It appeared to me to be a hypothetical to focus on the question of ripeness, but it turned out to reveal more than just ripeness. It is important to note her question that immediately preceded her hypothetical. Graber (female judge) asked ""Obviously you think this case is ripe..uh Why is that true, in the absence of the end of the negotiations as distinct from during the negotiations?" She then asked plaintiff the hypothetical in a slightly different context to help clarify. It focused the question of whether or not a anticipatory breach causes ripeness (doing so she sets aside any consideration of whether or not a legitimate union objective is being pursued in the barraging. In other words, in the hypothetical, the union cannot possibly have a legitimate union objective for the bargaining position of arbitrarily placing all men above women.. even so, can ripeness still be excluded since negotiations have not yet concluded, based on the fact that a breach is anticipated but has not yet occurred. After Graber presented her hypothetical to plaintiff, and heard his responses, she repeatedly asked the plaintiff "what was the act as distinct from stated intention?". She was asking for something more concrete than "anticipatory".
Graber also pressed the defendant to answer the hypothetical during rebuttal. When defendant answered he injected the hortatory established by constitutional objective, and attempted to continue the theme, but Graber said, "Let's leave aside the constitutional question.." thus she returned to the narrow hypothetical that excluded consideration of whether or not the union was pursuing a legitimate union objective. Having returned to the narrow hypothetical, where the union obviously could have no legitimate union objective in bargaining to place all men over women, defendant then still held that there is no DFR claim until the negotiations are completed, the ratification process finished, and that the political process has run its course without interference from the court (as he argued earlier, citing previous cases, of which the court had zero questions).
Regardless of how one decides to answer Graber's hypothetical of ripeness, the answer does not seem favorable to the plaintiff. If the hypothetical is not ripe even when the union clearly cannot have a legitimate union objective then the current actual defendant doesn't have any burden to show they have a legitimate union objective in their bargaining position.. at least not until and unless a contract is implemented and a suit follows, far in the future. On the other hand, if one says that there is indeed ripeness in Graber's hypothetical then it must be acknowledged that ripeness, at least in part, results because of an illegitimate union objective or arbitrary bargaining position. But since Graber carefully excluded the question of legitimate union objective (by inserting an illegitimate union objective) then the question still remains: Notwithstanding a hypothetical ripeness, did the actual defendant have a legitimate union objective that absolves them from a breach of DFR, and were they allowed to present their case?
Graber's hypothetical was revealing. If the "Raemey" case cited by plaintiff is inadequate to establish precedent that there is indeed ripeness, then the result favors defendant (Its applicability seemed uncertain). On the other hand if ripeness is acknowledged, then Graber's hypothetical demonstrates that the union must be able to present a case that their actions were in fact legitimate union objectives, which obviously was not allowed, neither were the jurors allowed to consider any such evidence.
PHX, I sat out the first reaction round out, wait until the "we cleaned your clock" settled down on both sides to reply. I hope readers can see this post for trying to be balanced. First, I don't see an AOL defeat based on their attorney's 10 seconds of silence on the ripeness question. Anyone who does is off-base. As one West observer said, he needed to think through his response. Graber's hypothetical was just that, a hypothetical. It caught Seham off guard, not expecting it. But his comments about Title 7 were all really needed to put that to rest. It wasn't until long after the EEOA/1964Civil Rights Act was passed that unions got rid of all their discrimination language about membership, including ALPA. But they didn't violate federal law with their language. Some did with their deeds and lost suits over it. I don't think Clear's "logic and ethics" doesn't come into play, either. He wants to take this case and the appeal to some higher moral plain. Appelate panels don't go there. Their looking at errors, not retrying the case.
What became obvious in the court tapes to me is this appeal boils down to ripeness. That's what the judges were interested in. All along from my first posts on it about a year ago, I thought ripeness was the main, if not the only issue. But on the AOL side of the ledger, I get the point, if they hadn't filed when they did (6 months), we'd be screaming timelyness during trial or in the appeal. I think AOL had no choice but to file when they did to protect their interests on timelyness. Which brings up Wake. By letting the case go forward, he decided the case was timely and ripe. I really think that if USAPA wins (anyone who lays a guarantee on either side winning is a fool), it will be on issue of ripeness. I don't think a reversal will include the other issues. Courts are supposed to rule on the limited law, not write new law, unless their prone to be activist courts. Don't confuse activist with being the same as liberal. Their been lots of conservative court cases that rewrote federal and state law.
Rakestraw, good-faith, bad-faith, jury instructions, what's allowed in, ligitimate union objective-that's all a bunch of hooey. I think the whole thing is ripeness. Now Clear made a very good counter to ripeness,
The entire ninth circuit appeal appears to be about ripeness. USAPA’s position is that as Seham said the knife thrust, when does the harm occur. USAPA says not until a CBA, plaintiffs position is once the intent is stated. So for all of you arm chair lawyers please justify and explain why the DFR case is not ripe but the snap back grievance is. Everyone knows that the “harm†does not occur until Jan 1, 2010. Yet USAPA went ahead and filed the grievance in July. Why was that not denied as not ripe back in July? How could that arbitration be scheduled prior to the date of harm?
Again, good point. I'd say while the pay issue wont be ripe until January, it also won't be arbitrated until after it is ripe. The grievance was denied back in July, but the company denial said USAPA was wrong on contract language, didn't mention ripeness. Ineresting point you bring up, but arbitration has a different set of rules than court cases. In the pay thing, we knew exactly when the damages would start and what they will be. Addington didn't get to make that case as counts 1 and 2 were thrown out.
So back to the one issue that I think will control the case, ripeness. One judge quoted right out of Ramey (the infamous pp 278-279),
"For these reasons we do not require nor even permit union members to bring suit against their union simply because the union has announced their future intentions to breach its duty."
Just in my opinion, for AOL to win, the 9th needs to either find a way around Ramey or outright reverse their previous Ramey decision. If AOL wins, then we got damages and court costs trials to go. If AOL loses on the narrow issue of ripeness, where are we? Injunctions gone for sure along with damage and court cost trials. $1.8 M down the tubes. Odds of finding another Don Stevens to start a new case when it does become ripe? Who knows. Actually, from the notoriety of this case, you might get someone to jump on the case. This is right down the alley of NRTW, but only if the plaintiffs are objectors. The issue of DOH being a "legitimate union objective" regarding vetoing a final and binding arbitration would still in the air. That is a battle to be fought long down the road, if there ever is a DOH contract. But remember, time is on your side. After retirements ramp up in 2012, you'll inherit the union 3 years later. A retrial maybe again will be in Wake's court, but maybe not. I don't know if you have to start it all over again, back to depos, etc, but it's still an expensive thing even if you don't. Second round, I'm sure you'll snag Bradford's testimony.
If AOAL loses on ripeness alone, they've got to look at the overreach of Wake in not just ruling initially that the case was timely, but not ripe. I'd like to hear a reason why Wake couldn't have gone that way. We can all do the what-ifs, but with a AOL loss, the biggest is what if Wake had accepted the case then put it on hold until ripe. If you lose on ripeness alone, it was Wake that wasted your money.
One more issue, arbitration results. I keep reading west posters saying the results have been poor. That's the "big lie" theory, tell a lie often enough and hope people will believe it. So far, we're 1 for 2 on TA disputes. Don't forget, ALPA wrote the TA, not USAPA. You can't count the furlough out of seniority arbitration as a USAPA loss, since that was defaulted on by West side refusal to participate. We're 1 for 2 on discipline/termination cases. The loss was a west termination before USAPA existed. There are 5 filed, awaiting. Results will speak for itself. The biggie, of course, is LOA84/93 pay, wear we rely heavy on ALPA language/intent. We'll see. Meanwhile, you get a lot more credibility sticking with truth on results, not making them up.