In this tort and contract action, we again examine the scope of WMATA’s sovereign immunity, as well as the immunity of its employees. Because the torts alleged here arose from policy decisions made during the reorganization of a WMATA department, we agree with the district court that WMATA is protected by sovereign immunity. Applying federal common law, we also hold that WMA-TA officials, when exercising discretionary functions and acting within the scope of their official duties, enjoy immunity from tort liability. We agree with the district court that the contract claims lack merit.
I
In 1966, acting pursuant to the Compact Clause of the Constitution, U.S. Const, art. I, § 10, cl. 3, Congress approved the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Compact between Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia to deal with growing traffic problems in the Washington area.
See
Pub.L. No. 89-774, 80 Stat. 1324 (1966) (codified as amended at D.C.Code Ann. § 1-2431 (1992)); H. Rep. No. 89-1914, at 5-6 (1966). Responsible for creating a coordinated public transportation system for the re
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gion, WMATA now operates an extensive Metrobus and Metrorail system running throughout Northern Virginia, the District, and two Maryland counties. We have summarized WMATA’s history and its relationship to Congress in earlier decisions.
See, e.g., Dant v. District of Columbia,
Appellant Richard W. Beebe works for WMATA as an attorney, having served in both the Office of General Counsel and the Office of Procurement. In 1989, he became a Construction Engineer Negotiator in what was then the Office of Procurement’s Final Decisions and Disputes Section, headed by appellee Narinder Kumar. In that job, Beebe investigated and analyzed contract claims and drafted final contracting decisions.
In 1992, by which time Beebe had reached a rank of TA-24, WMATA’s Board of Directors approved a reorganization of the Office of Procurement, appointing appellee Robert Bearinger to oversee its implementation. The reorganization shrank the Final Decisions and Disputes Section from thirteen to six positions and transferred it to a new Construction Contract Management division. In this new office, Beebe’s duties expanded from managing a single stage of the contracting process to “cradle-to-grave” contract administration.
During several personnel policy meetings with Bearinger and others and in a separate memorandum to Bearinger, Kumar criticized Beebe’s performance, suggesting that he was unqualified for his broader responsibilities and that Beebe should return to the Office of General Counsel. Bearinger then abolished Beebe’s job, replaced it with a new TA-24 Contract Administrator position, and appointed Kumar to head a selection committee to fill the new position. Beebe applied, but the committee selected him instead for a TA-22 Contract Administrator position.
In July, 1994, Beebe filed a ten-count complaint in the U.S. District .Court for the District of Columbia, asserting claims for breach of contract/promissory estoppel (count 1); constructive discharge (count 2); misrepresentation (count 3); fraud (count 4); gross negligence in the formulation and implementation of the selection process for the TA-24 Contract Administrator position (count 5); negligent entrustment (count 6); defamation of character (count 7); wrongful interference with employment relationship (count 8); breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing (count 9); and intentional infliction of emotional harm (count 10). Beebe named WMATA and Bearinger in counts one, two, three, four, five, nine, and ten; he named Kumar in counts two, seven, eight, nine, and ten; and he named only WMATA in count six.
Relying on a magistrate judge’s recommendations, the district court dismissed the tort claims against WMATA and the individual defendants on sovereign immunity grounds. The district court also granted summary judgment for defendants on the breach of contract/promissory estoppel claim, and dismissed the remaining contract claims. In this appeal by Beebe, we review the dismissal of counts two.through ten, as well as the summary judgment on count one
de novo,
applying the same standards used by the district court.
Wilson v. Pena,
II
Before considering the merits of Beebe’s appeal, we must deal with WMATA’s assertion that Beebe failed to exhaust his administrative remedies. The Compact requires employees to submit all unresolved “labor dispute[s]” to arbitration. D.C.Code
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Ann. § l-2431(66)(c). Employees must exhaust these procedures before filing suit.
Sanders v. WMATA,
Before filing his complaint in this case, Beebe initiated the collective bargaining agreement’s grievance procedures, progressing through the first two of its four steps. Not until four days after filing suit, however, did he initiate a “step three” grievance. While this would ordinarily bar Beebe from pursuing this litigation, WMATA does not contest Beebe’s assertion that notwithstanding the collective bargaining agreement’s requirement that it respond to a step three grievance within ten days, Article XX, Agreement Between WMATA and the Office and Professional Employees International Union, Local No. 2, it has never answered his step three filing. Under these circumstances, WfiVLATA has waived its exhaustion defense.
Cf. Vaca v. Sipes,
Ill
In signing the WMATA Compact, Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia conferred upon WMATA their respective sovereign immunities.
Morris,
To distinguish governmental from proprietary functions, we ask whether the activity amounts to a “quintessential” governmental function, like law enforcement.
Burkhart v. WMATA,
Although employment decisions are not quintessential governmental functions — after all, private entities also hire and fire employees — we held in
Burkhart
that “decisions concerning the hiring, training, and supervising of WMATA employees are discretionary in nature, and thus immune from judicial review.”
Burkhart,
Applying these standards, we think WMATA’s appointment of Bearinger to oversee the reorganization of the Office of Procurement as well as later actions by Bearinger and Kumar in the course of the reorganization were discretionary activities. Beebe does not allege that Bearinger or Kumar were told precisely how to structure the new department, which positions to create or abolish, or whom to hire or retain. Of course, not every action connected in some way to an employment decision amounts to a discretionary function. But all actions challenged by Beebe involved a large measure of choice, and we perceive no distinction between the discretion here and the hiring, training, and supervision of bus operators at issue in
Burkhart.
If anything, the activity in this case — reorganizing an entire office— involved even greater degrees of political, social and economic considerations. Agreeing with the district court that WMATA is therefore immune from Beebe’s tort claims, including the alleged intentional torts,
cf. Gray v. Bell,
IV
Because Beebe also asserts tort claims against Bearinger and Kumar in their individual capacities (counts 3-5, 7, 8, and 10), we must determine whether, as the district court held, they too have immunity from suit. The scope of immunity of WMATA employees for torts committed in the course of governmental or discretionary functions is a road not well traveled.
Section 80 of the Compact provides that the “exclusive remedy” for any action for which WMATA is liable “shall be by suit against the Authority.” D.C.Code ANnJ 1-2431(80). In other words, for torts committed in the course of proprietary or ministerial functions, WMATA is liable and its employees immune. The Compact is silent on the question this case presents: whether WMA-TA employees have immunity from suit where WMATA itself has immunity because the alleged torts occurred in the exercise of governmental or discretionary functions.
To resolve this issue, we must first determine which law to rely on — those of the three signatories or federal common law? Where Congress wanted state law to govern a question under the WMATA Compact, such as in proprietary tort actions, it said so explicitly.
See
D.C.Code ANN.§ 1-2431(80) (“The Authority shall be liable for ... torts ... committed in the conduct of any proprietary function, in accordance with the law of the applicable signatory....”). Where Congress has not so provided, federal law governs the interpretation of Compact terms.
Cuyler v. Adams,
While perhaps not the proper standard for interpreting
every
interstate compact, federal common law is particularly appropriate in WMATA’s case. Not only does the Compact have its roots in congressionally authorized studies,
see
H. Rep. No. 89-1914, at 3^1 (1966), but “Congress played a particularly active role” in WMATA’s creation,
Morris,
For the appropriate federal common law standard, we look to
Westfall v. Erwin,
Although
Westfall
places the burden of establishing immunity on the official,
Westfall,
Because we have already determined that Bearinger and Kumar were engaged in discretionary functions — Westfall’s second prong — they enjoy immunity from Beebe’s tort allegations. We thus affirm the district court’s dismissal of counts three through five, seven, eight, and ten against Bearinger and Kumar.
V
This brings us finally to Beebe’s claims for breach of contract/promissory estoppel (count 1), constructive discharge (count 2), and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing (count 9), asserted against WMATA, Bearinger, and Kumar. Section 80 of the Compact waives WMATA’s sovereign immunity for contractual disputes. D.C.Code Ann.§ 1-2431(80). Because the Compact makes WMATA the exclusive defendant where WMATA is liable, id., Bearinger and Kumar cannot be sued for any contractual claims. As for WMATA, we find no basis for questioning the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the breach of contract/promissory estoppel count or its dismissal of the remaining counts.
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Beebe claims that WMATA is contractually bound by statements in its personnel manual. Although like any District of Columbia employer WMATA can bind itself contractually in a personnel manual,
see Sisco v. GSA Nat’l Capital Fed. Credit Union,
Beebe’s remaining contract claims also fail: his covenant of good faith and fair dealing claim, because it depends upon the existence of an enforceable contract; and his constructive discharge claim, because he makes no allegation that WMATA made working conditions so onerous that he had to quit,
Atlantic Richfield Co. v. District of Columbia Comm’n on Human Rights,
VI
We affirm the district court’s grant of ap-pellees’ motion for summary judgment on the breach of contract/promissory estoppel count and of their motion to dismiss the remainder of Beebe’s complaint.
So ordered.
