Dow v. United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners of America

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEAL
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                             

No. 93-1127

                       JOSEPH DOW, ET AL.,

                     Plaintiffs, Appellants,

                                v.

 UNITED BROTHERHOOD OF CARPENTERS AND JOINERS OF AMERICA, ET AL.,

                      Defendants, Appellees.

                                             

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. Edward F. Harrington, U.S. District Judge]
                                                        

                                             

                              Before

           Torruella, Selya and Boudin, Circuit Judges.
                                                      

                                             

     Paul Alan Levy, with  whom Mark D. Stern and  Public Citizen
                                                                 
Litigation Group were on brief, for appellants.
                
     Christopher  N.  Souris,  with  whom  Feinberg,  Charnas   &
                                                                 
Schwartz was on brief, for appellees.
        

                                             

                          July 28, 1993

                                             

          SELYA,  Circuit  Judge.   This  appeal pivots  on   the
          SELYA,  Circuit  Judge.
                                

meaning  and  applicability  of   two  documents  concerning  the

internal  governance  of  a  labor  union,  Local  No. 218  ("the

Local"):   the  constitution of  its umbrella  union,  the United

Brotherhood  of Carpenters  and  Joiners ("the  International" or

"UBCJA") and the by-laws of Local 218 itself.  Much to the dismay

of  two  dissident  members  of  the Local,  the  district  court

deferred  to the  International's construction  of the  texts and

entered judgment accordingly.  We affirm.

                                I
                                 

                            Background
                                      

          Local No.  218 is affiliated  with, and subject  to the

direction of,  the International.  The  latter's constitution and

the  Local's by-laws both speak  to the manner  in which mid-term

vacancies  in leadership positions on  the local level  are to be

filled.  The constitution states that:

          [w]hen vacancies occur in any elective office
          or    in    the    position    of    Business
          Representative, the President  may appoint  a
          qualified member to fill the vacancy pro-tem,
          until  such time  as appropriate  notices are
          sent to the membership  for the holding of an
          election to fill the vacancy.

UBCJA Const.,    32(B).   Yet,  with regard  to  the position  of

Business Manager/Financial Secretary ("Manager"), the Local's by-

laws provide that, if a vacancy occurs:

          the Business Representative shall  assume the
          duties  of   the  Business  Manager/Financial
          Secretary  and  shall   appoint  a   Business
          Representative.

By-Laws of Local No. 218, art. II,   1(A).

                                2

          In  1992,   the  latent   tension  between   these  two

provisions  surfaced.    The  incumbent Manager  resigned.    The

Local's  President, Joseph  Dow,  appointed himself  to fill  the

vacancy  on a temporary basis and called for an election pursuant

to  section  32(B)  of  UBCJA's  constitution.   Dow  viewed  the

provisions we  have quoted as  conflicting and reasoned  that the

constitution   trumped   the  by-law   provision   for  automatic

succession.

          The International  resisted Dow's  attempt to  grab the

reins of power.1   Its president,  Sigurd Lucassen, directed  Dow

to give effect to  the by-law provision by allowing  the Business

Representative, Robert Cataldo, to succeed to the Manager's post.

Lucassen  found  no  conflict  between  the  two  instruments  of

governance;  the  by-law  provision  simply   mandates  automatic

succession to  fill a particular  vacancy while section  32(B) of

the constitution specifies a procedure for filling vacancies when

no other  mechanism  has  been  provided.    Because  the  by-law

provision  operated  ex  proprio  vigore to  fill  the  Manager's
                                        

position  simultaneously with  the  incumbent's  resignation,  it

prevented a  vacancy from occurring  and eliminated any  need for

resort  to  the  constitutional  provision.    It  was   on  this

understanding,   Lucassen   intimated,  that   the  International

approved the inclusion of article II, section 1(A) in Local 218's

                    

     1Inasmuch  as the  Manager's position  is the  brightest and
most coveted  star in  a local union's  administrative firmament,
the struggle over succession takes on added significance.

                                3

by-laws.2

          Little placated, Dow and  a fellow union member, Robert

Renda, sued in federal district court, premising their  action on

section 301(a) of the Labor-Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C.  

185  (1988),  and  section  101(a)(1)  of  the   Labor-Management

Reporting and Disclosure Act  ("LMRDA"), 29 U.S.C.   412  (1988).

The plaintiffs  named the International, the  District Council of

Carpenters,  and Local 218 as defendants.3  They sought to compel

recognition of Dow's status as Manager pro tem and to precipitate
                                              

an election to fill the balance of the unexpired term.   On cross

motions for summary judgment, the district court gave controlling

weight  to the  International's  interpretation of  the governing

documents  and entered judgment for  the defendants.  This appeal

ensued.

                                II
                                  

                             Analysis
                                     

                                A.
                                  

          Summary  judgment   is  appropriate  when   the  record

documents that  possess evidentiary force "show that  there is no

genuine issue as to any  material fact."  Fed. R. Civ.  P. 56(c).

The mechanics  of Rule  56 are familiar:   once the  moving party

avers "an absence  of evidence to  support the nonmoving  party's

                    

     2Section 32(B)  of the constitution  was in effect  when the
International  approved  the  Local's   by-laws.    Absent   such
approval, the by-laws could not have taken effect.

     3For  ease in reference, we discuss the issues as if Dow and
the International were the sole parties in interest.

                                4

case,"  Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,  477 U.S. 317,  325 (1986), the
                                

burden  of production  shifts  to the  nonmovant.   To  defeat  a

properly focused motion,  the nonmovant must tender  "significant

probative evidence," First  Nat'l Bank v.  Cities Serv. Co.,  391
                                                           

U.S.  253, 290  (1968),  which, when  viewed  in the  light  most

flattering  to the  nonmovant, illumines  a genuine  and material

factual dispute.  See  Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,  477 U.S.
                                                      

242, 247-48  (1986); Medina-Munoz  v. R.J. Reynolds  Tobacco Co.,
                                                                

896 F.2d  5, 8 (1st Cir.  1990); Garside v. Osco  Drug, Inc., 895
                                                            

F.2d  46, 48 (1st Cir. 1990).   While the required proof need not

necessarily rise to  the level of admissible  trial evidence, see
                                                                 

Celotex, 477 U.S. at 324, it must consist of something more  than
       

"conclusory allegations, improbable  inferences, and  unsupported

speculation."   Medina-Munoz, 896  F.2d at  8; accord  Fragoso v.
                                                              

Lopez, 991 F.2d 878, 886 (1st Cir. 1993); Kelly v. United States,
                                                                

924 F.2d 355,  357 (1st  Cir. 1991).   Brash conjecture,  coupled

with  earnest  hope  that  something   concrete  will  eventually

materialize, is insufficient to block summary judgment.

          This  appeal  implicates a  specialized  application of

Rule 56.   It  is  common ground  that a  labor union's  internal

affairs  comprise  an  enclave   best  kept  free  from  judicial

intrusion.    See Local  No. 48  v. United  Bhd. of  Carpenters &
                                                                 

Joiners,  920 F.2d 1047, 1051  (1st Cir. 1990);  Howard v. United
                                                                 

Ass'n  of Journeyman & Apprentices, Local #  131, 560 F.2d 17, 21
                                                

(1st Cir. 1977).  Thus, the scope of judicial inquiry is narrowly

circumscribed  in  such  cases.   And,  moreover,  the  resultant

                                5

circumscription is  particularly stringent when, as  now, a labor

organization's   interpretation  of   its  own   constitution  is

singularly at issue.  See Local No. 48, 920 F.2d at 1052.
                                      

                                B.
                                  

          In Local  No.  48, a  case  construing the  very  union
                           

constitution that is at  issue here, this court concluded  that a

general union's  interpretation of  its own governance  documents

will ordinarily be upheld "unless that interpretation is patently

unreasonable."   Id.  On  that basis, we  refused to second-guess
                    

the International  when it advanced a "plausible"  reading of its

constitution.   Id.  At bottom, then, Local No. 48 stands for the
                                                  

proposition  that,  in  the  absence  of  bad  faith,4   a  labor

organization's interpretation of internal union documents puts an

end  to  judicial  scrutiny  so  long  as the  interpretation  is

"facially sufficient" or grounded in "'arguable authority.'"  Id.
                                                                 

(citation omitted); accord Newell  v. International Bhd. of Elec.
                                                                 

Workers, 789 F.2d 1186,  1189 (5th Cir. 1986); Local  334, United
                                                                 

Ass'n of Journeymen & Apprentices v. United Ass'n of Journeymen &
                                                                 

Apprentices,  669 F.2d  129,  131  (3d  Cir. 1982);  Stelling  v.
                                                             

International Bhd.  of Elec. Workers,  Local Union No.  1547, 587
                                                            

F.2d 1379, 1389  n.10 (9th Cir. 1978), cert. denied, 442 U.S. 944
                                                   

(1979).

          This black letter law simplifies  our task.  We  afford

plenary  review  to the  entry of  summary  judgment below.   See
                                                                 

                    

     4Here,  Dow  adduced  no  evidence  that  the  International
formulated its interpretation in bad faith.  What is more, he has
not asserted a claim of bad faith on appeal.

                                6

Garside,  895 F.2d at 48.  To  do so here, we need only determine
       

whether  the   International's   synthesis  of   the   juxtaposed

documents, i.e., its view that section 32(B) of  the constitution
               

leaves room for, and can comfortably operate side by side with, a

by-law provision  mandating automatic succession  to a particular

post,  is  "so  implausible or  patently  unreasonable  as  to be

undeserving of deference."  Local No. 48, 920 F.2d at 1052.
                                        

                                C.
                                  

          We turn now to the record, first examining the relevant

texts.  On  one hand, the constitution, quoted supra p. 2, states
                                                    

that when "vacancies occur in any elective office," the president

of  the local  "may"  appoint a  replacement  to serve  until  an

election  is held.  On the other  hand, the by-laws, see supra p.
                                                              

2,  state  that "the  Business  Representative  shall assume  the

duties  of the  [Manager]"  if  a  "vacancy  [in  that  position]

occurs."    While  these  provisions  can assuredly  be  read  to

conflict     and  if  they clash,  the  constitutional  provision

prevails, see UBCJA Const.,    6(C), 25(A)   a harmonious reading
             

of them is  hardly implausible.  We think it  is significant that

the constitution uses  precatory rather than  mandatory language.

The permissive "may" contained in the constitution, as opposed to

the directory  "shall" contained  in the  by-law, signals that  a

temporary,  presidential appointment  and subsequent  election is

but  one  available  method  for   filling  vacancies,  impliedly

suggesting  that  other,  equally  satisfactory  methods  can  be

employed.   Accord  La Joie  v. Bay  Counties Dist.  Council, 143
                                                            

                                7

L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2547,  2549 (N.D. Cal.  1993) (refusing, for  this

reason, to  find a conflict between  the identical constitutional

provision  and  the  by-laws of  a  different  local).   On  this

(entirely   plausible)   reading,  automatic   succession   is  a

permissible method of selection.5  Hence, there  is ample textual

support   for    the   International's   conclusion    that   the

constitution's words are inapplicable  here because a new Manager

has  already been designated    that is, the  vacancy has already

been filled   through an authorized alternative process.

          Dow   contends  that   in   determining   whether   the

International proffered an interpretation worthy of  deference, a

reviewing  court  must not  examine the  letter  of the  texts in

majestic  isolation,  but  must  read them  in  conjunction  with

available extrinsic  evidence of  past union interpretations  and

practices.   We agree that  "track record" evidence  may often be

illuminating and should be considered.   After all, evidence that

a  union  decision  follows  established custom  might  serve  to

strengthen  the decision's inherent  reasonableness and,  by like

token, evidence that a union decision constitutes a radical break

from  uniform   past  practice   might   undermine  its   seeming

plausibility.   Cf. Local  No. 48, 920  F.2d at 1052  (citing the
                                 

context "of an  ongoing consolidation process" as one indicium of

the  reasonableness of  the union's  authorization of  a merger).

                    

     5We  believe  it  is   noteworthy  that  the  United  States
Department   of  Labor's   regulations  implementing   the  LMRDA
expressly  authorize  "automatic  succession"  to  fill  mid-term
vacancies.  29 C.F.R.   452.25 (1992).

                                8

Here,  however,  the summary  judgment  record is  barren  of any

evidence   sufficient   to   support  an   inference   that   the

International's  present  reading of  the  constitution  is newly

contrived or inconsistent with past practice.

          To be sure,  appellant tried  to plug this  hole.   His

failed  efforts center  around three  sworn statements  signed by

John S. Rogers, once a high-ranking officer of the International.

Appellant  tells us that these affidavits evidence a tradition of

requiring elections  to fill  mid-term vacancies  in the  face of

conflicting local by-laws.  He is wrong.  To the  extent that the

affidavits touch  upon matters germane  to this appeal,  they are

much too vague to forestall summary judgment.

          Appellant places greatest emphasis on Rogers's repeated

statements that it has "always" been UBCJA's  practice to conduct

elections to  fill mid-term vacancies.  In context, however, this

assertion constitutes no more than an empty generality.  A purely

conclusory statement  of this sort is  manifestly insufficient to

support  an inference  of inconsistent  past practice  without an

accompanying  suggestion    nowhere  to be  found    that  such a

vacancy has  ever before occurred in a  local that had adopted an

automatic succession rule.   See Local No.  48, 920 F.2d  at 1051
                                              

(explaining  that unsubstantiated  conclusions are  inadequate to

block summary judgment); Oliver v. Digital Equip. Corp., 846 F.2d
                                                       

103,  109 (1st  Cir.  1988) (refusing  to allow  "unsubstantiated

allegations"  to  defeat summary  judgment).   In the  same vein,

Rogers's general  statement that  "the Brotherhood and  its local

                                9

unions" have  deemed a  resignation to create  "a vacancy  . .  .

regardless of whether  or not the applicable  Constitution or By-

Laws   contained   a  successorship   provision"  is   devoid  of

significance  absent an indication   nowhere to be found   that a

particular incident  actually occurred and  that Rogers possesses

some  knowledge about  it.   See  Anderson,  477 U.S.  at  248-49
                                          

(stating  that,   in  the  summary  judgment  context,  suggested

inferences must be supported  by "specific facts"); Medina-Munoz,
                                                                

896 F.2d  at 9  (terming plaintiff's  attempted application  of a

conclusion to a different factual predicate "too large a  leap").

In light of these gaps, the Rogers affidavits, carefully read, do

not  contradict UBCJA's sworn averment that,  at least within the

past  five years,  the International  has never  ordered  a local

operating  under an  approved automatic  succession  procedure to

hold  an election to fill  a vacancy.6   Indeed, since the record

demonstrates  that the  International  has approved  a number  of

local union by-law provisions incorporating  automatic succession

regimes,  including  the  provision  at issue  here,  the  record

virtually compels the inference that UBCJA's present construction

of the  juxtaposed instruments  of governance is  consistent with

its past practice.

                    

     6The  shortcomings in  the Rogers's  affidavits are  all the
more  striking because  appellant extracted  not one,  but three,
successive affidavits  from Rogers, over a  period spanning three
and one-half  months.  The  latest of  these was executed  a mere
three days before  the hearing  on summary judgment.   Since  Dow
thrice  went  to the  well in  an  effort to  secure supplemental
information,  we think  it fair  to  assume that  everything that
could be said was in fact said.

                                10

          In   short,   appellant's   "past   practice"   proffer

represents  yet another  situation  where a  court considering  a

motion for summary judgment "cannot accept, in lieu of documented

facts,  conclusory assertions."    Sheinkopf v.  Stone, 927  F.2d
                                                      

1259,  1262 (1st  Cir.  1991).      Consequently,  we  hold  that

appellant  failed  to raise  a  genuine  question regarding  past

practice   that  would   bear  on   the  reasonableness   of  the

International's textual construction.

          We have  said enough.7  While  the International's take

on the written  provisions may not be  the only possible  one, or

even the most  natural one,  it is  well within  the universe  of

acceptable interpretations.  Because  plausibility is all that is

required  in  a   situation  of  this   kind,  the  lower   court

appropriately granted summary judgment on the existing record.

                               III
                                  

                     Curtailment of Discovery
                                             

                    

     7We  reject out  of hand  appellant's claim  that two  other
factual disputes sufficient to  defeat UBCJA's motion for summary
judgment lurk in the record.   First, pointing to the absence, as
of  September  9,  1992,  of documentary  proof  anent  Cataldo's
appointment as Business Representative, appellant speculates that
Cataldo was not duly appointed and,  therefore, could not succeed
to  the  Manager's  position  pursuant  to  the  by-laws.     The
speculation does not  hold water:   a nonmovant  cannot defeat  a
motion  for summary judgment solely  by asserting that the movant
has not adduced,  or explained  its failure to  adduce, the  best
possible  proof of a  material point.   See Celotex, 477  U.S. at
                                                   
323; Mack v. Great  Atl. & Pac. Tea  Co., 871 F.2d 179,  182 (1st
                                        
Cir. 1989).   The  second dispute  concerns  whether Cataldo,  in
violation  of the  constitution, assumed  the  Manager's position
before resigning as Local 218's Recording  Secretary.  Because it
is uncontradicted that Cataldo no longer held the latter position
by October 7, 1992,  at the latest, we, like  the district court,
deem the exact date of his resignation to be immaterial.

                                11

          Appellant's  fall-back  position is  that  the judgment

below must be vacated because the district court unduly curtailed

discovery prior  to deciding the  summary judgment motions.   See
                                                                 

generally Celotex,  477 U.S. at 322  (recognizing the requirement
                 

of  "adequate  time  for  discovery");  Fed.  R.  Civ.  P.  56(f)

(authorizing  continuances so  that  a nonmovant,  upon a  proper

showing, may gather "facts  essential to justify [an] opposition"

to summary judgment).  The argument is cast in disingenuous terms

and distorts the nature of the district court's discovery ruling.

          Early  in the  proceeding, the  district court  heard a

cacophony of sounds on the issue of  discovery: on one flank, the

International  urged a stay of discovery;  on the opposite flank,

Dow sought to expedite discovery and widen its scope.  Confronted

with cross motions for summary judgment that might be susceptible

to resolution on the submitted papers, and anticipating that oral

argument on the  cross motions  would take place  on January  12,

1993,  the district  court, in  a ruling  from the  bench, halted

discovery on December 18,  1992.  The court, however,  dropped an

anchor to windward:   since the full panoply of  papers regarding

the  motions had  not yet been  filed, the  judge invited  Dow to

request a continuance for the purpose of conducting  discovery at

the hearing on summary  judgment if, by then, Dow  still believed

that he could not adequately argue the cross motions without such

discovery.8      Hence,   notwithstanding   appellant's   current

                    

     8Various exchanges at the December 18 hearing tell the tale.
We offer  a  few representative  vignettes.   The  judge  advised
appellant's counsel  that if  the UBCJA  "file[s] something of  a

                                12

caterwauling about  a categorical  ban on discovery,  the court's

ore  tenus   order  was   plainly  an  interim   measure,  likely
          

extinguishable for the asking.

          Although Dow held the key to discovery, he neglected to

unlock the  door.  The January  12 hearing came and  went without

any semblance of a renewed request to conduct discovery.  Nowhere

did appellant ask, even as  a form of alternative relief,  that a

decision on summary judgment be postponed until further discovery

could  be obtained.   Rather, he  chose to  shelve the  quest for

discovery  and  dive   head-first  into   the  summary   judgment

maelstrom.9

          The  rule in this circuit  is clear that,  when a court

                    

factual nature, and  you need  something to rebut,  then I  would
move  [on January 12] for discovery."  The judge later reiterated
the point,  stating that  once the  paperwork  is complete,  "you
[appellant's attorney]  can see  whether you need  any discovery.
If,  for some  reason, on the  12th you  come in here  and say, I
can't  argue the motion because there is a particular document or
a factual allegation that has been made and I need to look at one
particular thing, maybe I would do it."

     9Appellant's  suggestion  that  he  revived   his  discovery
request  at the January 12 hearing is, at best, wishful thinking.
His counsel's  oral argument contained only  a fleeting reference
to appellant's  past inability to  conduct discovery as  he would
have  preferred.  His suggestion that he renewed the request in a
supplemental memorandum  filed in connection with  the hearing is
equally  jejune.   The memorandum,  directed primarily  toward an
entirely  different matter,  contained a  solitary sentence  more
obfuscatory   than   illuminative,  concerning   "legitimate  and
necessary outstanding requests for  discovery."  These constitute
no more  than veiled references which, without  more, cannot take
the place of an affirmative request to conduct further discovery.
Cf.  Paterson-Leitch Co.  v. Massachusetts  Mun.  Wholesale Elec.
                                                                 
Co.,  840 F.2d 985,  989 (1st Cir.  1988) (holding  that oral and
   
written  statements "complaining  about [a]  stay of  discovery,"
coupled with  "cryptic allusions," are  "entirely inadequate"  to
support a Rule 56(f) motion).

                                13

temporizes or  otherwise defers a ruling on  a discovery request,

and  the proponent thereafter fails  to resurrect the  issue in a

timely  fashion, he  is deemed  to have  abandoned the  point and

cannot later  complain  on  appeal concerning  a  denial  of  the

discovery in question.  See DesRosiers v. Moran, 949 F.2d 15, 22-
                                               

23 (1st Cir. 1991).  As we have said, "a party who seeks a ruling

must persist in his quest to some reasonable extent."  Id. at 23.
                                                          

          Having  flouted this rule, Dow finds himself mired in a

pit similar to that which the government dug for itself in Reilly
                                                                 

v. United  States, 863  F.2d 149  (1st Cir.  1988).   There,  the
                 

government moved for additional  discovery at a pre-trial hearing

before a magistrate judge.  In denying the motion, the magistrate

told the government that it might mull the matter for  a few days

and renew  the  request in  a more  specific form.   A  follow-up

request never came.  On appeal, the government attempted to press

an  objection to  the  denial of  discovery.   We  overruled  the

objection,  holding that  the  government had  an obligation  "to

specify, face-up  and squarely, what information  it continued to

seek."  Id.  at 168.   By not resurfacing  the point, despite  an
           

express invitation to do so, it "waived the right to  protest the

denial of" discovery.  Id.
                          

          The  same result must obtain  here.  The district court

voiced a clear invitation  to seek discovery anew.   Dow eschewed

it.  He cannot  now "legitimately complain of  lack of access  to

[discovery which he]  never seasonably requested."   Id. at  167.
                                                        

This  is  as  it should  be;  any  other  outcome would  squander

                                14

judicial  resources  and  give  parties  who,  like  Dow,  plunge

headlong into the  merits of  a case without  pausing to  exhaust

discovery options  a  second bite  at the  cherry.   In the  last

analysis, "[c]ourts, like the Deity, are most frequently moved to

help  those  who  help   themselves."    Paterson-Leitch  Co.  v.
                                                             

Massachusetts Mun.  Wholesale Elec. Co.,  840 F.2d 985,  989 (1st
                                       

Cir. 1988); see also Hebert  v. Wicklund, 744 F.2d 218,  222 (1st
                                        

Cir. 1984) (refusing  to "employ [Rule 56(f)] to  spare litigants

from their own lack of diligence").

                                IV
                                  

                            Conclusion
                                      

          We need go no further.  By failing to renew his request

for  discovery at the appropriate  time, Dow waived any objection

to the district court's decision to resolve  the summary judgment

motions on the existing record.  And, because the International's

reconciliation of the arguable  conflict between its constitution

and the Local's by-laws is plausible in terms of that record, the

entry of summary judgment in defendants' favor must stand.

Affirmed.
        

                                15