Court Opinion

ID: 9686555
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-24 15:55:20.468437+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:18:20.096696
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam.
On March 30, 1982, defendants Bay City Education Association, Bay City Public Schools Secretarial and Clerical Association, and Bay City Public School Non-Academic School Employees Association filed an unfair labor practice charge against plaintiff with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC). The charge alleged violation of the public employment relations act (PERA) in connection with certain subcontracting decisions made by plaintiff. Subsequently, the same defendants filed separate griev*731anees alleging that the same subcontracting policy violated collective-bargaining agreements with plaintiff. A full hearing was held before MERC regarding the unfair labor practice charge, and the matter is currently pending, with the parties awaiting decision by the hearing officer.
Nonetheless, despite the pendency of the matter before MERC, the same defendants filed separate demands for arbitration of their grievances. In the grievances, as in the unfair labor practice charge, the primary relief sought by the defendants is an order requiring plaintiff to bargain over the disputed subcontracting policy.
Plaintiff filed this action seeking a declaratory judgment that the matter was within the exclusive jurisdiction of MERC and that it was not arbitrable so long as it remains pending before MERC. The trial court issued an order denying plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. We reverse and remand.
Plaintiff points out that this issue has been thoroughly reviewed in the recent case of Detroit Fire Fighters Ass’n v City of Detroit, 408 Mich 663; 293 NW2d 278 (1980). In that case, the Court held that "once a party to a public employment collective-bargaining relationship invokes MERC’s jurisdiction under PERA, that party’s complaint should be resolved by MERC in accordance with the statutory processes”, 408 Mich 685. In the present case, defendants have invoked MERC’s exclusive jurisdiction, and any order allowing the matter to be deferred to private arbitration would run counter to the Legislature’s intention in vesting MERC with such jurisdiction. Id. We hold that this dispute must be conclusively decided by MERC, and that grievance arbitration must be terminated.
*732We are not persuaded by defendants’ attempts to distinguish or limit the impact of Detroit Fire Fighters, supra. The opinion announces a policy of broad application which extends far beyond the specific circumstances of that case. Defendant would circumvent that policy by adopting the reasoning of the dissent in Detroit Fire Fighters. However, this Court is bound by the ruling of the majority in that case. Absent citation to some authority which might have narrowed or limited the rule of Detroit Fire Fighters, we decline to depart from that rule in the present case.
The trial court’s orders denying summary judgment to plaintiff and granting summary judgment to defendants must be reversed. The matter is remanded for entry of a declaratory judgment stating that the parties’ dispute concerning subcontracting, together with any other issues submitted to MERC, have been placed within MERC’s exclusive jurisdiction and are not subject to any private grievance arbitration.
Reversed and remanded. No costs, a public question being involved.