Opinion
Docket No. 169900.
Submitted October 10, 1995, at Grand Rapids.
Decided June 14, 1996, at 9:05 A.M. Leave to appeal sought.
Taglia, Fette, Dumke, Passaro Kahne, P.C. (by Thomas R. Fette), for the Berrien County Probate Judges.
Thomas K. Byerley, Berrien County Corporation Counsel, for Berrien County.
Miller, Cohen, Martens, Ice Geary, P.C. (by Stuart M. Israel and Georgi-Ann Oshagan), for the defendants.
Defendants appeal from an order of the circuit court vacating an arbitrator's original award in this labor dispute. The dispute in this case is whether two governmental units from different branches of government can be joint employers. We find that they cannot be joint employers and we affirm the circuit court's order.
I
The Berrien County Probate Court operated a juvenile detention home in a building owned by Berrien County. The two maintenance workers for the building were employed by the probate court and were represented by defendants. When it was decided that the probate court should no longer be responsible for maintenance of the building, the chief judge was concerned about the continued employment of the two maintenance workers. He contacted the county in order to determine if the two employees could keep their jobs, albeit as employees of the county. To that end, the county engaged in negotiations with its union, the Teamsters, and obtained certain concessions that allowed the two maintenance employees to enter county employment as members of the Teamsters union. The employees were then laid off by the probate court and rehired by the county to provide maintenance work at the same building.
Defendants claimed that this process breached their collective bargaining agreement with the probate court. Defendants considered the transaction a sham, claiming that it was simply a ruse to switch the two workers to a different union in violation of the collective bargaining agreement between the court and defendants. Accordingly, defendants initiated a grievance procedure to protest the process.
Defendants' grievance ultimately went to arbitration. The arbitrator determined that the transaction involving the employees did constitute a breach of defendants' collective bargaining agreement. Neither party appeals this determination.
The arbitrator then determined that the probate court and the county were joint employers of the two maintenance workers. The arbitrator based his decision on a number of factors relating to the arrangement agreed to by the county and the court: (1) probate court employees are subject to policies and procedures formulated by the county, (2) the county provides personnel, payroll, and labor-related services to the probate court, and (3) the ultimate decision regarding the employees in this case was reached jointly by the county and the probate judges. The arbitrator then ordered the employees in question to be restored as members of defendants, pursuant to the agreement between defendants and the probate court, which agreement, according to the arbitrator, included the county.
The probate judges then appealed this ruling to the circuit court, arguing, among other things, that the arbitrator exceeded his authority in finding the county and the probate court to be joint employers because that finding violates the separation of powers doctrine. The circuit court agreed, and remanded the matter to the arbitrator to fashion a remedy that did not include the county.
On remand, the arbitrator ordered the probate judges to pay back union dues owed to defendants on behalf of the two maintenance workers.
II A
This Court's review of an arbitrator's award is very limited. We may not pass on the findings of fact or conclusions of the arbitrator reached on the merits of the case. Port Huron Area School Dist v. Port Huron Ed Ass'n, 426 Mich. 143, 150; 393 N.W.2d 811 (1986). We determine whether the arbitrator exceeded his contractual authority, or whether he made an error of law on a controlling issue that is apparent on the face of the award. DAIIE v. Gavin, 416 Mich. 407; 331 N.W.2d 418 (1982). For an error of law to warrant reversal of an arbitrator's opinion, it must have been so material or substantial as to have governed the award. Id. at 443.
B
The circuit court's determination in this matter was made in response to a motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10). Therefore, our review of that determination is de novo. See Kentwood Public Schools v. Kent Co Ed Ass'n, 206 Mich. App. 161, 164; 520 N.W.2d 682 (1994).
III
At the outset, we note that we are not deciding whether the arbitrator properly applied the joint-employer doctrine to the facts of this case in the abstract. The issue before us is much more narrow and limited: whether the joint-employer doctrine is applicable when the parties are two distinct governmental units, here the probate court and the county, each a member of a different branch of government. hold that it is not applicable in that situation.
The joint-employer doctrine is used to enforce a collectively bargained agreement against a non-signatory when the four general characteristics of an employer are met: (1) the power to select and engage the employee, (2) payment of wages, (3) the power of dismissal, and (4) power and control over the employee's conduct. Michigan Council 25, AFSCME v. Louisiana Homes, Inc, 192 Mich. App. 187, 190; 480 N.W.2d 280 (1991), vacated and remanded 441 Mich. 883 (1992), reaffirmed (On Remand), 203 Mich. App. 213; 511 N.W.2d 696 (1994). We are somewhat at a loss to understand why the arbitrator employed the joint-employer doctrine to initially decide this case because he had full authority to fashion a remedy within the four comers of the collective bargaining agreement. However, the issue having been raised and decided by the circuit court, we must now address it.
A
This Court has already determined that for the purposes of collective bargaining, probate court employees are not employees of the county in which the probate court exists; they are employees exclusively of the court. Cameron v. Monroe Co Probate Court, 214 Mich. App. 681; 543 N.W.2d 71 (1995). Thus, any decision that holds the county to be an employer of the probate court employees is in error.
B
Further, we cannot agree with defendants' argument that the probate court and the county, by sharing certain services, implicitly agreed to act as joint employers, thereby waiving the legal status of probate court employees as employees of the court only. We agree with the circuit court that such a result would violate the separation of governmental powers doctrine.
1
Our constitution provides:
The powers of government are divided into three branches: legislative, executive and judicial. No person exercising powers of one branch shall exercise powers properly belonging to another branch except as expressly provided in this constitution. [Const 1963, art 3, § 2.]
Although not all overlap in governmental functions is barred, People v. Trinity, 189 Mich. App. 19, 22-23; 471 N.W.2d 626 (1991), intergovernmental sharing of power is permissible only where the area of one branch's exercise of another branch's power is very limited and specific. Id. at 23.
2
The application of the joint-employer doctrine to merge the county and the probate court into one employer threatens to disrupt the delicate balance between the judiciary's right to control its employees and the county's responsibility to fund the courts. See Wayne Circuit Judges v. Wayne Co, 386 Mich. 1; 190 N.W.2d 228 (1971). The potential for overreaching by the county in directing the affairs of the judiciary, or by the judiciary in compelling the county to appropriate funds, is too great; one branch of government would not be properly limited from exercising the power of the other, thereby eliminating the necessary distinction between the two branches for collective bargaining purposes.
Thus, applying the joint-employer doctrine in the present context would impermissibly allow the county to exercise the powers of the probate court and the probate court to exercise the powers of the county. See Wayne Circuit Judges, supra; Cameron, supra.
3
We hold that the joint-employer doctrine may not be applied to merge two distinct governmental units — one a part of the judicial branch of government, the other clearly not — into a single employer for the purposes of public employment.
While the probate court is clearly a part of the judicial branch of government, the county is not. Counties are established in the constitution and derive their powers from the Legislature, having no general or inherent powers. They perform no judicial functions. Const 1963, art 7, § 1. Crain v Gibson, 73 Mich. App. 192, 200; 250 N.W.2d 792 (1977).
Affirmed.