Archie Peltzman, a marine radio officer, brought this action in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, seeking damages and injunctive relief against his former employer, Central Gulf Lines, Inc. Appearing pro se, Peltzman raised a myriad of claims before the district court based on maritime law, the New York and federal constitutions, the antitrust laws, and the collective bargaining agreement between the employer and Peltzman’s union, the American Radio Association. In essence, his claim was that the employer unlawfully acceded to a union request that he be discharged for failing to pay a $2,000 union initiation fee.
I.
The facts, as appellant presents them, are as follows: From 1943 through 1949, Peltzman was a member of the American Communications Association, the predecessor of the American Radio Association. In 1949 the Coast Guard refused to issue him a radio officer’s license on the ground that he was either a member of the Communist Party or a communist sympathizer. Without a license, Peltzman was ineligible to serve as a radio officer in the Merchant Marine. In 1967, he brought an action in federal court in the course of which the Coast Guard agreed to reissue him a license, see Peltzman v. Smith,
Before the dispute was settled, Peltzman received a permanent assignment on the S/S Green Ridge, one of Central Gulf’s vessels. He made three trips on the Green Ridge and then requested a one-trip vacation leave, as provided for in the collective bargaining agreement. At that time, the union demanded the $2,000 initiation fee and the employer indicated that he would not be rehired without obtaining clearance from the union. Peltzman then began a series of legal actions in an effort to save his job. He first took his claim to the National Labor Relations Board. When the Regional Director declined to file a complaint with the Board and the General Counsel affirmed the Regional Director’s decision, Peltzman appealed to this court. We dismissed the appeal from the bench, and the Supreme Court denied certiorari. Peltzman v. NLRB, No. 72-1091 (2 Cir.), cert. denied,
Failing to obtain relief in those two forums, Peltzman next brought his case to the federal court. In the court below, *334 however, he fared no better than in his previous efforts. On defendant’s motion, the district court granted summary judgment against Peltzman on at least three independent grounds. First, the court held that since his complaint was founded on conduct that would arguably constitute an unfair labor practice, Peltzman’s claims were subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the National Labor Relations Board. Second, it held that the judgment against him in the New York courts operated as a jurisdictional bar to his maintaining the action in federal court. The court next suggested that since the General Counsel had refused to issue a complaint on Peltzman’s application, he would probably be barred from bringing this action in court. 2 On the merits, the court concluded without discussion that “defendant’s refusal to rehire plaintiff was lawful under the circumstances.” The court did not reach the further defense that Peltzman had failed to exhaust contractual grievance procedures and that such failure should bar his present action. On that point, the court held that the exhaustion defense raised material disputed issues of fact. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for a determination whether the collective bargaining agreement provides Peltzman any basis for relief.
II.
Most of Peltzman’s arguments can be dealt with summarily. Nothing in maritime law renders illegal a discharge that is authorized under a legitimate union security clause. There is no colorable basis for an antitrust claim in this case. The security clause here is not subject to attack under the federal or New York constitutions, see NLRB v. General Motors Corp.,
Peltzman’s breach of contract claim, however, is not so easily dismissed. While his pleading is not as concise as could be hoped, his breach of contract claim is founded on his assertion that he
was
a member of the union when he was discharged, and that the union was thus not entitled to demand an initiation fee from him- — a demand which he alleges was not made of others in his position, see Cunningham v. Erie R. R.,
It is well settled that contract claims brought under § 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act are not subject to preemption by the National Labor Relations Board, see Smith v. Evening News Association,
Peltzman’s claim on the merits may well turn out to be without force. If the initiation fee was uniformly required by the union constitution and by-laws, and was regularly demanded of those in his position, then it is likely that the union security clause was properly invoked and that the contract claim must fail. While the district court may have explored these possibilities below, we are not confident that its brief statement that “the defendant’s refusal to hire plaintiff was lawful under the circumstances” reflects a careful consideration of Peltzman’s contract claim and a determination that he had raised no material questions of fact on that issue. 4 We therefore remand this case for the district court to determine whether Central Gulf breached the collective bargaining agreement, and, if so, whether Peltzman’s apparent failure to exhaust contractual grievance procedures should bar him from maintaining this suit. 5
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Our summary dismissal of Peltzman’s appeal was doubtless based on the well-settled principle that the General Counsel’s determination not to issue a complaint on an unfair labor practice charge is unreviewable, see Vaca v. Sipes,
. The district court expressed some doubt that the General Counsel’s refusal to issue a complaint would provide an independent basis for granting summary judgment, but held that since the action was subject to the Board’s exclusive jurisdiction, it did not have to decide the effect of the General Counsel’s decision.
. The state court apparently placed some weight on the fact that Peltzman’s unfair labor practice claim was still pending before the General Counsel,
. Had the defendant addressed itself more directly in its moving papers to Peltzman’s contract claim, it might have been able to establish that there was no factual dispute over Peltzman’s status as a union member. However, the defendant chose to stress the collateral estoppel and res judicata elements of this case and to present only brief and eonelusory allegations concerning the merits of the contract claim.
. Peltzman argues that he should be excused from the normal requirement that he exhaust the contractual grievance procedures, see Republic Steel Corp. v. Maddox,
