OPINION
Plaintiff Cooke brought suit against the defendant unincorporated labor organization (the “District Council”) and alleged violations of several sections of the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, 29 U.S.C. § 401 et seq. (the “Act”). In brief, Cooke contends that the District Council violated the Act by wrongfully transferring his job location to El Centro, California in retaliation for his support of a losing union candidate.
Cooke prayed for injunctive relief restoring him to his former jobsite, Riverside, California, and for punitive and compensatory damages. A hearing was held concerning only the liability aspect of the case. On April 1, 1974, the trial judge, after securing a waiver of findings of fact and conclusions of law from both parties, entered an injunction requiring the union to restore Cooke to his former jobsite. On July 26, 1974, the judge modified the injunction to prevent the union from ousting Cooke from his job pursuant to intra-union disciplinary proceedings. On August 13, 1974, the damage phase of the trial was held and the judge awarded Cooke compensatory damages, punitive damages and attorney fees. Thereafter on August 27, 1974 the reinstatement of Cooke was suspended by the district court and the District Council agreed to pay all wages and fringe benefits to Cooke pending the disposition of this appeal.
In this appeal the District Council insists (1) that the Act is not applicable to the facts of this case, (2) that even if applicable the Act is not available to Cooke because he failed to exhaust the internal appellate remedies available under the District Council’s constitution, (3) that the National Labor Relations Board has exclusive jurisdiction with respect to this dispute, (4) that punitive damages do not constitute “appropriate relief” within the meaning of the Act (i. e., 29 U.S.C. § 412), and (5) that the July 26, 1974 modification of the injunction was improper for numerous reasons.
We hold that the Act may. be applicable to the facts of this case, that whether internal appellate remedies must be exhausted before recourse to the Act is *818 possible is a matter of judicial discretion, that the National Labor Relations Board does not have exclusive jurisdiction with respect to this dispute, and that punitive damages may constitute appropriate relief. However we also hold that the present record is inadequate to determine whether internal appellate remedies have been exhausted and to permit a reasoned review of the trial court’s April 1, 1974 injunction or its modification on July 26, 1974. As a consequence we must reverse and remand for further proceedings designed to supply the deficiencies which at present preclude a proper review of these actions. During these proceedings and until the termination of all proceedings, appellate as well as trial, with respect to this case, or until June 30, 1976, whichever occurs first, Cooke shall continue to receive from District Council all wages and fringe benefits applicable to his former jobsite. Reinstatement of Cooke to his former job-site is stayed until further order of this court.
I.
Factual Background.
Cooke had been active for many years in the affairs of the District Council which is composed of nine affiliated local unions scattered throughout Southern California. Cooke serves as a business representative of the District Council, and is a member of Painters Local Union 286, one of the nine affiliated local unions.
The District Council employs a total of seventeen business representatives. Its function is to represent affiliated union employees in their dealings with employers, and to seek improved wages, hours, and other working conditions in the painting and drywall industry.
In June, 1973 elections were held throughout the District Council for the positions of Executive-Secretary and business representatives. Cooke was reelected business representative. Cooke supported the incumbent, Donald McNeel, against George Hartmann for the post of Executive-Secretary. Hartmann was elected.
Prior to this election, Cooke, as a business representative, was assigned to service the membership of Local 286 in Riverside County. Shortly after the election Cooke was reassigned to serve as business representative for Painters & Allied Trades Local No. 313, in El Cen-tro, California, a desert location approximately 167 miles from Cooke’s residence.
II.
Retaliatory Assignment of a Union Official As “Discipline” Within the Act.
Over a decade ago this court held that sections 101(a)(1) and 101(a)(2) of the Act (29 U.S.C. § 411(a)(1) and (a)(2)), which guarantee “every member” the right to engage in intra-union political activity, were applicable to officers of unions.
Grand Lodge of International Ass’n. of Machinists v. King,
Our view regarding the application of section 609 to discharge from union office because of intra-union political activity has not been followed by certain other circuits.
See Wambles v. International Bro. of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Etc.,
The issue before us is whether the teaching in King should be extended to job reassignments of union officials initiated to retaliate against such officials for intra-union political activity. We hold that it should. In reaching this result we are aware that the proviso set forth in section 101(a)(2) recognizes that the exercise by a union member of his rights guaranteed by the Act shall not be permitted “to impair the right of a labor organization to adopt and enforce reasonable rules as to the responsibility of every member towards the organization as an institution and to his refraining from conduct that would interfere with its performance of its legal or contractual obligations.” We are also aware that the concern for administrative coherence, which had led some courts to reject King, is more substantial when the principal, or perhaps only, tangible manifestation of alleged improper discipline is the reassignment of an officer who supported a losing candidate in a union election. A certain number of such reassignments very likely will occur following the election of certain new officers even in unions deeply committed to the values which animate sections 101(a)(1) and (a)(2). The complaining union official who asserts that his reassignment constitutes improper discipline must demonstrate that it reasonably cannot be related to a legitimate desire of the elected officials to secure a structure of job assignments that will permit them to manage the union in accordance with the mandate of their election. This burden of persuasion is not met merely by showing that the complaining official op *820 posed the election of an official who after being elected to the office obtained the reassignment of the complainant. To constitute “discipline” within the meaning of section 609 the reassignment must be shown to be retaliatory. When so shown the reassigned union official has established a violation of section 609 and is entitled to appropriate relief in a civil action pursuant to section 102 (29 U.S.C. § 412) of the Act.
III.
Exhaustion of Internal Appellate Remedies.
The issue whether an aggrieved official must first exhaust the internal appellate remedies before initiating a civil action pursuant to section 102 has been characterized by this court as a matter of judicial discretion.
Buzzard v. Local Lodge 1040 International Association of Mechanics and Aerospace Workers,
IV.
Scope of National Labor Relations Board Jurisdiction.
The contention by the District Council that the conduct of which Cooke complains constitutes an unfair labor practice under section 8(a) of the National Labor Relations Act (29 U.S.C. § 158(a)) and that as a consequence the National Labor Relations Board has exclusive jurisdiction is without merit. Our decision in
King
recognized that the rights conferred by the Act under which Cooke is proceeding are cumulative.
V.
Punitive Damages.
We need not devote extensive discussion to the District Council’s contention that punitive damages are not allowable under the Act. While this court has held that “emotional distress, standing alone” is not a sufficient basis for awarding damages under the Act,
International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Etc. v. Rafferty,
We believe, however, that the rule adopted by the Fifth Circuit in
International Brotherhood of Boilermakers Etc. v. Braswell,
*821 VI.
Inadequacy of Present Record.
In the ordinary case we would now turn to applying the principles set forth above to the facts of the case as revealed by the record before us. In this case, however, the record simply does not permit a reasoned application of these principles. The reason for our inability is, as pointed out above, that the trial court prior to promulgating the April 1, 1974 injunction solicited oral waivers of findings of facts and conclusions of law. Without such findings and conclusions we are unable to determine whether the principles set forth in this opinion were applied properly by the trial court.
Moreover, we are disinclined to permit the waiver under the circumstances of this case to excuse a failure to comply with Rule 52(a) Fed.R.Civ.P. Our reluctance is based in part on the view that union officers, who are not entitled to the protections of section 101(a)(5)
2
when the “discipline” does not affect their “status qua union member”,
Martire
v.
Laborers Local 1058,
The absence of findings of fact and conclusions of law also makes it impossible for us to review properly the District Council’s contentions that internal appellate remedies were not exhausted by Cooke and that punitive damages are improper under the circumstances of this case.
Finally, the record does not enable us to review properly the July 26, 1974 modification of the injunction which prevented the District Council from removing Cooke from his post and barring him from holding such post for life. The trial court’s modification also directed that the District Council retain Cooke in his post as business representative at Riverside until the next election (June 30, 1976) or until his expulsion had been reviewed by a court of competent jurisdiction. As previously indicated, the reinstatement of Cooke was suspended on August 27, 1974 and the District Council agreed to pay all wages and fringe benefits to Cooke pending the disposition of this appeal. While the record makes clear that trial judge regarded the District Council’s efforts to oust Cooke from his union office by resorting to internal procedures which charged Cooke with several offenses, including the unauthorized use of treasury funds and assault upon another union member, as steps taken to subvert and nullify his April 1, 1974 injunction, the record also indicates that hearing which accompanied the July 26, 1974 modification did not involve a reasonably extensive exploration of the good faith and legitimacy of the charges against Cooke.
The result is that we cannot determine whether the July 26, 1974 modification was proper or not. This places this court in an awkward position. To do justice to all parties we believe the proper procedure is, first, to reverse the trial court’s disposition of this case and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion and, second, to direct that during these proceedings, appellate as well as trial, or until June 30, 1976, whichever *822 occurs first, Cooke shall continue to receive from District Council all wages and fringe benefits applicable to his Riverside jobsite, and, third, to direct that reinstatement of Cooke to the Riverside jobsite be stayed until further order of this Court.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Commentators have pointed out that King and the cases which follow it should not be read to preclude the removal from office or reassignment of union officials who have manifested philosophical disagreement with, or personal disloyalty to, high-level officials upon whom rests the ultimate responsibility for conducting the affairs of the union. Such removal or reassignment may be necessary to preserve the strength and effectiveness of the union. See Beaird and Player, Free Speech and The Landrum-Griffin Act, 25 Ala.L.Rev. 577, 586-88 (1973). Cf. Kroner, Title I of the LMRDA: Some Problems of Legal Method and Mythology, 43 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 280, 293-95 (1968). Bok and Dunlop, in Labor in the American Community, pp. 90-91 (1970) have observed with respect to the Landrum-Griffin Act:
“With the passage of the Landrum-Griffin Act, the issue of union democracy should move away from broad legislative reform to a host of particular questions that vary greatly from one labor organization to another. Should both the local business agent and the assistant business agent be elected, or should the latter be appointed to ensure continuity and experience? What types of decisions should be subject to ratification? Should elections be held every year or every two or three years? Should the elections occur close to contract negotiations or will this force union officials to take irresponsible positions at the bargaining table? Few of these matters are fit subjects for legislation, and most should be judged according to the special circumstances of the particular union involved. In every case, the question should be, not whether any given change will make the union more democratic, but whether it will serve the ends of the modem union — to respond to the interests of the membership, to promote them effectively, to deal fairly with individuals and minorities within its ranks, and to exhibit a due regard for legitimate interests of those beyond its walls.”
. Section 101(a)(5) requires that union disciplinary proceedings meet certain minimum standards of due process. See generally Beaird and Player, Union Discipline of Its Membership Under Section 101(a)(5) of Landrum-Grif-fin: What is “Discipline” and How Much Process is Due?, 9 Ga.L.Rev. 383 (1975).
