Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GINSBURG.
James Cephas sued his employer, MVM, Inc., for damages, claiming the company violated its Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) with Cephas’s union when it transferred him to another position. The district court first held Cephas’s claim arose under § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, because § 301 completely preempts a claim for breach of a CBA cast in terms of state contract law. The court then held the applicable statute of limitations was to be found in § 10(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 160(b) (six months), and dismissed the action as untimely. We hold the applicable limitation period was to be found in the District of Columbia Code, § 12-301(7) (three years), *483 pursuant to which this case was timely filed.
I. Background
At all relevant times MVM provided security guards for various premises in Washington, D.C. under a contract with the U.S. Marshals Service. Cephas was employed by MVM as a Court Security Officer at the U.S. Attorney’s Office in March 2003 when Robert Chaney, the government official in charge of security there, alleged Cephas failed to respond to an emergency while on duty and invoked the Government’s contractual right to have Cephas removed. As a result, MVM transferred Cephas to its security force at the National Courts Building.
Cephas’s union filed a grievance with MVM, claiming the transfer was inconsistent with its CBA. MVM denied the grievance on the ground that the transfer of Cephas was “not reviewable” under the CBA because it “was done at the written request of the Government.”
In December 2004, Cephas sued Chaney and MVM in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia, alleging Chaney had defamed him and MVM had transferred him in violation of the CBA and unspecified “rights of Cephas.” MVM removed the case to the United States district court, which dismissed the suit against MVM in September 2005. The court reasoned that § 301 of the LMRA completely preempted Cephas’s claim under D.C. law and that, recast as a federal claim arising under § 301, it was barred by the six-month statute of limitations in § 10(b) of the NLRA.
Cephas appealed both rulings. Another panel of this court affirmed the dismissal of the action against Chaney; we address now only the timeliness of Cephas’s claims against MVM.
II. Analysis
Cephas argues his contract claim arises under D.C. law, i.e., is not completely preempted, and that, even if the claim is completely preempted and therefore arises under § 301, D.C. law provides the applicable statute of limitations. MVM takes the position that § 301 completely preempts Cephas’s state law claim and that the applicable statute of limitations is to be found in § 10(b) of the NLRA. Reviewing these issues of law de novo, we hold that Cephas’s claim arises under § 301 but nonetheless was timely filed because, for the type of claim advanced in this case, § 301 borrows the District of Columbia’s limitation period for a breach of contract action, which is three years.
A. Complete Preemption
Section 301(a) of the LMRA provides:
Suits for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization representing employees in an industry affecting commerce ... may be brought in any district court ... without respect to the amount in controversy [and] without regard to the citizenship of the parties.
The Supreme Court has held § 301(a) is a source of substantive federal common law,
Textile Workers Union v. Lincoln Mills of Ala.,
Section 301 completely preempts any action predicated upon state law if that action “depends upon the meaning of a collective-bargaining agreement.”
Lingle v. Norge Div. of Magic Chef, Inc.,
the pre-emptive force of § 301 is so powerful as to displace entirely any state cause of action “for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization.” Any such suit is purely a creature of federal law, notwithstanding the fact that state law would provide a cause of action in the absence of § 301.
Franchise Tax Bd. v. Constr. Laborers Vacation Trust,
Cephas’s complaint charges MVM breached the CBA and violated unspecified “rights” of his. Neither his complaint nor his brief, however, identifies any source of right — such as an individual employment agreement — other than the CBA. We conclude his action depends entirely upon the meaning of the CBA and is, therefore, completely preempted by § 301.
Lingle,
B. Timeliness
Although Cephas’s only cause of action arises under a federal statute, that is, § 301, federal law does not necessarily displace the statute of limitations that would apply under D.C. law. Section 301 does not specify a statute of limitations,
*
and “the general rule [is] that statutes of limitation” for federal rights of action that do not specify a limitation period “are to be borrowed from state law.”
Reed v. United Transp. Union,
The presumption favoring state law is overcome only “when the state limitations period ... would frustrate or interfere with the implementation of national policies or be at odds with the purpose or operation of federal substantive law.”
*485
North Star Steel,
Cephas argues federal law does not displace the state (here, D.C.) statute of limitations for a breach of contract action, wherefore his case was timely filed. MVM counters, on the authority of
DelCostello v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters,
(1) DelCostello and the Hybrid Claim
Before
DelCostello,
the Supreme Court had held in a § 301 suit for breach of a CBA that the applicable statute of limitations was to be borrowed from analogous state law. Thus, in
UAW v. Hoosier Cardinal Corp.,
a § 301 action for damages brought by a union alleging the employer had breached the CBA and various unwritten contracts of employment with the employees, the Court applied the state statute of limitations for breach of contract.
Although an employee may sue an employer under § 301 for breach of a CBA, the employee first must exhaust the grievance and arbitration procedures in the CBA.
Republic Steel Corp. v. Maddox,
In
DelCostello,
rather than draw upon state law to supply the limitation period for hybrid eases employees had brought against their employers, the Supreme Court applied the limitation period in § 10(b) of the NLRA. The Court emphasized the substantial similarity between the DFR component of a hybrid claim and an unfair labor practice claim.
Id.
at 170,
In § 10(b) of the NLRA, Congress established a limitations period attuned to what it viewed as the proper balance between the national interests in stable bargaining relationships and finality of private settlements, and an employee’s interest in setting aside what he views as an unjust settlement under the collective-bargaining system. That is precisely the balance at issue in this case. The employee’s interest in setting aside the final and binding determination of a grievance through the method established by the collective-bargaining agreement unquestionably implicates those consensual processes that federal labor law is chiefly designed to promote — the formation of the agreement and the private settlement of disputes under it. Accordingly, the need for uniformity among procedures followed for similar claims as well as the clear congressional indication of the proper balance between the interests at stake, counsels the adoption of § 10(b) of the NLRA as the appropriate limitations period for lawsuits such as this.
The Court in
DelCostello
distinguished
Hoosier
principally on the ground that it “did not involve any agreement to submit disputes to arbitration.”
(2) MVM’s Categorical Approach
MVM argues, on the authority of
Del-Costello,
that § 10(b) of the NLRA provides the limitation period for any suit brought by an employee against his employer for breach of a CBA, including non-hybrid claims and claims not subject to a grievance procedure. The district court agreed,
As the Supreme Court explained in
Del-Costello,
§ 10(b) of the NLRA displaces the presumption that state law defines the limitation period for a hybrid claim because such a claim “amount[s] to a direct challenge to the private settlement of disputes under the [CBA]” and, in view of the federal interest in the system of collective bargaining, § 10(b) appropriately limits the time an employee has to mount such a challenge.
In resisting this conclusion, MVM points to the following statement in
DelCostello:
“[E]ven if this action were considered as arising solely under § 301 ... the objections to use of state law and the availability of a well-suited limitations period in § 10(b) would call for application of the latter rule.”
Citing cases from other circuits, MVM asserts nonetheless that § 10(b) provides the limitation period whenever an employee alleges under § 301 that his employer violated a CBA. First, MVM relies upon
Foy v. Giant Food Inc.,
Second, MVM invokes
Woosley v. Avco Corp.,
Finally, MVM invokes the unpublished orders in
Sanders v. Hughes Aircraft Co.,
In sum, we reject MVM’s argument that DelCostello makes the six-month limitation period in § 10(b) applicable to every action an employee may bring against his employer under § 301, and we do not understand any other circuit, except perhaps the Fourth, to have adopted that position. In our view, the applicable limitation period depends upon the nature of the employee’s claim, to which issue we now turn.
(3) The Non-Categorical Approach
Having rejected MVM’s approach, we must determine whether Cephas raises a hybrid claim and, if not, whether federal law otherwise requires that we borrow the six-month limitation in § 10(b) of the NLRA. If the answers are on both counts no, then we must apply the statute of limitations for the “most closely analo
*489
gous” action under D.C. law.
See North Star Steel,
In the district court MVM at first argued that Cephas’s complaint, which advanced a straightforward claim for breach of contract under D.C. law, should be dismissed on the ground that he failed to plead essential elements of a hybrid claim. The court, however, dismissed Cephas’s action as untimely based upon the assumption that Cephas had not advanced a hybrid claim.
On appeal, Cephas points out that the grievance procedures in the CBA are expressly made inapplicable “to any situation where the Company is acting under the directives of the U.S. Marshals Service,” as he alleges MVM was doing in transferring him. On brief, MVM does not disagree and treats as a “fact that the CBA does not require an employee to use the grievance procedure in the CBA when challenging an action by MVM which was directed by MVM’s client — such as Mr. Cephas’s transfer.” At oral argument, moreover, MVM specifically affirmed that Cephas’s claims are excluded from the grievance and arbitration provisions of the CBA. Because Cephas’s claim could not have been processed through the grievance procedure in the CBA, it follows his case does not depend upon his union having breached its DFR; he alleges a straightforward breach of the CBA by his employer, not a hybrid claim of employer breach of contract and union breach of the DFR.
Nor does federal law otherwise counsel application of the limitation period in § 10(b). MVM does not even attempt to show that it does, and we are unable to see how applying the three-year limitation period in D.C.Code § 12-301(7) would frustrate “the formation of [a] collective agreement [or] the private settlement of disputes under it.’ ”
DelCostello,
Nothing in
George v. Local Union No. 689, International Brotherhood of Teamsters,
Finally, MVM seemed to suggest at oral argument that the National Labor Relations Board would have jurisdiction to entertain an unfair labor practice complaint upon the basis of the facts underlying Ce-phas’s claims, but counsel was unable to say what unfair labor practice would be made out or why that should matter—as are we.
See O’Hare v. Gen. Marine Transp. Corp.,
III. Conclusion
Cephas brought an action for breach of a CBA, making no claim that could have been processed through the grievance procedure in that contract. His state law claim is completely preempted and recast as a claim arising under § 301, as to which the local statute of limitations for a breach
of contract action, D.C.Code § 12-301(7), is presumptively applicable. MVM having failed to overcome that presumption, we hold Cephas timely filed his action. Accordingly, we remand the case to the district court for further proceedings.
So ordered.
Notes
Because § 301 was enacted before December 1, 1990, the default federal limitation period in 28 U.S.C. § 1658 is inapplicable.
The Court also distinguished
Hoosier
on the ground "the suit was brought by the union itself rather than by an individual employee.”
We recognize a suit for specific relief, such as reinstatement, might implicate different considerations than does an action for damages, but we need not address whether a different statute of limitations should apply because of the effect such a suit may have upon collective bargaining.
But see Cabarga Cruz,
