BROTHERHOOD OF MAINTENANCE OF WAY EMPLOYEES DIVISION/IBT, Plаintiff-Appellant, v. NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 12-3415.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Decided March 11, 2014.
Argued Oct. 31, 2013.
745 F.3d 808
D. The ALJ did not err by failing to obtain the medical source statement from Dr. Patil.
Last, Thomas asserts that the ALJ erred by declining to order a medical source statement from Dr. Patil, the consultative examiner. A medical source statement is a statement from a treating or examining physician that explains what a claimant can do despite her impairments. Illinois has never required such statements, and the completeness of an administrative record is generally committed to the ALJ‘s discretion. See Nelms v. Astrue, 553 F.3d 1093, 1098 (7th Cir.2009) (generally upholding ALJ‘s determination that record was adequаte). We do not see any reason to impose such a requirement in this case, particularly considering that the determination of a claimant‘s RFC is a matter for the ALJ alone—not a treating or examining doctor—to decide.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the decision of the district court and REMAND to the Social Security Administration for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Harry W. Zanville, San Diego, CA, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
James S. Whitehead, Sidley Austin LLP, Chicago, IL, for Defendant-Appellee.
Before BAUER, MANION, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.
BAUER, Circuit Judge.
I. BACKGROUND
The Brotherhood represents members of the maintenance-of-way craft employed by Norfolk. Maintenance-of-way members work to ensure that railways remain clear, safe, and navigable. This lawsuit
A. The Collective Bargaining Agreements
In 2001, the Brotherhood and Norfolk amended their existing collective bargaining agreements. This amendment, called the System Discipline Rule (Discipline Rule), outlines the procedures Norfolk must follow when disciplining the Brotherhood members. The Discipline Rule does not allow Norfolk to discipline, dismiss, or place an unfavorable mark on an employee‘s record without first conducting a fair and impartial investigation.
Pursuant to the Discipline Rule, Norfolk must provide written notice describing the precise charge to the employee and the Brotherhood at least ten days before the disciplinary hearing. The parties refer to the disciplinary hearing as an investigation. At the investigation, either the employee or Norfolk can call witnesses to testify. An employee is entitled to the assistance of authorized representatives throughout the process. The Discipline Rule does not require an external investigator to conduct the investigation; typically a single Norfolk-appointed officer conducts them.
After the investigation, the hearing officer determines whether the employee should be dismissed. An employee has the right to appeal the results of the investigation to a higher officer at Norfolk. If an employee remains unsatisfied, he or she may petition the Special Board of Adjustment (SBA)1 for a final adjudication on the matter.
B. The Railway Labor Act
The Railway Labor Act (RLA) governs labor disputes between employees, employers, and labor unions.
Minor disputes, on the other hand, are those arising out of grievances or out of the interpretation or application of agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, or working conditions.
Sub judice, the parties followed the procedures typical of a minor dispute. As prescribed by the Discipline Rule, investigations were held in all four disciplinary actions. As prescribed by the Discipline Rule and
C. The Disciplinary Actions
Norfolk fired four employees after investigation hearing officers concluded that each employee made false statements related to their claims of on-duty injuries.2 In each investigation, Norfolk submitted an accident reconstruction report by Richard T. Hughes, P.E. (Hughes), a consulting engineer. Hughes reenacted each accident, and in each case, he concluded that it was unlikely that the injuries sustained by the employees occurred as they described. Hughes never testified at any of the investigations, yet his reports were submitted as evidence. Norfolk never provided notice to the accused employees that it would rely on an expert report in their investigations. Norfolk‘s use of Hughes’ reports at the disciplinary investigations is the heart of this dispute.
We highlight the disciplinary proceeding of Steven Kawa (Kawa) because it adequately represents the alleged harm that has befallen each of the Brotherhood members. Kawa claimed he suffered cervical injuries when he drove a truck over a bump in the road at 55 miles per hour. Kawa was jostled and said he hit his head on the ceiling of the truck cab. Kawa drove for another 25 to 30 miles before he asked a co-worker to drive due to pain in his neck. Kawa went to a hospital that same day and was examined. Not one of the other three employees who rode in the truck saw Kawa hit his head or reported any injuries of their own.
After the incident, Norfolk documented Kawa‘s description of the event in a personal injury report. A Norfolk manager was skeptical of Kawa‘s injury because Kawa had previously asked for an extended leave of absence. The Norfolk manager reenacted the incident twice in the same truck, at the sаme speed, and in the same location. The manager was thrown upward by the bump, but he did not hit his head on the ceiling. The manager then hired Hughes to verify the results of the manager‘s tests. Hughes used the same data as the manager and concluded that it was an extremely remote chance that the bump in the road caused Kawa‘s injury. Subsequently, Norfolk notified Kawa to appear for an investigation regarding any false statements he may have made about his injury.
At the investigation, the manager testified and presented a document detailing
The Brotherhood appealed on Kawa‘s behalf to Norfolk management. The Brotherhood attacked the weight of the evidence аgainst Kawa, and asserted that [s]ince Mr. Hughes was not available for the Organization to question at the hearing, I can only assume that [Hughes’ report] will not have any bearing on the outcome of this investigation. Again, the Brotherhood did not argue that Norfolk‘s submission of Hughes’ report violated the Discipline Rule. Additionally, and for the first time in the proceeding, the Brotherhood introduced an affidavit from Tony Machetta (Machetta) about the purpose and function of the tether straps installed on the driver‘s seat of the truck. The Brotherhood did not provide information about Machetta‘s qualifications as an expert or subject him to cross-examination. Norfolk management confirmed Kawa‘s dismissal, explaining that the evidence did not support Kawa‘s appeal.
Next, the Brotherhood requested a hearing before the SBA. The SBA was comрosed of a Norfolk representative, a Brotherhood representative, and a neutral member. In its petition, the Brotherhood raised many issues about the investigation and argued that the facts did not support Norfolk‘s termination of Kawa. The Brotherhood still did not object to Norfolk‘s submission of Hughes’ report as a violation of Kawa‘s right to a fair and impartial investigation under the Discipline Rule. The SBA ruled that substantial evidence supported the conclusion that Kawa made a false statement concerning an on-duty injury and Norfolk‘s dismissal of Kawa was warranted.
The Brotherhood then filed a complaint in federal district court seeking to overturn the SBA award that confirmed Kawa‘s dismissal. The Brotherhood‘s efforts to vacate the award proved fruitless.
In a separate lawsuit filed in district court (the instant matter before us), the Brotherhood rеquested a permanent injunction. The Brotherhood wants to prevent Norfolk from using Hughes’ reports, or any expert-witness testimony, in employee investigations unless Norfolk follows new court-imposed procedures. The Brotherhood requested a court order mandating Norfolk to: (1) disclose expert witnesses to the Brotherhood and accused employees before investigations; (2) provide copies of еxpert reports to the Brotherhood and accused employees before investigations; (3) present experts for cross-examination at investigations; (4) allow the Brotherhood time to hire its own experts; and (5) qualify experts under the Daubert or Kumho Tire standards. The district court declined to exercise jurisdiction over this action because the Brotherhood‘s suit constituted a minor dispute within the exclusive jurisdiction of a RLA Adjustment Board.3
II. DISCUSSION
This court reviews de novo the district court‘s dismissal of cross-motions for summary judgment. Wisconsin Cent., Ltd. v. Shannon, 539 F.3d 751, 756 (7th Cir.2008).
There are two preliminary matters to clarify. First, the Brotherhood failed to develop its argument that Norfolk did not perform its duty under
The only remaining issue is whether this Court may exercise jurisdiction over this dispute. The Brotherhood argues that this Court has jurisdiction over its lawsuit because its complaint raised a federal question—whether Norfolk violated a provision of a federal statute,
When the parties disagree about the appropriate classification of a dispute, the party seeking tо establish that a dispute is minor and under the exclusive arbitral jurisdiction of a RLA Adjustment Board faces a relatively light burden. Consolidated, 491 U.S. at 307; Brotherhood of Ry., Airline & S.S. Clerks, Freight Handlers, Exp. & Station Employees v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co., 847 F.2d 403, 406 (7th Cir. 1988). To be considered minor, an employer‘s action only needs to be arguably justified by a contractual right under the terms of the collective bargaining agreement. Consolidated, 491 U.S. at 307. An employer‘s contractual claim may rely upon implied contractual terms, which the parties established through past practices. Consolidated, 491 U.S. at 312; Atchison, 847 F.2d at 406. Only if the employer‘s assertion of a contractual right is frivolous or obviously insubstantial will the court construe the dispute as major, and have jurisdiction to hear the case on its merits.
Consolidated is the seminal case which set the standard to determine whether railway labor disputes are major or minor. Id. at 301. In Consolidated, a union contested a railroad‘s decision to test employees for drugs during all periodic and return-from-leave physical examinations, instead of only testing occasionally. Id. at 300. The collective bargaining agreement was not in the record and neither party relied upon an express provision of the contract to support their contentions. Id. at 311. Instead, the Court looked to the past practices between the parties and found that [d]rug testing always had some place in [the railroad‘s] physical examination, although its role changed with timе. Id. at 313. The union argued that the railroad materially departed from the terms of the parties’ agreement when it increased the frequency of drug testing, but the Court disagreed. Id. at 316. It held that the case constituted a minor dispute that was within the exclusive jurisdiction of any Board formed under the RLA. Id. at 320.
Applying the Consolidated standard to the instant case, we agree with the district court‘s ruling that this dispute is minor. The Discipline Rule requires Norfolk to provide the Brotherhood members with a fаir and impartial investigation, but it does not provide extensive procedural requirements or evidentiary rules on how to meet that requirement. The only portion of the Discipline Rule which remotely discusses the presentation of evidence at investigations is paragraph (f), which states that [p]ertinent witnesses called by the carrier [or employee] to testify in disciplinary investigations will be compensated. The Discipline Rule does not explicitly address pre-investigation disclosures, the admissibility of hearsay testimony, or the role of expert witnesses.
The Brotherhood‘s conduct in Kawa‘s case illustrates the implied terms of the Discipline Rule. The Brotherhood submitted Machetta‘s affidavit after the initial investigation, but did not qualify Machetta as an expert or make him available for cross-examination. The Discipline Rule did not contain an express provision permitting the Brotherhood‘s action, but the Brotherhood submitted the affidavit anyway. Both parties enjoyed latitude to introduce testimony and evidence in the four recent disciplinary proceedings.
Norfolk also produced evidence from previous disciplinary actions in which the Brotherhood introduced expert testimony without offering the expert for cross-examination. In three investigations regarding the termination of employees who tested positive for marijuana, the Brotherhood submitted sworn statements from Dr. Klawans on behalf of its members. Though Dr. Klawans was never subject to cross-examination, the Adjustment Board considered his reports.5 The use of hearsay reports by lay persons and experts has played a consistent role in the disciplinary hearings of the Brotherhood members. Based on the parties’ past practices, Norfolk‘s use of Hughes’ reports in the investigations was arguably justified by the implied contractual terms of the parties’ collective bargaining agreements.
The Brotherhood attempts to use
The CNW Court held that a federal court could exercise jurisdiction and issue the railroad‘s request to enjoin the union from holding a labor strike. Id. at 584. In that case, howеver, the railroad filed suit after it exhausted the formal procedures mandated for a major dispute under
In this case, other practical remedies are available to the Brotherhood. It can renegotiate the terms of its collective bargaining agreement with Norfolk under the formal procedures required by
This case is also distinguishable from Ryan. The Ryan court held that it had jurisdiction and decided the case on the merits. Ryan, 286 F.3d at 460. In Ryan, five trainmen sought a declaration that they were entitled to representation in grievance proceedings by their union, the Brotherhood of Locomоtive Engineers, instead of the United Transportation Union, which traditionally represented them. Id. at 457. The only issue before the court was how to interpret
III. CONCLUSION
This dispute grew out of the application of the parties’ collective bargaining agreement in employee disciplinary actions. Norfolk met its burden of proving that its use of Hughes’ reports at investigations was justified by a contractual right, albeit an implied one. Therefore, we agree with the district court that the Brotherhood‘s suit is a quintessential minor dispute and find no basis for asserting jurisdiction over the subject matter of this dispute, Atchison, 847 F.2d at 412. The district court‘s decision is AFFIRMED.
