Between November 2008 and February 2009, Verizon New England, Inc. (VNE) began requiring its field technicians to carry company-issued cell phones during work. VNE supervisors need to stay in touch with field technicians, who are assigned to work on installation projects around Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and VNE found a previous company policy reliant on paging devices to be inefficient and cumbersome. The cell phones contain a global positioning system (GPS), which allows VNE to determine the location of each field technician through a monitoring service known as Field Force Manager.
Plaintiffs are VNE field technicians who are admittedly represented by a union, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 2324 (the Union), which has a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with VNE. The plaintiffs assert that by requiring them to carry these phones, VNE violated (1) their privacy rights under Article 14 of the Declaration of Rights in the Massachusetts Constitution and Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 214, § IB, and (2) their state-law rights as alleged third-party beneficiaries of a contract between VNE and Verizon Wireless, which they say required VNE to receive consent from its employees when it instituted the phone policy.
This is the second lawsuit before this court involving employee discontent with VNE’s new cell phone policy. In February 2009, VNE brought the first lawsuit against a pair of Union locals, asserting that they had violated a CBA no-strike clause in response to the cell phone policy and other VNE actions.
See Verizon New England, Inc. v. Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers, Local No. 2322,
In June 2009, a little more than four months after VNE filed that suit, the plaintiffs filed this suit. Before this filing, rather than grieve the new cell phone rule, the Union had filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in January 2009. The charge alleged that the rule constituted a change in working conditions over which VNE was required to bargain. On June 24, 2009, the NLRB deferred the charge to arbitration because the issue arose from the CBA. The plaintiff employee Union members, represented by the same counsel who represent the Union, filed suit in state court the next day asserting the two state-law claims.
VNE removed this case to the federal district court and moved for summary judgment. The plaintiffs then cross-moved to remand the case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. In its motion and opposition to the plaintiffs’ motion, VNE argued (1) that the plaintiffs’ state-law claims are preempted by § 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (LMRA), 29 U.S.C. § 185(a), as well as, pursuant to
San Diego Building Trades Council v. Garmon,
The district court entered summary judgment for VNE and denied plaintiffs’ motion to remand.
Hoggins v. Verizon New England, Inc.,
I.
The plaintiffs do not dispute that, as Union members, they are subject to the CBA entered by VNE and the Union. In relevant part, the CBA provides the following. Under an article entitled “Management Rights,” the agreement states:
Subject only to the limitations contained in this Agreement the Company retains the exclusive right to manage its business including (but not limited to) the right to determine the methods and means by which its operations are to be carried on, to assign and direct the work force and to conduct its operations in a safe and effective manner.
The CBA also outlines a grievance process, defining “grievance” as “a complaint involving the interpretation or application of any of the provisions of this Agreement or a complaint that an employee or group of employees for whom the Union is the bargaining agent has, in any manner, been unfairly treated.” Grievances may be sub *53 jected to arbitration consonant with requirements set out in the CBA.
VNE asserts that it adopted the cell phone policy at issue in this litigation pursuant to the Management Rights clause of the CBA. The plaintiffs work as Central Office Equipment Installation Technicians (COEI Techs) and install telephone equipment for VNE. Although COEI Techs have reporting headquarters, they often work on installation projects elsewhere in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, which can take days, weeks, or even months. VNE requires that COEI Techs stay in touch with their supervisors during these projects. Before VNE adopted the disputed policy, it provided COEI Techs with pagers; when a supervisor contacted a COEI Tech by pager, the COEI Tech would need to find a phone and call the supervisor back.
In switching from pagers to cell phones, VNE apparently sought to improve its communication with COEI Techs, streamline its administrative systems, and enhance its ability to locate COEI Techs working in the field. The cell phones VNE selected not only enable supervisors to call COEI Techs directly; they also contain a feature called Field Force Manager (FFM) that possesses more advanced capabilities. 1 FFM makes it possible for employees to punch in and out of work remotely, submit standardized forms, and receive driving instructions, customer contact information, and mass text messages from their supervisors. It also has a feature that can determine an employee’s hours worked from the punch in and punch out system and link this information to VNE’s payroll system. Most important here, FFM has a GPS function that allows VNE to monitor the location of the phones.
VNE describes the utility of this GPS tracking function with reference to improving its ability to respond quickly to emergencies. In particular, VNE emphasizes that when an emergency arises, this monitoring capability allows supervisors to quickly identify the COEI Techs in the area so they can assign them to the job. VNE also emphasizes that the GPS function is responsible for FFM’s ability to transmit driving instructions and process employee punch ins and punch outs, though it is not clear why this necessitates that VNE monitor the location of the phones. At any rate, VNE acknowledges that the GPS feature allows it “to determine whether an employee is not where he or she is supposed to be” when phones are logged-in to FFM. In relevant part, VNE’s work rules concerning the phones, adopted in October 2008, state: “Employees will not shut off, disable Field Force Manager, or render useless the GPS functionality of the phone during working hours.”
VNE began purchasing these phones from Verizon Wireless in October 2008 and issued them to employees between mid-November 2008 and early February 2009. On January 24, 2009, the Union filed an unfair labor practice charge with the NLRB, alleging that VNE had begun “requiring employees to use mobile telephones enabled with a GPS tracking system without giving the [Union] notice or an opportunity to bargain to the extent required by law.” Six months later, on June 24, the NLRB deferred the Union’s labor charge on the grounds that “the dispute here involved arises from the contract between the parties, and the contractual grievance-arbitration procedures are available for resolving the dispute.” The NLRB deferral letter noted as well that VNE had notified the Board that it was *54 “willing to arbitrate the dispute underlying this charge.”
On April 9, 2009, while the NLRB charge was still pending, the Union’s outside counsel sent a letter on behalf of VNE employees to Verizon Wireless. It is undisputed that the cell phone purchasing contract entered by VNE and Verizon Wireless contained a provision requiring authorized consent from all users and affected persons, though the contract is not a part of the record. The letter asserted that VNE was likely violating this term and raised the possibility of legal action against both VNE and Verizon Wireless. On April 23, 2009, Verizon Wireless responded that “neither your client [the Union] nor employees of Verizon New England are parties to any contract between Verizon Wireless and Verizon New England; nor are they intended as beneficiaries of any such contract.” The letter asserted that in light of this, any legal claim against Verizon Wireless “would have no basis.”
The day after the NLRB deferred the Union’s labor charge, on June 25, 2009, the plaintiffs filed this suit in Massachusetts state court. VNE removed the case to federal court, and the district court granted it summary judgment. On the question of preemption, the district court held that the plaintiffs’ privacy claims are preempted by § 301 because their resolution would require interpretation of the CBA’s Management Rights clause.
Haggins,
II.
We review de novo the entry of a grant of summary judgment.
TMTV, Corp. v. Mass Prods., Inc.,
As we recognized in
O’Donnell,
while § 301 on its face is only a grant of federal jurisdiction, the Supreme Court has deemed labor contracts within its scope “creatures of federal law” and “treats section 301 as a warrant both for removing to federal court state law claims preempted by section 301 and then dismissing them.”
Id.
at 53 (citing
Allis-Chalmers Corp. v. Lueck,
Such interference exists if the state-law claims “require construing the collective-bargaining agreement.”
Id.
at 54 (quoting
Lingle v. Norge Div. of Magic Chef, Inc.,
A state-law claim, we have held, “can ‘depend’ on the ‘meaning1 of a collective bargaining agreement” if either (1) “it alleges conduct that arguably constitutes a breach of duty that arises pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement,” or (2) “its resolution arguably hinges upon an interpretation of the collective bargaining agreement.”
Flibotte,
We begin with the state privacy claims under Article 14 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights and Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 214, § IB. In relevant part, the state statute provides: “A person shall have a right against unreasonable, substantial or serious interference with his privacy.” Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 214, § IB. Article 14 similarly provides, again in relevant part: “Every subject has a right to be secure from all unreasonable searches, and seizures, of his person, his houses, his papers, and all his possessions.” Mass. Const, pt. 1, art. 14.
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has made clear that in determining whether there is a violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 214 and Article 14, “the employer’s legitimate interest in determining the employees’ effectiveness in their jobs should be balanced against the seriousness of the intrusion on the employees’ privacy.”
Folmsbee v. Tech Tool Grinding & Supply, Inc.,
This is not the first time this court has been called to determine whether § 301 preempts state privacy claims brought by an employee subject to a CBA containing a Management Rights clause. In
Jackson v. Liquid Carbonic Corp.,
The same is true here. To determine the reasonableness of the interference likely will require resort to the cus
*56
tom and usage of the parties and their particular industry practices.
See United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co.,
The plaintiffs seek to evade this conclusion by arguing that
Jackson’s
holding on point has been overruled by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Livadas v. Bradshaw,
This court has not interpreted
Livadas
to establish such a rule, and with reason. As we held in
Flibotte, Livadas
made clear that § 301 “cannot be read broadly to pre-empt nonnegotiable rights conferred on individual employees as a matter of state law.”
Flibotte,
As the district court here held, the threshold question in this litigation is “not the clarity of the purported waiver but the proper scope of the underlying right.”
Haggins,
We turn to the question of the plaintiffs’ third-party beneficiary claim, which is not based on any state legislative policy but on a provision of a private contract between the defendant and another company. No
Livadas
questions are raised. Under Massachusetts law, third- . party beneficiaries may only enforce contracts when they are
“intended
beneficiaries” of the contract.
Miller v. Mooney,
We bypass VNE’s argument that this claim is preempted by § 301 because it is quite clear that the claim is not color-able under state law. The district court’s analysis that the plaintiffs failed to state a claim under state law was obviously correct. As the district court held, the plaintiffs introduced no evidence other than the relevant contract term to show that any third-party beneficiary status in employees was intended.
See Haggins,
The plaintiffs’ protest that the district court should have allowed them discovery, moreover, is too little too late. They did not seek discovery in the district court under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, nor did they present to the district court the argument that they chose not to seek discovery under Rule 56 because the defendants misled them about the grounds on which they would seek summary judgment,
see Cortés-Rivera v. Dep’t of Corr. & Rehab.,
A claim that is preempted under § 301 “must either be treated as a § 301 claim or dismissed as pre-empted by federal labor-contract law.”
Lueck,
III.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. VNE notes that the phones also offer more commonplace features, “including built-in applications like calculators, cameras, and the like.”
. The pláintiffs also seek to evade our decision in
Jackson
by invoking state cases recognizing constraints on government invasions of individual privacy interests. These cases are not relevant to the present dispute concerning an employer's purported invasions of the plaintiffs’ privacy interests.
See Commonwealth v. Goodwin,
. The Court's reference to clear and unmistakable waiver in
Livadas
cited to a footnote in
Lingle
that also dealt with a question of nonnegotiable state-law rights.
Livadas v. Bradshaw,
. In asserting that
Livadas
abrogated
Jackson,
the plaintiffs invoke decisions of the Third and Ninth Circuits that do not alter our analysis.
See Burnside v. Kiewit Pac. Corp.,
