Circuit Judge.
In this action, plaintiffs, retired members of the United Mine Workers, seek to establish that they contractually acquired pension benefit rights through a letter sent to them from a local official of the defеndant union in 1957 which solicited their membership in the union. The district court, concluding that it had jurisdiction under the Labor-Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185(a), addressed the merits, and found that no binding contract arose from the letter. Plaintiffs appealed. We conclude, however, that no federal jurisdiction exists for this action under 29 U.S.C. § 185(a) and so remand to the district court with instructions to dismiss this case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
I.
The pension rights at issue here were alleged to have arisen through a letter from the local UMW president soliciting the plaintiffs’ membership in the union in 1957. The key paragraph of thаt letter stated, “After being a member of the United Mine Workers of America, and working under the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement of 1950 as Amended October 1, 1956, [you] will be eligible to receive all benеfits from our Welfare and Retirement Fund .... ” However, in 1973, the trustees of the 1950 agreement-created pension fund amended the eligibility requirements of the fund to exclude applicants, like the plaintiffs, who lаcked five years of classified service for a signatory employer after May, 1946. Accordingly, the pension fund denied plaintiffs’ pension applications pursuant to these new eligibility criteria.
Plaintiffs then commenced a lawsuit (prior to this one) against the trustees of the pension fund alleging that the trustee-imposed exclusionary eligibility amendment was void as arbitrary and capricious. Thе district court in this previous action held that the eligibility amendment was not arbitrary and capricious and that therefore the plaintiffs had no pension rights under the fund established by the collective bargаining agreement. Distler v. Huge, Civil No. 77-4074 (E.D.Ill. April 7, 1978).
Plaintiffs then filed this action, seeking to establish that although they were found to have no pension rights under the terms of the collective bargaining agreement-created pension fund, such a right arose independently between the plaintiff and the *78 union itself as a result of the 1957 solicitation letter. Thus, unlike in the first case, plaintiffs did not base their asserted entitlement on any construction оf the pension fund or the collective bargaining agreements which gave birth to the fund, but solely on a bilateral agreement between the union and themselves as individual members.
The defendant moved tо dismiss the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, noting that 29 U.S.C. § 185(a) authorizes suits “for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization” but not for violation of cоntracts, such as those alleged here, arising solely between the
employee
and the labor union. The district court, however, held that jurisdiction lay, citing the liberal construction normally given this provision and
Buzzard v. Local Lodge 1040 International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers,
II.
Upon independent examination, however, we believe that no amount of liberal interpretation can bring this action under the canopy of 29 U.S.C. § 185. That provision authorizes only “[s]uits for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization .... ” The action here, by contrast, is based upon an alleged independent contract running only between the individual union member and the union and is not founded on a union obligation
arising from the collective bargaining agreement.
While Section 185
does
contemplate union members’ suits against the trustees of a pension fund for their failure to properly administer the fund’s mandates (on the theory that the pension fund’s organic document is implicitly incorporated into the employer-union collective bargaining contract),
see, e.g., Sheeran v. General Electric Co.,
The district court apparently discounted this crucial distinction in relying on
Buzzard v. Local Lodge 1040 International Association of Machinists and Aerospacе Workers,
In opposing defendant’s motion to dismiss below, plaintiffs argued alternatively that their complaint could be construed as a “fair representation” claim, which is cognizable under Section 185 on the theory that the duty of fair representation arises directly from an exclusive collective bargaining agreement. Plaintiffs stated tersely that here “any brеach of a promise which induced plaintiffs and other individuals to become members of the union would be a breach of the duty of fair representation.” However, the fair representatiоn analysis can have no jurisdictional impact here for two reasons.
First, apart from plaintiffs’ belated assertion in their memorandum opposing dismissal, there is simply no indication that plaintiffs arе in fact alleging, or could educe any facts to prove, a violation of the fair representation duty. Their complaint instead sounds entirely in common law contract principles
1
and does not in any way hint at “fraud, deceitful action or dishonest conduct” on the part of the union.
Hoffman v. Lonza,
Second, even if plaintiffs appeared to advance some allegation of misconduct in connection with the allеged UMW-member contract, we do not think such an allegation would be actionable under the “fair representation” standard. That duty, as the Supreme Court has noted, requires the union “fairly to represent all ... employees, both in its collective bargaining agreement ... and in its enforcement of the resulting collective bargaining agreement.”
Vaca v. Sipes,
For the foregoing reasons, this action is remanded to the district court with instruc *80 tions to dismiss it for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Remanded With Instructions.
Notes
. Plaintiffs’ operative legal allеgation, 1) 15, recites that “the refusal of the United Mine Workers of America Health and Retirement Fund to provide health and retirement benefits to the plaintiffs is a breach of the agreement madе by and between the plaintiffs and the United Mine Workers of America .... ”
.
Compare Anderson v. United Paperworkers International Union,
