FACTS
Plaintiffs Alice Leach and Carmen Irons are employees of Pan American World Airways, Inc.; defendant Teamsters Local 769 represents them before their employer. The two claim that the Department of Labor has declared them to be handicapped as a result of their extreme physical reactions to smoke in the workplace. Pursuant to the Railway Labor Act, Local 769 presented the employees’ claims to the System Board of Adjustment: both plaintiffs insist this representation was flawed because the union did not present the grievances in the manner they requested of it, and because the union did not allow them to choose whether they would rather represent themselves.
After the System Board deadlocked over the claims of Leach and Irons, the union presented Irons’ claim to a neutral arbitrator. Leach asserts that she signed an agreement with Pan Américan and Local 769 to allow her grievance to be presented at the same hearing; at the hearing, however, Local 769 withdrew Leach’s claim when Pan American objected to its introduction. Leach contends she should have been notified before Local 769 breached the agreement.
Irons lost her claim at arbitration. Leach never received a definitive answer as to her grievance. Both women filed charges against Local 769 according to the Teamsters’ internal procedures. An internal board exonerated Local 769, and the plaintiffs brought their claims to federal court, seeking to overturn the arbitration award and to recover damages for Local 769’s breach of its duty of fair representation. The complaint named Pan American, Local 769, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, and the Georgia-Florida Conference of Teamsters as defendants.
The present appeal poses the single and deceptively simple question of whether Leach and Irons are entitled to a jury trial of their claim that the union breached its duty to represent them fairly. The district court,
THE DESTRUCTION OF COX
Cox
expressly concluded that a discharged employee could obtain a jury trial for his claim that the union failed to represent him fairly.
Cox,
The panel in
Cox
analyzed the question of whether to grant a jury trial by applying the three-pronged test supplied by the Supreme Court in
Ross v. Bernhard,
The
Cox
court summarily addressed the second two prongs of
Ross,
explaining that the plaintiffs sought the traditional legal remedy of compensatory and punitive damages, and that juries “could adequately” adjudge the merits of disputes over the duty of fair representation.
Cox,
Since the panel decided
Cox,
two Supreme Court cases have eroded the rationale on which the panel constructed its decision.
2
In
United Parcel Serv., Inc. v. Mitchell,
Respondent suggests Hines actions might also be characterized as actions upon a statute, personal injury actions, or malpractice actions, all governed by a 3-year limitations period in New York.... All of these characterizations suffer from the same flaw as the effort to characterize the action as one for breach of contract: they overlook the fact that an arbitration award stands between the employee and any relief which may be awarded against the company.
Mitchell,
A second Supreme Court decision toppled what remained of the
Cox
analysis. In
DelCostello v. International Broth. of Teamsters,
Mitchell
and
DelCostello
also have undermined the reasoning the
Cox
panel used to assert that cases such as this one meet the second factor set forth in
Ross. Cox
stated that in cases such as the one at issue here plaintiffs seek only the traditional legal remedy of compensatory and punitive damages from the defendant union.
DelCostello
explained, however, that the claim against the union is “inextricably interdependent,”
DelCostello,
462 U.S. at
*288
164-65,
Leach’s and Irons’ claim against the employer seeks vacation of the arbitration award, 5 a de novo hearing of the merits of plaintiffs’ claims, and “fair and adequate” equitable relief for the plaintiffs. 6 None of the remedies sought by plaintiffs constitutionally merits a jury trial. Now that the Supreme Court has established that the remedies for that portion of plaintiffs’ suit directed at the employer are clearly equitable, and that the two parts of the claim are “inextricably intertwined,” we can no longer rely on Cox’s conclusion that the remedies sought by the plaintiffs against the union are legal ones.
Furthermore, the Supreme Court has limited the scope of damages awarded to employees victorious in fair representation cases. Stressing that the purpose of relief in these cases is “to make the injured employee whole,”
International Bro. of Electrical Wkrs. v. Foust,
As to
Cox’s
determination that juries would be able to adequately deal with the issues at stake in breach of duty of fair representation cases, we note that at least two courts, including this one, have questioned whether the third tenet of
Ross
retains any vitality in light of the fact that the Supreme Court has several times considered the right to a jury trial without analyzing or even mentioning the third factor.
Phillips v. Kaplus,
Cox having been implicitly destroyed by recent Supreme Court cases, this panel has no choice but to reconsider the question of whether plaintiffs have a right to a jury trial when they sue a union for the breach of the duty of fair representation.
PLAINTIFFS HAVE NO RIGHT TO A JURY TRIAL
DelCostello and Mitchell have not only undermined Cox; they have also dictated the answer we must give to the question of whether plaintiffs constitutionally deserve a jury trial in their suit against their union *289 for the alleged breach of its duty to represent them fairly. 7
In
DelCostello
the Court determined that the inadequacy of state law analogies, coupled with the overriding importance of national interests in federal labor policy, permitted it to ignore state law and choose the federal law it believed most appropriate, We reach a similar conclusion here. The need for uniformity and predictability in federal labor policy, when combined with the ill fit of any state law analogy for an action for breach of the duty of fair representation, leads us to eschew any analogy other than one to an unfair labor practice charge.
8
While the Supreme Court has
*290
never held that an action against a union for the breach of the duty of fair representation is an unfair labor practice, it has observed that: “the family resemblance is undeniable.”
DelCostello,
While fair representation actions do not resemble any particular actions at either law or equity, we note that from their inception they have embodied certain traditional notions associated with equity jurisdiction. Equity has been defined as “justice, that is, as ascertained by natural reason or ethical insight, but independent of the formulated body of law.”
Black’s Law Dictionary
634 (4th Ed.1951). The action for the breach of the duty of fair representation actually was implied by the Supreme Court from the statutory exclusivity of the bargaining agent. The Court reasoned that the duty arose from a “fair interpretation of the statutory language” and the “principle of general application that the exercise of a granted power to act in behalf of others involves the assumption toward them of a duty to exercise the power in their interest and behalf.”
Steele,
Mitchell
and
DelCostello
likewise control our decision as to whether plaintiffs’ request for a jury trial meets
Ross
factor number two. If the suit against the employer is “inextricably intertwined” with that against the union, then we cannot separate the remedies and the trial procedures in the two claims, declaring one set equitable and the other legal.
Cf. Phillips,
As to the third prong of
Boss,
without commenting on its current importance within the
Ross
structure we note that if juries can decide these claims “adequately,”
Cox,
Cox having been invalidated, the district court opinion based on Cox is
REVERSED.
Notes
. Congress, should it so desire, could establish the right to a jury trial in post-merger cases based on congressional statutes. The appellees, however, do not contend that Congress has attempted statutorily to grant the right to a jury. Appellees concede that the action for breach of the duty of fair representation was judicially created,
see Steele v. Louisville & N.R. Co.,
. While both cases were decided under the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 141-187, and Leach and Irons are suing under the Railway Labor Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 151— 188, for purposes of fair representation suits courts have refused to distinguish the two acts.
See, e.g., Ford Motor Co. v. Huffman,
. As the Sixth Circuit has explained: "[p]erhaps the most vital part of the analysis in
Mitchell
was the Court's recognition that Section 301 [29 U.S.C. § 185] claims are neither standard contract nor standard tort actions.”
Badon v. General Motors Corp.,
. In both DelCostello and Mitchell an employee sued his former employer for wrongful termination and his union for breach of its duty to fairly represent him. In Mitchell the Court analogized the action to one to vacate an arbitration award, and applied New York’s 90-day statute of limitations for such actions. In Del-Costello the Court considered two additional questions: what state statute of limitations should govern the claim against the union (as opposed to the employer), and whether or not to borrow a federal rather than a state statute of limitations. The Court again refused to draw an analogy to an action for a breach of contract, and additionally declined to analogize to either an action to vacate an arbitration award or to an action for legal malpractice. The Court concluded that in this situation no state law analogy adequately addressed the unique concerns of federal labor law, and borrowed the statute found in the National Labor Relations Act at 29 U.S.C. § 160(b).
.
See Skidmore v. Consolidated Rail Corp.,
. Specifically, plaintiffs claim: “the loss of employment benefits, protection under the collective bargaining agreement, and their ex-penses_" Rl-21-9, 10, 12.
. We realize that the Fifth Circuit has applied
Cox
since
DelCostello
and
Mitchell
were decided.
See Roscello v. Southwest Airlines Co.,
We also recognize that our conclusion differs from that reached by the D.C. Circuit.
See Quinn
v.
DiGiulian,
The D.C. Circuit correctly noted that Cox sought only damages from his former employer and union. It concluded that it could not depart from the
Cox
rule merely because a plaintiff sought equitable remedies as well as legal ones.
See Beacon Theatres, Inc.
v.
Westover,
We disagree with the
Quinn
conclusion for two reasons. First, we believe the federal policies at stake in labor law constitute the "imperative circumstances” to which
Beacon Theatres
referred. Secondly and independently, the Supreme Court has explained that monetary damages do not necessarily constitute a legal remedy,
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Southern Pac. Co.,
Finally, although as we have explained we do not find the distinction relevant, we observe that this case differs from both Quinn and Cox because these plaintiffs seek to vacate an arbitration award in the same action in which they present their suit for breach of the duty of fair representation.
. We recognize that, in refusing to hold that NLRB jurisdiction pre-empted judicial cognizance of fair "representation claims, the Supreme Court has concluded that it need not apply concerns as to uniformity of labor law or as to safeguarding administrative jurisdiction.
Vaca v. Sipes,
First, we note that our concern was to obtain a common law analogy: despite the obvious problems with the analogies, we, like the Supreme Court, would have had to tolerate the ill fit had we no better choice.
DelCostello,
Finally, the rationale that the Supreme Court has suggested precludes labor policy considerations in some areas does not apply in the fair representation context:
The need for uniformity ... is greatest where its absence would threaten the smooth functioning of those consensual processes that federal labor law is chiefly designed to promote — the formation of the collective agreement and the private settlement of disputes under it. For the most part, statutes of limitations come into play only when these processes have already broken down. Lack of uniformity in this area is therefore unlikely to frustrate in any important way the achievement of any significant goal of labor policy.
International U., U.A., A. & A.I.W. v. Hoosier C. Corp.,
. Such suits are tried first to the National Railroad Adjustment Board or a similar body. Appeals may be had to a federal district court. 45 U.S.C. § 153.
See also Skidmore,
Our decision comports with
West v. Conrail,
— U.S. —, —,
.
See Mitchell,
