OPINION
Plaintiff-Appellant Allied Systems, Ltd. (“Allied”) appeals the district court’s denial of a preliminary injunction preventing defendants-appellees Teamsters National Au
I.
The facts underlying this appeal are not in dispute. Allied is in the business of transporting automobiles in the United States and Canada from various rail, plant, and port locations to dealerships. It operates over 100 shipping facilities throughout the country, including one at 743 Harding Street in Nashville, Tennessee (“Harding Facility”). Allied also recognizes and has a collective bargaining relationship with the union, which, in turn, represents the workers at Allied’s facilities.
For each Allied shipping terminal location, including the Harding Facility, labor relations were governed by a multi-em-ployer, multi-local union collective bargaining agreement known as the National Master Automobile Transporters Agreement (“National Agreement”). Among many other things, the National Agreement contains an “established wage rate” for each facility, which was negotiated at both the national and local levels and approved by the union. Once negotiated and approved, the established wage rate remains effective for the term of the National Agreement. In addition, the National Agreement contains several provisions to the effect that any disputes over the interpretation of the National Agreement are to be submitted to an arbitrator. For example, Article 7, Section 7(a) of the National Agreement provides:
It shall be the function of the National Joint Arbitration Committee to settle disputes and grievances which arise under the following circumstances:
(1) Involving interpretations of, or disputes over, the provisions of the [National Agreement],
(4) Disputes and interpretations concerning alleged conflicts in provisions of the [National Agreement] on the one hand and Area Supplements and Riders thereto on the other hand.
J.A. at 144-45.
Pertinent to this appeal, the National Agreement contains a no-strike provision and a comprehensive grievance and arbitration procedure to which disputes arising under the National Agreement are to be submitted. Specifically, Article 7, Section 1 of the National Agreement provides in relevant portions as follows:
The parties agree that all grievances and questions of interpretation arising from the provisions of this Agreement shall be submitted to the grievance procedure for determination.
The Unions and Employers agree that there shall be no strike ... without first using all possible means of a settlement, as provided for in this Agreement, of any controversy which might arise.
J.A. at 139. However, there is an “exception” to the no-strike clause, which reads in relevant part as follows:
Any disputes the parties are unable to settle shall be referred to the appropriate Automobile Transporters Joint Area Arbitration Committee, except for the following direct violations, which are nondisputable:
(a) Nonpayment of the established wage rates, when due, provided for in this Agreement, Supplements or Riders;
*985 (e) This paragraph does not apply to disputes over the computation of wages or application of wage rates.
The Local Union shall give the Employer a seventy-two (72) hour written notice ... prior to taking any strike action authorized by the Section.
Id. (emphasis added). Interpretation of these subsections is the crux of the dispute in this appeal.
On October 1, 1997, Allied purchased Ryder Automobile Carrier Group and its subsidiary corporations including Commercial Carriers, Inc. With the purchase, Allied acquired several additional shipping facilities, including one located at 600 Veri-tas Street in Nashville (“Veritas Facility”). Allied reports that after the purchase, it possessed several “dual” and redundant shipping terminals in many cities, including Nashville. Allied management decided it would be economically efficient to consolidate several, if not all, of the dual terminals in most cities. This decision directly affected the operations at the Harding and Veritas Facilities in Nashville. In November 1997, Allied announced its intention to merge the two Nashville facilities sometime in early 1998.
The parties agree that because the Harding and Veritas facilities were operated by two different companies prior to October 1997, there were a number of differences in the terms and conditions of employment at the facilities. One such difference was the facilities’ established pay rate for labor. Although the parties resolved many other differences concerning the consolidation of the facilities (such as seniority determinations) through dispute resolution, Allied refused to negotiate the issue of the two different established pay rates. Instead, according to Allied, prior arbitration decisions in the industry established that when two terminals were merged, the conditions that applied at the terminal into which the operations were physically merged were the conditions that continued and applied at the surviving terminal. After Allied decided to merge the Harding and Veritas operations into the physical Harding Facility, it therefore determined that the Harding established pay rate would govern all workers at the “new” merged facility.
Allied acknowledges that the wage rates at the Harding and former Veritas Facilities were “dissimilar,” but contends that the net effect of the Harding wage rate was still higher than the Veritas Facility. Nevertheless, the union was displeased by Allied’s decision to discontinue paying the established wage rate from the Veritas Facility. Pursuant to the National Agreement, the union issued a 72-hour strike notice on May 29, 1998. On June 4, 1998, picketers appeared at the Harding Facility with signs reading (among other things) “Failure of Allied Systems to Pay Established Wage Rates.”
Later that day, Allied filed a complaint in the district court under § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (“LMRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 185, and a motion for a temporary restraining order enjoining the Union from striking at the Harding Facility. Following a hearing that afternoon, the district court granted the motion for a TRO and issued an order to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not be issued against the union for violating the no-strike clause of the National Agreement.
On June 11, 1998, the district court held a hearing on the motion for the preliminary injunction under § 301. In a ruling issued from the bench, the district court denied Allied’s request for a preliminary injunction.
This timely appeal followed.
II.
This court will review a district court’s grant or denial of a preliminary injunction for an abuse of discretion. Schenck v. City of Hudson,
III.
A.
A district court has the authority under § 301 to compel specific performance of a collective bargaining agreement requiring the arbitration of grievances in a labor dispute. See 29 U.S.C. § 185(a). However, § 4 of the NorrisLaGuardia Act, 29 U.S.C. § 104, significantly curtails a district court’s ability to issue an injunction against labor strikes and work stoppages. The pertinent portion of the Act reads:
No court of the United States shall have jurisdiction to issue any restraining order or temporary or permanent injunction in any case involving or growing out of any labor dispute to prohibit any person or persons participating or interested in such dispute ... from ...
(e) Giving publicity to the existence of, or the facts involved in, any labor dispute, whether by advertising, speaking, patrolling, or by any other method not involving fraud or violence[.]
29 U.S.C. § 104. This court has recognized that the “anti-injunction provisions of the Norris-LaGuardia Act were intended to protect workers in the exercise of organized economic power.” Crowe & Assocs., Inc. v. Bricklayers & Masons Union Local No. 2 (In re Crowe & Assocs., Inc.),
Occasionally, § 301 of the LMRA and § 4 of the Norris-LaGuardia Act come to direct loggerheads when a district court is asked to enjoin a labor strike which the employer contends violates a collective bargaining agreement. The Supreme Court first addressed the inherent conflict between the two statutes in Boys Markets, Inc. v. Retail Clerks Union,
In this appeal, Allied maintains that the decision to utilize the wage rates from the former Harding Facility to the new “merged” facility was a “dispute[ ] over the computation of wages [and/or] application of wage rates” within the meaning of Article 7, Section 1(e) of the no-strike clause in the National Agreement. Thus, in Allied’s view, the union was precluded from striking under the terms of the National Agreement, and the district court should have issued the injunction. In the alternative, Allied contends that all disputes over interpretation of the National Agreement were themselves to be arbitrated pursuant
When seeking a Boys Markets injunction, the employer has the burden of showing that it is entitled to such an injunction. In re Crowe & Assocs., Inc.,
First, the controversy must involve or grow out of a labor dispute within the meaning of Section 4 of the [Norris-LaGuardia] Act. Second, a full evidentia-ry hearing must be held. Third, the court must find that the dispute underlying the controversy is subject to binding arbitration under the terms of the collective bargaining agreement. Finally, the traditional equitable bases for injunctive relief must be met. A court has jurisdiction to issue an injunction only where all four of the above steps have been completed and satisfied.
International Union United Auto. Workers v. Lester Eng’g Co.,
Although the parties creatively articulate several issues for us to consider, the essence of their legal dispute can be distilled to one simple question: was the district court correct in denying Allied’s request for an injunction? We agree that the district court did not abuse its discretion below.
B.
Allied first argues that the district court should have issued the injunction because of a strong congressional policy favoring arbitration of labor disputes, and because Article 7, Section 7(a) of the National Agreement mandates that disputes over conflicting provisions are themselves to be resolved through arbitration. Since Boys Markets, the Supreme Court has emphasized that the anti-injunction provisions of the Norris-LaGuardia Act are to be given a “broad interpretation” and that the Boys Markets exception is to be recognized “only in limited situations where necessary to accommodate the Act to specific federal legislation or paramount congressional policy.” Jacksonville Bulk Terminals, Inc. v. International Longshoremen’s Ass’n,
Most collective bargaining agreements contain arbitration clauses. Truck Drivers Local 705 v. Schneider Tank Lines Inc.,
It can be argued that whether Article 7, Section 7(a) comes into effect is a natural and logical extension of the parties’ underlying dispute in this case. However, we believe it unwise to tread beyond the core underlying dispute between the parties, as such determinations “would embroil the courts in endless circular reasoning trying to decide where arbitrability starts and where it stops.” Comment, Labor Injunctions Pending Arbitration: A Proposal to Amend Norris-LaGuardia, 63 Tul. L. Rev. 1681, 1694 n. 85 (1989). Additionally, the Supreme Court’s decision in Jacksonville Bulk Terminals supports the view that a federal court must constrain itself solely to the arbitrability of the underlying dispute in determining whether to issue a Boys Markets injunction. In that case, the workers refused to handle any cargo bound to or coming from the former Soviet Union in protest of the 1979 invasion of Afghanistan. The'Court held that the underlying dispute between the parties was a political dispute “plainly not arbitrable under the collective bargaining agreement.” Jacksonville Bulk Terminals,
C.
Allied’s remaining argument is that it was entitled to a Boys Markets injunction because, in its view, the underlying dispute was over an arbitrable issue-namely, the computation and/or application of wage rates. We have previously held that Boys Markets injunctions are to be granted only when “it clearly appears to the trial judge that the dispute which underlies the strike is subject to a no-strike obligation.” Waller Bros.,
We are not convinced that Allied has met its burden of showing that the dispute was clearly and undisputably over an arbi-trable issue. The parties agree that several necessary changes were effectuated as a result of the merging of the two Nashville facilities including dispatch procedures and payroll policies. Likewise, it is also agreed that the parties submitted grievances to resolve seniority disputes to an arbitration panel. However, there is no evidence that the union engaged in a work stoppage for reasons other than the wage rate controversy. Such should not be surprising, because the no-strike exceptions of Article 7, Section 1 only reserved the right to strike in limited situations, including the nonpayment of established wage rates.
At the very least, reasonable minds may differ as to whether Allied’s decision to use the Harding Facility wage rate constituted (as the union asserts) the nonpayment of the Veritas Facility established wage rate, or (as Allied asserts) the application of wage rates. Both the union’s and Allied’s interpretation of the National Agreement have merit. However, so long as the right to strike is interrelated with an ambiguity in a collective bargaining agreement, a federal court is without jurisdiction to issue a Boys Market injunction. As the Second Circuit has succinctly pronounced:
Where the collective agreement, as here, excepts from the requirement of arbitration certain types of contract violations and provides that the union retains the right to strike with respect to such violations, no injunction can issue against a strike where the union presents a color-able claim'that such violations have occurred.
Standard Food Prods. Corp. v. Brandenburg,
Our decision in Waller Brothers presented a similar scenario involving differing meritorious interpretations of a collective bargaining agreement. In that case, the bargaining agreement contained a dispute resolution procedure for all disputes, but provided that wage rates were not subject to arbitration, and that the union reserved the right to strike in the event of a disagreement on wages. Waller Bros.,
We vacated the district court’s issuance of a Boys Market injunction because the employer had not clearly demonstrated that its interpretation of the contract was correct. While acknowledging that the employer’s position had “some force,” we noted that the parties’ “underlying dispute [was] inescapably over wage rates.” Id. at 137. Because the union had reserved the right to strike over wage rates disputes, and because the resolution of the question of whether the strike was in fact in violation of the no-strike clause could not be “fully addressed in an action seeking a preliminary injunction,” we concluded that the district court’s issuance of the injunction was improper.
As was the situation in Waller Brothers and Matson, the interpretation of the National Agreement with regards to the propriety of the union’s strike in this case is “far from clear.” Contrary to Allied’s protestations, however, our affirming the district court’s judgment is hardly a resolution of the merits of the underlying dispute. We do not hold that the union indeed had the right to strike over Allied’s decision to forgo the wage rates used at the former Veritas Facility in favor of the Harding Facility rates. We hold only that Allied has not demonstrated that its interpretation of the National Agreement is so clearly and undisputably correct to warrant the issuance of a Boys Market injunction. Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Allied’s request for a preliminary injunction. If Allied wishes to seek recourse against the union, it must do so in an unfair labor practice action on the merits.
IV.
For the reasons stated herein, the district court’s denial of Allied’s request for injunctive relief is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The workers comprising Local 327 delegated their bargaining authority to appellee Teamsters National Automobile Transporters Industry Negotiating Committee, which is a union negotiating committee established pursuant to the International Brotherhood of Teamsters’ Constitution. For simplicity’s sake, we will refer to both collectively as the ''union.”
. Allied argues that Waller Brothers is distinguishable from the present case because the National Agreement contained a more comprehensive grievance resolution procedure calling for arbitration of disagreements over the construction of the National Agreement's provisions per Article 7, Section 7(a). For the reasons explained in section III(B) of this opinion, Allied's continued reliance on Article 7, Section 7(a) is misguided.
