This appeal arises out of the alleged wrongful termination of appellant Bennett Cohen by appellee Flushing Hospital and Medical Center (“Hospital”), and the ensuing breach of the duty of fair representation by appellee Local 1199 National Health and Human Service Employees Union (“Union”). After removing the ease to federal court, both appellees moved for dismissal on the grounds that the wrongful discharge/failure to represent action was time-barred under the applicable six-month statute of limitations. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, Glasser, J., granted the motions and this appeal followed. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
The events surrounding the end of Cohen’s employment with the Hospital are somewhat complex, but crucial. We therefore give them close attention here.
Bennett Cohen was an employee of the Hospital and a member of the Union from October 13, 1987, until December 15, 1993. Before Cohen’s termination on December 15, he had been absent from work since October 15, 1993. He had initially taken sick leave, but never returned to work or contacted the Hospital about his status. Just before he left in October, Cohen had filed two discrimination complaints with the New York State Division of Human Rights: one against the Hospital, alleging unequal treatment based on creed and disability, and one against the Union, alleging a physical attack, motivated by Cohen’s creed and disability, by a union organizer named Marin. Cohen also filed a discrimination complaint against the Hospital with the State of New York Worker’s Compensation Board in late October.
In November, Cohen wrote to the Anti-Defamation League (“ADL”) about his discrimination claims. The ADL subsequently sent the Union a letter on December 28, 1993, outlining Cohen’s allegations of harassment by the Hospital and of unresponsiveness and abusiveness by Marin.
On December 15, 1993, the Hospital sent Cohen a letter stating that because he had not returned to work, it assumed he had resigned. In response, Cohen wrote the Hospital on December 19, 1993, denying that he had resigned and listing a series of complaints regarding his employment. Cohen asked for a full investigation of these complaints, acknowledged that the union “is clearly not working for me,” and indicated he would “seek outside assistance.” Cohen sent a copy of this letter to the president of the Union on December 19 and again on February 14, 1994. On the Union’s copy, he added the postscript “when is our union going to represent me?”
Cohen made no other attempts to contact either the Hospital or the Union, nor did he initiate any of the grievance proceedings provided for in the collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) between the Hospital and the Union. If Cohen wanted to grieve the Hospital’s assumption of resignation, he was required under the CBA to present his department head at the Hospital with a written grievance signed by his union representative. Alternatively, when the Union was put on notice that Cohen had been constructively discharged, the CBA allowed it up to ten days to file a grievance with the Hospital if it decided to contest the discharge.
Cohen wrote to the ADL on January 15, 1993, following up on his November letter and informing them that the Hospital had “terminated [his] employment without the union so much as lifting a single finger in my defense, up to and including this day.” Cohen re-sent this letter on March 21,1994. In response, the ADL sent a letter to the Union on April 25, 1994, restating Cohen’s harassment allegations, referring to its previous letter, and seeking an answer on how the matter was resolved.
Cohen initiated the instant action in state court on September 29,1994, alleging wrongful discharge by the Hospital in violation of the CBA and the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12101
et seq.
(1988) (“ADA”), breach of the duty of fair representation by the Union, and assault by Marin. The Hospital and the Union removed the case to federal court on the grounds that Cohen’s first and second claims were governed by section 301 of the Labor Manage
In this appeal, Cohen argues that the district court erred in dismissing his section 301 claims as time-barred. He maintains that a triable issue of fact exists as to the accrual date of his cause of action because the Union never told him it was not representing him and, therefore, he neither knew nor should have known until late April 1994 (five months before filing this action) that it had breached its duty of fair representation. Cohen also argues for the first time on appeal that the Hospital’s lawyers should be disqualified from representation in this case. We agree with the district court that Cohen’s claim is barred by the statute of limitations and find that the disqualification issue is not properly before us. We therefore affirm the dismissal of his claims.
DISCUSSION
I. The Statute of Limitations Claim
Cohen’s claims against the Hospital for wrongful discharge and the Union for breach of the duty of fair representation combine to create a “hybrid” cause of action governed by a six-month statute of limitations.
DelCostello v. International Bhd. of Teamsters,
Cohen argues that he could not have known the Union was not representing him until sometime after he received a copy of the ADL’s second letter to the Union, mailed on April 25, 1994. This letter restated Cohen’s harassment claims against Marin, referencing the ADL’s December 28th letter, and requested a response from the Union “indicating how this matter was resolved.”
2
Although the Union had not responded to the December ADL letter, or to the copies of the letter Cohen wrote to the Hospital contesting
We find no merit in Cohen’s position. As evidenced by his January 15, 1994, letter to the ADL in which he reported that he had been terminated “without the union so much as lifting a single finger in my defense, up to and including this day,” Cohen was well aware of the Union’s failure to take action on his termination.
See Ghartey v. St. John’s Queens Hosp.,
A grieved employee cannot rely on a union’s lack of response to informal correspondence to toll the statute of limitations when he has failed to invoke the formal grievance procedures available to him under a collective bargaining agreement.
Legutko,
The inaction of the Union, while not commendable, does not permit the statute of limitations to be tolled.
Metz v. Tootsie Roll Indus., Inc.,
We recognize, of course, that the Union should be encouraged to promptly notify the employee of its decision to pursue, or not to pursue, his or her claim and that this prompt action will help preserve any legal remedies available to the employee. To say, however, that the running of the statute of limitations will be postponed indefinitely until actual notification is received from the Union or the employer,would be contrary to the policy of prompt resolution. Lack of notification would leave claims unresolved indefinitely and leave the procedure open to all of the vices which statutes of limitations were intended to eliminate.
Id.
We find Metz wholly apposite as a matter of fact and law to the instant case, and adopt its reasoning here. Unlike King, supra, where we distinguished Metz on the basis of a union’s active pursuance of King’s grievance for eight months, the Union in this case never represented that it would pursue Cohen’s claim or took any steps to do so. Under the CBA, the Union had up to 10 days to file a grievance on Cohen’s behalf. When it did not, Cohen should have known at some point in the ensuing six months that the Union was not representing him. As his letter to the ADL reveals, Cohen in fact did know of the Union’s breach as of January 15, 1993.
Cohen raises the issue of fraudulent concealment by the Hospital and the Union for the first time in his appellate brief. If this issue were properly before us, which of course it is not, we would nevertheless find Cohen’s contentions unpersuasive. When a union’s action or inaction rises to the level of fraudulent concealment of its breach, the statute of limitations is tolled until the plaintiff discovers the fraud.
See Baskin v. Hawley,
We therefore find that Cohen’s actions against the Union and the Hospital are time-barred, and that his hybrid section 301 claim was properly dismissed.
II. Cohen’s Disqualification Claim
On appeal, Cohen alleges that the Hospital’s lawyers should be disqualified due to a conflict of interest arising from a meeting between Cohen and a member of the Hospital’s law firm. A review of the record reveals that Cohen failed to move for disqualification of the Hospital’s law firm. Under the law of this circuit, a party may not seek on appeal relief that he failed to seek below.
Schmidt v. Polish People’s Republic,
CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgment of the district court dismissing Cohen’s section 301 claims as time-barred under the six-month statute of limitations.
Notes
. We note that although the parties moved to dismiss pursuant to Fed.RXiv.P. 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6), Cohen presented materials beyond the pleadings, including an attorney affirmation, which the district court did not exclude. Under these circumstances, the district court was required to treat the motion as one for summary judgment and accordingly provide "all parties [with] reasonable opportunity to present all material made pertinent to such a motion by Rule 56.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). While it is preferable that courts explicitly follow the procedures required by Rule 12(b)(6) rather than fulfilling them
sub silentio
as in this case, Cohen was given ample opportunity to present his case to the court.
See, e.g., Groden v. Random House, Inc.,
. Cohen cites this letter as grounds for reasonably believing that the Union “was working on his matters.” Brief for Appellant at 13. We fail to see how the ADL’s reiterative communication on a discrimination claim dating from before Cohen left the Hospital could give rise to a belief that the Union was representing Cohen on his termination grievance, especially as the Union never responded.
We also note that Cohen relied on this same thin thread to weave an argument in the district court that the Hospital and the Union were actually in "negotiations” over his termination until
