A.E. ALCORN; Z.H. Lewellen; R.E. Carlson; R.V. Yates;
T.W. Neihart; L.J. Meehan; L.C. Yates; J.R.
Thorstenson; B. Galbreck; R.R. Hemley;
R. Koch; and M. Anderson, Appellants,
v.
The BURLINGTON NORTHERN RAILROAD COMPANY, a Corporation;
and the International Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers, a Labor Union, Appellees.
No. 88-2412NE.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted May 10, 1989.
Decided July 10, 1989.
Louis Thrasher, Lincoln, Neb., for appellants.
Harold A. Ross, Cleveland, Ohio and Thomas J. Knapp, Fort Worth, Tex., for appellees.
Before JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge, MARKEY,* Chief Judge, and HENLEY, Senior Circuit Judge.
MARKEY, Chief Judge.
A.E. Alcorn, Z.H. Lewellen, R.E. Carlson, R.V. Yates, T.W. Neihart, L.J. Meehan, L.C. Yates, J.R. Thorstenson, B. Galbreсk, R.R. Hemley, R. Koch, and M. Anderson (collectively appellants) appeal from the district court's1 dismissal of their complaint. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In the late 1970's, two major midwestern railroads, the Chicago, Roсk Island and Pacific Railroad (Rock Island) and the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Company (Milwaukee), declared bankruptcy. On March 4, 1980, sevеral railroads and unions, including the Burlington Northern Railroad Company (Burlington) and the International Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers (IBLE), negotiated an agreement (March 4th Agreement) to ease reorganization of the bankrupts. See Beardsly v. Chicago & N.W. Transp. Co.,
In April 1982, Burlington acquired rights to operate a route through South Dakota formerly operated by Milwaukee. On October 22, 1982, Burlington and IBLE signed an implemеnting agreement allowing former Milwaukee engineers to use, for a period of six-years, their Milwaukee-accumulated seniority in securing and holding positions at Burlingtоn. That agreement provided that after July 1, 1988, their seniority would be measured from the date of employment with Burlington.
The appellants are former Milwaukee employees and members of IBLE hired by Burlington between 1982 and 1984. On June 24, 1988, appellants filed a complaint and moved for a temporary restraining order (TRO) against measuremеnt of seniority from the date of employment with Burlington. Appellants claimed that: (1) their interests were not fairly protected by Burlington and IBLE during the implementing agreement negotiations; and (2) their complaints to IBLE regarding the seniority provision were not fairly pursued through a grievance/arbitration procedure. Under Beardsly, say appellants, they are entitled now to arbitration, even if their claim of unfair representation is barred.
The district court dismissed the claims and denied the motion for TRO, аccompanying its orders with a memorandum opinion in which it applied the six-month statute of limitations, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 160(b), borrowed and applied in DelCostello v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters,
Regarding the claim of unfair representation, the court said:
Several witnesses testified that the plaintiffs knew of the difference between their understanding of what the October 22nd agreement said and what it in truth said by late 1982, or at the latest in 1983. Certainly their claims based upon a theory of unfair representation at the negotiations for the October 22nd agreement accrued as of sometime in 1983. Because more than six months has past since 1983, I must find that the limitations period on that claim has run. Thus, this court has no jurisdiction to consider the merits of that claim.
Regarding the claim to arbitration, the court distinguished Beardsly saying:
I do not feel compelled to follow the analysis and holding of Beardsley (sic, Beardsly ) for several reasons. First, it seems likely, though the opinion is not entirely clear on this point, that the Beardsley engineers never sought arbitration and that, in fact, they may have beеn unaware of their right to seek arbitration under the March 4th agreement. See Beardsley [,
Unlike the Beardsley engineers, the plaintiffs' claim about the union's refusal to pursue their grievances clearly states a claim such as was envisioned by the Del Costello Court. The Del Costello Court acknowledged that claims of unfаir representation could arise in situations in which the union refused to pursue its members' grievances to arbitration or in which the union refused to pursue its members' complaints through the preliminary stages of a grievance procedure. [
A. Unfair Representation Claim
The district court correctly held that the six-month limitations period applied in DelCostello barred appellants' unfair representation claim. See Beardsly,
The district court correctly found that appellants' unfair representation claim accrued upon their discovery, in 1983, that they did not have lifetime seniority under the implementing agreement. Appellants challenge that finding, citing an indication in an earlier opinion in the Beardsly case that this court was concerned not with plaintiffs' awareness but with unfair representation. The argument is unavailing because that earlier opinion was vacated аnd revised, the language on which appellants rely being removed. Beardsly v. Chicago & N.W. Transp. Co.,
B. Claim to Arbitration
The district court correctly held the six-month limitation applicable to appellants' claim to arbitration and correctly distinguished Beardsly in relation to that claim.
The evidence indicating that appellants were aware оf their right to arbitrate was not the sole basis for the district court's finding that their claim to arbitration had accrued more than six-months before they filed their complaint in сourt. The district court found that that claim accrued when appellants became aware in 1984 that the IBLE would not thereafter pursue their complaint through a grievance or arbitration procedure. That conclusion is a correct statement of law as applied here, where, unlike the circumstances in Beardsly, appellants were confronted with an express refusal of IBLE to act on their demands.
A limitations period accrues when a claimant knows, or shоuld know through an exercise of reasonable diligence, of the acts constituting the alleged violation. See Dowty v. Pioneer Rural Elec. Coop.,
In sum, the district court's dismissal of appellants' claims against IBLE and Burlington was proper because those claims are barred, having accrued more than six-months before suit was brought. See Lincoln,
