This appeal embraces two of the many private lawsuits brought against healthcare providers throughout the country by a single law firm. These two suits, like others of the same pattern, allege that various hospital employees who work for the particular hospital or hospital group have been deprived of compensation for work performed during their meal break, for work performed before and after shifts, and for time spent attending training sessions.
The named plaintiffs, Patricia Cavallaro and Monique Herman, brought the two lawsuits at issue here seeking to represent a potential class of hospital employees— some covered by collective bargaining agreements (“CBAs”) and others not; the defendants were eight named entities (primarily hospitals and health care providers) in the UMass Memorial Healthcare network (“UMass”) and two officials of UMass (CEO John O’Brien and Human Resources VP Patricia Webb). Ultimately, the district court dismissed all but one claim on grounds of “complete preemp *3 tion” and the remaining claim on the merits. 1
One case, denominated No. 11-1073 in this court, began as an action in Massachusetts state court and asserted only state law claims, reflecting the type of wage issues loosely described above, based on contract, common law torts and regulatory statutes. The case was removed by UMass on the ground — revealed not in the complaint but in the motion to dismiss— that Cavallaro and Herman are employees of one network hospital, UMass Memorial Medical Center (“UMMC”) and, as members of the Massachusetts Nursing Association, the terms of their employment are governed by a CBA.
The second case, No. 11-1793 in this court, began as an original action in the federal district court and, raising like wage issues, asserted claims under federal law— specifically, the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 206-207, and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), id. §§ 1059(a)(1), 1104(a)(1). The district court dismissed the claims on the ground that the plaintiffs had failed adequately to allege an employment relationship with any of the named defendants. 2
The plaintiffs appeal in each of the two cases. The two appeals, although addressed to the same or overlapping conduct, present different questions and we address them separately. The issues relating to the state law claims largely turn on legal doctrine as to which our review is
de novo. O’Donnell v. Boggs,
No. 11-1073 (State Law Claims). The original state complaint alleged thirteen counts that may be grouped as follows:
-violation of the Massachusetts Payment of Wages Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 149, § 148 (Count 1);
-violation of the overtime provision of the Massachusetts Fair Minimum Wage Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 151, § 1A (Count 2);
-breach of contract or implied contract (Counts 3, 4 and 5);
-money had and received; quantum meruit/unjust enrichment (Counts 6 and 7); -fraud and conversion (Counts 8 and 12); -negligent misrepresentation (Count 9); -equitable and promissory estoppel (Counts 10 and 11); and -failure to keep accurate records (Count 13).
Counts 10 and 11 (resting on estoppel theories) were dismissed by stipulation but, to avoid confusion, our discussion below retains the original numbering.
In removing the case to federal court, UMass argued that section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (“LMRA”), 29 U..S.C. § 185, “completely preempts” plaintiffs’ state law claims, thereby trans *4 muting the state law claims into federal claims and permitting removal under federal question doctrine, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1441(b). UMass then moved to dismiss all claims with prejudice on the ground that they implicated CBAs and plaintiffs had failed to exhaust CBA remedies, while Cavallaro and Herman moved to remand to state court.
The district court declined to remand and ultimately dismissed all of the claims, save for Count 2, for failure to exhaust CBA remedies required by the relevant CBA. As for Count 2, the court did not determine whether the claim would be barred on this basis because it found that no such claim existed here in light of the statute’s “hospital” exemption and, exercising supplemental jurisdiction, it dismissed that claim on the merits. This appeal followed.
Plaintiffs say that the claims were all based on state law and that, in allowing removal, the district court misunderstood the distinction between “complete preemption,” which authorizes removal, and “defensive preemption,” which merely blocks, or diverts to CBA remedies, a claim otherwise properly in federal court. As we will see, the complete preemption concept has a core meaning which suffices to establish jurisdiction over the case in the district court, although the concept’s full present contours pose uncertainties that complicate the disposition of the claims once in federal court.
Removal is authorized for “[a]ny civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction founded on a claim or right arising under the Constitution, treaties or laws of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b). Here, all of the claims set forth in the state court complaint purport to arise under state law; and this, under the well-pleaded complaint rule, would ordinarily bar removal,
Franchise Tax Bd. v. Construction Laborers Vacation Trust,
“Complete preemption,” as distinct from the more familiar concept of defensive preemption,
3
applies where a purported state claim either is re-characterized as a federal claim or — and here, Supreme Court doctrine has become unstable — is otherwise so related to federal law as to permit the removal. The Court refined the concept primarily in labor cases, extending by analogy to a limited number of other federal statutes.
4
The most familiar example is a claim brought under state contract law to enforce a CBA subject to
*5
federal jurisdiction under section 301 of the LMRA.
E.g., Local 174, Teamsters v. Lucas Flour Co.,
The complete preemption doctrine grew out of the Court’s holding that (1) section 301 required the federal courts to create a body of federal common law for CBAs affecting interstate commerce,
Textile Workers Union v. Lincoln Mills,
Partly to protect the use of arbitration and grievance procedures common to CBAs, the Supreme Court declined to limit complete preemption to contract claims
eo nomine, Lueck,
Despite such confusion, plaintiffs’ main attack on removal in this case plainly fails, for it rests on the proposition that
none
of the claims asserted in the complaint are labor-contract claims. But the short answer is the
Lueck
decision rejected this limitation, explicitly finding a state tort claim for bad faith conduct in relation to a CBA preempted because it depended for its substance at least in part upon interpretation of a CBA; the tort was a distinct claim but its viability depended in some measure on the substance of the CBA.
Lueck,
Several of plaintiffs’ claims under state common law doctrines in this case similarly depend upon analysis of the terms of the CBA. Claims for money had and received, quantum meruit/unjust enrichment, and conversion all rest at bottom on the notion that plaintiffs have not been paid the wages they are owed; here, this depends importantly upon what the CBA provides, as we discuss more fully below, even if these amounts were in turn altered or enlarged by state statutory provisions that cannot be overridden by the CBAs.
The interrelationship of the state claims and a CBA cannot be avoided merely by refusing to identify the CBA in the complaint and citing the well pleaded complaint rule. If a plaintiffs refusal to identify a CBA controlled, removal under section 301 could always be defeated by artful pleading.
BIW Deceived v. Local S6, Indus. Union of Marine & Shipbuilding Workers of Am.,
Thus, on a minimum reading of the complete preemption cases, one or more of plaintiffs’ claims are removable; any such claim makes the
case
removable, 28 U.S.C. § 1441(c);
Pueblo Int’l, Inc. v. De Cardona,
When one turns from removal of the case to disposition of the claims, a different set of issues arise. Here, it is not the CBA alone but the presence, at least in this case (as in many others), of a broadly-phrased grievance and arbitration provision in the CBA. In deference to the agreed-to remedies, courts ordinarily dismiss claims falling within such provisions — namely, those intertwined with interpretation and application of the CBA— so long as relief can be provided within the CBA process. This course, however denominated (e.g., preemption, deference, exhaustion), is also prescribed by Lueck and has been repeatedly followed. 5
We have already indicated that certain of the common law claims — for money had and received, quantum meruit/unjust enrichment, and conversion — necessarily depend upon analysis of the CBA’s terms; but that is also true of the other common law claims that may look less like mere surrogates for a claim to enforce the CBA itself. Those claims in this case include claims for misstatement and claims purported to depend on contracts independent of the CBA itself.
To succeed on their fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims, plaintiffs would have to prove that their reliance on defendants’ alleged fraudulent statements was reasonable.
6
But plaintiffs, who say they were misled into thinking certain time was uncompensated, could not have
reasonably
relied on such statements without taking into account CBA provisions like those guaranteeing payment for work performed during meals, and the practices such provisions embody.
See Haggins v. Verizon New England, Inc.,
Similarly, claims relying on pre-CBA employment contracts will be defended on the ground that, when the employees entered their CBA-covered positions, their earlier employment arrangements were superseded by the CBA. In such a case, a claim based solely on the pre-CBA contract might not itself justify removal,
compare Berda v. CBS Inc.,
Because several other claims in this case unquestionably invoke complete preemption and only one is needed for removal of the entire case to federal court, only the latter question of defensive preemption remains. And, given the need to interpret the CBA’s integration provisions to resolve
*7
UMass’ inevitable defense that the CBA is intended to supercede any such prior contract claim, any claim of the latter type is ultimately sufficiently intertwined with the CBA to require use of the CBA processes.
Lueck,
The remaining claims at issue in this case are private claims based on state
regulatory
statutes. Although closely related to wages, such claims — unlike those based solely on common law theories— may not be “waivable” or “negotiable”— that is, capable of being superceded by the CBA.
Livadas,
But where a regulatory claim is nonwaivable, the question remains whether federal labor policy favoring the CBA grievance and arbitration provision still requires resort to that route, at least initially, if the claim’s resolution requires interpretation of the CBA.
Lueck
suggests that the answer is yes; but, the most recent Supreme Court case directly addressing statutory claims — albeit one addressing agency rather than private action — found it unnecessary to decide the defensive preemption issue because no dispute existed about the amount of wages owed — only whether, contrary to state law, they had been paid too late.
Livadas,
The law in this realm is still evolving and it is not easy to tell in what direction the Supreme Court may go. Indeed, such overlapping regulatory/CBA problems could be handled in a variety of ways and some tensions exist in Supreme Court precedent. Notably, several Supreme Court cases indicate that, at least where federal statutory claims are concerned, an arbitration clause can waive a judicial forum for a Fair Labor Standards Act claim, 29 U.S.C. § 206
et seq.,
only if such waiver is “clear and unmistakable.”
7
14 Penn Plaza LLC v. Pyett,
On the other hand, at least where there is no claim that the CBA itself violates a state statute,
O’Brien v. Town of Agawam,
Until the Supreme Court provides more guidance, the panel is bound by existing circuit precedent. Two of the regulatory claims at issue — plaintiffs’ claim under the Massachusetts Weekly Wage Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 149, § 148, and the claim for failure to keep accurate ree *8 ords — are under Adames preempted by entanglement with CBA interpretation. Whether those state claims could be revived if the CBA grievance process were employed and provided a predicate for further relief is an issue that has not been briefed and on which we express no opinion. 8
The Massachusetts Weekly Wage Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 149, § 148, requires an employer to pay wages owed to an employee within a fixed period; to succeed, an employee must, among other things, prove there are wages owed.
Stanton v. Lighthouse Fin. Servs., Inc.,
But this is a very different situation than
Livadas,
where the wages had been paid, there was no dispute about the amount, and the claim turned on whether the wages had been timely paid under the terms of the state law.
Livadas,
Plaintiffs insist that they are not raising any interpretive dispute about the CBA or the method of calculating wages, but only a factual dispute as to whether plaintiffs were paid for time spent working through meal breaks, before and after work, and during training sessions. Even so, some provisions of the CBA governing the named plaintiffs’ employment will likely need to be interpreted: for example, whether certain training programs are compensable depends on the employee having made a “timely” request to attend; and compensable meal time depends upon whether a nurse remained in the “patient care area.”
But more importantly, resolving the factual dispute does not resolve whether or how much wages are owed. UMass has argued that additional compensation provided by the CBA — say, premium pay above state mandatory rate, or differential pay for certain shifts — may offset any deficiency created by other uncompensated time for purposes of satisfying state mini-ma.
9
Determining whether there are wages owed thus will require construing and applying the various “peculiarities of industry-specific wage and benefit structures” embodied in the CBA — a complicated task better-suited for an arbitrator’s expertise and, regardless, which
Adames
already deemed a matter of interpretation requiring preemption.
*9
That leaves only plaintiffs’ claim under the Massachusetts Fair Minimum Wage Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 151, § 1A, which mandates overtime pay for hours worked over 40 per week at one and a half times the employee’s regular rate of pay. Whether CBA interpretation, or mere consultation, would be needed to determine the “regular rate” might be uncertain,
cf. Adames,
This exercise of supplemental jurisdiction was proper. 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a);
Rodriguez v. Doral Mortg. Corp.,
The district court also did not err in failing to remand to state court any claims of putative plaintiffs not covered by CBAs. The named plaintiffs in this case are current or former hospital employees whose employment is governed by a CBA. Any other potential class plaintiffs are not parties to the suit until plaintiffs’ status is established.
See Pruett v. Caritas Christy
11-1793 (Federal Claims). In No. 11-1793, plaintiffs allege UMass violated the minimum wage and overtime provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 206-207, and failed to keep accurate records and to credit all hours worked in violation of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1059(a)(1), 1104(a)(1). Primarily in dispute is the FLSA claim, for which the plaintiffs had to identify an employer, show an interstate nexus, and establish under-compensation. Id. §§ 206(a), 207(a)(1).
The district court dismissed the FLSA claim on the pleadings, saying that the complaint did not identify any employer for the named plaintiffs but merely the UMass umbrella organization and specific named hospitals — none of which were identified as the immediate employer for either plaintiff. Having already allowed two other amended complaints, the district court refused to allow an amendment for the FLSA claim or the ERISA claim, which it viewed as parallel or derivative.
Whether the complaint stated a claim without identifying the direct employer is a question of law,
Estate of Bennett v. Wainwright,
Here, plaintiffs say that their allegations were nevertheless sufficient because all of the UMass-affiliated entities operated as a “joint employer” or “integrated enterprise” — theories that might (or might not) extend liability beyond their direct employer.
Arculeo v. On-Site Sales & Mktg., LLC,
Plaintiffs do not suggest they were ignorant of which hospital directly employed their two named plaintiffs,
compare Cordero-Hernández v. Hernández-Ballesteros,
But, in this instance, the defendants themselves removed the parallel state case to federal court on the specific ground that these two employees were directly employed under a CBA by a named defendant identified by defendants themselves, and the district court accepted this allegation in sustaining the removal. Under these peculiar circumstances and with no indication of any prior abuse of the amendment process (the prior amendments were consented-to modifications reflecting developments in mediation), we think that one last amendment should be permitted, if the plaintiffs are so minded.
The judgment in No. 11-1073 is affirmed; the judgment in No. 11-1793 is vacated and that case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this decision. Each side shall bear its own costs on the appeals.
It is so ordered.
Notes
.
Cavallaro v. UMass Mem'l Healthcare, Inc.,
No. 09-40181,
.
Cavallaro v. UMass Mem'l Health Care Inc.,
No. 09-40152,
. Ordinary, or defensive, preemption is (like "jurisdiction”) a loose concept used variously by the courts to refer to certain defenses to a claim, of which a classic example is a state claim foreclosed because its assertion conflicts with a federal statute or falls within a field preempted by federal law.
Aetna Health Inc. v. Davila,
. The principal cases in the labor context include, in addition to
Avco: Allis-Chalmers Corp.
v.
Lueck,
.
Haggins v. Verizon New England, Inc.,
.
Carroll v. Xerox Corp.,
. A broadly-worded arbitration clause such as one covering "any dispute concerning or arising out of the terms and/or conditions of [the CBA], or dispute involving the interpretation or application of [the CBA]” will not suffice; rather, something closer to specific enumeration of the statutory claims to be arbitrated is required.
Compare Wright v. Universal Maritime Serv. Corp.,
.
Cf. Livadas,
. Plaintiffs admit that Massachusetts wage and hour statutes incorporate the standards of the Fair Labor Standards Act, which contemplates such offsets.
See
29 U.S.C. § 207(e)(5)-(7), (h); 29 C.F.R. § 778.200, 778.202;
Mullally v. Waste Mgmt. of Mass.,
.
See Davis v. Abington Mem’l Hosp.,
