhibit behavior warranting immediate
physical confrontation. The CO in the 2017 award even pinned the inmate against
a desk and then punched him twice in the head and once in the stomach.
By way of contrast, the inmate here persisted in refusing to return to his
cell despite Grievant’s affording him numerous opportunities to do so. In addition,
he remained belligerent and noncompliant even after Grievant deployed pepper
spray and while resisting the COs’ attempts to subdue and handcuff him. (Nov. 21,
2019 Arb. Award at 8.) In fact, the COs’ attempts to gain control over the inmate’s
arms in order to handcuff him were futile because he kept his arms tucked beneath
him and continued to attempt to rise from the floor such that the COs were prevented
from immediately calling for backup. (Id.) In that regard, the Arbitrator credited
the testimony of both COs present during the incident that they perceived a
threatening situation. (Id. at 15.) “Grievant testified that based on the amount of
7
resistance the inmate was giving them while they were attempting to get him
handcuffed, if he had gotten up, they were convinced that he would assault them.”
(Id. at 14.) Notably, once the inmate was cuffed, Grievant immediately ceased using
any force and waited for the responding officers to arrive. (Id. at 8.) While we might
have found differently, we are bound by the Arbitrator’s findings and accordingly,
we cannot say that the award is without foundation or that it does not logically flow
from the CBA.
II.
We next consider whether the arbitration award violates public policy.
The three-step analysis for application of the public policy exception provides that
the Court (1) identify the nature of the conduct leading to the discipline; (2)
determine if that conduct implicates a well-defined and dominant public policy; and
(3) determine if the award poses an unacceptable risk that it will undermine the
implicated policy and cause the public employer to breach its lawful obligations or
public duty, given the particular circumstances at hand and the arbitrator’s fact
findings. City of Bradford v. Teamsters Union No. 110, 25 A.3d 408, 414 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2011). Whether the award violates public policy is a question of law,
subject to our plenary review. Phila. Hous. Auth. v. Am. Fed’n of State, Cnty. &
Mun. Employees, Dist. Council 33, Local 934, 52 A.3d 1117, 1121 (Pa. 2012). As
the party below asserting that the award contravened public policy, the County
carried the burden of establishing that the award violated positive law. Pa. Tpk.
Comm’n v. Teamsters Local Union No. 250, 948 A.2d 196, 207 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008).
We turn to the first prong, identifying the nature of the conduct leading
to the discipline. Here, the conduct was Grievant’s alleged use of unjustified and
excessive force exceeding that which was necessary to achieve the inmate’s
8
compliance. However, the Arbitrator made binding findings of fact in determining
that there was no just cause for the five-day suspension. Both COs involved in the
incident testified that they considered the inmate to be an “active resister” and the
Arbitrator credited their testimony that they perceived a threatening situation. (Nov.
21, 2019 Arb. Award at 14-16.) Consequently, the Arbitrator determined that the
level of force was justified and not excessive given the fact that “[t]he [Standard
Operating Procedures (SOPs)] state that each [Use of Force] situation is unique[,]
and they also recognize that a threat is based on what the officer(s) perceives as a
threat.”4 (Id. at 16.)
4
The “force continuum” provision provides:
Each situation is unique. When force is required, an employee is
not required to start with the least amount of force (if this is not
appropriate) nor progress “by steps” through the force continuum (if
this is not appropriate). Conversely, employees are always expected
to use the appropriate level of force.
(SOP 8:01(1)(e), Nov. 21, 2019 Arb. Award at 5.) The justification for the use of force and force
options provision provides:
a. Use of force by staff, against an inmate . . . is justified when
acting staff reasonably believe such force is necessary to:
°prevent death or injury to themselves or others;
°prevent escape;
°recapture an escapee;
°to quell a disturbance;
°protect property from damage or destruction;
°effect compliance with rules, regulations and orders when
other methods of control have proven insufficient; [and]
°to assist in the administration of medical treatment, in
accordance with procedure.
(SOP 8:01(1)(a), Nov. 21, 2019 Arb. Award at 4.)
9
The second prong requires the Court to determine whether the conduct
implicates a well-defined public policy, as opposed to general considerations of
supposed public interests. Neshaminy Sch. Dist., 171 A.3d at 338. Indubitably, there
is an important public policy interest in guarding against the mistreatment of
incarcerated individuals. See, e.g., Hudson v. McMillian, 503 U.S. 1, 6-7 (1992)
(regardless of the prison officials’ intent, their use of excessive force constitutes
cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment, U.S. CONST.
amend. VIII). Acknowledgement of this important policy is also evident from the
County’s SOPs providing that a use of force should not exceed the amount of force
required to restrain an inmate, and that a CO should apply only the least amount of
force reasonably necessary to achieve an authorized purpose and should only use
force when other methods of control have proven insufficient. (SOPs 3.21 and 8:01,
Nov. 21, 2019 Arb. Award at 4.)5 Again, the binding facts as found by the Arbitrator
do not establish that Grievant exceeded those boundaries.
The third prong requires the Court to determine whether the award
poses an unacceptable risk that it will undermine the implicated policy and cause the
public employer to breach its lawful obligations or public duty, given the particular
circumstances at hand and the arbitrator’s fact findings. The question here,
therefore, is whether the award poses an unacceptable risk that will undermine the
public policy of guarding against the mistreatment of incarcerated individuals and
cause the County to breach its lawful obligations or public duty. This inquiry
encompasses “consideration of the particular circumstances of the case and any
attendant aggravating or mitigating factors.” City of Bradford, 25 A.3d at 415. As
5
In pertinent part, SOP 3.21 provides: “Employees shall use only that amount of force
required to accomplish their lawful duties, restore order or gain compliance to a lawful order.”
(SOP 3.21, Nov. 21, 2019 Arb. Award at 4.)
10
noted, the Arbitrator credited Grievant’s testimony as to his perception of the inmate
as an active resister and his view that the inmate’s combativeness and level of
resistance constituted a perceived threat to himself, and others of imminent assault
had the inmate arisen before the COs were able to handcuff him. Consequently, the
third prong is not met.
Accordingly, enforcement of the award does not violate the defined
public policy of protecting inmates from mistreatment or excessive use of force.
For the above reasons, therefore, we affirm.
_____________________________________
BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER,
President Judge Emerita
11
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
County of Berks and Berks County :
Prison Board, :
Appellants :
:
v. : No. 1199 C.D. 2020
:
Teamsters Local Union 429 :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 30th day of March, 2022, the order of the Court of
Common Pleas of Berks County is hereby AFFIRMED.
_____________________________________
BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER,
President Judge Emerita