{1} This сase examines the scope of a public employee union’s liability to its members for alleged inadequate representation during a grievance proceeding. Plaintiffs, who were members of the New Mexico Federation of Teachers-TVI, Albuquerque TVI Faculty Federation Local No. 4974 AFT, NMFT, and the American Federation of Teachers (“Union Defendants”), were fired from their jobs as full-time teachers at Albuquerque Technical Vocational Institute (“TVI”). Plaintiffs requested Union Defendants to represent them in a grievance against TVI seeking reinstatement and back pay through the procedures established in thе Collective Bargaining Agreement between Union Defendants and TVI. However, after obtaining a favorable arbitration decision concluding that Plaintiffs could file a grievance challenging their terminations, Union Defendants allegedly negotiated a settlement with TVI without consulting Plaintiffs, effectively waiving Plaintiffs’ grievance. Plaintiffs then filed a lawsuit in the district court against Union Defendants, asserting: 1) breach of the duty of fair representation, based on a negligence standard; 2) breach of the collective bargaining agreement of which Plaintiffs were third-party beneficiaries; 3) breach of the covenant of good faith and fаir dealing implied in the collective bargaining agreement; and 4) breach of a fiduciary duty. The district court dismissed Plaintiffs’ complaint under Rule 1-012(B)(6) NMRA 2006, concluding that Plaintiffs did not state a cause of action against Union Defendants.
{2} On appeal the Court of Appeals reversed the district court, reinstating Plaintiffs’ complaint in its entirety. Callahan v. Albuquerque TVI Faculty Fed’n Local No. k97k,
{3} We granted certiorari to consider three issues. One, what is the scope of a public employee union’s liability to a member for alleged failure or refusal to adequately represent the employee in a grievance proceeding? Two, whether public employees who seek compensatory damages from their
{4} In its order dismissing Plaintiffs’ complaint, the district court was clear that it was deciding this case under Rule 12(B)(6) and was not considering matters outside the pleadings. Dismissal on 12(B)(6) grounds is appropriate only if Plaintiffs are not entitled to recover under any theory of the facts alleged in their complaint. Kirkpatrick v. Introspect Healthcare Corp.,
{5} Plaintiffs were fired from their jobs as full-time teachers at TVI without notice or explanation. As employees of a public institution, Plaintiffs were covered by PEBA I. PEBA I gives public employees the right to join a labor organization for the purpose of collective bargaining. Union Defеndants are the exclusive representatives of TVI employees under a Collective Bargaining Agreement between Union Defendants and TVI. Part of the responsibilities of Union Defendants under the Collective Bargaining Agreement are to represent public employees during a grievance proceeding.
{6} Plaintiffs sought representation from Union Defendants to challenge their terminations and obtain reinstatement and back pay. Union Defendants undertook representation of Plaintiffs and filed grievances on Plaintiffs’ behalf. As a preliminary matter, Union Defendants represented Plaintiffs in an arbitration to determine whether Plaintiffs had a right to challenge their terminations. On this issue, Union Defendants prevailed — it was determined that Plaintiffs were entitled to challenge their terminations under the Collective Bargaining Agreement. Although Union Defendants continued to represent Plaintiffs, rather than seek reinstatement and back pay for them, Union Defendants settled the matter without notifying or consulting with Plaintiffs. The settlement required Plaintiffs to dismiss a pending federal lawsuit against TVI and to waive any right to future employment with TVI. 2 In the event Plaintiffs refused to abide by the settlement, Union Defendants had an agreement with TVI to testify against Plaintiffs in an attempt to have Plaintiffs’ federal lаwsuit against TVI dismissed.
{7} Dissatisfied with the settlement, Plaintiffs sued Union Defendants in the district court. In their complaint, Plaintiffs allege that Union Defendants ignored Plaintiffs’ legitimate defense to their terminations, failed to investigate Plaintiffs’ claims, processed
I. CAUSES OF ACTION SUPPORTED BY THE FACTS STATED IN PLAINTIFFS’ COMPLAINT AGAINST UNION DEFENDANTS
A. LABOR ORGANIZATIONS OWE PUBLIC EMPLOYEES A DUTY OF FAIR REPRESENTATION BUT CANNOT BE SUED FOR NEGLIGENT REPRESENTATION
{8} Plaintiffs argue that the above facts state a cause of action against Union Defendants for breach of the duty of fair representation and urge us to adopt a negligence standard to support such a cause of action. Union Defendants concede that they have a duty to fairly represent their union members. Union Defendants also concede in their reply brief that Plaintiffs have alleged sufficient facts in their complaint to support a cause of action for breach of the duty of fair representation. However, relying on Jones v. Int’l Union of Operating Engineers,
{9} In Jones, the employer, Continental Oil Company, fired Jones for refusing to sign a statement acknowledging he had a preexisting eye injury that limited his ability to work. Id. at 324,
The union has great discretion in handling the claims of its members, and in determining whether there is merit to such claim which warrants the union’s pressing the claim through all of the grievance procedures, including arbitration, and the courts will interferе with the union’s decision not to present an employee’s grievance only in extreme cases.
Id. at 331,
{10} In Jones, we also cited cases and legal scholars for the legal premise that a union is liable to a member for its arbitrary or bad faith action in representing or failing to represent a member against his or her employer. Id. Persuaded by the authority we cited, we held Jones had stated a cause of action when he pled that the union had arbitrarily, in bad faith, and in violation of its trust refused to press Jones’s grievance to arbitration. Id. at 331-32,
{11} We continue to believe that a court should only interfere with a union’s decision not to present an employee’s grievance in extreme cases. Expanding a cause of action for breach of fair representation to include negligent representation would exceed the bounds of caution we expressed in Jones. Moreover, requiring arbitrary, fraudulent or bad faith conduct to prove a breach of the duty of fair representation is consistent with United States Supreme Court precedent. See Vaca v. Sipes,
{13} Nevertheless, the Supreme Court recognized that the federal collective bargaining system “of necessity subordinates the interests of an individual employee to the collective interests of all employees in a bargaining unit.” Id. Therefore, “[a] breach of the statutory duty of fair representation occurs only when a union’s conduct toward a member of the collective bargaining unit is arbitrary, discriminatory, or in bad faith.” Id. at 190,
{14} Since Vaca, the United States Supreme Court has reiterated its holding that a union breaches its duty of fair representation only when its conduct is arbitrary, discriminatory, or in bad faith. United Steelworkers of Am.,
{15} Because we hold thаt the breach of duty of fair representation requires a showing of arbitrary, fraudulent, or bad faith conduct, Plaintiffs’ cause of action based on simple negligence is dismissed. The factual allegations in the complaint are sufficient to state a cause of action for arbitrary, fraudulent, or bad faith breach of the duty of fair representation.
B. PLAINTIFFS DO NOT STATE A CLAIM FOR BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY
{16} The Court of Appeals held that “unions such as Defendants owe a fiduciary duty to them union members such as Plaintiffs to represent those members fairly. Plaintiffs have adequately stated a cause of action and should be able to proceed with it.” Callahan,
{17} We do not interpret the Court of Appeals opinion to create a cause of action for breach оf fiduciary duty. Rather, we interpret the opinion as relying on our language in Jones to explain why Plaintiffs state a cause of action for breach of the duty of fair representation. In Jones, we stated that collective bargaining agreements “generally provide that grievance procedures are union
Unless a contrary intention is manifest, the employer’s obligations under a collective bargaining agreement which contains a grievance procedure controlled by the union shall be deemed to run solely to the union as the bargaining representative, to be administered by the union in accordance with its fiduciary duties to employees in the bargaining unit. The representative can enforce the claim. It can make reasonable, binding compromises. It is liable for breaches of trust in a suit by the employee beneficiaries.
Id. at 329,
{18} Plaintiffs rely on an American Law Reports annotation and two Pennsylvania cases in support of their argument that Union Defendants owed them a fiduciary duty relating to their employment grievance. However, our review of these authorities reveals that the authorities deal only with a union’s duty of fair representation. See Jerald J. Director, Annotation, Union’s Liability in Damages for Refusal or Failure to Process Employee Grievance,
C. PLAINTIFFS DID NOT STATE A CLAIM FOR BREACH OF COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT AS THIRD-PARTY BENEFICIARIES
{19} The Court of Appeals held that Plaintiffs stated a claim for breach of a collective bargaining agreement as third-party beneficiaries. Callahan,
{20} A third-party may have an enforceable right against an actual party to a contract if the third-party is a beneficiary of the contract. Fleet Mortgage Corp. v. Schuster,
{21} However, for Plaintiffs “to have an enforceable right as third-party beneficiaries against the Union, at the very least the employer must have an enforceable right as promisee.” Rawson,
D. PLAINTIFFS DID NOT STATE A CLAIM FOR BREACH OF IMPLIED COVENANT OF GOOD FAITH AND FAIR DEALING AS THIRD-PARTY BENEFICIARIES
{22} While we do not recognize breach of an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing as a cause of action in New Mexico in at-will employment relationships, Melnick v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
II. PLAINTIFFS WERE NOT REQUIRED TO EXHAUST ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDIES IN THIS CASE BECAUSE BREACH OF THE DUTY OF FAIR REPRESENTATION IS NOT A “PROHIBITED PRACTICE” UNDER PEBA
{23} Union Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ claims are barred because Plaintiffs did not file a prohibited practices complaint with either the Public Employee Labor Relations Board (“PELRB”) or the TVI Labor Relations
{24} The general rule is that a party must exhaust administrative remedies unless those administrаtive remedies are inadequate. McDowell v. Napolitano,
{25} Even if we were to interpret PEBA I broadly enough to define a prohibited practice to include a claim for breach of the duty of fair reрresentation, the PELRB and the TVI-LRB cannot provide Plaintiffs with an appropriate remedy. Neither the PELRB nor the TVI-LRB are authorized to award monetary damages to an aggrieved union member for a union’s breach of its duty of fair representation. PEBA I endows the PELRB with “the power to enforce provisions of the Public Employee Bargaining Act through the imposition of appropriate administrative remedies.” Section 10-7D-9(F); see also Section 10-7D-11(E) (endowing local boards like TVI-LRB with “the power to enforce provisions of the Public Employee Bargaining Act or a local collective bargaining ordinance, resolution or charter amendment through the imposition of appropriate administrative remedies”). However, PEBA I does not define the scope of PELRB’s power to impose appropriate administrative remedies to include the award of compensatory damages. TVI’s Governing Board Resolution 1994-57 (August 29, 1994), which was adopted pursuant to PEBA I, Section 10-7D-26(C), states the collective bargaining policy and creates the TVI-LRB. While Section 6(F) of Resolution 1994-57 attempts to define the scope of the administrative remedies, the resolution does not state that the TVI-LRB is authorized to award Plaintiffs’ monetary damagеs against Union Defendants. Section 6(F) of Resolution 1994-57 states:
If upon the preponderance of the evidence introduced at a hearing the board shall be of the opinion that it has been established that a person or organization has engaged in or has committed a prohibited practice under Section 14 or 15 of this policy, it shall issue and cause to be served on such person an order requiring such person to cease and desist from such prohibited practice and to take such affirmative action including reinstatement of employees with or without back pay, as will effectuate this policy____
It is clear that those who wrote Resolution 1994-57 envisioned suits against an employer, who would be in a position to reinstate an employee and provide that employee with back pay. However, the TVI-LRB, armed with the Legislature’s grant of power to impose “appropriate administrative remedies,” could not order Union Defendants to reinstate Plaintiffs. It is also doubtful that the Legislature’s grant empowers the TVI-LRB to award monetary damages other than back pay, such as the actual and exemplary damages sought by Plaintiffs here against Union Defendants. Therefore Plaintiffs were not required to exhaust administrative remedies by first bringing their claim against Union Defendants before the PELRB or the TVI-LRB.
III. PLAINTIFFS HAVE PLED FACTS SUFFICIENT TO DEFEAT A MOTION TO DISMISS AFT AS A DEFENDANT UNDER RULE 12(B)(6)
{26} Plaintiffs’ lawsuit included AFT as a named defendant along with the New Mexico
{27} A general rule is that an international union cannot be sued for breach of the duty of fair representation where the international union is not designated as an exclusive representative in a collective bargaining agreement. Kuhn v. Nat’l Ass’n of Letter Carriers, Branch 5,
{28} Although these authorities are persuasive, because the district court decided the issues under Rule 12(B)(6), we must determine whether Plaintiffs pled sufficient facts in their Complaint which, if true, would make AFT a party to the Collective Bargaining Agreement or an exclusive bargaining agent for Plaintiffs. In paragraph 2 of their Complaint, Plaintiffs alleged that AFT does business in New Mexico and by contract is an exclusive representative for Plaintiffs. In paragraph 4, Plaintiffs alleged that AFT is a party to the Collective Bargaining Agreement. We conclude that Plaintiffs have pled facts sufficient to defeat a 12(B)(6) motion seeking to dismiss AFT as a party defendant.
CONCLUSION
{29} We hold that public employee unions in New Mexico owe union members a duty of fair representation and that Plaintiffs stated a cause of action against Union Defendants for breach of the duty of fair representation since the complaint can be interpreted to include a breach based on arbitrаry, fraudulent, or bad faith conduct. Plaintiffs did not state a claim for breach of a fiduciary duty, breach of a collective bargaining agreement as third-party beneficiaries, or breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing as third-party beneficiaries. Because breach of the duty of fair representation is not listed as a prohibited practice under PEBA I, Plaintiffs were not requii-ed to bring their claim before the PELRB or the TVI-LRB to exhaust their administrative remedies. Finally, Plaintiffs have pled sufficient facts against AFT, which if true, make AFT a proper party defendant. We remand to the district court for рroceedings consistent with this opinion.
{30} IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs based their lawsuit largely on the provisions for public employee bargaining in PEBA I. The current provisions for public employee bargaining are found in a new Public Employee Bargaining Act. See NMSA 1978, § 10-7E-1 (2005). Although the two acts appear to be identical in relevant part, see §§ 10-7E-2 to 10-7E-26 (2003, amended 2005), we rely on the provisions of PEBA I because the relevant events occurred prior to the repeal of PEBA I.
. Plaintiffs' federal lawsuit against TVI was dismissed with prejudice on April 2, 2002, pursuant to a settlement between the parties. We note that in the federal scheme, suits involving wrongful termination and inadequate union representation are normally brought as hybrid actions, where the aggrieved employee sues the employer for breach of the collective bargaining agreement under Labor Management Relations Act § 301, 29 U.S.C. § 185 (2000), and sues the union for breach of the duty of fair representation implied from the National Labor Relations Act. DelCostello v. Int'l Bhd. of Teamsters,
. We agree the complaint does not state a cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty as fiduciary duty is defined in 29 U.S.C. § 501. However, a review of 29 U.S.C. § 501 is not necessary since this section is not applicable to government, or public, employee unions. Local 1498 v. Am. Fed'n of Gov’t Employees,
