Appellant Christine Holt Spinelli sued claiming she was fired in retaliation for exercising her rights under ERISA. We consider whether she was entitled to a jury trial.
I
Prior to her discharge, Spinelli served as a bartender at the Gold Coast Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. On July 19, twelve days before being fired, she wrote a letter to Michael Gaughan, the managing partner of Gold Coast. In this letter, Spinelli sought certain information about the -health plan serving Gold Coast’s employees. A return receipt shows Spinelli’s letter arrived on July 26. On July 31, she was fired. She never received a response to her letter.
In the district court, Spinelli claimed that the timing was more than a. coincidence, that she was fired for calling her employer to task about employee benefits. The employer responded that Spinelli was fired for légiti-mate reasons which we need not discuss here. Suffice it to say the record amply supports the district court’s finding that Spi-nelli was not discharged in retaliation for exercising rights under ERISA, although it would have supported a contrary finding as well. Since there was, so to speak, a horse race, it became’ significant who the trier of fact was. Spinelli made a proper jury demand but the district judge set' the case for a bench trial, relying on our cases which held that jury trials are generally unavailable under ERISA.
Nevill v. Shell Oil Co.,
II ■
The Seventh Amendment provides that “[i]n Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved....” U.S. CONST, amend. VII. It’s not always clear what amounts to a “Suit[ ] at -common law” within the meaning of the Seventh Amendment.. We know, though, that the jury right is not limited to actions that .actually existed at common law, but extends 'to actions analogous thereto.
Tull,
In a recent series of cases, the Supreme Court has provided a methodology for determining whether rights created, modified or preempted by federal statutes are analogous to those existing at common law. First, the Court has said, we must look at the nature of the right to determine whether it is analogous to common law rights.
Terry,
Ill
ERISA section 510 makes it “unlawful for any person to discharge ... a participant or beneficiary for exercising any right to which he is entitled under the provisions of an employee benefit plan_” 29 U.S.C. § 1140. To enforce these rights, section 510 incorporates the remedies of section 502, which in turn authorizes an aggrieved participant or beneficiary to bring a civil action “(A) to enjoin any [violative] act or practice ..., or (B) to obtain other appropriate equitable relief....” Id. § 1132(a)(3). Following the Supreme Court’s guidance, we ask two questions: First, is the. action analogous to a common law action? Second, are the remedies legal or equitable?
A. Nature of the Action
In the few Supreme Court cases classifying a particular action as legal or equitable, the Court has generally looked for an analogy to some action known when the Seventh Amendment was adopted.
See, e.g., Terry,
Although analogizing to eighteenth-century actions,is certainly one way to classify an action as legal or equitable, we believe it is not the only way. After all, the common law is not static. By its nature, it adapts to changing circumstances, creating new causes of action as they become necessary, discarding old ones as they become obsolete. See Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Common Law 1 (1881) (“The law embodies the story of a nation’s development through many centuries .... ”); cf. Melvin Aron Eisenberg, The Nature of the Common Law 154-61 (1988) (discussing “generative theory” of common law). Thus in the first part of Seventh Amendment analysis, we should consider not only whether an action is analogous to a common law claim known in the eighteenth century, but also to one known today.
Spinelli claims she was improperly discharged in retaliation for exercising rights . given to her by a federal statute. She could not have made such a claim during the eighteenth century, a time when employment relationships were largely at will. The cause of action, for retaliatory discharge is, rather, a creature of the twentieth century, and the latter part of it at that.
See
Sara A. Corello,
In-House Counsel’s Right to Sue for Retaliatory Discharge,
92 Colum.L.Rev. 389, 394 (1992) (discussing
Petermann v. International Bhd. of Teamsters Local 396,
*857
We find it more appropriate to analogize Spinelli’s claim to retaliatory discharge, a tort so widely accepted in American jurisdictions today we are confident that it has become part of our evolving common law. And, wherever the tort has been recognized, it has been treated as legal and not equitable.
See Weber v. Jacobs Mfg. Co.,
B. The Nature of the Remedy
We get a different answer, however, in considering the nature of the remedy provided. By its terms, section 502 — the remedies provision for section 510 — provides only for equitable relief. Thus subsection (A) speaks exclusively about enjoining any practice which violates ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3)(A): Subsection (B) is even more explicit, providing only for “other appropriate equitable relief,” 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3)(B). The language is clear enough, but the Supreme Court last term removed any remaining doubt in
Mertens v. Hewitt Assocs.,
— U.S. -, -,
As noted, the Supreme Court has told us four times that the nature of the remedy is more important for Seventh Amendment purposes than the nature of the right. Where, as here, the two conflict, we conclude that the equitable nature of the relief is dispositive, unless Congress lacks the power to so limit the remedies available for violations of section 510. Spinelli makes two arguments to this effect. First, citing Granfinanciera and Terry, Spinelli argues that Congress cannot simply transform an otherwise legal claim into an equitable one by statutory fiat. Second, she argues that because her claim under section 502(a)(3) preempts her indisputably legal claim for retaliatory discharge under Nevada law, it is a direct substitute for the state claim; as a result, she’s entitled to the jury trial she would have received had she been able to bring her suit under state law. 4
We reject Spinelli’s first argument because we see nothing in
Terry, Granfinanciera,
the Seventh Amendment, or anywhere else which prevents Congress from creating a cause of action for which only equitable relief is available. ' Such a statutory creation does not represent the sort of , “purely taxonomic change” which the court rejected in
Granfi-nanciera,
Spinelli also argues that Congress may not take away a plaintiffs legal claim under state law and replace it with a federal claim that is only equitable in nature. But we fail to see any constitutional impediment to such action. Congress surely can preempt a state cause of action, be it legal or equitable: This is the very nature of federal supremacy. 5 Once Congress, has chosen to preempt the state claim, it’s free to give affected individuals a full federal claim, a claim providing only for remedies limited to equity, a damages claim only, or no claim at all. The Seventh Amendment, again, does not stand in the way.
IV
We conclude that Congress could properly limit Spinelli’s remedies under ERISA to those available-in equity. Having done so, it created a right that is essentially equitable in nature. Therefore a jury trial was not required. As Spinelli raises no other issues on appeal, the judgment of the trial court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although a panel of this court cannot overrule Ninth. Circuit precedent,
see Atonio v. Wards Cove Packing Co.,
. For example, we could analogize section 510 to an equitable action for breach of fiduciary duty— since section 510 imposes duties on one person ' for someone else's benefit (here the employer . becomes obligated not to fire employees for an improper reason). Or we could compare section 510 to a legal claim for breach of implied contract by arguing that section 510 adds an implied term (here, a bar against retaliatory discharges) to certain express or implied private contracts (here, employment relationships). Figuring out which of these provides the closer analogy isn't much better than asking whether red is more analogous to green or to yellow.
. Prior to
Mertens,
language at the very end of
Ingersoll-Rand Co. v. McClendon,
. Nevada state law, Spinelli points out, probably would have sustained a claim for retaliatory discharge for exercise of rights she held under federal law.
See K Mart Corp. v. Ponsock,
. It is possible that, if Congress preempts a valuable state right, its actions may amount to a taking for which compensation is available in the appropriate forum.
Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co.,
