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MACOMB COUNTY v. AFSCME COUNCIL 25 LOCALS 411 AND 893

8790June 12, 2013No. Docket No. 144303
Defendant WinMacomb County
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Case Details

Citation
494 Mich. 65
Judge(s)
Markman, Kelly, and Zahra, JJ., concurred with Young, C.J.; CAVANAGH, J., concurred with MCCORMACK, J.; VIVIANO, J., took no part in the decision of this case because he was the Chief Judge of the 16th Judicial Circuit Court before his appointment to this Court.
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

Breach of Contract

Outcome

Michigan Supreme Court reversed the MERC and Court of Appeals, holding that the employer did not commit an unfair labor practice when it unilaterally changed the actuarial table used to calculate pension benefits because the CBA granted discretion to the retirement commission and the change did not create a new term requiring bargaining; the proper remedy lies in the grievance arbitration process.

Excerpt

MACOMB COUNTY v AFSCME COUNCIL 25 LOCALS 411 AND 893 Docket No. 144303. Argued March 5, 2013 (Calendar No. 2). Decided June 12, 2013. AFSCME Council 25 Locals 411 and 893, the International Union UAW Locals 412 and 889, and the Michigan Nurses Association filed unfair labor practice complaints with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC) against Macomb County, the Macomb County Road Commission, and the 16th Judicial Circuit Court, asserting that by changing the method for calculating pension benefits, respondents had lowered their pension benefits without bargaining on the issue as required by the public employment relations act (PERA), MCL 423.201 et seq. The parties’ .collective-bargaining agreements (CBAs) provided employees with various pension-plan options, including one in which payments terminated at the death of the employee (straight-life pension) and another in which pension benefits continued until the death of both the employee and his or her beneficiary (joint-and-survivor pension). A Macomb County Retirement Ordinance mandated that the optional joint-and-survivor benefit be the actuarial equivalent of the standard straight-life benefit. In 1982, respondents switched from using gender-based actuarial tables to calculate the joint- and-survivor benefit to using a female actuarial table for all retirees. In 2006, respondents adopted a different mortality table for calculating those benefits after determining that use of the female mortality table resulted in higher pension benefits for those employees who chose the joint-and-survivor option. The hearing referee recommended that the MERC dismiss the unfair labor practice charge. She determined that a retirement plan’s actuarial assumptions were mandatory subjects of bargaining under the PERA, but concluded that the duty to bargain had been satisfied because the CBAs covered the issue of retirement benefit calculations and the parties had agreed to have those benefits calculated as provided in the retirement ordinance. The referee determined that although the term “actuarially equivalent” in the ordinance was a matter of contract interpretation, the issue should be resolved through the grievance arbitration procedures, and did not constitute an unfair labor practice. The charging parties filed exceptions to the hearing referee’s proposed decision and the MERC rejected the recommendation, concluding that the actuarial assumptions at issue were never memorialized in the retirement ordinance or any of the CBAs referring to the ordinance. The MERC reasoned that although the ordinance did not define the phrase “actuarial equivalent,” the parties had tacitly agreed to continue the use of the female actuarial table and that respondent’s change in the table used violated the duty to bargain. In a split opinion, the Court of Appeals, Fitzgerald and Shapiro, JJ., (Markey, E J., dissenting), affirmed the MERC’s decision, 294 Mich App 149 (2011), concluding that actuarial assumptions were mandatory subjects of bargaining, that the term actuarial equivalence did not unambiguously mean equal in value and that the parties’ past practice of using the female actuarial table constituted a tacit agreement to continue using it absent modification by collective bargaining. The Supreme Court granted respondents’ application for leave to appeal. 491 Mich 915 (2012). In Em opinion by Chief Justice Young, joined by Justices Markman, Kelly, and Zahra, the Supreme Court held-. Disputes over the terms or conditions of employment that are covered by a CBA are subject to arbitration through the grievance process. When the CBA grants the retirement commission discretion to use actuarial tables to establish pension benefits, the commission’s decision to alter a long-standing method used to calculate those benefits, by itself, does not constitute the clear and unmistakable evidence necessary to overcome the CBA’s coverage and the change in calculation method does not create a new term or condition of employment that would trigger the need to bargain. Instead, the remedy for this dispute lies in the grievance and arbitration system that the parties chose to adopt. 1. MCL 423.215(1) requires a public employer to engage in collective bargaining with its employees with respect to wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment; the calculation of retirement benefits is a mandatory subject of collective bargaining. While the parties do not need to reach sm agreement on a subject of mandatory collective bargaining, neither party may take unilateral action on the subject absent an impasse in the negotiation. When the parties reach a negotiated agreement for a provision in the CBA that fixes the parties’ rights, further mandatory bargaining is foreclosed because the matter is covered by the agreement and because the parties must be able to rely on their agreements. In determining whether the MERC may resolve an unfair labor practice claim involving a breach of contract, it initially must determine whether the subject of the claim is covered by the contract. If a CBA covers the term or condition in dispute, then the details and enforceability of the provision are left to arbitration through the grievance process that the parties agreed to and memorialized in the CBA. As a result, when the parties have agreed to a separate grievance or arbitration process, the MERC’s review of a CBA in the context of a refusal-to-bargain claim is limited to determining whether the agreement covers the subject of the claim. In this case, UAW 412, Units 39, 46, 49, 55, and 75, UAW Local 889, AFSCME Local 411, and the Michigan Nursing Association’s CBAs incorporate the terms of the retirement ordinance in the definition of retirement benefits. As a result, those charging parties’ claims challenging the change in the long-standing method used to calculate pension benefits are covered by the CBAs and the grievance procedure is the appropriate avenue to determine the charging parties’ rights under their respective CBAs. In addition, the Macomb County Road Commission and AFSCME Local 893 CBA implicitly incorporated the retirement ordinance to the extent that the ordinance governs optional joint-and-survivor benefits and the grievance procedure is the appropriate forum in which to challenge the calculation of those pension benefits as well. 2. A charging party may pursue an unfair labor practice complaint regarding the changing of a term or condition of employment even when a CBA controls, but only when the new term or condition amounts to an amendment of the CBA. Where a party claims that an employer unilaterally changed a term or condition of employment that is covered by unambiguous language in the CBA, that party must present clear and unmistakable evidence establishing the parties’ affirmative intent to revise the CBA and establish new terms or conditions of employment; doubt about whether a subject matter is covered should be resolved in favor of having the parties arbitrate the dispute, not the MERC. The charging party must show that the parties had a meeting of the minds with regard to the new terms or conditions such that there was an agreement to modify the contract. An affirmative intent to revise the terms of the CBA must be shown; a past practice must be so widely acknowledged that it creates an amendment to the contract. In this case, the retirement ordinance expressly provides the retirement commission with discretion to adopt actuarial calculations that apply to the retirement system. The commission’s decision to alter a long-standing method used to calculate pension benefits, by itself, does not constitute the clear and unmistakable evidence necessary to overcome the CBA’s coverage and the change in calculation method does not create a new term or condition of employment that would trigger the need to bargain. There was no evidence of a mutual commitment that the retirement commission would continue using the female actuarial table. In addition, the description in the CBA of the current actuarial table does not indicate an intent to limit the retirement commission’s discretion to adopt a different table in the future and does not create an ambiguity in their discretion to make such changes. 3. Doubt about whether a subject matter is covered by the CBA is resolved in favor of having the parties arbitrate the dispute. The arbitrator, not the MERC, is best equipped to decide whether a past practice has matured into a new term or condition of employment for purposes of a CBA. In this case, the Court of Appeals erred by affirming the MERC decision that the respondents violated the terms of the CBAs when they changed the actuarial table used to calculate pension benefits. The retirement ordinance grants the retirement commission discretion to adopt actuarial calculations that apply to the retirement system. When calculating pension benefits, actuarial equivalence is a term of art that unambiguously means a benefit of equal value. Because the ordinance requires that the pension benefits be actuarially equivalent, the commission properly altered the long-standing method used to calculate the optional joint-and-survivor benefit to ensure that they were equal in value to those received for straight-life benefits. Reversed and remanded to the MERC for dismissal of the charging parties’ unfair labor practice claims. Justice McCormack, joined by Justice Cavanagh, dissenting, would have affirmed the Court of Appeals’ decision and concluded that the parties’ 24-year intentional practice of using a very specific formula for achieving actuarial equivalence amended the contract and required bargaining anew before a unilateral change could be made. Although actuarial equivalence is an unambiguous term of art, the retirement commission knew that the 100% female/0% male mortality table would not achieve actuarial equivalence. On the suggestion of the actuarial firm, the retirement commission amended the retirement ordinance to indicate a specific interest rate and data set that referred to the 100% female/0% male mortality table. This deliberate choice and longstanding past practice thereby modified the unambiguous CBA language. Justice Viviano took no part in the decision of this case because he was the Chief Judge of the 16th Judicial Circuit Court before his appointment to this Court. 1. Labor Relations — Collective Bargaining — New Terms or Conditions of . Employment. In determining whether the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC) may resolve an unfair labor practice ULP claim involving a breach of contract, it initially must determine whether the subject of the claim is covered by the contract; where a party claims that an employer unilaterally changed a term or condition of employment that is covered by unambiguous language in the collective bargaining agreement (CBA), that party must present clear and unmistakable evidence establishing the parties’ affirmative intent to revise the CBA and establish new terms or conditions of employment; doubt about whether a subject matter is covered should be resolved in favor of having the parties arbitrate the dispute, not the MERC. 2. Labor Relations — Collective Bargaining — Past Practices — Amendments of Contracts. When a collective-bargaining agreement (CBA) covers the subject matter of an unfair labor practice dispute and grants the retirement commission discretion to alter what would otherwise be a mandatory subject of collective bargaining, the fact that the commission decided to alter a long-standing practice, by itself, does not constitute the clear and unmistakable evidence necessary to overcome the CBA’s coverage of the matter and to create a new term or condition of employment that would trigger the need to bargain. 3. Labor Relations — Collective Bargaining Agreements — Pension Plan Options — Actuarially Equivalent — Words and Phrases. When calculating pension benefits under different plan options, a requirement that the plans be “actuarially equivalent” unambiguously means that the benefit plans must be of equal value. McConaghy & Nyovich, LLC (by Timothy K. McCo-naghy), for Macomb County, Macomb County Road Commission, and the 16th Judicial Circuit Court. Miller Cohen PLC (by Bruce A. Miller, Richard G. Mack, and Ada Verloren) and Ava Barbour, for AFSCME Council 25 Locals 411 and 893 and International Union UAW Locals 412 and 889. Anita Szczepanski for Michigan Nurses Association. Amici Curiae: Plunkett Cooney (by Mary Massaron Ross) for the Michigan Municipal League, Michigan Township Association, Michigan Association of Counties and the State Bar Public Corporation Law Section. Young, C.J. The public employment relations act (PERA) requires public employers to bargain with their employees’ designated representatives concerning the “terms and conditions of employment,” including the calculation of retirement benefits. Failure to do so constitutes an unfair labor practice. The unfair labor practice complaints at issue in this case arise out of the Macomb County Retirement Commission’s decision to change the actuarial table used to calculate joint and survivor retirement benefits for employees retiring after July 1, 2007. We hold that the respondents did not commit an unfair labor practice when they refused to bargain with the charging parties over this decision and that the remedy for this dispute lies in the grievance and arbitration system these parties have created. If a collective bargaining agreement covers the term or condition of employment in dispute, “the details and enforceability of the provision are left to arbitration.” The unfair labor practice complaints in this case concern subject matters covered by the collective bargaining agreements. Thus, the grievance process contemplated in the collective bargaining agreements is the appropriate avenue to challenge respondents’ actions. The collective bargaining agreements grant the retirement commission discretion to establish actuarial tables to calculate joint and survivor benefits. The retirement commission’s 24-year practice of using the same actuarial table to calculate those benefits does not, on its own, constitute the clear and unmistakable evidence necessary to overcome the collective bargaining agreements’ coverage of the matter and create a new term or condition of employment. As a result, none of the unfair labor practice charges can be sustained. We reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand this case to the Michigan Employment Relations Commission for dismissal of the unfair labor practice complaints. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY The Macomb County Board of Commissioners enacted the retirement ordinance and established the Macomb County Employees Retirement System to “provid[e] pension and retirement benefits for the employees of the County of Macomb ... .” The ordinance vests the seven-member Macomb County Retirement Commission with “the general administration, management and responsibility for the proper operation of the Retirement System, and for construing and making effective the provisions of [the] Ordinance.” The retirement ordinance grants a retiring county employee the option of receiving a monthly retirement allowance payable only until the employee’s death, or receiving a reduced allowance during the retiree’s life, the payment of which continues after this death and through the life of a named beneficiary. If the retiree chooses to allow a surviving beneficiary to receive payments in addition to his or her own “straight life benefit,” the monthly “joint and survivor” payment is reduced to ensure that it is “the actuarial equivalent.. . of [the employee’s] straight life retirement allowance . . . .” The retirement ordinance does not define the term “actuarial equivalent.” This case focuses on the method that the retirement system uses to calculate the joint and survivor benefit as compared to the straight life benefit. Until 1982, the county used gender-based actuarial tables to calculate the joint and survivor benefit. However that year, in response to a United States Supreme Court decision and a Michigan Attorney General opinion, the commission concluded that it could not continue to use gender-based actuarial tables. It sought the advice of its actuary, Gabriel, Roder, Smith & Company (GRS), in selecting a single, gender-neutral actuarial table to calculate the joint and survivor payment without regard to either the employee’s or the beneficiary’s gender. GRS outlined several alternative approaches and noted that the only approach “designed to make sure that no participant will receive a lesser benefit than under [existing] procedures,” would be to adopt the female actuarial table for all retirees. Ultimately, the retirement commission chose to adopt the female actuarial table for all retirees. For 24 years, the retirement system applied the female actuarial table when calculating its retirees’ monthly joint and survivor payments. However, GRS studied the retirement system over a five-year period (2001-2005) and concluded that the joint and survivor benefit was “more valuable than the single life annuity form of payment.” To ensure that the optional joint and survivor payment would “have the same present value, on average, as the straight life normal form of payment,” GRS proposed a different actuarial table for the commission to adopt. GRS determined that a blended table that assumed 60% male retirees and 40% female retirees would best approximate benefits that are equal in value among all the options. At its November 17, 2006 meeting, the commission voted 4-3 to adopt this 60% male actuarial table, to take effect for all employees who retire on or after July 1, 2007. The charging parties demanded collective bargaining over the change. Respondents rejected this demand and claimed that the existing collective bargaining agreements gave the commission discretion to adopt new actuarial tables. The charging parties then filed unfair labor practice complaints with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC). After conducting a three-day hearing, the hearing referee recommended that the MERC dismiss the unfair labor practice charges. She determined that a retirement plan’s actuarial assumptions are mandatory subjects of bargaining under the PERA. However, because the underlying collective bargaining agreements “contain extensive provisions ‘covering’ pension benefits,” and because “the parties were satisfied, and agreed, to have these benefits calculated as provided in the ordinance,” she concluded that the respondents had already fulfilled their statutory duty to bargain over the retirement system’s actuarial assumptions. While “the meaning of the term ‘actuarial equivalent’ in the ordinance involved bona fide questions of contract interpretation,” those questions “are properly subject to resolution through the grievance arbitration procedures set out in the parties’ contracts,” not in litigation over unfair labor practices. The charging parties filed exceptions to the hearing referee’s proposed decision. The MERC agreed with the charging parties and rejected the referee’s decision and recommended order. It concluded that “[t]he actuarial assumptions at issue here were never memorialized in the Retirement Ordinance or any of the collective bargaining agreements referencing the Retirement Ordinance.” Although the ordinance did not define the actuarially equivalent benefits promised to retirees and their beneficiaries, the term’s meaning “has been subordinated to the question of whether the parties have amended their agreements by the longstanding practice of calculating optional pension benefits that are not the actuarial equivalent of straight life benefits ....” On this question, the MERC determined that the parties “tacitly agreed that joint and survivor benefits would continue to be calculated as they had [been] in the past.”

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8790Jul 2016

HECHT v NATIONAL HERITAGE ACADEMIES, INC Docket No. 150616. Argued March 10, 2016 (Calendar No. 3). Decided July 26, 2016. Craig Hecht brought an action in the Genesee Circuit Court alleging that his employment was terminated by National Heritage Academies, Inc., in violation of the Michigan Civil Rights Act (CRA), MCL 37.2101 et seq. Plaintiff had been employed as a teacher by defendant when he made racially charged comments. When later questioned about the comments by his supervisors, plaintiff provided inconsistent explanations. Plaintiff also allegedly attempted to interfere with his supervisors’ investigation of the incident by asking a witness to change his statement about what had happened. Plaintiff was subsequently terminated. Plaintiff asserted that his attempts to find new employment as a teacher were hampered by defendant’s mandatory statutory disclosures to other schools of his record of unprofessional conduct. Before trial, defendant moved to preclude plaintiff from presenting evidence of the disclosures because the disclosures were required by MCL 380.1230b and a school employer that discloses information in good faith under the statute is immune from civil liability for the disclosure. The court, Geoffrey L. Neithercut, J., ruled that the evidence was admissible. Defendant moved for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiffs case in chief, arguing that this was a disparate-treatment discrimination case and plaintiff had not shown that any of defendant’s other employees engaged in the same or similar conduct. The court denied the motion. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff, finding that he had proved that race was a factor in his termination, that he had shown $50,120 in past economic loss, and that he had shown $485,000 in future economic loss. Defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV), a new trial, or remittitur. The court denied the motion. The Court of Appeals, Sekvitto, P. J., and Cavanagh, J. (Wilder, J., dissenting), affirmed in an unpublished opinion. The Supreme Court granted defendant’s application for leave to appeal. 498 Mich 877 (2015). In an opinion by Chief Justice Young, joined by Justices Markman, Zahra, McCormack (as to Parts I, II, and III), Viviano, Bernstein (as to Parts I, II, and III), and Larsen, the Supreme Court held,'. In light of the circumstantial evidence presented and all the inferences that could have been reasonably drawn from that evidence in favor of the jury’s liability verdict, a reasonable jury could have concluded that defendant violated the CRA. However, because MCL 380.1230b afforded defendant complete immunity from civil liability flowing from the mandatory disclosures compelled by that statute, the trial court erred by allowing the jury to consider the disclosure evidence. Accordingly, the award of future damages had to be vacated and the case remanded for further proceedings. 1. When reviewing a motion for JNOV, an appellate court must construe all the evidence and the inferences arising from the evidence in the nonmoving party’s favor. If reasonable jurors could have honestly reached different conclusions, the jury verdict must stand. Under MCL 37.2202(1) of the CRA, an employer may not discharge or otherwise discriminate against an individual with respect to employment because of race. A claim under the CRA requires proof of “but for” causation. There are multiple ways to prove that a plaintiff was the victim of unlawful discrimination, including direct evidence of discrimination, i.e., evidence that proves impermissible discriminatory bias without additional inference or presumption. In this case, however, contrary to the conclusion of the Court of Appeals majority, defendant failed to present direct evidence of discrimination. One way of proving unlawful discrimination without direct evidence is by showing that the plaintiff was treated unequally to a similarly situated employee who did not have the characteristic protected under the CRA. Thus, an employer’s differing treatment of employees who were similar to the plaintiff in all relevant respects, except for their race, can give rise to an inference of unlawful discrimination. In order for this type of evidence to give rise to such an inference, the similarly situated employee must be nearly identical to the plaintiff in all relevant respects. In this case, plaintiff presented a different kind of circumstantial evidence: circumstantial evidence that his employer considered his race in its decision to discharge him. Plaintiff argued that the black employees routinely engaged in racial banter, but were not disciplined. There were distinctions between the comments made by plaintiff and those made by defendant’s black employees that, if credited by the jury, might have allowed the jury to find for defendant. However, plaintiff presented additional evidence that defendant considered plaintiffs race in terminating him. Specifically, plaintiff also presented evidence that defendant’s management employees were aware of and tolerated the unequal enforcement of defendant’s stated zero-tolerance policy. The evidence, if believed, suggested that defendant’s management employees prohibited negative stereotyping in the workplace except when negative stereotyping comments were made by defendant’s black employees. The jury was thus shown the difference between defendant’s policy in theory and its racially biased application. This was potent circumstantial evidence of defendant’s allegedly racially biased decision-making. This evidence could have allowed a reasonable jury to conclude that defendant applied a different standard to plaintiffs conduct based on his race. Accordingly, the jury could reasonably have found that race was a ‘Tut for” cause in defendant’s decision to investigate plaintiff and escalate punishment for his racial comments. Similarly, while defendant presented nondiscriminatory reasons for its decision to terminate plaintiff, plaintiff presented sufficient evidence for a reasonable juror to reject those race-neutral reasons as unbelievable. The jury’s verdict, finding a violation of the CRA, was supported by the totality of the evidence presented and the reasonable inferences in plaintiffs favor that could be drawn from that evidence. 2. Generally, all relevant evidence is admissible, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution of the United States, the Constitution of the state of Michigan, the rules of evidence, or other rules adopted by the Supreme Court. Evidence may also be prohibited by statute. MCL 380.1230b provides that before hiring an applicant for employment, school employers must request that the applicant sign a statement (1) authorizing the applicant’s current or former employer or employers to disclose to the school employer any unprofessional conduct by the applicant, and (2) releasing the current or former employer from any liability for providing that information. Before hiring an applicant for employment, a school employer must request that the applicant’s current or prior employer provide information concerning the applicant’s unprofessional conduct, if any. After receiving such a request, a school employer must provide the information requested and make available to the requesting school employer copies of all documents in the employee’s personnel record relating to the unprofessional conduct. A school employer that discloses information in good faith under the statute is immune from civil liability for the disclosure. In this case, plaintiff argued that he was not precluded from presenting evidence of the mandatory disclosure because he did not sue for the disclosure itself—he sued for a violation of the CRA and presented evidence of the adverse impact of the disclosure to establish future damages. Plaintiffs belief was that only a direct action for the disclosure, e.g., a defamation claim, was precluded by MCL 380.1230b(3), but the admission of evidence of the disclosures in a case such as this was permissible. The term “civil liability’ is defined as being legally obligated for civil damages. The trial court’s decision to admit evidence and argument regarding the mandatory disclosures for the purpose of assessing damages allowed the jury to impose against defendant legal obligations arising from the disclosure. This violated the plain language of the statute. There can be no damages without liability. A legislative decision to preclude liability necessarily precludes damages on the same basis. There is no textual support for the view that immunity under the statute depends on the nature of the claim underlying the civil liability. The improper admission of the disclosure evidence tainted the jury’s future damages award, which had to be vacated. Court of Appeals judgment is affirmed to the extent it held that plaintiff presented sufficient circumstantial evidence to sustain the jury’s verdict finding that defendant violated the CRA; Court of Appeals judgment is reversed to the extent it held that the trial court properly admitted evidence of defendant’s mandatory disclosures of plaintiffs unprofessional conduct; jury award of future damages is vacated; case is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings. Justice McCormack, joined by Justice BERNSTEIN, concurring in part and dissenting in part, agreed with the majority that plaintiff presented sufficient evidence of discrimination such that the trial court did not err by denying defendant’s motion for JNOV, but disagreed with the majority’s decision to vacate the jury award for future damages. MCL 380.1230b(3) confers immunity from liability, i.e., the state of being legally obligated for damages, “for the disclosure,” not from paying money as compensation for a state of legal responsibility unrelated to the disclosure. Because the statutory immunity is tied to the liability and not the remedy, MCL 380.1230b(3) only precludes imposing liability (and damages flowing therefrom) on a defendant when the liability arises from an injury caused by the disclosure itself. Disclosing plaintiffs unprofessional conduct did not create additional legal responsibility for which defendant was on the hook; rather, it was the alleged illegal act of discharging plaintiff based on his race that gave rise to defendant’s liability. The injury from which the liability arose was the discriminatory discharge, not the disclosures. Introducing evidence of defendant’s disclosures of plaintiffs conduct merely assisted the jury in determining the appropriate remedy for the discriminatory discharge. Because plaintiffs injury was the discriminatory discharge rather than defendant’s disclosures, and because it was the discriminatory discharge for which defendant was held liable, the future damages award did not constitute civil liability for the disclosure, and the award of future damages should have been affirmed. 1. Actions — Violations of the Civil Rights Act — Sufficiency of the Evidence — Causation. Under MCL 37.2202(1) of the Civil Rights Act, an employer may not discharge or otherwise discriminate against an individual with respect to employment because of race; a claim under the act requires proof of “but for” causation; there are multiple ways to prove that a plaintiff was the victim of unlawful discrimination, including through proofs of either direct or circumstantial evidence of discrimination. 2. Schools — Disclosures of Unprofessional Conduct — Immunity from Civil Liability for Disclosures — Inadmissibility of Evidence of Disclosures to Assess Damages in a Discrimination Case. Under MCL 380.1230b, before hiring an applicant for employment a school employer must request that the applicant’s current or prior employer provide information concerning the applicant’s unprofessional conduct, if any; after receiving such a request, a school employer must provide the information requested and make available to the requesting school employer copies of all documents in the employee’s personnel record relating to the unprofessional conduct; a school employer that discloses information in good faith under the statute is immune from civil liability for the disclosure; evidence of such a disclosure is not admissible for the purpose of assessing the plaintiffs damages arising out of the disclosure in a case brought by a plaintiff alleging that he or she was fired in violation of the Michigan Civil Rights Act, MCL 37.2101 et seq. Law Office of Glen N. Lenhoff (by Glen N. Lenhoff and Robert D. Kent-Bryant) and Rizik & Rizik, PC (by Michael B. Rizik, Jr.), for plaintiff. Warner Norcross & Judd LLP (by John J. Bursch, Dean F. Pacific, and Matthew T. Nelson) for defendant. Amici Curiae: Bill Schuette, Attorney General, Aaron D. Lind-strom, Solicitor General, Matthew Schneider, Chief Legal Counsel, Kathryn M. Dalzell, Assistant Solicitor General, and Mark G. Sands, Assistant Attorney General, for the Attorney General. Miller, Canfield, Paddock and Stone, PLC (by Clifford W. Taylor, Paul D. Hudson, and Brian M. Schwartz), for the Michigan Manufacturers Association. YOUNG, C.J. In this race discrimination case, we must decide whether the trial court erred by denying defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) and determine the propriety of the admission of evidence of defendant’s mandatory reporting under MCL 380.1230b. We hold that the Court of Appeals did not err by affirming the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion for JNOV on plaintiffs claim of discrimination under the Civil Rights Act (CRA), MCL 37.2101 et seq. Contrary to the Court of Appeals, we conclude that there was no direct evidence of discriminatory animus concerning the firing of plaintiff. This case turned on circumstantial evidence—on the credibility of plaintiffs proofs that suggested there were racial reasons for his treatment and on the credibility of defendant’s nonracial justifications for firing him. We conclude, based on the evidence presented and all the inferences that could be reasonably drawn from that evidence in favor of the jury’s liability verdict, that a reasonable jury could have concluded that defendant violated the CRA. Finally, because MCL 380.1230b afforded defendant complete immunity from civil liability flowing from the mandatory disclosures compelled by this statute, we hold that the trial court erred by allowing the jury to consider evidence of defendant’s statutorily mandated disclosures of plaintiffs wrongdoing to other schools, and the Court of Appeals erred by affirming the trial court’s decision in that regard. For these reasons, we reverse in part and affirm in part the judgment of the Court of Appeals, vacate the jury award for future damages, and remand to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Defendant, National Heritage Academies, Inc., is a company that owns and operates a number of public, independently operated schools, including Linden Charter Academy (LCA) located in Flint, Michigan. The student body at LCA is predominantly black. Plaintiff, Craig Hecht, is a white teacher who had been employed by defendant at LCA for approximately eight years, most recently serving as a third-grade teacher. We draw from the evidence adduced at trial the following narrative concerning the events that led to plaintiffs termination. On November 3, 2009, Lisa Code, a white library aide at LCA, entered plaintiffs classroom during class time to return a computer table she had borrowed. Upon her arrival, however, Code realized that she had brought back the wrong table— the one she borrowed was white, whereas the one she returned was brown. Noting her error, Code asked plaintiff if he would prefer to have a white table, like the one she borrowed, or the brown one she had returned. Plaintiff responded, “[Y]ou know I want a white table, white tables are better.” He continued, “[W]e can take all these brown tables and we can burn the brown tables.” Also present for this exchange was Floyd Bell, a black paraprofessional assigned to plaintiffs classroom. After hearing plaintiffs comments, Bell and Code both “called a foul” on plaintiff, in accordance with the school’s informal procedures for addressing inappropriate personal conduct. Plaintiff denied hearing either Bell or Code call a foul on him, but later acknowledged that his comments were meant to imply that “white” people are better than “brown” people. Later that same day, Code reported the incident to Corrine Weaver, the dean of LCA. Weaver, in turn, reported the incident to her supervisor, Linda Caine-Smith, the principal of LCA, who initiated an investigation. Caine-Smith and Weaver each separately interviewed plaintiff, Bell, and Code and took written statements from all three. Although Code’s testimony at trial emphasized that plaintiff made the statements in front of a child, plaintiffs counsel also elicited testimony from Code that her November 4th written statement did not include that allegation. When questioned, plaintiff provided varying explanations regarding what had happened. At first, plaintiff confirmed to Weaver the general discussion about white and brown tables, but he denied that he meant anything racial by his statements. The following day, plaintiff told Caine-Smith that he never said “brown should burn.” However, later that day, plaintiff sent Caine-Smith a written statement in which he admitted to saying, “white tables are better than brown tables” and “all brown tables should burn.” He also admitted that he involved a third-grade student in the “jok[e]” after he made the comments. Plaintiff subsequently met with Bell, apologized to him, and shook his hand. At this point in the investigation, Caine-Smith contacted Courtney Unwin, defendant’s employee relations manager, to discuss plaintiffs conduct and Caine-Smith’s belief that plaintiff had lied during their initial conversation regarding the incident. Unwin then spoke directly to plaintiff, who, despite the admissions made in his earlier written statement, told her that his remark was simply a “tasteless joke,” denied involving a student in the joke, and claimed that none of his students heard the exchange. Unwin also claimed that plaintiff called her later that day, stated that he could not even remember saying anything about brown tables burning, and then justified his conduct by reference to racial banter he suggested was regularly engaged in by black teachers at LCA. Plaintiff claimed that he told Unwin he was just kidding around, that similar joking happened all the time at the school, and that he would do anything to make it better. Caine-Smith and Unwin met to discuss plaintiffs comments in the classroom and his versions of the incident. They discussed several disciplinary options, including a final written warning and termination. After that meeting, Caine-Smith called plaintiff to her office and told him he was being placed on immediate leave pending further investigation. Instead of leaving the building, plaintiff went into a room in which Bell was tutoring students. Plaintiff asked the students to leave the room so that he and Bell could speak privately. He then asked Bell to change the statement he gave defendant. Bell declined the request and explained that he would not lie for plaintiff. Plaintiff also tried to contact Code by calling both her home and cellular phones. Code did not answer either call, but plaintiff left a voicemail stating that he was “desperate” to speak to her. Code testified that plaintiff had never before tried to contact her. Code further testified that plaintiff never asked her to change her statement. The following day, Bell told Caine-Smith that plaintiff had asked him to lie. After receiving this information, Caine-Smith worried that plaintiff had similarly contacted Code. When asked, Code told Caine-Smith about the voicemail, causing Caine-Smith to consult with Unwin again.

Mixed Result
Henry v. Laborers' Local 1191
8790May 2014

HENRY v LABORERS’ LOCAL 1191 RAMSEY v LABORERS’ LOCAL 1191 Docket Nos. 145631 and 145632. Argued October 8, 2013 (Calendar No. 2). Decided May 5, 2014. Anthony Henry and Keith White brought an action in the Wayne Circuit Court against Laborers’ Local 1191 (a labor union that represents construction workers), Michael Aaron (the union’s business manager), and Bruce Ruedisueli (the union’s president), alleging that their indefinite layoff from employment at the union was unlawful retaliation under the Whistleblowers’ Protection Act (WPA), MCL 15.361 et seq. Henry and White had worked as business agents for the union until their terminations. They alleged that defendants asked several union members to repair the fagade of the Trade Union Leadership Council building. The union recorded payments for the work as picket duty even though the members did not engage in picket duty on those days. Henry and White believed that Aaron was involved in criminal activity, including fraud, an illegal kickback scheme, and misappropriation of union funds. They also believed that the union had required members to work without proper safety precautions and without receiving union wages. Henry circulated an unsigned open letter to the union’s leadership and distributed it to the union’s membership, the union’s parent leadership, and local news outlets. The letter asked why the union was paying members out of its picket fund to work on a for-profit establishment and suggested that Aaron had received illegal kickbacks from the council in exchange for providing the council free construction labor. Henry and White subsequently contacted the United States Department of Labor with their suspicions and informed the union of their decision to report the allegations. The Department of Labor investigated the allegations and interviewed several union employees and officials. It referred the matter to an assistant United States attorney, who declined to intervene. Aaron later notified Henry and White that they had been indefinitely laid off from employment at the union. During the pendency of Henry and White’s action, Michael Dowdy and Glenn Ramsey (also business agents for the union) were terminated from their employment. Dowdy and Ramsey filed a separate WPA action in the Wayne Circuit Court against the union, Aaron, and Ruedisueli, claiming that they had been terminated for their cooperation in the Department of Labor’s investigation and disclosing to investigators facts substantiating the allegations of criminal misconduct. Defendants moved for summary disposition in the Henry/White lawsuit and for partial summary disposition in the Dowdy/Ramsey lawsuit, alleging that the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (LMRDA), 29 USC 401 et seq., preempted plaintiffs’ WPA claims and that, as a result, the court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to hear them. The court, Jeanne Stempien, J., denied both motions, concluding that the WPA’s protection of an employee against an employer’s retaliatory employment actions does not contravene the LMRDA because the LMRDA only protects from retaliation the rights afforded union members. Defendants appealed in each case, reasserting their claim of LMRDA preemption and raising the new defense that the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), 29 USC 151 et seq., independently preempted the circuit court from exercising subject-matter jurisdiction. The Court of Appeals, Ronayne Krause, RJ., and Saad and Wilder, JJ., consolidated the appeals and affirmed in an unpublished opinion per curiam, issued July 3, 2012 (Docket Nos. 302373 and 302710), agreeing that plaintiffs had not alleged any infringement of their membership rights and that, as a result, the LMRDA’s protections did not cover their claims. The panel also held that the WPA did not undermine the LMRDA’s purpose of giving elected union officials the discretion to implement policies that reflect the wishes of union membership because claims of wrongful discharge for refusing to commit or aid in committing a crime did not infringe the union leaders’ discretion Finally, the panel held that the NLRA did not preempt plaintiffs’ claims because a claim for retaliatory discharge arising out of an employee’s report of suspected illegal activity or participation in an investigation of it is only of peripheral concern to the NLRA’s purpose of protecting employees’ rights to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection. The Supreme Court granted defendants’ applications for leave to appeal. 493 Mich 934 (2013). In an opinion by Justice Kelly, joined by Chief Justice Young and Justices Cavanagh, Markman, McCormack, and Viviano, the Supreme Court held: Neither the National Labor Relations Act nor the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act preempts Whistleblowers’ Protection Act claims premised on retaliation for reporting suspected criminal misconduct, and state courts have subject-matter jurisdiction over those claims. 1. Preemption is fundamentally a question of congressional intent. Congress can preempt state law either explicitly or implicitly. In the absence of explicit statutory language, state law is preempted when it regulates conduct in a field that Congress intended the federal government to occupy exclusively or when it actually conflicts with federal law. There is no single formula to apply preemption principles in all contexts. Rather, a court must examine congressional intent to preempt state law in the specific context of the statute or statutes at issue, in this case how the WPA operates against the background of the NLRA and the LMRDA. 2. With respect to the NLRA, § 7 of that act, 29 USC 157, states that employees have the rights to self-organization; form, join, or assist labor organizations; bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing; and engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection. Section 8(a)(1), 29 USC 158(a)(1), states that it is an unfair labor practice for an employer to interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed by § 7. The NLRA both creates federal rules regarding labor relations and delegates enforcement of that policy to an administrative agency, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). When am activity is arguably subject to § 7 or § 8 of the act, the states and the federal courts must defer to the exclusive competence of the NLRB to avert the danger of state interference with national policy. “Arguably subject” means that the party asserting preemption must advance an interpretation of the act that is not plainly contrary to its language and has not been authoritatively rejected by the courts or the board. There are two related exceptions to preemption of state law regulations that are arguably subject to § 7 or § 8. The first is when the activity regulated is merely a peripheral concern of the NLRA. The second is when the regulated conduct touches interests so deeply rooted in local feeling and responsibility that in the absence of compelling congressional direction, a court could not infer that Congress had deprived the states of the power to act. Courts must consider whether there exists a significant state interest in protecting the citizen from the challenged conduct and whether the exercise of state jurisdiction over the state claim entails little risk of interference with the regulatory jurisdiction of the NLRB. When the conduct at issue in the state litigation is arguably prohibited by the NLRA and thus within the exclusive jurisdiction of the NLRB, the critical inquiry in determining whether an exception applies is whether the controversy presented to the state court is identical with that which could he presented to the board. When it is identical, states cannot subject violators to a supplemental sanction for violations of the NLRA. 3. With respect to the LMRDA, 29 USC 411(a)(2) protects union members’ freedom of expression and assembly by giving every member the right to meet and assemble freely with other members; express any views, arguments, or opinions; and express at meetings the member’s views on any business properly before the meeting. It also gives union members procedural protections against discipline by the union. When a plaintiff has dual status as both an employee and a member of the union, the LMRDA only provides protection from discipline in the member’s capacity as a member, not in his or her capacity as an employee. This limitation ensures the freedom of elected union leaders to choose staff whose views are compatible with their own, which is an integral part of the LMRDA’s purpose of ensuring a union administration’s responsiveness to the mandate of a union election. Because conduct protected under the LMRDA does not extend to a union member’s rights as an employee, a state-law retaliation claim brought by a union employee as an employee is preempted to the extent that it conflicts with the LMRDA’s purposes. Likewise, the LMRDA preempts state law that would unduly limit the discretion of union officials to select their employees. As a result, when a union employee brings a state-law retaliation claim as an employee, a court must analyze whether the claim conflicts with the LMRDA’s purpose and goal of protecting democratic processes in union leadership. A state-law retaliation claim is not preempted when it does not conflict with the purposes of the LMRDA. The discretion the LMRDA affords unions to choose their employees is not limitless. The act does not preempt state wrongful-termination claims in cases in which elected union officials attempt to use their discretion as a shield to hide alleged criminal misconduct. Any other conclusion would undermine the explicit purpose of the LMRDA to eliminate or prevent improper practices on the part of labor organizations, employers, labor-relations consultants, and their officers and representatives. In fact, protecting union employees from retaliation when they raise claims of criminal wrongdoing helps to protect the interests of rank-and-file union members and safeguard union democracy and, as a result, achieve the purposes of the LMRDA. 4. The WPA specifically regulates an employer’s retaliation against employees who report a violation or suspected violation of law. MCL 15.362 provides that an employer shall not discharge, threaten, or otherwise discriminate against an employee regarding the employee’s compensation, terms, conditions, location, or privileges of employment because the employee reports or is about to report a violation or a suspected violation of a law or regulation or rule to a public body or because an employee is requested by a public body to participate in an investigation, hearing, or inquiry held by that public body or a court action. 5. When assessing claims of NLRA preemption, it is the conduct being regulated, not the formal description of governing legal standards, that is the proper focus. The specific conduct plaintiffs alleged in their WPA claims is that defendants unlawfully retaliated against them for reporting suspected wrongdoing to the Department of Labor. Plaintiffs’ allegations of wrongdoing fell into two general categories: (1) improper working conditions (that workers were paid unfairly and were not provided with necessary safety precautions) and (2) criminality (that defendants were engaged in fraud, embezzlement, and misuse of union funds). Basic to the right guaranteed to employees in § 7 of the NLRA to form, join or assist labor organizations is the right to engage in concerted activities to persuade other employees to join for their mutual aid and protection. The mutual-aid-or-protection clause in § 7 protects employees from retaliation by their employers when they seek to improve working conditions through resort to administrative and judicial forums, among other activities intended to improve working conditions. Similarly, the relevant inquiry when examining whether activity is concerted is whether the employee acted with the purpose of furthering group goals. 6. The NLRA preempted plaintiffs’ WPA claims related to improper working conditions. Plaintiffs unquestionably acted with the purpose of furthering group goals when they disputed the working conditions for union members. Their claims of unfair wages and an unsafe work environment were prototypical issues of dispute under the NLRA. Therefore, plaintiffs’ conduct to improve unfair wages and an unsafe work environment was arguably protected under § 7 of the NLRA, and § 8 specifically prohibited defendants from retaliating against plaintiffs for engaging in conduct protected under § 7. Neither of the two exceptions to NLRA preemption applied to plaintiffs’ concerted activity regarding working conditions because those conditions are of central, not peripheral, concern to the NLRA’s purposes. Because this protection has been central to the NLRA’s purposes for nearly 80 years, the more recent attempt of the WPA to regulate retaliation for an alleged unfair labor practice does not touch interests so deeply rooted in local feeling and responsibility that a court could not infer that Congress intended the NLRB to have exclusive jurisdiction over a state whistleblower claim arising out of complaints regarding an employer’s improper working conditions. 7. The NLRA did not preempt the WPA with respect to plaintiffs’ claims alleging retaliation for reporting defendants’ criminal wrongdoing. While the NLRA regulates employees’ concerted activities for their mutual aid or protection, it does not regulate the reporting of federal and state crimes. Section 7 is not so broad that it protects all concerted activities by employees. At some point the relationship between the concerted activity and the employees’ interests as employees becomes so attenuated that an activity cannot fairly be deemed to come within the mutual-aid- or-protection clause. The allegations of criminal misconduct that plaintiffs communicated to the Department of Labor did not relate to the employer’s labor practices. Rather, a state court can adjudicate the underlying allegations of embezzlement and other criminal misconduct without having to consider an employer’s labor practices or whether employees engaged in protected activity when reporting those allegations. Moreover, Michigan has a deeply rooted and substantial interest in enforcing its criminal laws, which the NLRB has no authority to enforce and which the WPA assists by protecting employees who report allegations of criminal misconduct, interests that are separate from the interests articulated in the NLRA. 8. Plaintiffs’ WPA claims premised on reporting defendants’ alleged criminal misconduct also survived defendants’ assertion of LMRDA preemption. Although the LMRDA does not provide union employees who have been terminated a cause of action for retaliation taken against them as employees, states are not completely forbidden from restricting a union leader’s discretion to terminate a union employee. If a union retaliates against a union employee as an employee, any underlying state-law retaliation claim is preempted only to the extent that it conflicts with the purposes of the LMRDA. States are afforded considerably more freedom to supplement the LMRDA federal scheme as long as no conflict arises between state law and the LMRDA. A union employer’s discretion in employment decisions must yield in cases in which elected union officials attempt to use that discretion as a shield to hide alleged criminal misconduct. As a result, the LMRDA allows state-law retaliation claims to proceed in state courts. Affirmed in part and remanded. Justice Zahra, concurring in part and dissenting in part, joined the majority’s opinion in Parts I, II, 111(A), (C), (D), and IV(B), but dissented from Parts III(B) and IV(A) and the outcome of the case. Justice Zahra agreed that the LMRDA did not preempt plaintiffs’ WPA claims but disagreed with the majority’s conclusion that the NLRA did not preempt those claims. Conduct is arguably prohibited by the NLRA if the underlying activity that is the subject matter of the litigation is arguably subject to the protections of § 7 or the prohibitions of § 8. Plaintiffs’ WPA claims were arguably subject to the NLRA because plaintiffs’ reporting of alleged wrongful conduct was done to assist their labor organization by revealing that the organization’s assets might be subject to depletion through fraud, embezzlement, and misuse of union funds. The union officials, in their capacity as employers, were prohibited by the NLRA from discharging their employees simply because the employees reported their suspicions of illegal activity that would harm the union. Moreover, plaintiffs’ claims did not fall within what is effectively one exception to NLRA preemption for deeply rooted state interests that are of peripheral concern to the NLRA. In general, when courts determine the applicability of the exception, they effectively presume that claims grounded in state law reflect deeply rooted state interests and inquire instead whether the conduct at issue is of peripheral concern to the NLRA, engaging in a fact-intensive inquiry to decide whether both the NLRA and the state statute, as applied, prohibit the complained-of activity. When the NLRA and state law do not prohibit the same conduct, the preemption exception will apply. Plaintiffs’ claims here sounded in retaliatory discharge. They reported alleged criminal conduct that triggered protection under the WPA and simultaneously assisted a labor organization, which entitled their activity to NLRA protection. Thus, both the WPA and the NLRA prohibited discharge for the protected action, and the NLRA preempted the WPA. In addition, plaintiffs’ WPA claims represented a classic example of unacceptable NLRA circumvention through artful pleading. Justice Zahra would have reversed the judgment of the Court of Appeals and dismissed plaintiffs’ WPA claims because they were preempted by the NLRA. Employers and Employees — Whistleblowers’ Protection Act — National Labor Relations Act — Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act — Federal Preemption of Whistleblower Claims — Criminal Conduct. Neither the National Labor Relations Act, 29 USC 151 et seq., nor the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, 29 USC 401 et seq., preempts claims brought under the Whistleblowers’ Protection Act, MCL 15.361 et seq., that are premised on retaliation for reporting suspected criminal misconduct, and state courts have subject-matter jurisdiction over those claims. Joel B. Sklar and Robert Dinges for Anthony Henry and Keith White. Giarmarco, Mullins & Horton, PC (by Ben M. Gonek) for Michael Ramsey and Glenn Dowdy. Legghio & Israel, PC (by Christopher P. Legghio and Michael J. Bommarito) for Laborers’ Local 1191 and Michael Aaron. Law Offices of J. Douglas Korney (by J. Douglas Korney) for Bruce Ruedisueli. Amicus Curiae: Bill Schuette, Attorney General, Aaron D. Lindstrom, Solicitor General, and Susan Przekop-Shaw, Jason Hawkins, and Bradley A. Fowler, Assistant Attorneys General, for the Attorney General. KELLY, J. This case involves whether, and the extent to which, plaintiffs’ claims asserted under the Michigan Whistleblowers’ Protection Act (WPA) are preempted by the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) and the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (LMRDA). Plaintiffs allege that defendants violated the WPA when they discharged plaintiffs in retaliation for reporting to the United States Department of Labor their suspicions of fraud, embezzlement, improper wages, and unsafe working conditions or for participating in the Department of Labor’s ensuing investigation. Defendants argue that the NLRA and LMRDA preempt plaintiffs’ WPA claims and, as a result, the state court must dismiss those claims. Congress

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