Opinion
Docket No. 57986.
Decided October 5, 1982.
Touma, Watson, Nicholson, Fletcher DeGrow (by Gary A. Fletcher), for plaintiff.
Levin, Levin, Garvett Dill (by Erwin B. Ellmann, Robert J. Finkel and Eli Grier), for defendant.
Defendant Port Huron Education Association (PHEA) appeals as of right an order by the circuit court declaring that the emergency actions taken by plaintiff Port Huron Area School District (PHASD) in March, 1979, did not violate the 1978-1980 collective-bargaining agreement between the two parties.
This opinion will address the proper construction of the term "financial resources" in the context of a collective-bargaining agreement.
On March 19, 1979, PHASD Superintendent James Burchyett recommended that the PHASD Board of Education resolve that the district faced a financial emergency for the 1979-1980 school year. Accordingly, on March 26, 1979, the board passed such a resolution.
The PHASD's March, 1979, budget estimate for the 1979-1980 school year showed potential operating expenses of $29,115,000 and projected revenues of $27,688,000. Thus, there was a predicted budget deficit of $1,427,000. However, the revenue figures did not include the projected estimate of fund equity — $875,000 — remaining after the 1978-1979 school year.
Due to the financial emergency called by the board, many PHEA members received layoff notices dated April 18, 1979. As a result, on May 9, 1979, the PHEA filed a grievance alleging that the emergency resolution and subsequent layoffs constituted a clear violation of art 2, § 3 of the collective-bargaining agreement. The dispute eventually made its way into the court system.
We set forth below the critical language of the collective-bargaining agreement:
"A. It is recognized that a substantial reduction of student membership or financial resources may occur at any time. Either of these reductions, if substantial, may require a General Staff Reduction. It is further recognized that while a substantial reduction of student membership will necessitate a General Staff Reduction, such a staff reduction would be proportionate and therefore could be carried out without violation of the class size provisions in Article V, Paragraph I. It is further recognized that a substantial reduction of financial resources could necessitate a General Staff Reduction which would make Article V, Paragraph I, inoperative either in whole or in part.
"B. While a membership or financial emergency may occur at any time the Board's decision to declare an emergency shall be for a specific school year. Continuation of an emergency shall be by Board action.
"C. It is also expressly understood that any and all initial millage requests by the District during the life of this Agreement will, when combined with state and Federal aid, meet the express terms and conditions of this Agreement." (Emphasis added.)
These provisions define the circumstances under which the PHASD may declare the existence of an emergency. PHASD contends, and the circuit court found, that a substantial reduction of financial resources had occurred. In making this decision, the circuit court ruled that a determination of the PHASD's "financial resources" required consideration not only of the funds available for expenditure by the PHASD, but also of the projected expenditures. In other words, the court concluded that the term "financial resources" meant the difference between projected revenues and projected expenses.
On appeal, PHEA contends that the circuit court's definition of "financial resources" was erroneous. We agree.
We are convinced that the plain meaning of the term "financial resources" is "assets". A "resource" is the amount of a particular commodity available for consumption. If our government expected to have a million barrels of oil available for use by the armed forces in a given year, but expected the army to consume 999,999 barrels, we would be most surprised to hear our government announce that our military oil resources consist of only one barrel of oil. We simply cannot agree with PHASD's contention that "resources" means "surplus".
The circumstances surrounding the agreement provide support for the above conclusion. A reduction in projected surplus would frequently bear little or no relation to the necessity to declare an emergency. For example, if the 1978-1979 surplus had been $10,000, but the 1979-1980 surplus was estimated at $1,000, did the parties intend that the board should be empowered to lay off personnel? We hardly think so, even though a 90% reduction is surely "substantial".
We hold that the term "financial resources" means the funds — assets, expected revenues, etc. — available for expenditure by the PHASD in a given year. The voluminous collective-bargaining agreement was drafted after lengthy negotiations between two countervailing powers, and we are not convinced that the PHEA would have signed the agreement if the PHASD had insisted upon substituting the term "surplus" for "resources".
The record shows that there was no "reduction in financial resources" under the standard set forth above. We therefore reverse and remand this case to the circuit court for further proceedings in light of this opinion.
PHASD argues that interpretation of the term "financial resources" in the manner urged by the PHEA will impose an absurd or impossible condition on the PHASD. Although courts will not interpret a contract in a manner which would impose an absurd or impossible condition upon one of the parties, Wembleton Development Co v Travelers Ins Co, 45 Mich. App. 168, 172; 206 N.W.2d 222 (1973), we cannot agree that our interpretation of the contract can be properly characterized as such. The trial court's calculations showed only a 1% reduction in projected resources, even when projected expenses were taken into account. Under the circumstances, we find this reduction insubstantial.
Finally, we reject PHEA's contention that the trial court erred in finding that a substantial reduction of student membership had occurred. The court properly found that this substantial reduction justified the PHASD's layoff of 41 teachers. PHEA argues that the PHASD should be estopped from asserting that this decline in student enrollment justified its action inasmuch as the board did not assert such a justification when it announced the existence of an emergency. We disagree. The superintendent stated, in his answer to the grievance filed by the PHEA, that the board's action was justified by a substantial reduction in student membership as well as a substantial reduction in financial resources. We find the superintendent's response sufficient to preclude the PHEA's estoppel claim.
Reversed and remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. No costs, neither party having prevailed in full. We do not retain jurisdiction.