905 F.2d 610, *; 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 9120, **;
134
L.R.R.M. 3161; 117 Lab. Cas. (CCH) P10,463
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. INTERNATIONAL
BROTHERHOOD OF TEAMSTERS, CHAUFFEURS, WAREHOUSEMEN AND HELPERS OF AMERICA,
AFL-CIO, et al., Defendants, HAROLD FRIEDMAN, Eleventh Vice President,
Defendant-Appellant, ANTHONY HUGHES, Respondent-Movant-Appellant
Nos. 89-6248, 89-6250, 90-6136, 90-6138, 90-6142
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
905 F.2d 610; 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 9120; 134 L.R.R.M. 3161;
117 Lab. Cas. (CCH) P10,463
April 30, 1990, Argued
June 1, 1990, Decided
SUBSEQUENT
HISTORY: [**1]
As Amended
June 7, 1990.
PRIOR
HISTORY:
Appeal by former union officers Harold
Friedman and Anthony Hughes from (1) November 2, 1989 memorandum and order of
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, David N.
Edelstein, J., upholding the power of court-appointed administrator, pursuant to
consent decree, to hear disciplinary charges against them; and (2) March 13,
1990 opinion and order of Judge Edelstein, upholding the decision of
administrator to impose one-year suspension from union office. Appeal by
defendant IBT from that portion of the March 13, 1990 opinion and order
upholding power of administrator to invalidate union resolution.
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED.
CORE TERMS: administrator, consent decree,
disciplinary, reproach, suspension, subordinate, indictment, discipline,
binding, one-year, standard of review, collateral estoppel, interpretive,
affiliated, membership, oath, vigorously, delegation, wrongdoing, thereunder,
nonparty, loyalty, different result, great deference, prior criminal, corrupt,
exculpatory, appointed, unfair, exclusive jurisdiction
COUNSEL: Walter P. Loughlin, New York, New York
(Mudge Rose Guthrie Alexander & Ferdon, James T. Grady, Washington, District
of Columbia, General Counsel, IBT, Jed S. Rakoff, Robert P. Knapp III, Ralph P.
DeSanto, Vincent P. Esposito, Jr., of Counsel), for Defendants International
Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America,
AFL-CIO.
Paul J. Cambria, Jr., Buffalo, New York (Lipsitz, Green,
Fahringer, Roll, Schuller & James, William M. Feigenbaum, Richard P.
Weisbeck, Jr., of [**2] Counsel), for
Defendant-Appellant Harold Friedman.
Moses Krislov, Cleveland, Ohio
(Daniel Markewich, New York, New York, of Counsel), for
Respondent-Movant-Appellant Anthony Hughes.
Randy M. Mastro, New York,
New York, Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York
(Otto G. Obermaier, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New
York, Edward T. Ferguson, III, Richard W. Mark, Assistant United States
Attorneys, of Counsel), for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Charles M. Carberry,
Investigations Officer, New York, New York (Robert W. Gaffey, New York, New
York, of Counsel), for Plaintiff-Appellee.
JUDGES: Feinberg, Meskill and Winter, Circuit
Judges.
OPINIONBY: FEINBERG
OPINION: [*612] FEINBERG, Circuit Judge.
These appeals
challenge the implementation in particular respects of a voluntary settlement
effected in March 14, 1989 (the Consent Decree) in an action brought by
plaintiff-appellee United States of America (the government) in the United
States District Court for the Southern District of New York against
defendants-appellants International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs,
Warehousemen and Helpers of America, AFL-CIO (the IBT), the IBT's General
[**3] Executive Board (the GEB), individual
members of the GEB, including Harold Friedman, and various reputed members and
associates of La Cosa Nostra, an alleged criminal organization.
Harold
Friedman and Anthony Hughes appeal from a March 13, 1990 opinion and order of
Judge David N. Edelstein, upholding the decision of an Independent Administrator
(the Administrator), appointed pursuant to the Consent Decree, that imposed a
one-year suspension from union office upon Friedman and Hughes. The basis of the
suspension was their 1989 criminal convictions in a federal district court in
Ohio. These two appeals have been consolidated with prior appeals by Friedman
and Hughes from a November 2, 1989 memorandum and order of the district court,
reported at 725
F. Supp. 162, which upheld the authority of the Administrator, pursuant to
the Consent Decree, to hear charges against them. Defendant-appellant IBT
appeals from that part of the March 13, 1990 order that upheld the power of the
Administrator to invalidate a Resolution passed by the GEB.
For reasons
given below, we affirm the orders of the district court.
Background
These appeals have a complex procedural history. In [**4] June 1988, the government brought this suit under
the civil remedies provision of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organizations Act (RICO). See 18
U.S.C. § 1964. The complaint alleged that the IBT was controlled by La Cosa
Nostra and sought sweeping reforms of the IBT, including the appointment of
trustees to conduct the affairs of the IBT, wide-ranging electoral reforms and
permanent injunctions against the commission of racketeering within the union.
[*613] In March 1989, on the eve of
trial, the government, the IBT and most of the members of the GEB including
appellant Friedman entered into the Consent Decree, which is a comprehensive
document covering 31 double-spaced typewritten pages. In the preface to the
Consent Decree, the union defendants, including Friedman, acknowledged that
"there have been allegations, sworn testimony and judicial findings of past
problems with La Cosa Nostra corruption of various elements of the IBT" and
agreed that "there should be no criminal element or La Cosa Nostra corruption of
any part of the IBT." The Consent Decree put the RICO claims in abeyance,
replacing that litigation with a systematic mechanism to achieve [**5] reforms throughout the IBT over the next few years,
including direct rank-and-file elections of the union leadership and enhanced
procedures for investigation and discipline of corrupt union officials. The
Consent Decree stated that the district court would retain jurisdiction "over
this case" until "satisfactory completion and implementation of the terms and
conditions" of the Consent Decree, which, with some exceptions, is apparently
contemplated to occur in 1992.
The specific terms of the Consent Decree
are as follows. Under the Consent Decree, three court officers are appointed to
oversee certain aspects of the affairs of the IBT: an Election Officer, an
Investigations Officer and an Administrator. The Election Officer is to
supervise the 1991 election of IBT officers. The Investigations Officer is
granted authority to investigate corruption and prosecute disciplinary charges
against any officer, member or employee of the IBT or any of its affiliates. The
Administrator oversees the implementation of the remedial provisions of the
Consent Decree. For example, the Administrator sits as an impartial
decisionmaker in disciplinary cases brought by the Investigations Officer,
conducts [**6] the disciplinary hearings and
decides them. The Administrator may also apply to the district court to
facilitate implementation of the Consent Decree, and the other parties to the
Decree may make such applications as well. Furthermore, the district court is
vested with "exclusive jurisdiction" to decide any issues relating to the
actions or authority of the Administrator. And the IBT Constitution is amended
to incorporate and conform with all of the terms of the Consent Decree.
Friedman and Hughes are the first two IBT officials charged and tried
under the remedial scheme created by the Consent Decree. Friedman was a named
defendant in the underlying civil RICO lawsuit in the Southern District and a
signatory to the Consent Decree. At that time, Friedman was a member of the GEB,
being the Eleventh Vice-President of the IBT. In addition, he was President of
Local 507 located in Cleveland, Ohio, and President of the Ohio Conference of
Teamsters. Friedman subsequently resigned from the GEB, but remained as
President of Local 507 and the Ohio Conference of Teamsters until the time of
his suspension. Hughes was until the time of his suspension the Recording
Secretary of Local 507 in Cleveland. [**7]
In 1986, Friedman, Hughes and the late Jackie Presser (former IBT
General President) were named as co-defendants in a criminal indictment in the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio. United
States v. Friedman et al., Cr. 86-114 (N.D.Ohio) (White, J.). The
indictment charged, among other things, that the defendants had committed
various RICO offenses and had embezzled from certain unions through a "ghost
employee" scheme. After the indictment was filed, Friedman was re-elected as
President of Teamster Local 507, and Hughes was re-elected as Recording
Secretary of Teamster Local 507. Subsequently, in May 1989, Friedman and Hughes
were convicted of various charges contained in the indictment, and each was
sentenced to a four-year term of probation and separation from all IBT-related
activity for concurrent four-year periods. Judge White stayed the sentences
pending the outcome of appeals by Friedman and Hughes to the United States Court
of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. The appeals are scheduled to be heard on June
4, 1990.
[*614] In July 1989, the
Investigations Officer filed separate union disciplinary charges before the
Administrator, seeking [**8] to remove Friedman
and Hughes from office (Charge I). Specifically, the Investigations Officer
charged Friedman and Hughes with conducting themselves in a manner that brought
reproach on the IBT, in violation of Article II, section 2(a), of the IBT
Constitution. That section requires all IBT members to subscribe to an oath of
loyalty; the oath obligates each member, among other things, "to conduct himself
or herself at all times in such a manner as not to bring reproach upon the
Union." n1 Article XIX, section 6(b)(2), of the IBT Constitution provides that
violation of the oath of loyalty constitutes a specific basis for union
disciplinary charges. The charges against Friedman and Hughes treated their
criminal convictions as the underlying conduct that formed the basis of their
violations of Article II, section 2(a). In September 1989, the Investigations
Officer filed a second charge against Friedman alone, alleging that he had
brought reproach upon the IBT by knowingly associating with members of La Cosa
Nostra (Charge II).
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n1 Article II, section 2(a), provides
in relevant part:
Each person upon becoming a member thereby pledges his honor:
to faithfully observe the Constitution and laws of the [IBT], and the Bylaws
and laws of his Local Union . . . [and] to conduct himself or herself at all
times in such a manner as not to bring reproach upon the Union. . .
.
(emphasis supplied).
- - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - [**9]
In mid-August 1989, Friedman and Hughes
challenged the Administrator's authority to hear the disciplinary charges
against them. In September 1989, the Administrator rejected the challenges in a
written opinion, and shortly thereafter applied to the district court for review
of his decision. Friedman and Hughes in turn moved the district court for a
preliminary injunction to prevent the charges from going forward.
On
November 1, 1989, the GEB enacted a resolution (the Resolution) interpreting the
term "reproach upon the Union" of the IBT Constitution in a manner, explained
more fully below, that would apparently preclude the disciplinary charges
against Friedman and Hughes.
On November 2, 1989, the district court
granted the Administrator's application and denied the motions of Friedman and
Hughes, thus allowing the disciplinary hearings before the Administrator to
proceed. Friedman and Hughes then appealed to this court and sought a stay of
their disciplinary hearings. In December 1989, a panel of this court denied
their motions for a stay and denied the motion of the government to dismiss the
appeals for lack of jurisdiction.
In January 1990, the Administrator
issued an opinion [**10] suspending Friedman and
Hughes from all IBT posts for one year. In reaching that result, the
Administrator considered the effect of the recent GEB Resolution on the pending
charges, and concluded that he was not bound by it. The Administrator
subsequently applied to the district court for review of the merits of his
decision on the charges. Friedman and Hughes cross-applied for review and sought
an order permanently enjoining the Administrator and the Investigations Officer
from subjecting them to disciplinary proceedings.
After the
Administrator's January 1990 opinion, the government moved in this court to
dismiss the earlier appeals of Friedman and Hughes as moot. A panel of this
court denied the motion, but deferred further consideration of the earlier
appeals until any appeal from the ruling of the district court on the
Administrator's application for a review of his decision on the merits.
On March 13, 1990, the district court issued an opinion and order
affirming the one-year suspensions and denying appellants' motions for a
permanent injunction. Appellants appealed from the district court's decision and
moved this court to stay their removal from union office pending appeal.
[**11] On March 27, 1990, a panel of this court
denied the motions but expedited the appeals. Although not a party to this
appeal, the Investigations Officer was granted permission to submit a brief and
to [*615] share the government's time at oral
argument.
Discussion
At the outset we note that appellants
Friedman, Hughes and the IBT raise a number of essentially similar claims.
Accordingly, we first address the issues that permeate the appeals of all three
appellants, identifying only where necessary for the sake of accuracy the
arguments raised by individual parties. This first set of issues involves the
Administrator's authority to override the Resolution that purported to interpret
certain disciplinary provisions of the IBT Constitution as well as the
reasonableness of the Resolution. Next, we turn to a consideration of the common
issues raised by Friedman and Hughes, namely, whether certain provisions of the
IBT Constitution or the doctrine of collateral estoppel bar Charge I. Finally,
we turn to the individual issues raised by Friedman and Hughes, the most
significant being whether Hughes as a nonparty is bound by the disciplinary
provisions of the Consent Decree. In addressing [**12] the appeals of Friedman and Hughes, we do not find
it necessary to distinguish between arguments raised in their initial appeals
from those raised in their subsequent appeals, since the later briefs
incorporate by reference all applicable arguments from the earlier appeals.
I. Preliminary Issues
A. Jurisdiction
As a
threshold matter, we must consider whether we have jurisdiction to entertain
these appeals. Paragraph 12(A) of the Consent Decree provides that the
Administrator's decisions are "final and binding, subject to the [district]
Court's review as provided herein," and paragraph 16 further provides that the
district court "shall have exclusive jurisdiction to decide any and all issues
relating to the Administrator's actions or authority" under the Consent Decree.
The government, seconded by the Investigations Officer, argues that the language
of the Consent Decree defines the rights of the parties, and that appeal to this
court is not among them.
National labor policy does not favor waivers of
statutory rights by unions, so that a union's intention to waive a statutorily
protected right must be clear and unmistakable before a claim of waiver may
succeed. See, [**13] e.g., Metropolitan
Edison Co. v. NLRB, 460 U.S. 693, 708 & n. 12, 103 S. Ct. 1467, 75 L.
Ed. 2d 387 (1983); Chesapeake
& Potomac Tel. Co. v. NLRB, 687 F.2d 633, 636 (2d Cir. 1982). Such
a clear and unmistakable intent is not present here, since the phrase "exclusive
jurisdiction," read in the context of the Consent Decree, does not unambiguously
exclude appellate review. Appellants argue that paragraph 16 was merely intended
as a provision on venue, such as the typical retention-of-jurisdiction provision
commonly found in consent decrees. See, e.g., In
re Robertson Class Plaintiffs v. National Basketball Ass'n, 625 F.2d 407,
409 (2d Cir. 1980). Nothing in the Consent Decree indicates that the parties
intended to waive their right to invoke the jurisdiction of this court.
Moreover, the government conceded at oral argument that the availability of
appellate review was never discussed in the course of negotiations. Finally,
this court, in another appeal involving the same Consent Decree, did not
question the existence of appellate jurisdiction in applying paragraph 16 as a
venue requirement. See United
States v. International Bhd. of Teamsters, 899 F.2d 143, 146 (2d Cir.
1990). [**14]
The Investigations
Officer also argues that we lack jurisdiction because the orders of the district
court under attack are neither final under 28
U.S.C. § 1291, nor appealable collateral orders. In support, he cites
paragraph 2 of the Consent Decree, which provides that
Upon satisfactory completion and implementation of the terms
and conditions of this order, this Court shall entertain a joint motion of the
parties hereto for entry of judgment dismissing this action with prejudice. .
. .
Under this theory, appellate review would be
unavailable during implementation of [*616] the
Consent Decree because no final judgment in the lawsuit has yet been entered.
We are not persuaded that we lack jurisdiction over the appeals of
Friedman and Hughes from the district court's denial of their requests for
injunctive relief. Those rulings are appealable under 28
U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), since Friedman and Hughes will immediately suffer
serious, perhaps irreparable, consequences and the orders may be effectually
challenged only by immediate appeal. See Carson
v. American Brands, Inc., 450 U.S. 79, 84, 67 L. Ed. 2d 59, 101 S. Ct. 993
(1981). [**15] This is so because the final
judgment officially terminating the underlying RICO action in the Southern
District will not be entered until the completion of the executory provisions of
the Consent Decree, by which time Friedman and Hughes will have served their
one-year suspensions.
The government argues that this court should not
have to review all of the "hundreds of decisions" that will be litigated in the
district court regarding implementation of the Consent Decree. Certainly, the
policies behind the final judgment rule in the federal courts support that view,
and we emphasize that we by no means suggest that all of the Administrator's
decisions will be immediately appealable to this court after the district court
has passed upon them. Indeed, the appeal of the IBT from that portion of the
March 1990 order that determined the respective interpretive powers of the GEB
and the Administrator is more problematic. Unlike appellants Friedman and
Hughes, the IBT is not appealing from an order denying it injunctive relief to
prevent serious consequences, which can be effectively challenged only by an
immediate appeal. Prior attempts by the IBT to appeal from orders of the
district court [**16] facilitating the
implementation of the Consent Decree have been dismissed. See United States
v. International Bhd. of Teamsters, No. 89-6252 (2d Cir. Dec. 13, 1989)
(unpublished summary order); United States v. International Bhd. of
Teamsters, No. 89-6254 (2d Cir. Dec. 13, 1989) (same). However, we find it
unnecessary to resolve the issue of the IBT's right to appeal from the March
1990 order at this time because the IBT raises no fundamental claim that
Friedman and Hughes have not already advanced, although the IBT may cast its
arguments in slightly different terms. Therefore, we will assume only for the
purpose of the present appeals that the arguments of the IBT are properly before
us.
B. Standard of Review
Although we conclude that we have
jurisdiction to entertain the present appeals, the question remains of the scope
of our review. Under the circumstances of this case, we have no doubt that the
Administrator's decisions are entitled to great deference. See Foreman
v. Wood, Wire & Metal Lathers Int'l Union, 557 F.2d 988, 992 (2d Cir.
1977) (scope of appellate review of decision of administrator appointed
pursuant to settlement agreement similar to [**17] deferential standard applied to arbitrator's
decisions). We note that the parties have expressly incorporated into the
Consent Decree a highly deferential standard of review. Paragraph 12(A) of the
Consent Decree states that the Administrator shall preside at disciplinary
hearings "conducted under the rules and procedures generally applicable to labor
arbitration hearings" and shall "decide such cases using a 'just cause'
standard." In addition, that paragraph states that "any decision of the
Administrator shall be final and binding," subject to the review of the district
court. Paragraph 16 of the Consent Decree further provides that:
In reviewing actions of the Administrator, the Court shall
apply the same standard of review applicable to review of final federal agency
action under the Administrative Procedure Act.
This
language, as the context makes clear, refers to review of the Administrator's
actions by the district court. It may well be that the district court's
decisions implementing the Consent Decree are entitled to the same deference as
those of the Administrator. However, we need not address further the intricacies
flowing from the different levels of [**18]
review. The district court appropriately accorded great deference [*617] to the Administrator in upholding his decisions,
and we think, under any reasonable standard of review applied by us to the
issues raised in this court, the district court's orders must be sustained.
II. Common Claims of Appellants IBT, Friedman and Hughes
A. The Resolution
The Resolution was passed at a special meeting
of the GEB on November 1, 1989, after the Administrator had decided that he had
authority to proceed against Friedman and Hughes on the charges against them but
before the district court had decided that issue. The Resolution was passed
without notice to the Administrator and without provision by the IBT of an
agenda in advance as required by the Consent Decree. This conduct is apparently
the subject of a dispute, presently under consideration by the district court,
over whether the discussions at the GEB November 1989 meeting were protected
from disclosure to the Administrator by the attorney-client privilege. The
Resolution was passed at the request of at least one member of the GEB, IBT Vice
President Theodore Cozza, who was himself charged with conducting himself so as
"to [**19] bring reproach upon" the IBT "by
knowingly associating with associates of La Cosa Nostra."
The Resolution
purported to interpret two portions of the IBT Constitution: Article II, section
2(a), see note 1, and Article XIX, section 3(d). The text of the latter is
reproduced in the margin. n2 The Resolution first provided that the phrase "to
bring reproach upon the Union" of Article II, section 2(a), was unduly vague and
thus must be limited in application to the more specific provisions of Article
XIX, sections 6(b)(3)-(7), reproduced in the margin. n3 In addition, the
Resolution stated that the "reproach" provision was never intended to "cover
associations between union members or officers with other persons inside or
outside the trade union movement based upon the reputation or reputed activities
of such other persons, absent any proof of participation or association with
such persons" in conduct violating the more specific provisions of Article XIX,
sections 6(b)(3)-(7). See note 3. Finally, the Resolution provided that the term
"known generally" in Article XIX, section 3(d), see note 2, does not require an
officer's admission of wrongful activities or actions, because to so interpret
[**20] such language "would make it possible to
set aside the will of the membership which elected such officer when it was
known generally by the membership of such allegations."
- - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n2
Article XIX, section 3(d), provides in relevant part:
Charges against elective officers of the International Union
or any subordinate body shall be limited only to those activities or actions
occurring during their current term of office, and only those activities and
actions occurring prior to their current term which were not then known
generally by the membership of the International Union or the subordinate
body in the case of an officer of a subordinate body.
(emphasis supplied).
n3 Article XIX, section 6(b), provides:
The basis for charges against members, officers, elected Business
Agents, Local Unions, Joint Councils or other subordinate bodies for which he
or it shall stand trial shall consist of, but not be limited to, the
following:
(1) Violation of any specific provision of the
Constitution, Local Union Bylaws or rules of order, or failure to perform any
of the duties specified thereunder.
(2) Violation of oath of office or
of the oath of loyalty to the Local Union and the International Union.
(3) Embezzlement or conversion of union's funds or property.
(4) Secession, or fostering the same.
(5) Conduct which is
disruptive of, interferes with, or induces others to disrupt or interfere
with, the performance of any union's legal or contractual obligations. Causing
or participating in an unauthorized strike or work stoppage.
(6)
Disruption of Union meetings, or assaulting or provoking assault on fellow
members or officers, or failure to follow the rules of order or rulings of the
presiding officer at meetings of the Local Union, or any similar conduct in,
or about union premises or places used to conduct union business.
(7)
Crossing an authorized primary picket line established by the member's Local
Union or any other subordinate body affiliated with the International
Union.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - [**21]
The Resolution, if binding, would
presumably bar Charge I against Friedman [*618]
and Hughes, since the Resolution silently repeals sections 6(b)(1) and (2) of
Article XIX, see note 3, and the latter recognizes violation of the oath of
loyalty as a basis for disciplinary charges. Moreover, since both Friedman and
Hughes were re-elected to their union posts in 1987, presumably after the
allegations in their 1986 indictments became "known generally" to the IBT
membership, the Resolution's interpretation of Article XIX, section 3(d), would
also independently bar Charge I.
Appellants argue that the Administrator
was without authority to override the Resolution and further that the Resolution
provided a reasonable interpretation of relevant disciplinary provisions of the
IBT Constitution.
1. The Administrator's Authority. Appellants
argue that the delegation of specific disciplinary powers to the Administrator
in the Consent Decree did not include the GEB's power to interpret the IBT
Constitution. The Administrator derived his authority to review the Resolution
and to interpret the IBT Constitution as related to disciplinary matters from
the powers granted to him under paragraph [**22]
12(A) of the Consent Decree. That paragraph provides, in relevant part, that the
Administrator
shall have the same rights and powers as the IBT's General
President and/or General Executive Board under the IBT's Constitution
(including Articles VI and XIX thereof) and Title 29 of the United States Code
to discharge those duties which relate to: disciplining corrupt or dishonest
officers, agents, employees or members of the IBT or any of its affiliated
entities (such as IBT Locals, Joint Councils and Area Conferences), and
appointing temporary trustees to run the affairs of any such affiliated
entities.
Paragraph 12(A) further provides:
As to decisions of the IBT General Executive Board on
disciplinary charges and trusteeship proceedings during the Administrator's
tenure, the Administrator shall review all such decisions, with the right to
affirm, modify or reverse such decisions. . . .
The Administrator considered his disciplinary powers under paragraph
12 of the Consent Decree to include a delegation of the interpretive authority
of the General President and the GEB, as set forth in Article VI, section 2(a),
and Article IX, section 1, of the [**23] IBT
Constitution, insofar as he exercised that authority to interpret the
disciplinary provisions of the IBT Constitution. Article VI, section 2(a),
provides that the General President "shall have authority to interpret the
Constitution and laws of the International Union . . . and to decide all
questions of law thereunder between meetings of the [GEB]," and Article IX,
section 1, of the IBT Constitution provides that the GEB "shall have the
authority to interpret and apply the Constitution and laws of the International
Union and to decide all questions of law thereunder subject to appeal to the
next Convention."
In his January 1990 opinion, the Administrator ruled
that the Resolution did not bind him. In its March 1990 opinion, the district
court upheld the Administrator's authority to override the GEB Resolution.
We agree that the Administrator had authority to disregard the
Resolution. In determining the scope of the Administrator's authority, we turn
to the explicit terms of the Consent Decree. See SEC
v. Levine, 881 F.2d 1165, 1178-79 (2d Cir. 1989). The disciplinary
power vested in the Administrator by virtue of paragraph 12(A) of the Consent
Decree, set [**24] forth above, plainly included
the power to interpret the disciplinary provisions of the IBT Constitution.
Appellants maintain, however, that Article IX, section 1, of the Constitution,
grants the GEB exclusive authority to issue definitive interpretations of the
Constitution, and that this authority was not modified by the Consent Decree in
view of both the absence of any specific reference to the Administrator's
interpretive power in the Consent Decree and the express reservation of rights
contained in paragraph 18(a) of the Consent Decree. That paragraph states that
"except as provided by the terms of this order, nothing else herein shall be
construed or interpreted as affecting or modifying . . . the IBT Constitution."
[*619] We are not persuaded that the
IBT reserved the right to issue binding interpretations of the disciplinary
provisions of its Constitution, in view of the express delegation contained in
paragraph 12(A) of the Consent Decree, which grants the Administrator "the same
rights and powers as the IBT's General President and/or General Executive Board
under the IBT's Constitution (including Articles VI and XIX thereof)" to
discharge disciplinary duties. Appellants [**25]
would have us read the parenthetical phrase as confining the Administrator to
the more limited interpretive powers set forth in Article VI, section 2(a), of
the IBT Constitution, but the plain language of the Consent Decree does not
permit such a restrictive reading. The Administrator's powers "include," but are
not limited to, Articles VI and XIX. The Administrator's powers include as well
the broader interpretive power authorized under Article IX, section 1, of the
IBT Constitution insofar as the exercise of that power relates, as it does here,
to disciplining corrupt or dishonest IBT or IBT-affiliated officers, agents,
employees or members. As already indicated, Article IX, section 1, of the IBT
Constitution vests the GEB with authority to "interpret and apply" the IBT
Constitution and to "decide all questions of law thereunder." Moreover, the
Administrator's comprehensive right to review disciplinary charges of the GEB
necessarily includes the final authority to determine what constitutes an
offense subject to discipline under the IBT Constitution.
2.
Reasonableness of the Resolution. Appellants also argue that the
Resolution is a reasonable interpretation of the IBT Constitution, [**26] and is thus binding on the Administrator and the
courts, because federal case law recognizes a union's fundamental right to
interpret its own constitution and requires judicial deference to that
interpretation unless patently unreasonable. The Administrator rejected the
GEB's constitutional interpretations as unreasonable, and the district court
affirmed this ruling.
Even on the unlikely assumption that the GEB
retained any independent authority to issue interpretations of the disciplinary
provisions of the IBT Constitution, we conclude that the Resolution was entitled
to no weight. The parties disagree over whether this court applies a "patently
unreasonable" or a mere "unreasonable" standard to review of a union's
interpretation of its Constitution. Appellants maintain, relying on Association
of Contracting Plumbers, Inc. v. Local Union No. 2, United Ass'n of Journeymen
and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipefitting Indus. of the United States and
Can., 676 F. Supp. 523, 530 (S.D.N.Y.), aff'd, 841
F.2d 461 (2d Cir. 1988), that this Circuit applies a patently unreasonable
standard of review. The government contends, relying on Schonfeld
v. Raftery, 359 F. Supp. 380, 388 (S.D.N.Y. 1973), [**27] aff'd sub nom. Fritsch
v. District Council No. 9, Bhd. of Painters, 493 F.2d 1061 (2d Cir.
1974), that this court merely applies an unreasonableness standard. Under
either standard, we reach the same result.
Appellants' arguments in
defense of the reasonableness of the Resolution are not persuasive. The IBT
attempts to sugarcoat the circumstances surrounding the Resolution, which was
passed at a "special" meeting just one month after the Administrator had ruled
against Friedman and Hughes on their various legal defenses to the charges
against them and while the district court was considering the matter. The IBT
also attempts to minimize the Resolution's likely effects, while Friedman and
Hughes recognize the exculpatory nature of the Resolution but maintain that this
fact is irrelevant, even as they attempt to benefit by it. Appellants ask this
court not only to disregard the exculpatory character of the Resolution, which
would bar pending charges against current and former GEB members, but also to
ignore the fact that the Resolution was precipitated by a request from at least
one charged IBT officer. This we decline to do. Cf. Morrissey
v. Curran, 423 F.2d 393, 400 [**28] (2d
Cir.) (exculpatory amendment to union constitution declared void), cert. denied,
399
U.S. 928, 26 L. Ed. 2d 796, 90 S. Ct. 2245 (1970).
[*620] Moreover, the passage of the Resolution
apparently violated the IBT's obligations under paragraph 17 of the Consent
Decree, which expressly provides that the IBT must seek approval prior to making
any changes in the areas covered by the Consent Decree:
The parties intend the provisions set forth herein to govern
future IBT practices in those areas. To the extent the IBT wishes to make any
changes, constitutional or otherwise, in those provisions, the IBT shall give
prior written notice to [the government]. . . .
The
IBT maintains, however, that the requirement of paragraph 17 refers solely to
changes that it might propose to the Consent Decree, and does not affect the
IBT's right to interpret its Constitution. This argument ignores the fact, as
the district court noted, that this paragraph specifically requires the IBT to
refrain from any unilateral changes, "constitutional or otherwise," in the broad
areas covered by the Consent Decree. Paragraph 17 was obviously intended to
protect the background [**29] understanding of
both parties of what existing rules, regulations and constitutional provisions
would govern the IBT.
We agree with the district court that the
"significant alterations" attempted by the Resolution "in the offenses which
constitute violations of the IBT Constitution are major changes in the governing
rules of the IBT," and would effectively nullify the Administrator's powers in
disciplinary matters.
III. Common Arguments of Friedman and
Hughes
A. Constitution as Bar
In addition to relying on the
effect of the Resolution, appellants Friedman and Hughes argue that the IBT
Constitution bars the Administrator from hearing Charge I. Friedman and Hughes
make three specific arguments. The first repeats the construction of Article
XIX, section 3(d), of the IBT Constitution adopted in the Resolution. Under
section 3(d), an IBT officer cannot be subject to discipline for alleged
pre-election misconduct, unless the allegations were not "known generally" by
the membership of the IBT Local. Friedman and Hughes maintain that as a result
of their well-publicized criminal indictments in 1986, their alleged wrongdoing
was "known generally" prior to their re-election in [**30] 1987. Appellants' second argument is that under
Article XIX, section 6(a), of the IBT Constitution, an IBT officer cannot be
subject to disciplinary hearings for conduct arising from a criminal conviction
while the criminal appeal is pending. Finally, Friedman and Hughes maintain that
the same section contains a one-year statute of limitations that bars the
instant charges.
With regard to the first contention, the Administrator
held that Article XIX, section 3(d), by its explicit terms, precludes
disciplinary charges only for generally known pre-election activity,
not mere allegations, and the district court agreed. The theory of
these holdings was that because Friedman and Hughes were, at the start of their
terms, vigorously denying that they had engaged in the "activities and actions"
for which they were indicted (and subsequently convicted), they could not
credibly claim that their criminal activity was "known generally." With regard
to the second contention, the Administrator and the district court held that
paragraph 6 of the Consent Decree expressly authorizes the General President or
the GEB to suspend officers during the pendency of civil or criminal charges,
and [**31] the Administrator possesses these
same disciplinary powers. As to the third contention, the Administrator and the
district court ruled that the plain language of paragraph 5 of the Consent
Decree eliminates any limitations period for disciplinary charges brought by the
Investigations Officer and tried before the Administrator.
In each of
these instances, taking into account the great deference to be given to the
Administrator's rulings, we cannot say that the district court erred.
B.
Collateral Estoppel
Friedman and Hughes next argue that the district
court erred in allowing the Administrator to collaterally estop them from
[*621] contesting issues determined adversely
to them in the Ohio criminal case, in view of the pendency of the criminal
appeals there. Citing Parklane
Hosiery Co. v. Shore, 439 U.S. 322, 330-31, 58 L. Ed. 2d 552, 99 S. Ct. 645
(1979), Friedman also argues that Hughes's unavailability to testify on
Friedman's behalf in the prior criminal case made the Administrator's offensive
use of collateral estoppel unfair.
We have recently pointed out that the
pendency of a criminal appeal generally "does not deprive a judgment of its
preclusive [**32] effect." See United
States v. All Right, Title & Interest in Real Property & Building Known
as 303 West 116th Street, 901 F.2d 288, 292 (2d Cir. 1990); cf. Sherman
v. Jacobson, 247 F. Supp. 261, 268 (S.D.N.Y. 1965) (judgment may be
final for purposes of collateral estoppel, despite the fact that an appeal from
it has not been decided); Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 13 comment g
(1982) (same). As Judge Edelstein recognized, if the convictions of Friedman and
Hughes are reversed by the Sixth Circuit, they may seek from him relief from the
orders now under attack. Thus, the situation of Friedman and Hughes is not akin
to that presented to this court in Gelb
v. Royal Globe Ins. Co., 798 F.2d 38 (2d Cir. 1986), cert. denied, 480
U.S. 948, 94 L. Ed. 2d 794, 107 S. Ct. 1608 (1987), on which appellants
rely. There this court refused to preclude relitigation of an issue on which
plaintiff earlier had been denied effective appellate review. Id.
at 45.
In addition, Parklane does not require a different
result. There the Court recognized that the offensive use of collateral
estoppel, whereby a defendant [**33] is
foreclosed from relitigating an issue that he has previously litigated
unsuccessfully in an action with another party, could, in some circumstances, be
unfair to a defendant. Parklane,
439 U.S. at 330. Such unfairness might result, the Court indicated, where a
defendant had "little incentive to defend vigorously" in the first action; where
"the judgment relied upon as a basis for the estoppel is itself inconsistent
with one or more previous judgments in favor of the defendant"; or where "the
second action affords the defendant procedural opportunities unavailable in the
first action that could readily cause a different result." Id.
at 330-31.
None of these circumstances are present here. Friedman
and Hughes had every incentive to litigate their criminal cases vigorously and
there were no inconsistent judgments on the issues to which estoppel was
applied. With regard to Hughes's failure to testify in the prior criminal case,
it is true that he there exercised his Fifth Amendment right. Friedman claims
that this prevented him from establishing his authorization defense, i.e., that
the alleged "ghost employee" scheme was done at the direction of the [**34] FBI, and emphasizes that in view of Hughes's
present willingness to testify on Friedman's behalf, the Administrator's refusal
to allow him to do so was unfair. This court has recognized that "the
application of collateral estoppel could result in unfairness if 'without fault
of his own' a party against whom collateral estoppel is sought was deprived of
'crucial' evidence or witnesses in the prior action whose outcome is said to bar
a subsequent action." United States v. United States Currency in the Amount
of $ 228,536.00, 895
F.2d 908, 920 (2d Cir. 1990) (quoting Blonder-Tongue
Laboratories, Inc. v. University of Ill. Found., 402 U.S. 313, 333, 28 L.
Ed. 2d 788, 91 S. Ct. 1434 (1971)), cert. denied, 493
U.S. 958, 110 S. Ct. 2564, 109 L. Ed. 2d 747 (1990). Friedman, however, was
not "'without fault of his own,'" since he never moved to sever Hughes as a
co-defendant in the prior criminal trial to facilitate obtaining in that forum
his co-defendant's purportedly exculpatory testimony. Moreover, we note that the
testimony of Hughes was received by the Administrator as "mitigation" evidence.
The Administrator rejected the testimony as [**35] not credible, because, while Hughes testified that
in his presence the late Jackie Presser told Friedman to hire one of the
allegedly ghost employees because the FBI wanted it done, Friedman could not
with any certainty recall that this conversation took place. [*622] Hughes's testimony, even if admitted as proof
going to Friedman's authorization defense, would not therefore have "readily
cause[d] a different result." Parklane,
439 U.S. at 331.
IV. Individual Claims of Friedman and
Hughes
A. Friedman
Friedman also argues that Charge II
should be considered by us even though the Administrator has not yet ruled upon
it, because the district court in its March 1990 opinion gave express permission
to the Administrator to proceed with a disciplinary hearing on this charge.
Friedman argues that Charge II is insufficient on its face for lack of requisite
specificity in violation of the IBT Constitution, federal labor law and due
process. Because Friedman has yet to be tried on this charge, his claim is
premature and we decline to address it.
B. Hughes
1. Binding
Effect of Consent Decree on Non-party. Hughes vigorously argues that
because he was [**36] neither a party to the
original lawsuit nor a signatory of the Consent Decree, he cannot be bound by
it. n4 Quoting Coronado
Coal Co. v. United Mine Workers of America, 268 U.S. 295, 304, 69 L. Ed.
963, 45 S. Ct. 551 (1925), Hughes contends that the IBT cannot unilaterally
change its Constitution, which constitutes the "'fundamental agreement of
association'" between the IBT and its affiliated local unions and members, and
then make the new terms binding on them. This is so, Hughes maintains, because
various provisions of the IBT Constitution explicitly reserve the power of
amendment to the International Convention of the IBT, by vote of its duly
elected delegates. Hughes also argues that application of the terms of the
Consent Decree to him would violate due process, because, citing Martin
v. Wilks, 490 U.S. 755, 109 S. Ct. 2180, 2184 & n. 2, 104 L. Ed. 2d 835
(1989), his interests were not adequately represented by those parties who,
by entering into the Consent Decree, avoided substantial monetary penalties
under the RICO forfeiture provisions. Hughes also argues that because the IBT
and the GEB lacked the authority to amend the IBT Constitution, [**37] the purported amendments pursuant to the Consent
Decree are void as to the affiliated locals and their members. He further
contends that since the Consent Decree's amendment of the one-year statute of
limitations contained in Article XIX, section 6(a), of the Constitution does not
apply to him, the charges against him are time-barred.
- - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n4
The related issue of whether the Consent Decree has binding effect on
IBT-affiliated nonparties is before this court in United States v.
International Bhd. of Teamsters, No. 90-6038(L), and is scheduled to be
heard the week of June 11, 1990. That appeal is from a January 17, 1990 opinion
of Judge Edelstein, reported at 728
F. Supp. 1032, which held that the IBT subordinate entities (members,
locals, joint councils, and area conferences) were bound by the Consent Decree,
and which enjoined them from raising any challenges to that Decree in any forum
other than the Southern District of New York.
- - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
These
arguments are without merit. While we need not decide whether [**38] Hughes as a nonparty could be bound by each and
every term of the Consent Decree, he clearly could be bound by the terms of the
disciplinary mechanism set in place by the Consent Decree. This is so because
the investigatory and disciplinary powers of the court-appointed officers are
proper delegations of the powers of the IBT General President and the GEB within
the scope of the IBT Constitution that binds all members of the IBT, and because
the IBT Constitution, in Article XXVI, section 2, contemplates amendment by the
GEB, under the circumstances of this case, as a result of judicial direction. n5
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - -
n5 Article XXVI, section 2, provides, among other things,
as follows:
If any provision of this Constitution shall be declared invalid or
inoperative by any competent authority of the executive, judicial or
administrative branch of a state, provincial or federal government, the
General Executive Board shall have the authority to suspend the operation of
such provision during the period of its invalidity and to substitute in its
place and stead a provision which will meet the objections to its validity and
which will be in accord with the intent and purpose of the invalid
provision.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - [**39]
In addition, Hughes's reliance on the
Court's decision in Martin is inapposite, [*623] since the Consent Decree does not curtail any
independent right of a member beyond what the IBT itself already had power to
control, that is, a member's discipline under the IBT Constitution. In contrast,
the nonparty firefighters in Martin, who challenged the consent decree
there, asserted their independent right to be free from employment
discrimination in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. See Martin,
109 S. Ct. at 2186 n. 6. In this case, Hughes was subject to disciplinary
oversight both before and after the entry of the Consent Decree, and the IBT
merely exercised its discretionary authority under the Constitution to delegate
the investigation and discipline of union misconduct to the court-appointed
officers.
2. Non-IBT Wrongdoing. Hughes also claims that he
does not come within the ambit of any grant of authority to the Administrator
under the Consent Decree, since his conviction in Ohio was not based upon any
wrongdoing in connection with the IBT. This claim is also without merit.
Although the disciplinary charges against Hughes [**40] are based upon his conviction for wrongdoing in
relation to a non-IBT labor union, the Administrator could reasonably have
concluded that the conviction of Hughes, an officer of an IBT Local, in
connection with a scheme to embezzle the funds of a non-IBT labor union, brought
reproach upon the IBT. In addition, Article XIX, section 6(b), of the IBT
Constitution, see note 3, provides that "the basis for charges against . . .
officers . . . for which [they] . . . shall stand trial shall consist of, but
not be limited to" specified violations directly related to the IBT.
Accordingly, the Administrator's decision to impose discipline was consistent
with the IBT Constitution and his powers under the Consent Decree.
We
have considered all of appellants' arguments and, for the reasons given above,
the orders of the district court are affirmed.