Carmelo Reyes BARINA, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
GULF TRADING AND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY, A DIVISION OF GULF
OIL CORPORATION, a Corporation and The National
Maritime Union of America, an
unincorporated association,
Defendants-Appellees.
No. 83-5752.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Dec. 7, 1983.
Decided Feb. 23, 1984.
Edgar Gonzales Rios, Alhambra, Cal., for plaintiff-appellant.
William P. Barry, McCutchen, Black, Verleger & Shea, Los Angeles, Cal., Ned R. Phillips, New York City, for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of California.
Before SKOPIL, FERGUSON and CANBY, Circuit Judges.
CANBY, Circuit Judge:
Barina brought this action against his employer under Sec. 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 185, and against his union for violating its duty of fair representation. The district court dismissed the entire action as untimely. In this appeal, we must decide whether to apply retroactively the statute of limitations required by either United Parcel Service, Inc. v. Mitchell,
BACKGROUND
Gulf Trading and Transportation Company (Gulf) discharged Barina on October 22, 1979. Barina protested to his union, the National Maritime Union (NMU). NMU obtained a settlement of the grievance which afforded Barina reinstatement, but not payment of full back wages.1 NMU notified Barina of the settlement by letter on June 11, 1980. Barina disapproved of the settlement and brought suit on June 24, 1981, against Gulf under section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 185, and against NMU for violation of its duty of fair representation. Following the pattern in hybrid Sec. 301/fair representation actions, the complaint alleged that the union violated its duty of fair representation during the grievance proceeding and that the terms of the settlement violated the collective bargaining agreement.
Barina's cause of action accrued on July 12, 1980.2 Under the then prevailing law, Barina's action against Gulf and NMU was timely. Because California law would have been the source of the applicable limitations,3 Barina had four years to file his suit against his employer, Singer v. Flying Tiger Line, Inc.,
The district court, however, applied United Parcel Service, Inc. v. Mitchell,
After the district court's decision dismissing Barina's action, the Supreme Court decided DelCostello v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters, --- U.S. ----,
ANALYSIS
I. Barina's suit against NMU.
The district court erred in applying Mitchell retroactively to Barina's claim against NMU. We have held that Mitchell applies only to the employee's claim against his employer and that it does not affect the limitation applicable to the employee's claim against his union. McNaughton v. Dillingham Corporation,
Nor can DelCostello be applied retroactively to bar Barina's claim against NMU. We squarely confronted that question in Edwards v. Teamsters Local No. 36,
Because Mitchell is inapplicable and DelCostello does not apply retroactively, we reverse the district court's dismissal of Barina's action against NMU.
II. Barina's claim against Gulf.
A. Retroactive application of Mitchell.
In Singer v. Flying Tiger Line Inc.,
Gulf argues that Singer should not be followed because it was effectively overruled by Local 1020 of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters v. FMC Corporation,
B. Retroactive application of DelCostello.
We lack controlling precedent concerning DelCostello 's retroactive application in suits brought by an employee against his employer to set aside arbitration. Therefore, we must resolve the retroactivity question by weighing the three factors specified in Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
The first and the third factors militate against retroactivity here. DelCostello establishes a new principle of law because it imposes a limitation on the employee that is eight times shorter than the limitation that applied when his claim arose. Moreover, DelCostello deviated from the Supreme Court's prior direction in UAW v. Hoosier Cardinal Corp.,
The second Chevron Oil factor does favor retroactivity in this case. A substantial purpose behind the six-month limitation developed in DelCostello is to give finality to labor disputes.
Singer, Edwards, and McNaughton II confirm our decision not to apply DelCostello retroactively to Barina's suit against Gulf. Those cases presented issues analogous to the one we now decide. In Singer, we confronted the question whether a 100-day limitation mandated by Mitchell should be applied retroactively to an employee's suit against his employer; in Edwards and McNaughton II, the issue was whether DelCostello 's six-month limitation should be applied retroactively to an employee's fair representation suit against his union. All three cases resolved their analogous issues as we do here: they decided against retroactive application.
Because neither Mitchell nor DelCostello may be applied retroactively to Barina's suit against Gulf, the district court's dismissal of Barina's action against Gulf, like its dismissal of Barina's action against NMU, was erroneous. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Notes
The settlement resulted from an informal grievance proceeding. Although the settlements involved in Mitchell and DelCostello resulted from arbitration, not an informal grievance proceeding, nothing turns on this distinction. The same limitation periods apply whether an employee's grievance is resolved with or without going to arbitration. McNaughton v. Dillingham Corp.,
The district court selected July 12, 1980, as the date of accrual because the collective bargaining agreement afforded NMU 30 days to take a grievance decision to arbitration. Therefore Barina knew, or should have known, by July 12 that his dispute with Gulf had been finally resolved. Barina contends that accrual occurred later. Our disposition of the case makes it unnecessary to determine which of the dates urged by the parties is the correct one; all are within the limitation period that we apply. We therefore need not resolve whether accrual occurs when the employee learns, or should have learned, that his dispute was finally resolved, as the district court held, or whether accrual occurs when the employee learns, or should have learned, that the union may have violated its duty of fair representation. For simplicity, we accept the district court's determination of accrual
The parties agree that California is the appropriate source for all relevant state law
Mitchell was decided on April 20, 1981, slightly more than nine months after Barina's cause of action accrued
We recognize that the Third, Fourth, Fifth, Eighth and Eleventh Circuits reached conclusions contrary to Edwards and applied DelCostello retroactively. Perez v. Dana Corporation,
Because the plaintiff was an airline employee in Singer, the action against the employer was brought under the Railway Labor Act, 45 U.S.C. Secs. 151 et seq., rather than under Sec. 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 185. This distinction, which the court in Singer ignored, is without import and does not provide a basis for distinguishing Singer
In McNaughton I, we did apply Mitchell retroactively to a hybrid Sec. 301/fair representation claim brought by an employee against his employer. In that case, however, we expressly declined to entertain plaintiff's contention that Mitchell should not be applied retroactively because the contention had not been raised in the district court. Id. at 1047 n. 5
We reject Gulf's contention that McNaughton I 's reasoning requires application of California's 100-day limitation apart from its reliance on Mitchell. Mitchell is fundamental to McNaughton I 's analysis.
The inequity of retroactive application of DelCostello is greatly diminished, of course, if the six-month limitation of DelCostello is applied to a claim arising before DelCostello but after Mitchell. The effect then is to lengthen the limitation from the customarily short (20-100 day) period applicable to actions to set aside commercial arbitrations. While prejudice to the defendant might occasionally result from the resurrection of a claim once thought dead, it is not likely to equal the prejudice to the plaintiff resulting from the unexpected death of a claim thought to be alive
In this case, retroactive application of DelCostello would drastically shorten the limitation otherwise applicable to Barina's claim under the law of this circuit. The same was true in Edwards and McNaughton II, where we held DelCostello was not to be applied retroactively to unfair representation claims against a union.
