Supreme Court granted plaintiffs' petition to enjoin AFSCME's Local 983 from
holding the duly scheduled election and directed Local 983 to provide a plan,
to be reviewed by Plaintiffs for a future election within 30 days. The
Appellate Division unanimously reversed the Supreme Court's ruling and
dismissed Plaintiff's petition.
The Appellate Division opined that Supreme Court had "improvidently
exercised its discretion to enjoin [Local 983] from proceeding with their
scheduled election," explaining that as Local 983 is an unincorporated
association, the Plaintiff's petition fails because it does not plead
"that each individual union member authorized or ratified the [allegedly]
unlawful actions", citing Matter of Agramonte v Local 461, Dist. Council 37, Am. Fedn.
of State County and Mun. Empls., 209 AD3d 478, and other authorities
including Martin v Curran, 303 NY 276.
Further, said the Appellate Division, "even had the Martin requirement
not applied, [Plaintiffs] failed to exhaust their contractual remedies before
bringing this action," noting AFSCME's constitution prohibits members from
instituting a civil action without first availing themselves of the remedies in
its constitution. The remedies available to Plaintiffs' include a procedure to
challenge the conduct of an election so that a protesting party has an
opportunity to be heard.
The decision also points out that provisions of AFSCME's constitution allow
petitioners to "appeal an adverse determination to a judicial panel, then
to a full judicial panel, and then again to an international convention." In
addition, the Appellate Division commented that the Union's
constitution "also gives the union the authority to set aside an election
outcome and hold a new election upon a finding of a violation."
In the words of the Appellate Division "Petitioners have not advanced a
sufficient reason to excuse them from exhausting that remedial process."
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access the Appellate Division's decision posted on the Internet.