Matthew Nagel v. United Food and Com. Workers, No. 22-1330 (8th Cir. 2023)
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Plaintiff opposed a new collective-bargaining agreement that passed by a 119-vote margin. Plaintiff sued the union for breach of its duty of fair representation and a violation of the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act. At their core, these claims are about whether the union hoodwinked members into ratifying the new collective-bargaining agreement by concealing what would happen to the 30-and-out benefit. The district court dismissed the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act claim, denied Plaintiff’s motion for class certification, and granted summary judgment to the union on the fair-representation claim. On appeal, Plaintiff alleged that the union concealed key information, but only nine members said it would have made a difference.
The Eighth Circuit affirmed, holding that Plaintiff failed to provide other evidence that the outcome of the vote would have changed. The court reasoned that the ratification vote was overwhelmingly in favor: 228 to 109, a 119-vote margin. Plaintiff offers only nine members who would have voted “no” if they had known about the elimination of the 30-and-out benefit. Even assuming each would have voted the way he thinks, the agreement still would have passed by a wide margin. The court wrote that no reasonable jury could conclude that the union’s alleged bad-faith conduct was the but-for cause of the union’s ratification of the collective-bargaining agreement.
Court Description: [Stras, Author, with Smith, Chief Judge, and Benton, Circuit Judge] Civil case - Labor law. In this action plaintiff, a member of the defendant union, sued it for breach of its duty of fair representation after the union negotiated and the membership passed a new collective bargaining agreement; plaintiff alleged the union failed to reveal all of the provisions of the new agreement; even assuming plaintiff is right, he must still establish a causal link between the union's bad faith and his injuries; to meet his burden, plaintiff must show that the vote to ratify would have been different if the union had discussed the provision at issue; here, the new CBA passed by a 119-vote margin out of the 337 total votes cast, and plaintiff could only produce 9 members who claimed they would have changed their vote with the additional information; on this record, no reasonable jury could conclude that the union's alleged bad-faith conduct was the but-for cause of the ratification of the CBA.
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