OPINION
This is a class action suit brought by Brotherhood Railway Carmen of the United States and Canada (“BRC”) and Earl D. Whaley, an individual employee and union member, as representatives of a class of employees who worked for Delpro Company (“Delpro”) and who were furloughed in March or June 1982, and terminated in July, 1982, when Delpro closed its Bear, Delaware, facility. Plaintiffs allege that Delpro and its corporate parent, Trailer Train Company, intentionally, willfully and in bad faith violated the Railway Labor Act (“RLA”), 45 U.S.C. § 151 et seq. (1976), by failing to bargain in good faith and by unilaterally changing working conditions and terms of employment. 1 Plaintiffs seek declaratory and injunctive relief, back pay and punitive damages.
In a previous opinion,
Brotherhood Railway Carmen of United States and Canada v. Delpro Co.,
Prior to class certification, neither defendants, plaintiffs nor the Court questioned the propriety of punitive damages under the RLA. This issue was raised for the first time when, soon after the Court’s certification decision issued, defendants moved to dismiss the class plaintiffs’ punitive damage claim. That motion is now before the Court. 2
Discussion
The class plaintiffs’ punitive damage claim faces considerable precedential obstacles. Although one decision in the Southern District of New York has held punitive damages recoverable under the RLA against an employer,
see Brown v. World Airways, Inc.,
Defendants place primary reliance on this District’s opinion in
Brady v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.
Brady sued both his union and his employer for violations of the RLA. The union moved to strike Brady’s demand for a jury trial. “Intermixed” with this jury trial issue, Judge Wright explained, was the question of whether the plaintiff was entitled to punitive damages.
the regulation of economic relations between labor and management is an exceedingly delicate matter, and this Court is unwilling to employ the crude device of punitive damages as a remedy in causes founded on a detailed and pervasive federal statutory scheme without express authorization from Congress.
Id. at 506. 4
Although this broad language in Brady suggests that all punitive damage awards are barred under the RLA because of Congress’ failure to provide explicitly for their recovery, it is uncertain whether Judge *1335 Wright’s holding reached the defendant employer. Only the union moved to strike the plaintiff's jury demand, not the employer. This Court, therefore, cannot rely on Brady as conclusive precedent.
A fresh look at the question of punitive damages is, in any event, demanded by
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers v. Foust,
Punitive damage awards against unions for unfair representation, the Court concluded, would not advance national labor policy. Offsetting potential benefits of punitive awards, the Court explained, “is the possibility that punitive awards could impair the financial stability of unions and unsettle the careful balance of individual and collective interests which [the Supreme Court had] previously articulated in the unfair representation area.”
The Foust court directed its analysis to suits against unions. That analysis is not immediately transferable to actions against employers. Two of Foust’s policy arguments in particular have less import in suits against management. One is Foust’s concern with the economic hardship wrought by punitive awards. The other is the Foust Court’s fear that collective interests would be sacrificed for those of the individual. Employers, with their larger treasuries and their ability to pass costs on to customers, would under most circumstances be able to absorb or deflect the financial impact of a sizable punitive award. In contrast, a large punitive award against a labor union could easily cripple its financial health. In addition, awards against employers would rarely compromise the collective interest. It is conceivable that an employer under threat of a punitive damage suit by an individual employee might grant special treatment to that employee against the best judgment of the union, thereby undermining the union’s credibility. But this potential conflict with the collective interest is far more remote than that envisioned in Foust. A union, unlike an employer, has an obligation to protect the interest of its membership. It must, day after day, decide which claims to press and which claims not to press with management, always with an eye on the long term welfare of its constituents. Outside influences on the union’s strategic judgments would thus impinge immediately on the union’s ability to represent its membership.
Other policy reasons do, however, militate strongly against recognition of a punitive award. One important reason flows directly from the creation in Foust of a per se rule against exemplary damages in suits against unions for breaches of their duty of fair representation. The Supreme Court likely would extend Foust to suits by management against unions. 5 Without a simi *1336 lar per se rule to protect management, the careful balance in labor-management relations under which employers and unions have operated for years would be upset. To allow a threat of unpredictable punitive awards against employers, where unions sitting opposite them at the bargaining table are immune from such threats, would unfairly multiply the unions’ arsenal of negotiating weapons. If a union could arrive at the bargaining table armed with a uniquely held power to file punitive damage suits, it could inject an unsettling factor not now present in labor-management negotiations. 6 An employer might feel compelled to concede issues that it honestly believed were not in the best interest of the company or of its workers. I do not believe that Congress intended to create this imbalance in the bargaining process.
More generally, introducing punitive damages on the labor scene may have a detrimental effect on the congressional goal of furthering congenial labor relations between union and management. As Chief Justice Warren stated in his dissenting opinion in
United Automobile Workers v. Russell,
The parties to labor controversies have enough devices for making one another “smart” without this Court putting its stamp of approval upon another. I can conceive of nothing more disruptive of congenial labor relations than arming employee, union and management with the potential for “smarting” one another with exemplary damages. Even without the punitive element, a damage action has an unfavorable effect on the climate of labor relations. Each new step in the proceedings rekindles the animosity. Until final judgment the action is a constant source of friction between the parties.
Finally, punitive damage awards would conflict with the general goals of national labor legislation. See
Foust,
The [NLRA] is essentially remedial. It does not carry a penal program declaring the described unfair labor practices to be crimes. The Act does not prescribe penalties or fines in vindication of public rights or provide indemnity against community losses as distinguished from the protection and compensation of employees. Had Congress been intent upon such a program, we cannot doubt that Congress would have expressed its intent and would itself have defined its retributive scheme.
Id.
at 10,
*1337
Justice Blackmun criticized the
Foust
majority for relying on
Republic Steel
as support for an “essentially remedial” labor policy “inhospitable to punitive awards” because, Justice Blackmun believed, the question faced in
Republic Steel
“was simply one of the Board’s statutory competance.”
Plaintiffs rely on
Brown v. World Airways, Inc.,
*1338 In summary, the Court does not believe that an award of punitive damages against an employer for violations of the RLA would further the national labor policy of facilitating collective bargaining and achieving industrial peace, nor would it be consistent with congressional intent as reflected in other federal labor laws. The duties imposed on employers under the Railway Labor Act may be enforced by suits for declaratory or injunctive relief, and injured employees may be compensated for any actual damages they suffer. But the RLA does not impose additional penalties against violators of the Act. Consequently, plaintiffs are not entitled to pursue their punitive damage claim and defendants’ motion to dismiss that claim will be granted.
An appropriate order will issue.
Notes
. These actions, plaintiffs contend, violated section 2 First, Second, Fourth, Seventh and Eleventh, and section 6, of the RLA, 45 U.S.C. §§ 152, 156.
. The Court stayed notification of class members pending resolution of defendants’ motion to dismiss the punitive damage claim. Because the Court holds infra that punitive damages may not be recovered in this case, its prior order will be modified so that no class notice need be distributed.
. The Supreme Court in
Foust
declined to decide the propriety of punitive awards under the Landrum-Griffin Act.
Int'l Bhd. Elec. Workers v. Foust,
One court has harmonized the Landrum-Griffin act cases with Foust as not involving a statute, like the RLA, with an overarching purpose of promoting collective bargaining and peaceful industrial relations, but as involving a "Bill of Rights for union members.” Eaton v. D’Amato,581 F.Supp. 743 (D.D.C.1980).
. The plaintiff s second statutory cause of action in
Brady
was based on the union's breach of its duty of fair representation. Punitive damages were held unavailable under that claim also. The threat of a punitive damage award for breach of the duty of fair representation, the Court stated, "may have unforeseeable effects upon the institution of free collective bargaining----”
. In fact, a breach of a union’s duty of fair representation, with its overtones of broken fi *1336 duciary obligations, presents a stronger case for punitive damages than does a violation of a union's statutory requirements under the Railway Labor Act.
. It is significant that other than
Brown v. World Airways, Inc.,
. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals has previously interpreted
Republic Steel
as prescribing a rule relevant beyond NLRB powers. In
Local 127, United Shoe Workers
a majority of judges in that en banc decision cited
Republic Steel
as support for nonrecognition of punitive awards in section 301 actions under the Labor Management Relations Act.
See
In Deboles v. Trans World Airlines,552 F.2d 1005 , decided before Foust, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals did, in dicta, suggest that in some circumstances punitive awards under the RLA might be maintainable against employers. See id. at 1019 (no indication that RLA deviates from general remedial labor policy "at least with respect to union misconduct”). The Court of Appeals has never, however, squarely faced the question of punitive damages against employers under the RLA. Cf. Rohrer v. Conemaugh & B.L.R.R. Co.,359 F.2d 127 (3d Cir. 1966) (punitive damages sought but case dismissed); Roberts v. Lehigh & N.E. Ry. Co.,323 F.2d 219 (3d Cir.1963) (punitive damages sought but not discussed). See also Bhd. Ry. Clerks v. Philadelphia B. & N.E.R.R. Co., 78 Lab.Cas. (CCH) ¶ 11434 (E.D.Pa.1976) (punitive damages sought but not discussed). Some courts in other circuits have, without discussion, implied in dicta that punitive damages might be recoverable in some cases. See Bangor & A.R.R. Co. v. Bhd. Locomotive Firemen & Engineermen,442 F.2d 812 , 821 (D.C.Cir.1971) (employers did not act "so unreasonably as to warrant assessment of punitive damages"); Air Line Pilots Ass’n v. Scheduled Skyways, Inc.,567 F.Supp. 171 , 179 (W.D.Ark.1983) (no punitive damages recoverable because plaintiff claimed no compensatory damages).
. The Court expresses no view as to whether it would recognize a punitive damage award in favor of an unrepresented employee.
. Plaintiff also relies on
Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen v. Southern Railway Co.,
... ignorefd] the loss of opportunities for earnings resulting from the contracting out of work allocated by agreement to Brotherhood members — a deprivation amounting to a tangible loss of work and pay for which the board is not precluded from granting compensation. Nothing in the record establishes the unavailability of signalmen to perform the work contracted out by the railroad.
Id. (emphasis added). To deny an award of damages in cases where an employee is not laid off, the Court explained, would allow employers to “unilterally contract out work that has been allocated by agreement to the union, under no greater threat than liability for merely nominal damages____’’ Id. at 68. A collective bargaining agreement, if employers could so act with impunity, “would soon become a worthless scrap of paper.” Id. at 68.
Even if Southern Railway is construed as departing from a strictly "remedial” approach to the RLA, it does not compel a broad rule allowing awards of punitive damages against employers, especially not in the instant case which involves massive employee layoffs and a potential assessment of far more than nominal damages. To the extent that Southern Railway might support a punitive damage award in the instant case, this Court respectfully disagrees with that decision.
