Appellants in this suit raise the question of whether a union’s failure to appeal from a grievance arbitration award unfavorable to some of its members breaches the duty of fair representation it owes those members. We hold that in this case it does not. On the facts alleged here, the district court,
Appellants are a group of auto salesmen who were discharged by their employer (the Cadillac Automobile Company of Boston) after engaging in an illegal strike. They protested the discharge and, under the contract between the employer and their union (Metropolitan Automobile Salesmen, Local No. 122) they went to arbitration. The arbitrator found that the strike was illegal but that discharge was too severe a remedy. He therefore ordered appellants to pay a fine, amounting to between two and three weeks pay for each of them. The salesmen felt that, under the contract, the arbitrator lacked the power to assess a fine. They asked their union to appeal the decision; but it did not do so. .Rather, the union, in a related district court proceeding in April 1978, pursued various claims of its own. 1
*6 Subsequently, the employees protested the union’s failure to appeal by bringing an unfair labor practice charge before the National Labor Relations Board. The Acting Regional Director denied their claim, stating:
The Union could reasonably have interpreted the award as merely a disciplinary action by the arbitrator in lieu of discharging the salesmen and, therefore, not as a levy against individual members in an attempt to make them liable for damages for a Union authorized breach of contract. Accordingly, absent a clearly blatant and palpably incorrect decision by the arbitrator in this case, the Union’s judgment in not appealing the award was not considered so unreasonable and arbitrary as to amount to a breach of the duty of fair representation.
The employees then sued the employer for breach of contract in federal district court under § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, which grants the district courts jurisdiction to hear “suits for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization.” They also sued their union, claiming a violation of its duty to represent them fairly.
Hines v. Anchor Motor Freight, Inc.,
We note, as an initial matter, that appellants’ claims may well be barred by the statute of limitations. The illegal strike took place in April 1977; the arbitration award was made on November 10, 1977; and appellants brought suit on November 28, 1978. The Supreme Court recently held in
United Parcel Service, Inc. v. Mitchell,
- U.S. -,
The
United Parcel
opinion suggests that appellants’ claim against the union may also be barred,
see
at-,
Nonetheless, the Supreme Court in
United Parcel
did not explicitly decide the statute of limitations issue in respect to the
*7
union, and we have previously held that the appropriate period for such actions is that provided in the state tort statute of limitations,
de Arroyo v. Sindicato de Trabajadores Packinghouse,
In any event, we believe that the district court correctly decided that no breach occurred in this instance. When a collective bargaining contract calls for final and binding grievance arbitration, as here, an arbitration decision is ordinarily final, for the employees have obtained what their union has bargained for.
United Steelworkers v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
There is an exception to the “finality” rule where the union does not represent the employee properly at the arbitration proceeding. Then the employee did not receive the remedy of arbitration that the contract promised him.
Vaca v. Sipes,
The burden that these terms are meant to impose upon a union member is particularly heavy if he attacks the union’s failure to appeal from an admittedly fair arbitration proceeding — a proceeding untainted by any union failure to represent its members in good faith. While we need not hold, as did the district court, that a union’s failure to appeal could never breach its representational duty, it is obvious that courts ought to allow such actions, if at all, only in unusual instances where unfairness is blatant. See generally Tobias, Individual Employee Suits for Breach of the Labor Agreement and the Union’s Duty of Fair Representation, 5 Toledo L.Rev. 515, 539-40 (1974). Otherwise, the threat of suit by disappointed members will too often lead unions, against their better judgment, to appeal arbitration awards to the courts. And, the advantages of grievance arbitration — the informal, speedy, inexpensive nonjudicial settlement of disputes — can be eroded.
There is no likelihood that any such blatant unfairness on the union’s part can be shown here. The award itself was not obviously invalid. To the contrary, the district court found that the fines that the arbitrator “assessed ‘drew their essence from the contract,’ particularly under Articles VI, VII and XIV(A).” The district judge believed the appellants’ basic legal claim was wrong; and, without passing on *8 the merits of that claim, we note that this view is, at a minimum, reasonable. A contract that allows an arbitrator to order dismissal for engaging in an unlawful strike may rationally be thought to allow a fine as a less drastic punishment. Moreover, the union could reasonably have discounted the possible benefit of a successful appeal by the prospect that a second arbitrator might uphold the discharges, thus rendering the victory on appeal a pyrrhic one.
Nor is there any allegation of fact sufficient to show unlawful union conduct.
See
F.R.Civ.P. 56(e). Aside from the simple failure to appeal, appellants make two allegations in their complaint in support of their claim. First, they allege that the union “failed or refused to meet” with the company “regarding the amount of the fines and the method of assessment”. Leaving aside the tangential relevance of this claim to the fairness of the arbitration proceeding, we do not see that any such failure to meet with the company — if it occurred — was unfair. The arbitrator’s award left the computation of the fines to the company alone. Second, the appellants assert that in April 1978, one of the employees spoke to a union representative requesting that the issue of the validity of the fines be raised in district court, that the union representative indicated that the matter would be raised, but that it was not raised. This second claim, also insubstantial, concerns a comment made well after the time to appeal expired and thus could not sustain a claim of discriminatory treatment sufficient to violate the statute. In any event, we are unwilling to hold that a union breaches its duty of fair representation merely because, in the course of representing all of its members, it fails to espouse a position supported by some of the individuals who comprise its membership.
Humphrey v. Moore,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The district court proceeding was conducted for the purpose of determining the damages, if any, suffered by the employer as a result of the strike. The union contended that the employees’ fines should be set off against any damages assessed against the union. The district court rejected this argument, adopted the arbitrator’s finding that the strike was illegal, and assessed compensatory damages against the union for the strike amounting to approximately $24,780.
The union appealed the district judge’s ruling in this court. The employees filed a motion to intervene in the appeal, contending that the fines assessed against them were unauthorized by the collective bargaining agreement, and that the union’s failure to appeal the arbitrator’s award was a breach of the duty of fair representation, since the alleged motive for the union’s inaction was its desire to have the deducted fines set off against the damages assessed against itself. We denied the motion to intervene, noting that the movants presented issues and claims for relief which should not be
*6
addressed initially in our court.
Cadillac Automobile Company of Boston v. Local No. 122, Metropolitan Automobile Salesmen,
78-1270 (1st Cir. Oct. 10, 1978). In a subsequent opinion, we affirmed the judgment of the district court assessing damages against the union, and rejected the argument that the fines assessed against the individual salesmen should be set off against the compensatory damages.
Cadillac Auto. Co. v. Metro. Auto. Salesmen,
. Appellants make a separate claim against the employer for vacation pay that they allege was wrongly withheld. They claim that grievance arbitration is “futile” as to this matter. But, they allege no facts sufficient to overcome the company’s affidavits showing the absence of any reason for thinking it futile and the absence of any excuse for appellants’ failure to proceed to grievance arbitration as the contract requires. The district court correctly dismissed this claim for failure to follow the grievance arbitration procedure specified in the contract.
