                                 ___________

                                 No. 95-2661
                                 ___________

Midwest Coca-Cola Bottling Co.,     *
                                    *
          Plaintiff - Appellee,     *
                                    *
      v.                            *
                                    *
                                    * Appeal from the United States
Allied Sales Drivers, Ambulance,* District Court for the
Beer, Brewery, Grain Elevator,      * District of Minnesota.
Retail Liquor, Livery, Malt         *
House, Spring Water,                *
Soft Drinks, Taxi Cab, Vending      *
Drivers, Helpers, Inside            *
Employees, and General Workers      *
Union, Local 792,                   *
                                    *
         Defendant - Appellant.     *

                                 ___________

                   Submitted:     February 16, 1996

                       Filed:    July 11, 1996
                                 ___________

Before McMILLIAN, LAY and JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judges.

                                 ___________

JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge.


     Allied Sales Drivers, Ambulance, Beer, Brewery, Grain Elevator,
Retail Liquor, Livery, Malt House, Spring Water, Soft Drinks, Taxi Cab,
Vending Drivers, Helpers, Inside Employees, and General Workers Union,
Local 792, appeals from an order of the district court vacating an
arbitrator's award that ordered Midwest Coca-Cola Bottling Company to
reinstate a discharged employee.     The Union argues that the arbitrator's
award is consistent with the collective bargaining agreement between the
Union and Coca-Cola,
and, therefore, the award should be enforced.    We reverse the judgment of
the district court and order enforcement of the arbitrator's award.


     William Thoreson worked for Coca-Cola and his employment with Coca-
Cola was governed by a collective bargaining agreement negotiated between
the Union and Coca-Cola.   The Agreement contains a management prerogatives
paragraph, giving Coca-Cola the right to make and enforce rules of conduct
and to discipline and discharge employees.1     The Agreement provides that
Coca-Cola shall not discharge an employee after he obtains seniority
without just




     1
      Article I(d) of the Agreement states:

                               ARTICLE I.
                       RECOGNITIONS AND COVERAGE

          (d)      Management Prerogatives: [Coca-Cola] has,
     retains and shall continue to possess and exercise each
     and every management right, right to function, privilege
     and authority which it had prior to the certification of
     the Union except, and only except, as specifically
     limited, relinquished, modified, or restricted by this
     Agreement. Illustrative, but not all inclusive of the
     rights of management retained are the right to manage the
     Company; to direct the work force, and to make and
     enforce rules of conduct; . . . to classify, promote,
     discipline, demote, and discharge employees; . . . .
     Subject to the terms of this agreement, rights not
     specifically set forth in the Agreement upon which the
     parties negotiated or had the opportunity to negotiate,
     whether or not such rights have been exercised by [Coca-
     Cola] in the past, remain with [Coca-Cola].

(emphasis added).

                                    -2-
cause.2     There is a grievance procedure, the last step of which is
arbitration.3



     2
         Article IV(d) of the Agreement states:

                              ARTICLE IV.
                      GENERAL WORKING CONDITIONS

          (d)     Discharge: [Coca-Cola] shall not discharge
     any employee after he has been placed on the seniority
     list without just cause.        Notice of discharge or
     suspension shall be mailed to the Union office within two
     (2) work days of occurrence. In case of discharge, such
     employee may request an investigation as to the discharge
     and should such investigation prove an injustice has been
     done, the employee shall be reinstated and compensated at
     his usual rate of pay, while he has been out of work.
     Appeal from a discharge or suspension must be taken
     within five (5) work days following notice thereof to the
     Union Steward by written notice by the Union to [Coca-
     Cola], and if a satisfactory decision is not reached by
     the Union and [Coca-Cola], it shall be settled as
     provided under Article VII of this Agreement.

          Suspension or discharges will be imposed when the
     decision to take action is made.

(emphasis added).
     3
      Articles VII(a) and (b) of the Agreement state:

                              ARTICLE VII.
                          GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE

          (a) No claimed grievance of any kind will be acted
     upon or considered valid for any reason unless filed in
     writing with [Coca-Cola] within thirty (30) days of the
     alleged violation. This shall not apply to discharge or
     suspension cases which shall be considered under Article
     IV(d).

          (b) Any controversy arising from the interpretation
     of, or adherence to the terms and provisions of this
     Agreement shall be settled promptly by negotiations
     between the Union and [Coca-Cola].     If no adjustment
     satisfactory to both parties can be reached in this way,
     then the matter shall be settled by arbitration . . . .

                                  -3-
(emphasis added).

                    -4-
       The Agreement recognizes Coca-Cola's right to make work rules for its
employees, except where this right is specifically limited, modified, or
restricted by the Agreement.      Exercising its right to make rules of
conduct, Coca-Cola required any employee who was going to be late or absent
from work to call and notify Coca-Cola thirty minutes before his scheduled
work   time.   Coca-Cola   provided    for    increasing   punishments   for   each
successive violation of its rule within a twelve-month period: a verbal
warning for the first; a written warning for the second; a three-day
suspension for the third; and discharge of the employee for the fourth
violation in twelve months.4


       Thoreson reported for work late four times from October 1993 to May
1994, and on every occasion failed to call in thirty minutes before his
scheduled time for work.     Before October 1993, Thoreson had worked for
Coca-Cola for seventeen years without a problem.


       Coca-Cola gave Thoreson a verbal warning for his first late




       4
        Coca-Cola's work rules provide:

       Violation of [work] rules will normally result in
       progressive discipline. On a first occurrence, a verbal
       warning will be issued. Second occurrence within a 12
       month period will result in a written warning.      On a
       third occurrence, the employee will be given a three (3)
       day suspension. Finally, a fourth violation will result
       in discharge.

                                      . . .

       Employees who are unable to attend work must call and
       report their absence 30 minutes prior to the time they
       are scheduled to start. "Call in" must be made every day
       to the employee's immediate supervisor, unless the
       supervisor specifically tells the employee that a call
       does not have to be made every day (as in the case of a
       long-term illness).

       In the event an employee will be late reporting for work,
       a call will be made to report the intended lateness 30
       minutes prior to the scheduled starting time.

                                      -5-
arrival to work without calling in, a written warning for his second, and
a three-day suspension for his third.    Finally, after Thoreson arrived late
for work without calling in for the fourth time in less than twelve months,
Coca-Cola discharged Thoreson.       The Union disagreed with Coca-Cola's
decision to discharge Thoreson and asked Coca-Cola to reinstate Thoreson,
but Coca-Cola refused to change its decision.


        The dispute between the Union and Coca-Cola over Thoreson's discharge
went to arbitration as required by the Agreement after the Union and Coca-
Cola failed to settle the dispute themselves.       The arbitrator found that
between October 1993 and May 1994 Thoreson had failed four times to call
Coca-Cola before his late arrival at work and that Thoreson had no good
excuse for his failures.     The arbitrator ruled, however, that Coca-Cola
should reinstate Thoreson without backpay because Thoreson had a good work
record over the seventeen years he worked for Coca-Cola before October
1993.


        Coca-Cola refused to reinstate Thoreson and brought this action in
federal district court to vacate the arbitrator's award.        The district
court stated that the arbitrator found that Thoreson had violated Coca-
Cola's work rules four times without any good excuse for doing so.       The
district court concluded that Thoreson's four violations constituted just
cause to discharge Thoreson and that the Agreement did not permit the
arbitrator to order Thoreson's reinstatement after his four unexcused
violations of Coca-Cola's work rules.       The district court vacated the
arbitrator's award, and the Union appeals.


        Our review of this arbitration award is exceptionally narrow because
Coca-Cola and the Union have contracted to have their disputes settled by
an arbitrator, and it is the arbitrator's view of the facts and the meaning
of the Agreement that they have agreed to accept.    See United Paperworkers
Int'l Union v. Misco, Inc., 484




                                     -6-
U.S. 29, 37-38 (1987).   We must enforce the arbitrator's award, even if we
think he has committed serious error, as long as he is arguably construing
or applying the Agreement and acting within the scope of his authority.
Id. at 38.    The arbitrator cannot, however, dispense his own brand of
industrial justice and his award is legitimate only so long as it draws its
essence from the Agreement.   United Steelworkers v. Enterprise Wheel & Car
Corp., 363 U.S. 593, 597 (1960).


     Coca-Cola argues that the arbitrator could not order it to reinstate
Thoreson because the Agreement permits it to make and enforce work rules
and that it properly discharged Thoreson under those rules.


     We reject Coca-Cola's argument because it fails to consider the
entirety of the applicable contract provisions.   The Agreement gives Coca-
Cola the ability to adopt and enforce work rules and to discipline and
discharge employees, and makes clear that these management rights exist
except as specifically limited, relinquished, modified or restricted by the
Agreement.   Thus, while the Agreement gives Coca-Cola the right to enforce
work rules and to discharge employees, it also provides that Coca-Cola
"shall not discharge any employee after he has been placed on the seniority
list without just cause."   These provisions of the Agreement are the basis
for the issues that were presented to the arbitrator for a decision.


     We have in earlier cases, one of which involves Coca-Cola, considered
the tension that may exist between the right to discipline and contract
provisions requiring just cause for discharge.     In Chauffeurs, Teamsters
& Helpers Local Union No. 878 v. Coca-Cola Bottling Co., 613 F.2d 716 (8th
Cir.), cert. denied, 446 U.S. 988 (1980), we rejected an argument that an
arbitrator's award reinstating an employee was unenforceable because it had
no foundation in the collective bargaining agreement.    Like the




                                    -7-
agreement in this case, the contract provided that the company could not
discharge an employee without just cause.           Id. at 718-19.       The management
rights provision, which is quite similar to the one before us, reserved to
the company the rights not "clearly and expressly relinquished" by the
specific terms of the contract, and provided that the company could
"discharge or otherwise discipline employees for cause determined to be
just by the [company]."       Id. at 719.       The Chauffeurs case specifically
involved the issue of whether "just cause" was ambiguous as to its
procedural    implications,       and   determined      that   interpretation   by     an
arbitrator was appropriate.        Id. at 719-20.       Chauffeurs is instructive in
that it examines the relationship between specific provisions of the
contract concerning management's right to discharge and just cause.


     Later,    in   Local   238     International    Brotherhood    of    Teamsters    v.
Cargill, Inc., 66 F.3d 988 (8th Cir. 1995) (per curiam), an employee was
discharged for refusing to submit to a drug and alcohol test.                         The
company's    drug   and   alcohol    policy,    which    the   collective   bargaining
agreement incorporated by reference, stated that any employee who refused
a test would be discharged.          Id. at 989-90.       The collective bargaining
agreement also stated that the company could not discharge an employee
without just cause.       Id. at 990.     An arbitrator reinstated the employee
because he concluded that there was insufficient cause to discharge the
employee.    Id. at 989.    After considering these facts we stated:


     [T]here is an inherent tension or ambiguity between the portion
     of the drug and alcohol policy which provides that if "testing
     is refused, the employee . . . will be terminated," and the
     provision in the collective bargaining agreement submitting
     drug and alcohol policy disputes to grievance and arbitration.
     Harmonizing these discordant provisions was clearly a matter
     for the arbitrator and was well within his authority.


Id. at 990.    We also observed that the arbitrator was concerned with the
question of remedy and went on to quote Misco, 484 U.S. at




                                          -8-
41, as follows:


      [T]hough the arbitrator's decision must draw its essence from
      the agreement, he `is to bring his informed judgment to bear in
      order to reach a fair solution of a problem.           This is
      especially true when it comes to formulating remedies.'


Id.


      In the case before us the Agreement specifically gives Coca-Cola the
right to make and enforce rules of conduct and to discharge.              The work
rules adopted by Coca-Cola are based on this provision in the Agreement.
Discharge, however, is limited by the clear statement that Coca-Cola "shall
not discharge any employee . . . without just cause."          Arbitration of the
issue of discharge under the Agreement of necessity involved the issue of
just cause.   As the Agreement nowhere defines just cause, the arbitrator
must interpret and decide the meaning of the Agreement with respect to its
discharge provisions.     Under the Agreement, the arbitrator was entitled to
decide that Coca-Cola did not have just cause to discharge Thoreson, and
to order Coca-Cola to reinstate Thoreson.           Insofar as there was tension
between the right to enforce work rules specifying discharge, and to
discharge only for just cause, these were issues to be resolved by the
arbitrator.    Cargill, 66 F.3d at 990.        The fact that we, the district
court,   or   Coca-Cola    may   disagree    with    the   arbitrator's   arguable
interpretation of the Agreement is of no consequence, because Coca-Cola and
the Union bargained for the arbitrator's interpretation.           See Enterprise
Wheel & Car Corp., 363 U.S. at 599.         Because the arbitrator has arguably
construed and applied the Agreement and has acted within the scope of his
authority, his award drew its essence from the Agreement.


      In support of its argument that discharge was mandated by a violation
of its work rules, Coca-Cola relies on Truck Drivers &




                                      -9-
Helpers Union Local 784 v. Ulry-Talbert Co., 330 F.2d 562 (8th Cir. 1964),
and St. Louis Theatrical Co. v. St. Louis Theatrical Brotherhood Local 6,
715 F.2d 405 (8th Cir. 1983).       The collective bargaining agreements in
those cases, however, are substantially different from the one before us.
In Ulry-Talbert, the company fired an employee for dishonesty in falsifying
his work records.   330 F.2d at 563.     The agreement gave the company the
right to discharge and discipline employees, but also provided that regular
employees may be discharged for proper cause.       Id.   Immediately following
the "proper cause" provision, the agreement listed conduct, including
dishonesty, that "shall be grounds for discharge."             Id. at 563-64.
Additionally, the agreement permitted the company to discharge employees
for dishonesty without the normally required written warning.      Id. at 564.
Further, under the agreement, an arbitrator, in considering discharges,
"shall only reverse" the decision of the company if he "finds that the
Company's complaint against the employee is not supported by the facts, and
that the management has acted arbitrarily and in bad faith or in violation
of the express terms of this Agreement."      Id.    Because the agreement in
Ulry-Talbert specifically modified the requirement of proper cause for
discharge by stating dishonesty "shall be grounds for discharge," and
limited the arbitrator to deciding whether the company's complaint was
supported by the facts, Ulry-Talbert gives no support to Coca-Cola.


     Further, this is not a case such as St. Louis Theatrical, where a
company discharged an employee for an unauthorized work stoppage.           The
collective bargaining agreement in St. Louis Theatrical stated that any
employee discharged for participating in an unauthorized work stoppage
"shall have no recourse to any other provisions of this Agreement except
as to the fact of participation."    715 F.2d at 407-08.      We held that once
the arbitrator found that the employee participated in the work stoppage
and was thus subject to discipline, any consideration as to whether the
discharge was an excessive penalty exceeded his




                                     -10-
authority.    Id. at 408-09.   Again, because the agreement in St. Louis
Theatrical limited the arbitrator's authority in a way that the agreement
in this case does not, St. Louis Theatrical gives no support to Coca-Cola.
     Coca-Cola's argument, at the core, is that the work rules trump the
Agreement.   We reject this argument.


     Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and order
enforcement of the arbitrator's award.


     A true copy.


             Attest:


                  CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.




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