MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This аction was brought under § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act against plaintiff’s employer, Anchor Motor Freight, Inc., for wrongful termination and against Teamsters International and Local 557 for breach of the duty of fair representation. The incident that resulted in plaintiff’s termination occurred on June 27,1977, and a grievance against the employer was heard by the Eastern Conference Automobile Transporters Joint Committee on July 19, 1977, which decided in favor of the employer. Plaintiff received a copy of the arbitration decision “several days later.” On August 20, 1977, he received a copy of the minutes of the July 1977 meeting from Arthur C. Morningstar, with a letter asking that he forward any changes, in writing, or the minutes would be approved. Plaintiff consulted with an attorney and, on September 14, 1977, wrote the president of Local 557 expressing his dissatisfaction with the decision and the union’s representation of him. Suit was filed on March 16, 1978.
This Court ruled on defendants’ motions for summary judgment on March 17, 1981.
The primary question presented is whether
Mitchell
should be applied retroactively. There is no question that, if it can be applied retroactively,
Mitchell
governs. Although only the employer was before the Court, it is reasonably clear from the Supreme Court’s opinion that the short limitations period would apply to a companion action against a union for breach of the duty of fair representation.
See Singer v. Flying Tiger Line, Inc.,
Exactly when the plaintiff received the Eastern Conference decision is not clear; plaintiff states that it was “several days” after the July 19, 1977 meeting. Plaintiff had the decision at some point beforе he received Mr. Morningstar’s letter on August 20, 1977.
*723
Plaintiff urges that his September 14, 1977 letter should be treated as a request for reconsideration of the arbitration decision, tolling the statute of limitations until he received a response. No formal response was ever made by the Eastеrn Conference or Local 557, but plaintiff was aware no later than December 1977 that nothing more would be done by the local and the Eastern Conference.
1
Even assuming that limitations did not begin to run until plaintiff was told that no further action would be taken, in late December 1977, this action was filed more than 30 days after that time.
Cf. Davidson v. Roadway Express, Inc.,
The Supreme Court summarized the factors to be considered in deciding whether a new decision should be applied retroactively in
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
The Court identified three factors to be used in deciding whether to apply a decision nonretroactively. First, the decision sought to be applied only prospectively must establish a new legal principle, either by overruling “clear past precedent” or by deciding a case of first impression, resolution of which “was not cleаrly foreshadowed” in earlier cases.
Id.
The three factors are interrelated. The first and third factors combined, for example, require analysis of a “reliance factor.”
Cash v. Califano,
Past precedent in the Supreme Court and the Fourth Circuit on the issue decided in
Mitchell
cannot be described as “clear.” The Supreme Court held in
UAW
v.
Hoosier Cardinal Corp.,
There was no prior case of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit addressing the question decided in Mitchell. The Court held in Kennedy v. Wheeling Pittsburgh Steel Corp., 81 LRRM 2349 (4th Cir. 1973) (per curiam), an unpublished opinion, that a § 301 action against a union was barred by a state’s five-year statute of limitations on suits on oral contracts, reasoning that the same limitatiоns period should apply to a suit against the union as applied to that against the employer. The question whether a statute of limitations for vacating arbitration awards barred suit was not before the Court, although the union had argued that the six-month limitations period of the Labor Management Relations Act or the state limitations period for tort actions applied, see id. at 2349.
The limitations question in
Mitchell
had not been previously presented to the Supreme Court. The case is not, however, one of first impression in the same sense as
Rodrique v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
A few other courts have been faced with the problem of retroactive application of
Mitchell,
although none of the cases reported to date is extremely helpful. Thе U. S. Courts of Appeals for the First and Seventh Circuits have applied
Mitchell
retroactively, although neither court analyzed the question in terms of the
Chevron Oil
factors.
Sear v. Cadillac Automobile Co.,
The only case in which retroactivity is discussed is
Singer v. Flying Tiger Line, Inc.,
As previously mentioned, my reading of Mitchell is that where the breach of the duty of fair representation complained *725 of relates to the union’s presentation of the employee’s grievance at an arbitration hearing resolved in favor of the employer, the same limitations period will be applied to the action against the union as to the underlying action against the employer. Joint presentation and trial of the two claims is virtually compelled by thе nature of the concomitant actions against the employer and union in § 301 cases. Plaintiff must now bring suit against the employer within the period of time for vacating the arbitration award in any event and is not substantially burdened by having to sue the union at the same time.
Plaintiff has asserted that the Maryland 30-day limitations period for vacating arbitration awards is unconstitutional, at least as applied to this action or to § 301 actions generally. The Maryland statute, Cts. & Jud.Proc.Code Ann. § 3-224, provides that a petition to vacate an arbitration award is to be filed within 30 days after delivery of a copy of the award to the petitioner, id. § 3-224(a)(1), and specifies five grounds upon which an award is to be vacated, id. § 3-224(b). One of the grounds is that an award was “procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue means,” id. § 3 — 224(b)(1), and where that is the ground ;or the petition to vaсate, the period of limitations begins when the ground became known, or should have become known, to the petitioner, id. § 3-224(a)(2).
Plaintiff relies in part on the general principle that when a new limitations period is applied to existing causes of action, a reasonablе time period must be allowed for assertion of existing rights. That principle is applied to statutory enactments. The principles concerning retroactive application of decisions implicate similar concerns, but, as previously noted, they do not dictatе nonretroactive application of Mitchell.
Plaintiff also contends that a 30-day period is simply too short a time to be applied to a § 301 action. He points out that although 30-day time periods are common for filing appeals from trial court or administrative decisions, normally counsel has already been retained and is familiar with the facts of the case, so that filing an appeal is a relatively short process. This is not true of a § 301 suit. Employees are forbidden from being represented by counsel at a labor arbitration proceeding, rather they must be represented by the union. It is not necessarily true that individuals are generally represented by counsel at administrative proceedings, although they may be, if they wish. The 30-day limitations period, Md.R.P. B4, for seeking judicial review of an administrative determination will be aрplied whether a petitioner was represented by counsel or not.
As previously noted, it may well be that plaintiff’s tolling arguments have merit, and I have here assumed, for the purpose of deciding the motion, that the limitations period began in December 1977. In considering plaintiff’s argument that 30 days, as opposed to the 90-day period in
Mitchell,
is too short a time, it is important to note the scope of
Mitchell.
This Court does not read that case as broadly as does the plaintiff.
Mitchell
involved an allegation that the union had breached its duty of fair representation by the manner in which it handled the grievance.
See Mitchell v. United Parcel Serv., Inc.,
*726 For the reasons set forth in this Memorandum, I shall vacate the prior ruling on the motions for summary judgment of Local 557 and Anchor Motor Freight and, based on Mitchell, enter summary judgment for both defendants on the ground that plaintiff’s action is barred by limitations.
Defendants have requested, in addition to summary judgment in their favor, that this '"Court award them cоsts and attorneys’ fees. No supporting documents have been submitted. More important, although defendants have ultimately prevailed, the fact that they did so only after the subsequent ruling of the Supreme Court amply demonstrates that this is the kind of case in which an award of costs and attorney’s fees is inappropriate.
Notes
. See Plaintiffs Affidavit of May 27, 1981, ¶ 6.
