Collective Bargaining Agreement Did Not Allow Private Suit Against Employer
After a member of the Faculty Association (FA) decided not to continue with a college employee’s grievance, the employee sued the college directly. In affirming the dismissal of the employee’s private suit (because the suit was not allowed by the collective bargaining agreement (CBA)), the Third Department wrote:
“As a general proposition, when an employer and a union enter into a collective bargaining agreement that creates a grievance procedure, an employee subject to the agreement may not sue the employer directly for breach of that agreement but must proceed, through the union, in accordance with the contract”…. Exceptions include where the collective bargaining agreement grants an employee a right to sue directly or where the union fails in its duty of fair representation … . Plaintiff acknowledges that he is not alleging that FA breached its duty of representation. He contends, however, that, under the CBA, decisions related to promotions are excepted from the grievance procedure and, thus, he can pursue an action directly against defendants. The ultimate decision about a promotion is not subject to a grievance under the CBA. Nonetheless, the lengthy procedures an associate professor must follow over several years to become eligible for consideration of a promotion to full professor are set forth in the CBA and are not explicitly excepted from the grievance process. It is the purported failure by defendants to follow these promotion procedures that plaintiff challenges, and the CBA does not carve out a separate right regarding these procedures that can be enforced by an employee directly against defendants … . Altman v Rossi, 515888, 3rd Dept, 6-13-13
