Case Name: Lavern BARNICA, Appellant, v. KENAI PENINSULA BOROUGH SCHOOL DISTRICT and Gladys Stalker, Appellees
Court: Alaska Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Alaska
Decision Date: 2002-05-03
Citations: 46 P.3d 974
Docket Number: No. S-9155
Parties: Lavern BARNICA, Appellant, v. KENAI PENINSULA BOROUGH SCHOOL DISTRICT and Gladys Stalker, Appellees.
Judges: Before: MATTHEWS, EASTAUGH, BRYNER, and CARPENETI, Justices.
Reporter: Pacific Reporter 3d
Volume: 46
Pages: 974–986

Head Matter:
Lavern BARNICA, Appellant, v. KENAI PENINSULA BOROUGH SCHOOL DISTRICT and Gladys Stalker, Appellees.
No. S-9155.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
May 3, 2002.
Arthur S. Robinson, Robinson & Beiswen-ger, Soldotna, for Appellant.
Howard S. Trickey, Jermain, Dunnagan & Owens, P.C., Anchorage, for Appellees.
Before: MATTHEWS, EASTAUGH, BRYNER, and CARPENETI, Justices.

Opinion:
OPINION
MATTHEWS, Justice.
On August 22, 1995, Lavern Barnica resigned from his position as a custodian at the Nikiski High School. Eight months later he sued the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District and his former immediate supervisor, Gladys Stalker, for wrongfully constructively discharging him from employment. Barnica claimed that he was discriminated against because of his sex in violation of AS 18.80.220, and that this discriminatory treatment "made working conditions so intolerable that Plaintiff was foreed into involuntary resignation." Barnica alleged that Stalker permitted women custodians to do less work than he was required to do, generally showed partiality towards women custodians, and retaliated against his complaints that he was being unfairly treated by giving him even more work to do. Barnica sought compensatory and punitive damages but not injunctive relief.
The district answered and pled a number of affirmative defenses including that Barnica had failed to exhaust contractual remedies prescribed by the collective bargaining agreement to which he was subject.' Subsequently, the district moved for summary judgment on the exhaustion defense. It noted that the collective bargaining agreement specifically prohibited discriminatory treatment on the basis of sex, that it provided a four-step grievance procedure culminating in binding arbitration, and that Barnica did not use these procedures. The district argued that the grievance procedures were exclusive, and that Barnica's unexcused failure to use them precluded him from maintaining the suit.
Barnica opposed the motion. He admitted that to the extent that he was asserting a contract claim, his claim should have been exhausted through the grievance procedures. But he contended that his claim was also a tort claim "for violation of the public policy contained in Alaska's anti-discrimination statute," and that this claim was independent of the collective bargaining agreement and therefore not barred by his failure to use the grievance procedures.
The superior court granted summary judgment in favor of the district. In a balanced opinion, the court noted that authorities in other jurisdictions were divided as to whether exhaustion of contractual remedies should be required in similar situations. Based generally on our decisions requiring exhaustion of contractual or administrative remedies in many contexts, the court concluded that Bar-nica
was required to have exhausted his remedies under the collective bargaining agreement. Most wrongful discharges could be ascribed to some violation of a public policy. If all employees alleging tortious violations of public policy were permitted to cireumvent the arbitral < procedures set forth in their contractual agreements, it would undermine the doctrine of exhaustion and do violence to the spirit and the letter of the Cozzen[ ] and Beard[ ] decisions.
In his opening brief on appeal Barnica continues to characterize his claim as a "statutory public policy tort." He argues that the basis for this claim "is independent of any understanding embodied" in the collective bargaining agreement, and that Norcon, Inc. v. Kotowski indicates that he may proceed without exhausting contractual remedies.
In response, the district recasts Barnica's claim as a statutory claim and argues that public policy favoring arbitration points to the application of the exhaustion doctrine to this case. The district also contends that analogous federal decisions have required arbitration of statutory civil rights claims, relying on such cases as Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp. and Austin v. Owens-Brockway Glass Container, Inc. In response to Barnica's argument that Norcon should control this case, the district argues that Norcon is distinguishable. The issue there was preemption under the federal Labor Management Relations Act, which is inapplicable to states or their political subdivisions. The district argues that the state Public Employment Relations Act, AS 23.40.210(a), applies instead, and that the Public Employment Relations Act mandates that collective bargaining agreements contain grievance procedures with binding arbitration.
In reply . Barnica accepts the district's characterization of his claim as a statutory discrimination claim. But he contends that the district's reliance on federal authority is ill conceived. He notes that the 1974 case of Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co., which arose in a collective bargaining context and did not require exhaustion, was not overruled by the 1991 Gilmer decision, which involved an individual contract. He observes that most federal circuits have continued to follow Gardner-Denver rather than Gilmer in collective bargaining cases.
As Barnica states, "the essential issue in this appeal" is whether the collective bargaining agreement "to arbitrate statutory discrimination claims should be binding on individual employees ." We regard this as a close question. The collective bargaining agreement explicitly prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex. The Human Rights Act, AS 18.80.220(a), prohibits the same conduct. The Public Employment Relations Act requires that collective bargaining agreements include a grievance procedure "which shall have binding arbitration as its final step." The collective bargaining agreement complies with this requirement. A person aggrieved by a violation of the Human Rights Act may bring an action in the superior court; in addition, an aggrieved person may initiate an administrative proceeding before the Commission for Human Rights. Grievance procedures in collective bargaining agreements, like agreements to arbitrate generally, are mandatory in the sense that they preclude the use of otherwise available judicial remedies. But does this rule apply to a claim based on conduct which is both a violation of a collective bargaining agreement and a statute which affords a judicial remedy?
For the reasons that follow, our answer is that a claim subject to an agreement to arbitrate for which an independent statutory judicial remedy is also available must be arbitrated, unless the history and structure of the statute in question indicate that the legislature intended to preclude waiver of the judicial remedy in favor of the arbitral forum. As there is no such indication in the Human Rights Act, we affirm the judgment.
Central to our decision is the fact that the legislature has mandated that all collective bargaining agreements subject to the Public Employment Relations Act contain grievance procedures and that all 'such procedures must have binding arbitration as a final step. The legislature has recognized that a "rational method for dealing with disputes" between public employers and employees is one of the tools of effective government, and it has chosen grievance procedures with binding arbitration as the preferred method for the achievement of this goal. The Pub-lie Employment Relations Act's declaration of policy states:
The legislature finds that joint decision-making is the modern way of administering government. If public employees have been granted the right to share in the decision-making process affecting wages and working conditions, they have become more responsive and better able to exchange ideas and information on operations with their administrators. Accordingly, government is made more effective. The legislature further finds that the enactment of positive legislation establishing guidelines for public employment relations is the best way to harness and direct the energies of public employees eager to have a voice in determining their conditions of work, to provide a rational method for dealing with disputes and work stoppages, to strengthen the merit principle where «civil service is in effect, and to maintain a favorable political and social environment. The legislature declares that it is the pub-lie policy of the state to promote harmonious and cooperative relations between government and its employees and to protect the public by assuring effective and orderly operations of government. These poli-cles are to be effectuated by |
(2) requiring public employers to negotiate with and enter into written agreements with employee organizations on matters of
wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment[.]. [ ]
The choice of grievance procedures with arbitration as the final step seems well designed to promote harmonious and cooperative government employer-employee relations. Such procedures encourage the carly resolution of disputes by discussion and conciliation before they escalate to unmanageable proportions. Various practical remedies are then possible. By contrast, once a case reaches the judicial litigation stage the disputants' positions have typically hardened so that no constructive solution is possible. To use modern terminology, "win/win" results can be achieved with grievance and arbitration procedures, whereas litigation is more likely to be a "zero sum" process-either the employer or the employee will lose.
In addition, we have recognized that the "common law and statutes of Alaska evince 'a strong public policy in favor of 'arbitration" Compared to litigation, arbitration is a relatively inexpensive and expeditious method of dispute resolution. This policy also supports giving primacy to contractual grievance/arbitration clauses in cases like the present.
In the one case in which we addressed a conflict between a colléctive bargaining grievance/arbitration remedy and a statutory judicial remedy we held that the judicial remedy could be pursued. Public Safety Employees Ass'n v. State arose out of a dispute over bush housing owned by the state and rented to certain state employees. We held that some aspects of the dispute fell within a collective bargaining agreement and thus were potentially subject to arbitration. But we held that the arbitration remedy was not exclusive and that the employees had the right to sue as tenants under the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act. We had "but little difficulty" in reaching this conclusion because a section of the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act contained a non-waiver provision applicable not only to rights, but to remedies, under the act." Referring to this non-waiver clause we stated "that the right to sue under the act cannot be prospectively bargained away. Hence, the contract remedy here cannot displace that which is provided by the act."
Unlike the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, the Human Rights Act does not contain a provision prohibiting the waiver of judicial remedies. Thus the rationale underlying our conclusion in Public Safety Employees Ass'n does not apply to the present case.
One case that we cited in Public Safety Employees Ass'n was Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co. There the United States Supreme Court held that an unfavorable arbitrator's decision rendered under a collective bargaining agreement did not preclude an employee from bringing a racial discrimination claim in federal court based on Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Based on a number of factors the Court concluded that the Title VII judicial remedy was not meant to be waivable merely because a claim raising the same underlying conduct was submitted to arbitration:
In sum, Title VII's purpose and procedures strongly suggest that an individual does not forfeit his private cause of action if he first pursues his grievance to final arbitration under the nondiscrimination clause of a collective-bargaining agreement.[ ]
Some years after our decision in Public Safety Employees Ass'n, the United States Supreme Court decided Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp., which held that an employee was precluded by an arbitration agreement from pursuing a judicial remedy on his claim of age discrimination. In Gil mer, the Court established a rule of decision like that which we believe should govern here. Agreements to arbitrate supercede statutory judicial remedies "unless Congress itself has evinced an intention to preclude a waiver of judicial remedies for the statutory rights at issue." The Court observed that the burden would be on the party opposing arbitration to show that a waiver of the judicial forum was meant to be precluded and that such an intention might be discoverable from the text of the act or its legislative history or from an "inherent conflict" between arbitration and the underlying purposes of the act. The Court cautioned that this inquiry should be engaged in bearing in mind that "questions of arbitrability must be addressed with a healthy regard for the federal policy favoring arbitration."
The Gilmer Court then turned to the question of whether Congress, in enacting the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, intended to bar waivers of the individual judicial remedy provided in the act. In a discussion which is in many respects relevant to the present case, the Court found there to be no such intent. The Age Discrimination in Employment Act, like the Human Rights Act, provides both for administrative and judicial remedies and for administrative remedies to take precedence over judicial remedies. In finding no inherent conflict between arbitration and the purpose of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, the Court pointed to the act's flexible approach to the administrative resolution of claims-informal efforts to conciliate like those provided in the Human Rights Act -which suggested that out-of-court dispute resolution methods like arbitration were consistent with Congress's purpose. The Court also noted that arbitration procedures under the Federal Arbitration Act are fair and the arbitrators in the particular controversy before the court could fashion both damage awards and "other": relief, meaning equitable relief. Similar broad relief is also authorized under the clause in this case: "The arbitrator shall have complete authority to make any decision and provide any remedy appropriate except as otherwise expressly prohibited by law or this Agreement." The Gilmer Court also observed that arbitration proceedings would not preclude the commission administering the act from proceeding independently to seek class-wide relief nor would a claimant be precluded from filing an administrative charge even if he is precluded from filing suit. The same can be said with respect to the Human Rights Commission and administrative remedies available under the Human Rights Act.
Gilmer did not overrule Gardner-Denver. Instead, the earlier case was distinguished primarily on grounds relating to the fact that a collective bargaining agreement was involved in Gardner-Denver while Gilmer involved an individual agreement. But the Court also noted that general attitudes toward arbitration had changed in the intervening years:
The Court in Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co. also expressed the view that arbitration was inferior to the judicial process for resolving statutory claims. That "mistrust of the arbitrable process," however, has been undermined by our recent arbitration decisions. "[ Wle are well past the time when judicial suspicion of the desirability of arbitration and of the competence of arbitral tribunals inhibited the development of arbitration as an alternative means of dispute resolution."[ ]
The Fourth Circuit has applied the Gilmer rule to collective bargaining agreements. But most of the other circuits continue to follow Gardner-Denver in collective bargain, ing cases. In 1998 the United States Supreme Court indicated that "whether or not Gardner-Denver's seemingly absolute prohibition of union waiver of employees' federal forum rights survives Gilmer" is an open question.
We deal here with 'a question of state law on which neither Gardner-Denver, nor Gilmer, nor other federal authorities supply binding precedent. These cases are discussed because they deal with a similar controversy in more or less analogous situations and lend history and context to the issue before us. We are in general agreement with the Gilmer opinion and believe that it more accurately reflects Alaska policy favoring arbitration than does Gardner-Denver. And we do not believe that the distinction between collective bargaining contracts and individual contracts is necessarily meaningful with respect to the treatment of arbitration clauses. Many individual contracts in the employment area are essentially contracts of adhesion offered to the prospective employee on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. Collectively bargained contracts are typically the product of bilateral negotiations and thus can be expected to be at least as fair to employees as standard individual contracts offered by employers. Thus there is little reason to enforce arbitration clauses in individual contracts while declining to enforce similar clauses in collective bargaining agreements.
Barnica argues that our holding in Norcon, Inc. v. Kotowski dictates that a judicial forum for statutory gender discrimination claims cannot be waived. In Norcon, an employee covered by a collective bargaining agreement sued for sexual discrimination in violation of AS 18.80.220. The superior court held that plaintiff's claim was preempted by § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, and that the claim was subject to the grievance procedures of the contract. We reversed, explaining that "if [an] employee's suit against her employer is based on state law claims neither founded on rights created by a [collective bargaining agreement] nor dependent on the analysis or interpretation of the [collective bargaining agreement], the [Labor Management Relations Act] does not preempt such claims." The question in Norcon was one of preemption; if the claim was preempted, the suit was barred by the federal statute of limitations, and if it was not, the employee could proceed with her state statutory judicial remedy. The issue did not, as it does here, involve choosing between a state arbitration remedy and state judicial remedy.
The test used to determine preemption is different from the Gilmer test that we are following in this opinion. The preemption test asks whether the worker's rights under state law can be adjudicated without having to interpret the collective bargaining agreement. That contrasts with Gilmer which asks whether Congress intended that workers' judicial remedies not be waivable. Answering as we did in Norcon that the employee's right to be free from sex discrimination could be determined independently of the collective bargaining agreement is fully consistent with answering the Gilmer test by saying that the legislature did not manifest an intent to preclude the waiver of the Human Rights Act judicial remedy in favor of grievance/arbitration procedures.
Barnica points to the statement in Norcon that "[the right to a non-diseriminatory workplace conferred . by AS 18.80.220 could not be waived by any contrary contractual provision." On its face this statement speaks of a substantive right and not remedies. It is not inconsistent with finding the judicial remedy for a discriminatory workplace waivable in favor of grievance/arbitration procedures. For these reasons we reject Barnica's argument that our decision in this case is controlled by Norcon.
One additional Alaska case should be mentioned. In Storrs v. Municipality of Anchorage we held that an employee's state constitutional right to a pretermination hearing could be waived in a collective bargaining agreement so long as the remedy substituted by the collective bargaining agreement was "fair, reasonable and efficacious." This holding supports our conclusion that statutory remedies can be waived by reason of substitute remedies in collective bargaining agreements. If constitutionally mandated remedies may be waived by alternative griev-" ance/arbitration procedures, statutory remedies likewise may be subject to waiver because of such procedures.
For the reasons stated, the judgment is AFFIRMED.
FABE, Chief Justice, not participating.
. Collectively referred to in this opinion as the district.
. Cozzen v. Municipality of Anchorage, 907 P.2d 473 (Alaska 1995).
. Beard v. Baum, 796 P.2d 1344 (Alaska 1990).
. 971 P.2d 158 (Alaska 1999).
. 500 U.S. 20, 111 S.Ct. 1647, 114 L.Ed.2d 26 (1991).
. 78 F.3d 875 (4th Cir.1996).
. 415 U.S. 36, 94 S.Ct. 1011, 39 L.Ed.2d 147 (1974).
. Barnica thus concedes that under the terms of the collective bargaining agreement his discrimination claim was subject to arbitration and that the question we must decide is whether this aspect of the agreement is enforceable.
. Article 4 of the agreement provides:
The District and Association shall not discriminate against any bargaining unit member in matters of salaries, fringe benefits, similar terms and conditions of employment, or any other conditions of this Agreement on the basis of . sex .
. AS 23.40.210(a).
. The grievance procedures article of the collective bargaining agreement provides for a four-step grievance resolution process beginning with a meeting with the employee's immediate supervisor, continuing through hearings before the superintendent and the school board, and culminating in binding arbitration before an impartial arbitrator selected by the American Arbitration Association. A grievance under the contract is defined as "a claim by a grievant that there has been an alleged violation . of the [collective bargaining] Agreement ."
. See AS 22.10.020(i). The availability of this remedy, as well as the remedy under the collective bargaining agreement, makes a separate tort remedy unnecessary and we conclude that none is available. See Walt v. State, 751 P.2d 1345, 1353 & n. 16 (Alaska 1988).
. See AS 18.80.100-135. Moreover, unlawful discriminatory conduct prohibited under AS 18.80 is a misdemeanor punishable by up to thirty days in jail and by a fine of no more than - $500. See AS 18.80.270.
. See Casey v. City of Fairbanks, 670 P.2d 1133, 1137 (Alaska 1983); International Bhd. of Teamsters, Local 959 v. King, 572 P.2d 1168, 1172 n. 9 (Alaska 1977); see, e.g., Republic Steel Corp. v. Maddox, 379 U.S. 650, 85 S.Ct. 614, 13 L.Ed.2d 580 (1965) (stating general rule in federal law that "individual employees wishing to assert contract grievances must attempt use of the contract grievance procedure agreed upon by employer and union as the mode of redress").
. See AS 23.40.210(a).
. See AS 23.40.070.
. See AS 23.40.210(a).
. AS 23.40.070.
. Department of Pub. Safety v. Public Safety Employees Ass'n, 732 P.2d 1090, 1093 (Alaska 1987) (quoting University of Alaska v. Modern Constr., Inc., 522 P.2d 1132, 1138 (Alaska 1974)).
. See id.
. As the Supreme Court of the United States has recently observed in Circuit City Stores, Inc. v. Adams, 532 U.S. 105, 123, 121 S.Ct. 1302, 149 L.Ed.2d 234 (2001): "Arbitration agreements allow parties to avoid the costs of litigation, a benefit that may be of particular importance in employment litigation, which often involves smaller sums of money than disputes concerning commercial contracts." '
. 658 P.2d 769, 770 (Alaska 1983).
. Id. at 774.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 774-75.
. 415 U.S. 36, 94 S.Ct. 1011, 39 L.Ed.2d 147 (1974).
. Id. at 49, 94 S.Ct. 1011.
. 500 U.S. 20, 111 S.Ct. 1647, 114 L.Ed.2d 26 (1991).
. Id. at 26, 111 S.Ct. 1647 (quoting Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., 473 U.S. 614, 628, 105 S.Ct. 3346, 87 L.Ed.2d 444 (1985)).
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 27-29, 111 S.Ct. 1647.
. 29 U.S.C. § 626; AS 18.80.145.
. 29 U.S.C. § 626; AS 18.80.145.
. Gilmer, 500 U.S. at 29, 111 S.Ct. 1647.
. Id. at 30, 111 S.Ct. 1647.
. Id. at 32, 111 S.Ct. 1647.
. Here, as in Gilmer, "by agreeing to arbitrate a statutory claim, a party does not forgo the substantive rights afforded by the statute; it only submits to the resolution in an arbitral, rather than a judicial, forum." 500 U.S. at 26, 111 S.Ct. 1647 (quoting Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., 473 U.S. 614, 628, 105 S.Ct. 3346, 87 L.Ed.2d 444 (1985)).
. Id.
. AS 18.80.060, .100-.110.
. Gilmer, 500 U.S. at 35, 111 S.Ct. 1647.
. Id. at 34 n.5, 111 S.Ct. 1647 (quoting Mitsubishi Motors, 473 U.S. at 626-27, 105 S.Ct. 3346) (internal citations omitted).
. See Austin v. Owens-Brockway Glass Container, Inc., 78 F.3d 875, 880-82 (4th Cir.1996).
. See Penny v. United Parcel Serv., 128 F.3d 408, 414 (6th Cir.1997) (concluding that "an employee whose only obligation to arbitrate is contained in a collective bargaining agreement retains the right to obtain a judicial determination of his rights under a statute such as the ADA"); Harrison v. Eddy Potash, Inc., 112 F.3d 1437, 1453 (10th Cir.1997), vacated on other grounds, Eddy Potash, Inc. v. Harrison, 524 U.S. 947, 118 S.Ct. 2364, 141 L.Ed.2d 732 (1998); Pryner v. Tractor Supply Co., 109 F.3d 354, 363 (7th Cir.1997) (holding that "the union cannot consent for the employee by signing a collective bargaining agreement that consigns the enforcement of statutory rights to the union-controlled grievance and arbitration machinery created by the agreement"); Brisentine v. Stone & Webster Eng'g Corp., 117 F.3d 519, 526-27 (11th Cir.1997); Varner v. National Super Markets, Inc., 94 F.3d 1209, 1213 (8th Cir.1996); Tran v. Tran, 54 F.3d 115, 118 (2d Cir.1995).
. Wright v. Universal Maritime Serv. Co., 525 U.S. 70, 80, 119 S.Ct 391, 142 L.Ed.2d 361 (1998).
. Cf. Circuit City Stores, Inc. v. Adams, 532 U.S. 105, 121 S.Ct 1302, 149 L.Ed.2d 234 (2001) (reviewing individual contract); Mago v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc., 956 F.2d 932 (9th Cir.1992) (same).
. Further, individual member's claims under Alaska law are less subject to union control than under federal law. For example, if Barnica's union had refused to take his case to step four arbitration, he could have sued the district for breach of the collective bargaining agreement in the superior court without the need, as under federal law, to show that the union had breached its duty of fair representation. See Casey v. City of Fairbanks, 670 P.2d 1133, 1138 (Alaska 1983).
. The lack of fair procedures or the absence of unbiased arbitrators can serve as a reason not to require that contract remedies be used in preference to judicial remedies with respect to both individual and collective bargaining contracts. But such contentions are case specific. Cf. Bruns v. Municipality of Anchorage, 32 P.3d 362 (Alaska 2001) (discussing excuse of failure to exhaust administrative remedies "where administrative procedures are ineffective because of lack of meaningful access, bias, futility, or the possibility that the claimant could face irreparable harm"). No contentions of procedural unfairness or bias are made in this case.
. 971 P.2d 158 (Alaska 1999).
. Id. at 165.
. 29 U.S.C. § 185.
. Norcon, 971 P.2d at 164.
. Id. at 164-65.
. Id.
. Id.
. Gilmer, 500 U.S. at 26, 111 S.Ct. 1647.
. Norcon, 971 P.2d at 165.
. The Gilmer Court stressed that statutory substantive rights are not waived even though statutory remedies may be. See supra note 39.
. 721 P.2d 1146, 1150 (1986).