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McKinney Restoration, Co. v. Illinois District Council No. 1 of the International Union of Bricklayers & Allied Craftworkers

7th CircuitDecember 15, 2004No. 03-3253Cited 1 time
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Cudahy, Ripple, Rovner
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The employer's appeal of the district court's decision upholding the statute of limitations bar to vacating the arbitration awards was rejected. The Court of Appeals affirmed that the employer's challenge to the first arbitration award was untimely and that the May and December awards were separate, final decisions.

What This Ruling Means

# McKinney Restoration Co. v. Illinois District Council No. 1 ## What Happened McKinney Restoration, a construction company, had a dispute with a union representing its workers. The company and union had agreed to use arbitration—a private process where a neutral person decides disputes instead of going to court. An arbitrator made decisions about the company's obligations, but the company later tried to challenge and overturn those arbitration decisions. ## What the Court Decided The appeals court rejected the company's attempt to challenge the arbitration awards. The court found that the company waited too long to file its challenge. Once an arbitrator makes a final decision, there are strict time limits for asking a court to overturn it. The company missed that deadline, so its challenge was dismissed. ## Why This Matters for Workers This ruling protects workers by enforcing arbitration agreements and time limits. When companies and unions agree to arbitration to resolve disputes, those decisions become binding and final if challenged too late. Workers benefit because disputes get resolved definitively rather than dragging through endless legal challenges.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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