David Arnold’s employment as a phot was terminated by Air Midwest, Inc. on November 6,1992. Mr. Arnold brought suit against his union, the Air Line Phots Association (“ALPA”), for breach of its federal duty of fair representation under the Rahway Labor Act, and for breach of contract and of fiduciary duty arising out of alleged deficiencies in pre-termination representation. Mr. Arnold also brought claims against union attorney John G. Schleder for breach of fiduciary duty and legal malpractice, arising out of the same alleged deficiencies in representation. 1 The district court granted summary judgment in favor of • defendants, holding that the six month statute of limitations had run on Mr. Arnold’s duty of fair representation claim *859 against the union, that his state law claims against the union and its attorney are preempted by federal labor law, and that Mr. Sehleder is immune from suit as an agent of the union. Mr. Arnold appeals, and we affirm.
I.
This court reviews a grant of summary judgment under the same standard applied by the district court.
2
Summary judgment is appropriate if there is no issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e). We view the evidence in the record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Bohn v. Park City Group, Inc.,
In October 1992, Mr. Arnold concluded that Air Midwest was requiring operation of aircraft in a manner contrary to aircraft specifications and federal regulations. Mr. Arnold began operating his plane in what he believed was a safe manner, contrary to Air Midwest directives. On October 19, Mr. Arnold was warned that he was in trouble for failing to achieve the set flight times, and on October 21 he was suspended. Mr. Arnold requested legal representation from ALPA, and ALPA assigned Mr. Sehleder to assist Mr. Arnold in discussions with Air Midwest. Air Midwest accused Mr. Arnold of participating in a union “slow down,” which Mr. Arnold denied. Mr. Arnold was advised by Mr. Sehleder that, as a union representative, Mr. Sehleder might have a conflict of interest if the union and Mr. Arnold made contradictory statements. Mr. Arnold expressed to union representatives his ongoing concerns about this conflict, and about his difficulty in contacting the ALPA attorneys, but he nonetheless continued to rely on Mr. Sehleder.
On October 27, Mr. Arnold and Mr. Sehleder met with management. After questioning by management, Mr. Arnold was informed that he would be terminated. His termination was confirmed by letter dated November 6. ALPA filed a request for reconsideration on Mr. Arnold’s behalf. On November 21, Mr. Arnold informed ALPA that he had retained private counsel to represent him in the grievance proceedings. ALPA nevertheless continued to assist Mr. Arnold through the person of Mr. Sehleder. When the request for reconsideration of the termination was denied January 5, 1993, ALPA filed an appeal for Mr. Arnold with the Air Midwest Systems Board, on January 28, 1993, as ALPA was required to do by the collective bargaining agreement. However, a date was never set for the Systems Board hearing. Mr. Arnold filed the instant action on October 20, 1993, asserting several claims against both ALPA and Mr. Sehleder arising out of alleged deficiencies in representation from October 20 to November 6,1992.
II.
Mr. Arnoid concedes that a six month statute of limitations applies to his duty-of-fair-representation claim.
See Barnett v. United Air Lines, Inc.,
The general rule is that “the limitation period begins to run when an employee knows or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known or discovered the acts constituting the union’s alleged violations.”
Lucas v. Mountain States Tel. & Tel.,
Mr. Arnold asserts that the statute of limitations was nevertheless tolled by ALPA’s ongoing representation of him in the grievance process. We noted in
Edwards
that in duty-of-fair-representation cases in which “the union’s alleged breach arises outside the context of processing a grievance, the employee’s claim may be tolled by the employee’s good faith attempt to exhaust the grievance procedures.”
Mr. Arnold claims the trial court erred in concluding that ALPA did not continue to represent him. He maintains that although he discharged Mr. Schleder and retained private counsel,.he never discharged the union from representing him. Mr. Arnold farther contends the actions taken by the union on his behalf after November 6 establish, that the union was engaged in his representation, notwithstanding his retention of private counsel. Viewed most favorably to Mr. Arnold, the evidence in the record suggests that Mr. Arnold did not discharge ALPA itself, and that ALPA’s provision of assistance after November 6 indicates ALPA continued to represent Mr. Arnold. We note in this regard that the collective bargaining agreement requires the union to represent an employee before the Systems Board; he may not represent himself individually. Conse *861 quently, the district court erred in concluding otherwise for summary judgment purposes.
Nonetheless, we agree that Mr. Arnold’s duty-of-fair-representation claim was not timely filed because Mr. Arnold does not provide evidence to support tolling the statute of limitations until April 21, 1993. After ALPA filed the appeal on Mr. Arnold’s behalf with the Systems Board on January 28, no hearing was ever scheduled. The record indicates that Air Midwest, ALPA, and Mr. Arnold agreed a hearing would be scheduled for a mutually convenient time beyond the normal thirty day limit. The only other evidence in the record, introduced by Mr. Arnold himself, established that on February 25, Air Midwest’s counsel wrote to Mr. Arnold’s counsel advising that he was still waiting for Mr. Arnold to propose a date convenient to him for the Systems Board hearing. There is no evidence that Mr. Arnold ever proposed a hearing date. The record and Mr. Arnold are utterly silent about his continued inaction after that time. Mr. Arnold asserts only that ultimate responsibility for setting a hearing lies with the chairman of the Systems Board. Under these circumstances, we do not accept Mr. Arnold’s argument that the statute of limitations ought to be tolled indefinitely. We stated in
Lucas
that accrual of the employee’s duty-of-fair-representation claim will be tolled if the employee makes a good faith attempt to exhaust grievance procedures.
Lucas,
“The application of equitable doctrines rests in the sound discretion of the district court.”
Edwards,
III.
The district court held Mr. Arnold’s state law claims against both the union and Mr. Schleder preempted by the federal duty-of-fair-representation claim, and further held that Mr. Schleder, as an agent of the union, is immune from Mr. Arnold’s claims arising out of Mr. Schleder’s actions taken on behalf of the union. Mr. Arnold does not appeal the district court’s conclusion that his state law claims against the union are preempted by his duty-of-fair-representation claim. He contends, however, that his state law claims against Mr. Schleder are not preempted by the federal labor laws because, as an attorney, Mr. Schleder is not entitled to immunity as a union agent. In deciding the immunity issue, we must assess the extent to which Mr. Schleder’s actions were taken on behalf of the union and in fulfillment of the union’s duty of fair representation to Mr. Arnold. Mr. Arnold advances two main contentions: first, general immunity for union agents should not extend to lawyers; and second, immunity does not apply here because an attorney-client relationship existed between Mr. Schleder and Mr. Arnold. 5
Generally, a union’s agents may not be held individually liable for actions taken on behalf of the union.
Atkinson v. Sinclair Refining Co.,
Mr. Arnold urges that such immunity for union agents should not extend to attorneys. Courts have consistently rejected efforts to distinguish lawyers from other union agents for purposes of
Atkinson
immunity. In rejecting a malpractice claim against a union attorney for advice given in the grievance process, the Ninth Circuit noted that a union may use non-lawyer agents to represent its interests in the collective bargaining process.
Peterson,
These courts have also articulated persuasive public policy considerations that favor the extension of immunity to union attorneys. Allowing union members to proceed against the union’s attorneys for malpractice would anomalously subject the union’s agents to a higher standard of care than the union itself.
See Breda
We find the rationale advanced in these cases to be well-grounded in the Supreme Court’s precedents and well-supported by public policy. We hold that the immunity for union agents established by Atkinson extends to lawyers, and that an attorney who performs services for and on behalf of a union may not be held liable in malpractice to individual grievants where the services performed constitute a part of the collective bargaining process. That process plainly encompasses services provided by the union in its role as exclusive representative. Mr. Arnold’s proper remedy would have been to timely file suit against the union on his duty of fair representation claim.
To avoid the
Atkinson
bar, Mr. Arnold contends Mr. Schleder acted as Mr. Arnold’s personal representative, not the representative of the union. Mr. Arnold might be able to proceed against Mr. Schleder if Mr. Schleder had specifically agreed to provide direct representation to Mr. Arnold as an individual elient.
See Peterson,
Mr. Arnold also suggests that Mr. Sehleder’s representation was not in connection with the performance of a collective bargaining function because at the time of the representation no grievance had yet been initiated. We have recognized, however, that the union’s duty of fair representation may be implicated by actions taken outside the context of processing a grievance.
Lucas,
We hold that Mr. Schleder is immune from suit, and any claims against Mr. Schleder are subsumed by the union’s duty of fair representation.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Mr. Arnold's Complaint also asserted claims against Air Midwest and its vice-president for, inter alia, wrongful termination, defamation, and tortious interference with his livelihood. Those claims are not at issue in this appeal.
. We reject Mr. Arnold’s argument that the district court acted improperly in converting defendants’ motion to dismiss to a motion for summary judgment. Notice to the parties is required to prevent unfair surprise when a judge converts a 12(b)(6) motion into a Rule 56 motion.
Nichols v. United States,
. We stated in
Lucas
that “when a union represents an employee throughout a grievance procedure, a claim challenging the adequacy of that union’s representation normally does not accrue until the dispute resolution process has been completely exhausted.”
. Our opinion in
Lucas
used the imprecise formulation that
“accrual
of [the employee's] claim can be tolled” by an attempt to exhaust the grievance process.
. At argument, Mr. Arnold’s counsel suggested that recent Tenth Circuit precedent narrows the scope of preemption under the Railway Labor Act. We have examined the cases referred to by counsel.
Fry v. Airline Pilots Ass’n,
. Mr. Arnold also contends the failure to subject union counsel to liability under state malpractice laws is contrary to public policy because such attorneys are effectively immunized from all lia-hility for negligent representation. This objection does not detain us, for we do not address here the viability of a malpractice claim by the union against its attorney.
