Reisman v. Associated Faculties of the Univ. of Me.
Reisman v. Associated Faculties of the Univ. of Me.
Opinion of the Court
Jonathan Reisman, a professor at the University of Maine at Machias, challenges a state law which authorizes a faculty union elected by a majority of employees, to bargain collectively and exclusively on behalf of all employees as a violation of his First Amendment rights of speech and association. Reisman has moved for a preliminary injunction that would enjoin the Associated Faculties of the University of Maine, the union that represents Maine's public university faculty, from holding itself out as his representative, and that would enjoin the board of the University of Maine System from regarding the union as his representative and agent. The Defendants have moved to dismiss Reisman's complaint under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.
I. BACKGROUND
The University of Maine System Labor Relations Act (the "Act"), 26 M.R.S.A. § 1021, et seq. (West 2018), establishes the collective bargaining rights of the employees of Maine's public institutions of higher education. Plaintiff Jonathan Reisman is one such employee, serving as a professor of economics at the University of Maine at Machias (the "University"). He contends that the Act violates his First Amendment rights of free speech and association by *175enabling the Defendant Associated Faculties of the University of Maine (the "Union"), having been elected by a majority of employees as the bargaining agent, to bargain collectively and exclusively on behalf of all employees who comprise the bargaining unit. Reisman is not, however, a member of the Union and he disagrees with its positions on various issues of public import.
The Act provides that a majority of employees in a bargaining unit may choose to be represented by a union for purposes of collective bargaining with the University regarding "wages, hours, working conditions and contract grievance arbitration." 26 M.R.S.A. §§ 1025, 1026(1)(C). Employees are not required to be union members. Id. at §§ 1023(2), 1027(1)(G). A union that receives the majority of the votes is certified and "recognized by the [U]niversity ... as the sole and exclusive bargaining agent for all of the employees in the bargaining unit." Id. at § 1025(2)(B). Such a union "is required to represent all the [U]niversity ... employees within the unit without regard to membership in the organization certified as bargaining agent." Id. at § 1025(2)(E).
Reisman seeks a preliminary injunction under Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(a) that would enjoin the Union from holding itself out as his representative, and also enjoin the Defendant Board of Trustees of the University of Maine System (the "Board") from treating the Union as his representative and agent. In response, the Union, the Board and the University, along with the intervenor Attorney General of the State of Maine ("Maine"), move to dismiss Reisman's complaint under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failing to state a claim. Because I conclude that Reisman's complaint fails to state a claim, I deny his motion for a preliminary injunction, grant the Union's, the University and the Board's, and the State's motions to dismiss, and order the dismissal of this case.
II. ANALYSIS
To survive a motion to dismiss, the complaint "must contain sufficient factual matter to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face." Rodríguez-Reyes v. Molina-Rodríguez ,
Reisman argues that the Act imposes on him "a government-appointed lobbyist who attempts to influence government on his behalf and in his name, as his agent and representative, even though he disagrees with the positions it attributes to him." ECF No. 5 at 7. This, he contends, gives rise to two First Amendment violations: First, Reisman contends that the Act violates his right to free speech because it effectively compels him to speak on matters from which he chooses to refrain from speaking. See Wooley v. Maynard ,
Stated succinctly, Reisman's constitutional challenge to the Act is that by establishing the Union as the exclusive bargaining agent of the University's professors, the Act violates his First Amendment right of free speech and association by depriving him of the right to "decide what not to say" and by placing him in an agency relationship with the Union, thereby forcing him into an unwanted expressive association. ECF No. 38 at 5.
The Union, the University and the Board, and the State all contend that Reisman's constitutional arguments are contrary to established precedent of the Supreme Court and the First Circuit Court of Appeals: Minn. State Bd. for Cmty. Colleges v. Knight ,
Knight involved a challenge by college instructors to a Minnesota law mandating that a union representative selected as their exclusive bargaining agent concerning "the terms and conditions of employment" also be their exclusive agent in "meet and confer" sessions with school officials covering other matters outside the scope of mandatory union negotiations.
Reisman attempts to distinguish Knight , arguing that Knight only addresses associational exclusion because the Minnesota statute denied professors the opportunity to speak at "meet and confer" sessions, while his challenge to the Act is broader because the Act compels him to associate and speak against his beliefs. ECF No. 38 at 14. The Knight decision, however, is not so narrow. The Court explained that "[t]he state has in no way restrained appellees' freedom to speak on any education-related issue or their freedom to associate or not to associate with whom they please, including the exclusive representative." Knight ,
In D'Agostino , the First Circuit, relying in part on Knight , affirmed the dismissal of a complaint under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) which challenged a statutory scheme which-like the one at issue here-authorized exclusive representation in collective bargaining for public employees.
As previously noted, however, Reisman also argues that Knight and D'Agostino are no longer valid in light of the Supreme Court's recent ruling in Janus . Specifically, Reisman argues that by stating in Janus "that a union serv[ing] as exclusive bargaining agent for its employees [is] itself a significant impingement on associational freedoms that would not be tolerated in other contexts," the Court indicated for the first time that collective bargaining statutes do burden First Amendment rights and must therefore pass some level of heightened scrutiny.
In Janus , the Supreme Court held that statutes that compel the payment of agency fees to a union that serves as the exclusive bargaining agent for all employees-both union members and non-members-violate the First Amendment rights of the non-member employees by compelling them to subsidize the union's private speech.
*178Reisman also contends that the Knight and D'Agostino decisions should be reconsidered because they did not apply the heightened level of judicial review-"exacting scrutiny"-which Janus indicates should be applied.
Accordingly, Janus did not overrule or unsettle the Knight or D'Agostino decisions, both of which are binding precedent. The other courts which have addressed the same or similar questions since the Supreme Court's decision in Janus have reached the same conclusion. In Bierman v. Dayton ,
Reisman contends that by challenging the Act's constitutionality he does not seek to prevent the Union and the Board from continuing to negotiate the terms and conditions of employment and "to apply the terms of its collective bargaining agreement to all bargaining-unit members." ECF No. 38 at 2. Rather, he challenges the Act because, as he characterizes it, the Act unlawfully "permits the Board to appoint *179the Union as [his] unwanted representative and agent so that it can speak on his behalf on many issues of substantial public concern." ECF No. 38 at 3. This argument mischaracterizes the Act's requirements and effect.
Under the Act, the Union was not, as Reisman asserts, appointed by the Board as his representative and agent. Instead, it was selected by a majority vote of the employees to serve as their bargaining-unit's agent. 26 M.R.S.A. § 1025. And by authorizing the Union, in its role as the agent for the bargaining-unit, to negotiate with the Board on matters related to the terms and conditions of employment, id. at § 1025(2)(B), the Act does not cloak the Union with the authority to speak on issues of public concern on behalf of employees, such as Reisman, who do not belong to the Union. Reisman remains free to speak out in opposition to the Union and its positions as he sees fit. His constitutional challenge to the Act thus rests on a fundamental misconception. The Union is not, as Reisman appears to believe, his individual agent. Rather, the Union is the agent for the bargaining-unit which is a distinct entity separate from the individual employees who comprise it. Because the Union is not Reisman's agent, representative, or spokesperson, the Act does not compel him, in violation of the First Amendment, to engage in speech or maintain an association with which he disagrees.
III. CONCLUSION
For the preceding reasons, I conclude that Reisman's complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted arising from the Act's alleged infringement of his First Amendment Rights. The Defendants' motions to dismiss (ECF Nos. 30, 33, 34) are therefore GRANTED . Consequently, Reisman has failed to demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits of his claims, the key requirement for obtaining a preliminary injunction. "The sine qua non of [the preliminary injunction] inquiry is likelihood of success on the merits: if the moving party cannot demonstrate that he is likely to succeed in his quest, the remaining factors become matters of idle curiosity." New Comm Wireless Servs., Inc. v. SprintCom, Inc. ,
SO ORDERED.
The Janus decision assumed that "labor peace," meaning the "avoidance of the conflict and disruption that [Abood ] envisioned would occur if the employees in a unit were represented by more than one union," is a compelling state interest.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jonathan REISMAN v. ASSOCIATED FACULTIES OF the UNIVERSITY OF MAINE, University of Maine at Machias, and the Board of Trustees of the University of Maine System, and State of Maine, Intervenor.
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published