OPINION
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This motion is part of a large group of cases against defendant Prudential Insurance Company of America (“Prudential”) which have been transferred to this Court for coordinated pretrial proceedings under 28 U.S.C. § 1407 pursuant to the order of the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation. The majority of these cases involve allegations by currant and former Prudential policyholders that the company engaged in various illegal sales practices. The cases at issue on this motion are part of a smaller subset of cases, in which certain former Prudential sales agents allege that Prudential took adverse employment actions against them because they refused to participate in these illegal practices. Plaintiffs Michael R. Weaver (“Weaver”), Herbert Schulte (“Schulte”), Rick A. Martin (“Martin”), Kenneth R. Young (“Young”) and Michael D. Gordon (“Gordon”) (collectively, for purposes of this motion, the “agents”) assert such claims.
At some point in the course of each of the agents’ employment at Prudential, they became eligible to sell insurance products which, at least in Prudential’s view, constituted securities. Accordingly, each signed a Uniform Application for Securities Industry Registration or Transfer (“U-4”). 1 Young signed two U-ris, the first in 1988 and the second in 1993 when, after his 1992 retirement, Prudential allegedly retained his services as an “agent emeritus.” (Young Opp. Br. p. 3) Although the agents’ U-4s differed in minor respects, for purposes of this motion they were essentially the same. For example, Young’s 1988 U-4 read, in relevant part:
2. I hereby apply for registration with the organizations and states indicated in Item 10 as may be amended from time to time [i.e., the NASD] 2 and, in consideration of-such organizations and states receiving and considering my application, I submit myself to the jurisdiction of such -states and organizations and hereby certify *632 that I agree to abide by, comply with, and adhere to all the provisions, conditions and covenants of the statutes, constitutions, certificates of incorporation, by-laws and rules and regulations of the states and organizations as they are and may be adopted, changed or amended from time to time, and I agree to comply with, be subject to and abide by all such requirements and all rulings, orders, directives and decisions of, and penalties, prohibitions and limitations imposed by such states and organizations, subject to right of appeal as provided by law; ...
5. I agree to arbitrate any dispute, claim or controversy that may arise between me and my firm, or a customer, or any other person, that is required to be arbitrated under the rules, constitutions, or by-laws of the organizations with which I register, as indicated in Item 10 as may be amended from time to time.
Insofar as is relevant to this motion, Weaver’s U-4 and Young’s 1993 U-4 contained the same provisions. Martin and Schulte, on the other hand, signed an earlier version of the U-4 which differed slightly in two ways: (1) in paragraph 2, in addition to certifying that they agreed to abide by, comply with and adhere to the provisions, conditions and covenants of the statutes, constitutions, certificates of incorporation, by-laws and rules and regulations of the NASD, Martin and Schulte attested: “I ... have read and understand” these provisions and rules; and (2) in paragraph 5, their U-4s do not contain the language “as may be amended from time to time” at the end of the sentence. 3
Interpretation of the NASD arbitration provisions — and a determination of which provisions were in effect at various times— are central issues on this motion. Effective October 1, 1993, the NASD amended its Code in respects that are critical to this motion (the “1993 amendment”). Although each agent was terminated before the 1993 amendment took effect, they all filed their actions after that date. 4
Two provisions of the NASD Code are chiefly relevant. Under its postamendment formulation, Part I Section 1 (“section 1”) sets forth generally the matters eligible for arbitration:
any dispute, claim, or controversy arising out of or in connection with the business of any member of the [NASD], or arising out of the employment or termination of employment of associated person(s) with any member, 5 with the exception of disputes involving the insurance business of any member which is also an insurance company:
(1) between or among members;
(2) between or among members and associated persons;
(3) between or among members or associated' persons and public customers, or others; 6 and
*633 (4) between or among members, registered clearing agencies with which the [NASD] has entered into an agreement to utilize the [NASD] arbitration facilities and procedures, and participants, pledges, or other persons using the facilities of a registered clearing agency, as these terms are defined under the rules of such a registered clearing agency.
Part II Section 8 (“Section 8”). defines which disputes must be arbitrated:
(a) Any dispute, claim, or controversy eligible for submission under Part I of this Code between or among members and/or associated persons, and/or certain others, arising in connection with the business of such member(s) or in connection with the activities of such associated person(s), or arising out of the employment or termination of employment of such associated person(s) with such member, 7 shall be arbitrated under this Code, at the instance of:
(1) a member against another member;
(2) a member against a person associated with a member or a person associated with a member against a member; and,
(3) a person associated with a member against a person associated with, a member.
Even under its preamendment version, section 8 contemplated arbitration between members and persons associated with a member.
In addition, plaintiffs Gordon, Weaver and Schulte were, during their employment with Prudential, members of the United Food & Commercial Workers International Union (the “union”). 8 Accordingly, their employment was governed by the terms of a collective bargaining agreement between Prudential and the union (the “CBA”). 9 Pursuant to Labor Management Relations Act § 301, certain state law causes of action which they might otherwise be entitled to bring against Prudential may be preempted by the CBA
DISCUSSION
PRUDENTIAL’S MOTION TO COMPEL ARBITRATION
The Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”), 9 U.S.C. §§ 1-9 (1988), governs enforcement of arbitration agreements contained in U-4s.
See Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp.,
On the other hand, “arbitration is a matter of contract and a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to submit.”
AT & T Technologies Inc. v. Communications Workers of America,
To determine whether a party may compel arbitration, a Court “must determine: (1) whether there is an agreement to arbitrate; (2) whether the claims fall within the scope of that agreement; and (3) whether there has been a waiver of the right to arbitrate.”
Wojcik,
The agents first argue that they signed no valid agreement to arbitrate claims against Prudential. All four agents assert that Prudential is not a party to the U-4s they signed, and Martin and Young argue that their U-4s did not bind them at the time of the events from which this litigation arises. Second, the agents argue that the arbitration provisions do not apply to the claims at issue here because (a) the arbitration clauses did not apply to employment disputes before the 1993 amendment and cannot be retroactively applied; and (b) their claims are exempt from arbitration by virtue of the insurance business exception set forth in Section 1 of the NASD Code. Finally, Martin asserts that the U-4 he signed is unenforceable as a contract of adhesion. The Court will address these arguments in turn. 10
I. Applicability of the U-4s to the Parties
A. Prudential May Enforce the Arbitration Provisions Even Though it is Not Named as the “Firm” in the U-4s
The agents allege that Prudential is not a party to the U-4 arbitration provision and therefore cannot enforce it. That provision requires the agents “to arbitrate any dispute, claim or controversy that may arise between me and my firm, or a customer, or any other person, that is required to be arbitrated under the rules, constitutions, or by-laws of the [NASD].” The “firm” is identified in a separate section of each agent’s U-4 as Pruco Securities Corp. (“Pruco”), Prudential’s wholly-owned subsidiary. The agents claim Prudential cannot compel enforcement of an arbitration provision contained in an agreement to which it was never a party.
This argument fails for several reasons. First, the Court notes that each agent agreed to arbitrate disputes not only with his firm but with “a customer, or any other person,” so long as the NASD rules require that dispute to be arbitrated. The agents have focused on the “my firm” language and failed to address the remainder of the provision. Clearly, Prudential is an “other person” whose disputes with its agents are covered by the current NASD arbitration rules. Moreover, each agent’s U — i contained a separate provision requesting names of broker-dealers other than Pruco with which he would maintain registration. With the exception of Young’s 1993 U-4, each of the agents attested that they would maintain concurrent registration with Prudential.
*635
Prudential Ins. Co. of America v. Shammas,
Kresock v. Bankers Trust Co.,
B. Martin’s Employment Agreement did not Supersede his Agreement to Arbitrate
Martin alleges that in 1988, some five years after he signed his U-4 in 1983, Prudential promoted him to District Agencies Manager and entered a standard employment agreement with him which explicitly stated: “This Agreement supersedes any previous agreement the Manager may have had with the Company.” (Martin Opp.Br. pp. 6-7, 10-11) Martin contends that the employment agreement supersedes his U-4 and that, since the employment agreement did not contain an arbitration clause, Prudential may not compel arbitration of his claims. (Id. at pp. 7,11)
O’Donnell v. First Investors Corp.,
Here, too, even though Martin’s employment agreement states that it “supersedes any previous agreement the Manager may have had with the Company ” (emphasis added), the U-4 is not an agreement with Prudential and therefore remained in effect following Martin’s promotion.
*636 G. Prudential May Enforce Young’s U-4
Young argues that Prudential cannot enforce the U-4 against him because (1) he never became subject to it because he never actually engaged in the sale of securities; and (2) he was no longer subject to the first U-4 he signed once Prudential terminated him and notified the NASD of this fact, and he never became subject to the second U-4 he signed because Prudential denies that it rehired him as an agent emeritus. (Young Opp.Br. pp. 6-7)
The Court in
Foley,
The Ninth Circuit rejected Young’s second argument in
O’Neel v. National Ass’n of Securities Dealers, Inc.,
It would seem strange indeed that with such a significant integrated method of dispute settlement one party could frustrate the purpose of the Exchange rules and the federal policy favoring arbitration by the mere expediency of resignation from the Exchange.
Id.
at 806-07,
quoting Muh v. Newburger, Loeb & Co.,
II. Applicability of Arbitration Clauses to Agents’ Claims
A. Coverage of Employment Disputes
As set forth above, the 1993 amendment added language to sections 1 and 8 of the NASD which makes it clear that the arbitration provisions currently cover employment disputes. In the legislative history to the proposal for the 1993 amendment, the NASD stated: “The NASD has taken the position that employment disputes are arbitrable under Section 8, but in order to clear up any ambiguity, it is proposing the changes ... whieh parallel the NYSE rule language.” Fed.Reg.Vol. 58, No. 138, pp. 39070, 39071 (July 21, 1993). Prudential argues that this legislative history proves that the provisions always applied to employment disputes and that, in any event, the 1993 amendment applies to the agents’ claims because they filed them- after its effective date. The agents argue that the 1993 amendment indicates that the provisions did not apply to employment disputes previously and that the amendment cannot be applied retroactively.
The agents urge the Court to adopt precedent from the Seventh Circuit. In
Farrand v. Lutheran Brotherhood,
any dispute, claim, or controversy arising out of or in connection with the business of any member of the [NASD], with the exception of disputes involving the insurance business of any member which is also an insurance company:
(1) between or among members;
(2) between or among members and public customers, or others; ...
*637 The Court focused on the language in section 1 following the colon, which defines the parties whose claims are subject to arbitration, and determined that members’ representatives’ claims are not subject to arbitration. The Court rejected the defendant’s argument that the phrase “or others” in subpart (2) covered such claims, finding that “such a reading ... would make all of the words after the colon surplus.” Id. at 1255-56. The Court acknowledged that “the NASD’s rules could be stretched to cover such disputes,” id. at 1255, and that the NASD had suggested in its proposed amendment that it “believe[d] that its Code already covers employment disputes,” id. at 1256, but concluded that “[a] change in the Code, rather than a strained interpretation of the current language, is the right way to proceed.” Id. at 1257.
Kresock,
The Court rejected the defendant’s argument that the plaintiffs agreement to be bound by amendments to the NASD Code mandated arbitration on the ground that “[t]he incentive created by such a result would be this: after commencement of litigation, an organization such as the NASD could simply amend its rules to force one or both parties to do something (like arbitrate) that one or both never agreed to do.” Id. Thus, the fact that the agents filed their cases after the effective date distinguishes this case from Kresock in a meaningful way; for a holding that U-4 signatories are bound to amendments taking effect, before they file their cases would not create this opportunity for strategic rule changes.
A recent district court opinion within the Seventh Circuit examined
Kresock
and stated that it “appeared to be primarily concerned with the application of amendments to a situation in which a claim has already been filed.”
Wojcik,
This reasoning is persuasive, and harmonizes
Kresock
with the holdings of numerous other courts which have applied the 1993 amendment to cases filed before the amendment’s effective date. In
Pitter,
The 1993 amendments to the NASD Code deal, after all, only with the forum where employment claims will be heard. They do not alter the substantive rights conferred by Congress -on employees)... In Landgraf v. USI Film Prods.,511 U.S. 244 , [-,]114 S.Ct. 1483 , 1502 [,128 L.Ed.2d 229 ] (1994), the Supreme Court stated that ‘changes in procedural-rules may often be applied in suits arising before their enactment without raising concerns about retro-activity.’ Thus, it is entirely appropriate to hold [plaintiff] to compliance with non-substantive rules that took. effect almost six months before he filed his lawsuit.
The Pitter Court distinguished Kresock on the ground that the plaintiff there had not filed his claims until after the effective date of the amendment. Id. at 134 n. 5.
In
Moore,
This Court finds the Farrand and Kresock holdings to be inapposite to this case, in which the agents all signed written agreements to abide by the rules and regulations of the NASD Code, as amended, and brought ■their claims after the effective date of the 1993 amendment. Given the agents’ explicit agreement to arbitrate under the NASD Code “as amended,” the Court must look to the rules as they existed at the time the agents filed suit, and- not before. On this ground alone, it is clear that the agents may not avoid arbitration on the ground that their disputes are employment-related.
' Moreover,
Farrand
and
Kresock
have been widely criticized. Most notably, the Court in
Kidd v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of the United States,
The
Kidd
Court resolved this apparent conflict by reading the language following the colon in section 1 to modify only the insurance business exception clause that immediately preceded it, rather than the entire paragraph. Under this reading, parties were required to arbitrate “any dispute connected to an NASD member’s business, except for disputes involving the insurance business of an NASD member that are (1) between NASD members or (2) between NASD members and public customers or others.”
Kidd,
While this Court agrees that the
Farrand
reading creates an inconsistency between sections 1 and 8 of the NASD Code, it also hesitates to adopt the
Kidd
reading of section 1. Like the Court in
Pitter,
' Yet another approach courts have taken to this semantic conundrum is to label it an ambiguity and apply the presumption in favor of arbitration to resolve the issue. As noted in
Kidd,
This Court is not convinced that the presumption in favor of arbitrability would be powerful enough on its own to compel arbitration where the language of the provisions is so unclear. However, the
Kidd
opinion provided additional support for its holding that the preamendment Code contemplated arbitration of employment disputes,
This position finds further support in numerous opinions that predate the 1993 amendment in which courts applied the NASD arbitration clause to employment disputes of various kinds.
See e.g., Association of Inv. Brokers,
In sum, the Court finds ample indications that the preamendment NASD Code applied to employment disputes such as the agents’ claims; however, the Court will simply hold that, since all the agents filed their claims after the' effective date of the amendment, they are bound thereby and may not avoid the arbitration provisions simply because their disputes are employment-related. This does not end our analysis, however. The fact that the agents have asserted claims .that are arbitrable under the terms of their U-4 does not mean that they must arbitrate them against Prudential. As an insurance company, Prudential is potentially subject to the “business of insurance” exception set forth in the NASD Code.
*640 B. The Insurance Business Exception
Section 1 of the NASD Code excludes from its list of matters eligible for arbitration all “disputes involving the insurance business of any member which is also an insurance company.” Although none of the parties were able to enlighten the Court as to the drafting history or. reasoning behind this exception, presumably it has something to do with the lack of insurance industry expertise on the part of securities industry arbitrators. Certainly, it would stand to reason that the drafters of the NASD might have recognized that a category of its signatories belong to an industry which, although it sells some products with a securities component, operates otherwise in a separate sphere from the rest of the securities industry. Especially given the complex regulatory framework which governs the insurance industry, the exception makes a great deal of sense.
Numerous cases have found' the insurance business exception inapplicable to personnel and various other employment related disputes.
See, e.g., Shammas,
From this authority, however, Prudential asks the Court to derive a rule that the insurance business exception can never apply where the plaintiff alleges an employment-related injury. A contrary rule, asserts Prudential, would allow any employee of an insurance company to avoid arbitration “simply by alleging the dispute involves consideration of the company’s insurance business.” (Prudential Reply Br. p. 16) Prudential’s argument focuses too narrowly upon the injuries the agents allege, disregarding the scope and nature of the issues the trier of fact will have to analyze in determining whether or not to grant relief for those injuries.
The agents concede that garden-variety employment disputes do not implicate the insurance business exception. They claim, however, that the instant case is distinguishable from ordinary employment disputes on the ground that their claims are more intricately connected with the allegedly fraudulent and illegal character of Prudential’s insurance business practices than are claims in ordinary employment disputes. This Court agrees — and would add that this ease is also distinguishable from garden variety employment disputes in another important respect. The agents’ claims are intertwined with dozens of putative class actions potentially involving hundreds of thousands of policyholders who have made allegations against Prudential that involve the same factual issues that the agents’ claims raise. The resulting potential for inconsistent results and inefficiencies provided the impetus for the consolidation of all of these actions in this Court, and the samé circumstances— while they obviously could not justify a reformation of a binding contract to arbitration claims — have also weighed into the Court’s determination that these claims involve Prudential’s insurance business and therefore belong in this Court and not in a separate arbitral forum. The Court does not share Prudential’s concern that future disgruntled insurance employees will avoid arbitration simply by including allegations involving their employers’ insurance business; courts are perfectly capable of looking beyond the face of a complaint to determine whether or not the dispute really involves a defendant’s insurance business,
The Court is aware that the few courts which have addressed the application of the insurance business exception to claims arising- out of employment relationships appear to have rejected the agents’ position; however, the Court finds each of these cases distinguishable under the unique circumstances of *641 the instant case. To the extent they are not, the Court declines to follow them here. In Young v. Prudential Ins., Docket No. SOM-L-907-95 at p. 4 (slip op.) (N.J.Super. Law Div. Oct. 19, 1995), the Court refused to apply the exception to a claim for discharge in retaliation for whistle blowing, finding that “the exception relating to insurance and the business of insurance ... must of necessity relate to disputes about the practices of an insurance company raised between insurance companies themselves and not to the alleged retaliation visited on'an employee who calls attention to his insurance company employer’s alleged unlawful insurance practice.”
The opinion provides few specifics about the retaliatory discharge claim — only that it involved the plaintiffs “whistleblowing about unlawful conduct of other Prudential employees.” Id. at 2. Thus, it is not clear that the claim would have required the Court to engage in the comprehensive evaluation of Prudential’s insurance practices that the agents’ claims might require. Moreover, this Court finds no support in the text or history of the NASD Code for the Young Court’s finding that the exception applies only to disputes between insurance companies themselves. Accordingly, the Court will decline to follow Young in this matter.
In
Trumbetta v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
the plaintiff ma[de] some general allegations in the complaint that [defendant] is engaging in unlawful insurance practices, the basis of his claims stem from actions taken by the defendants against the plaintiff since he did not participate in their alleged scheme. Thus, whether or not the defendants actually engaged in any unlawful insurance practice is irrelevant to this dispute.
The Trumbetta opinion does not set forth the factual details of the plaintiffs claims in that case; however, the case appears to be distinguishable from the agents’ claims here. In Trumbetta, the plaintiff had made “some general allegations in the complaint” that the defendant insurance company had engaged in “certain unlawful insurance practices” and that the defendants had taken adverse actions against him “since he did not participate in their alleged scheme.” Id, at *3. However, the “thrust” of the Trumbetta complaint was “that the defendants harassed and persecuted [plaintiff] such that he lost business and th[u]s.ultimately was constructively discharged.” Id.
Accordingly, the Trumbetta Court found that “whether or not the defendants actually engaged in any unlawful insurance practices is irrelevant to this dispute.” Id. Although it is not entirely clear from the opinion, it would seem that the plaintiff in Trumbetta could prove that illegal acts of harassment and persecution led to his constructive discharge without proving that, defendants actually engaged hi unlawful insurance practices; thus, the Trümbetta case implicated the business of insurance only indirectly, having to do only with the defendants’ motivation for whát would be, if proven, independently unlawful acts.
Here, by contrast, Prudential discharged the agents in what would facially appear to be an entirely proper manner. Prudential’s action becomes unlawful only if the agents can prove that it was taken in retaliation for the agents’ refusal to cooperate with unlawful insurance practices, and only if the practices the agents refused to participate in were actually fraudulent or unlawful does Prudential’s allegedly retaliatory motive become improper or unlawful.
Armijo,
111. Enforceability of Martin’s U-4
Martin argues that “the alleged arbitration agreement is one of adhesion, was entered into fraudulently and does not bind Martin in any manner.” (Martin Br. p. 3) He asserts that his agreement to submit to the jurisdiction of the organizations for which he applied for registration was “buried” at the end of one of many purported “employment forms” which Prudential presented for his immediate signature as a condition of employment. Martin acknowledges his express agreement, appearing in “fine print” (Martin Br. p. 6) at paragraph 5 of the U-4, “to arbitrate any dispute ... that is required to be arbitrated” under NASD rules. However, he claims that neither of these provisions should bind him to arbitrate this dispute because, contrary to Prudential’s own representation at the end of the U-4 that “the applicant will be familiar with the ... rules and by-laws of the ... self-regulatory organization with which this application is being filed, and the rules governing registered persons,” Martin was never provided with copies of any of the rules or regulations with which he purportedly agreed to comply. (Martin Br. p. 5)
A somewhat similar argument has prevailed in the Ninth Circuit. In
Prudential Ins. Co. of America v. Lai, 42
F.3d 1299, 1301 (9th Cir.1994),
cert. denied,
— U.S. -,
when they signed the U-4 form, they were told only that they were applying to take a test, which was required for their employment by Prudential, and that they were simply directed to sign in the relevant place without being given an opportunity to read the forms. Arbitration was never mentioned, and plaintiffs were never given a copy of the NASD Manual.
The Court held that, under these circumstances, the plaintiffs had. not knowingly agreed to waive their rights to sue in federal court under Title VII; it based its holding, however, on specific language from the federal statute requiring a knowing agreement to waive such rights before a plaintiff can be compelled to arbitrate. Id. at 1304-05. The agents have pointed to no such statutory requirement of a knowing waiver of their rights; accordingly Lai is distinguishable from this case.
Moreover,
Lai
has been rather extensively criticized.
See Beauchamp v. Great West Life Assur. Co.,
[E]ven if Smith Barney had explained the ■ scope of the arbitration clause to plaintiff, the end result would have been the same; the execution of a Form U-4 is not unique to Smith Barney employees and it is not optional. It is an SEC industry-wide requirement, a prerequisite to registration with any securities firm. Thus, plaintiff could not have been fraudulently induced into signing this document or could not have detrimentally relied on any affirmative representations rendered by Smith Barney---- Smith Barney is bound by the terms of the Form U-4 to the same extent as plaintiff is bound.
*643
See also Pitter,
This Court is sympathetic to the views of those who believe that the arbitration provisions to which employees in the securities industry are required to submit as a condition of their employment are unfair. However, basic contract law and longstanding judicial precedent clearly preclude a holding that Martin’s U-4 is a contract of adhesion,
The Court is intrigued, however, by Martin’s argument that Prudential’s failure to provide him with copies of the rules and regulations with which the U-4 obligated him to comply despite its explicit written attestation that it had done so precludes the company from demanding arbitration. This is a question which the courts do not appear to have addressed yet. The parties have not fully briefed the issue, and in light of the Court’s holding on the insurance business exception it is unnecessary for this Court to explore it further; however, the Court highlights this as a potential ground for exploration.
PRUDENTIAL’S MOTION TO DISMISS ON SECTION 301 PREEMPTION GROUNDS
As set forth above, Gordon, Weaver and Schulte were union members during their employment with Prudential and, accordingly, governed by the terms of the CBA. Under Labor Management Relations Act (“LMRA”) § 301,
Suits for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization representing employees in an industry affecting commerce as defined in this Act, or between any labor organizations, may be brought in any district court of the United States having jurisdiction of the parties, without respect to the amount in controversy or without regard to the citizenship of the parties.
29 U.S.C. § 185(a). While the statute on its face simply provides for federal jurisdiction over controversies involving collective bargaining agreements, the preemptive force of section 301 has long been acknowledged. See
Lingle v. Norge Div. of Magic Chef, Inc.,
if the resolution of a state-law claim depends upon the meaning of a collective-bargaining agreement, the application of state law (which might lead to inconsistent results since there could be as many state-law principles as there are states) is preempted and federal labor-law principles — necessarily uniform throughout the Nation — must be employed to resolve the dispute.
Lingle,
. [13-15] Thus, the proper approach to a state law preemption question is to analyze each element of the state claim at issue and then to determine whether its resolution will require the Court to construe or interpret any terms or provisions of the applicable labor agreement.
See Lingle,
the fact that a particular provision of the [CBA] may not explicitly address the conduct underlying [the] complaint does not mean that resolution ... does not require interpretation of the agreement.... The governmental nature of the collective-bargaining process demands a common law of the shop which implements and furnishes the context of the agreement although not expressed in it.
Douglas v. American Information Technologies Corp.,
That resolution of a state law claim might require
consultation
of a collective bargaining agreement does not mandate preemption; a claim is preempted only if its resolution requires
interpretation or construction
of a collective bargaining agreement.
See Hawaiian Airlines, Inc. v. Norris,
— U.S. -, - n. 8,
The circuit courts have not yet reached a consensus on whether reliance upon terms of a collective bargaining agreemeñt as a defense to plaintiffs claims creates grounds for preemption.
See Livadas,
— U.S. at - n. 18,
In
Capraro v. United Parcel Service Co.,
However, in an earlier case arising directly under the LMRA, the Third Circuit arrived at a different conclusion.
Berda v. CBS, Inc.,
*645
Berda,
Berda
should be viewed through the prism of the Supreme Court authority upon which it relies.
Caterpillar
was not a true section 301 preemption case; rather, the issue presented in that ease was whether the doctrine of
complete preemption
applied to allow the defendants in the case to remove to federal court claims brought exclusively under state law.
14
Indeed, the
Caterpillar
Court specifically noted: “We intimate no view on the merits of ... any of the [section 301] preemption arguments discussed above.”
Caterpillar,
The Seventh, Eighth and Ninth Circuits have clearly stated that defenses are relevant in the preemption analysis.
15
As noted above, the Seventh Circuit cited
Caterpillar
to support its determination that it was “free to resolve this [preemption] question by looking beyond the plaintiffs’ complaint to the defenses [defendant] asserts.”
Smith,
Both the Ninth Circuit and the. Eighth Circuit have cited
Lingle, 486 U.S.
at 407,
To defend against a retaliatory discharge claim, an employer must show that it had a nonretaliatory reason for the discharge; this purely factual inquiry likewise does not turn on the meaning of any provision of a collective-bargaining agreement. Thus, the state-law remedy in this case is ‘independent’ of the collective-bargaining agreement ...: resolution of the state-law claim does not require construing the collective-bargaining agreement.
This clear indication that potential defenses are relevant to a section 301 preemption *646 analysis, coming one year after the Caterpillar decision, provides a further indication that the Supreme Court did not intend that its Caterpillar holding should apply beyond the context of the complete preemption doctrine.
These decisions comport with the policies and purposes of section 301 preemption. As set forth above, supra pp. 643-44, the reason courts have ascribed such broad preemptive effect to section 301 is to enforce properly negotiated arbitration provisions and to ensure uniformity of interpretation regarding collective bargaining agreements. A court can frustrate this policy just as effectively by deciding an issue that arises in a defense as it can by deciding that same issue when it arises as an element of the plaintiffs proof. Accordingly, this Court will consider not only the issues raised by the agents’ claims but also the issues raised by Prudential’s defenses in determining whether section 301 preemption applies.
Prudential moves to preempt two categories of claims: (1) those of Gordon, Weaver and Schulte for retaliatory discharge; and (2) Weaver’s claims for defamation and. tortious interference with business expectancies. 16 Prudential contends these claims will require the Court either to interpret specific provisions of the CBA or to examine relationships and practices governed by the CBA. For example, the company claims it terminated Schulte and Weaver for low sales production under the terms of its low production probation policy (“LPP policy”). Prudential asserts that the CBA supplied the authority under which it adopted the LPP policy, and that the CBA mandates grievance arbitration for disputes arising out of its application of the policy.
Similarly, Prudential states that it terminated Gordon when he failed to return to work after his disability period expired. Under the company’s Service Disability Allowance Plan (the “disability plan”), expressly incorporated into the CBA in effect at the time, agents with less than five years’ service are entitled to six months of disability leave benefits but face termination if they do not return to work at the end of the six-month period. Finally, Prudential defends Weaver’s charges of defamation and tortious interference with business relations on the grounds that it owed its policyholders an obligation to disclose the information it imparted and that Weaver had no reasonable expectation of maintaining an independent business relationship with Prudential policyholders. Prudential contends that these relationships between the company, its agents and its policyholders are all" governed by express and implied terms of the CBA.
I. Retaliatory Discharge
Under Illinois law, which applies to the claims of Weaver and Schulte, a retaliatory discharge complaint must allege (1) that the employer discharged the employee in retaliation for the employee’s activities; and (2) that the discharge contravened a “clearly mandated public policy.”
Carter Coal Co. v. Human Rights Com’n,
In
Lingle, supra,
the Supreme Court determined that section 301 did not preempt an Illinois state law claim that alleged retaliatory discharge for filing a workers compensation claim. The defendant in that case claimed that the reason for the discharge was that the plaintiffs workers compensation claim contained false informa
*647
tion, and that this constituted “just cause” for termination under the parties’ collective bargaining agreement. The Supreme Court found that the state law claim was independent of the collective bargaining agreement because it turned on questions pertaining to “the conduct of the employee and the conduct and motivation of the employer,” the determination of which did not require the Court to interpret any terms of the agreement.
Id.,
Prudential attempts to distinguish Lingle. It points out that it took adverse employment actions against Weaver, Schulte and Gordon under terms of the CBA that were much more specific than the “just causé” provision at issue in Lingle, and contends that, whereas the Lingle defendants simply referred to the “just cause” provision as a justification for terminating the plaintiff there, this Court must actually examine and interpret CBA terms to resolve the agents’ retaliatory discharge claims.
Specifically, Prudential claims the Court will have to “evaluate” Prudential’s claim that it terminated Weaver and Schulte for low sales production pursuant to the LPP policy — which, in turn, will require the Court to examine the amount of commissions these agents earned during the relevant period and to compare their performance to that of similarly situated agents who were not terminated. To decide Gordon’s retaliatory discharge claim, Prudential argues, the Court will have to resolve a disagreement between Prudential and Gordon as to whether or not Prudential’s disability plan authorized it to terminate Gordon. (Prudential Br. p. 20)
There are several potential problems with Prudential’s arguments. First, it is far from clear that resolution. of the retaliatory discharge claims will ultimately turn on the application of any specific CBA terms. It does not appear that either Illinois or Kentucky requires a retaliatory discharge plaintiff to show that the employer’s
sole
motivation for taking action against the plaintiff was retaliatory.
See Szaflarski v. Lurie Co.,
Although Prudential contends that its defenses bring the CBA into play, this is not so apparent either. A court in this district recently declined to preempt a retaliatory discharge claim, holding: “Even if the employer’s nonretaliatory explanation for the discharge depends on its interpretation of the collective bargaining agreement, ‘[s]o long as this interpretation was made in good faith and actually motivated ... the [employer’s] actions,’ it constitutes a valid defense ‘without regard to the correctness of the interpretation.’”
Kube v. New Penn Motor Express, Inc.,
Prudential’s position also assumes that the agents
challenge
its interpretation of the CBA. Clearly, if the parties all agree on the meaning of the relevant CBA provisions, the doctrine of preemption does not preclude the Court from deciding whether or not they constitute valid defenses.
Hawaiian Airlines, Inc.,
— U.S. at -,
Even to the extent that the agents attack the LPP policy directly for requiring production levels that can only be met through illegal sales practices, their claims do not appear to present an interpretation question.
See Sayres v. Lancaster Press, Inc.,
Douglas,
Arguments like Prudential’s have fared poorly in other courts as well — including the United States Supreme Court. In
Hawaiian Airlines,
— U.S. at -,
Prudential cites
Doran v. Thermatex Corp.,
For all of these reasons, the Court determines that section 301 does not mandate preemption of the agents’ retaliatory discharge claims. The Court will also address Schulte’s related claim for emotional distress arising out of his allegedly wrongful termination, for which Prudential requested preemption for the first time- in its reply brief. As Prudential appears to concede, Schulte’s claims for retaliatory discharge and emotional distress arise out of the same facts and implicate the CBA to the same degree. Accordingly, the Court will also deny Prudential’s request for preemption of Weaver’s emotional distress claim.
II. Defamation and Tortious Interference Claims
Weaver alleges that Prudential defamed him and interfered with his business relationships — both during and after his employment with Prudential — by informing individuals that Weaver was being investigated for unethical conduct, that he did not understand the insurance business, that he was inexperienced and that he “did not know what he was saying” when he told policyholders that Prudential had engaged in improper churning practices. (Weaver Resp. pp. 5, 13) Prudential argues that resolution of this claim requires interpretation of the CBA because the CBA establishes the contours of the relationships among Prudential, its agents and its policyholders, an understanding of which is necessary to evaluate Prudential’s qualified privilege defense to the defamation action and to assess Weaver’s reasonable expectations for purposes of the tortious interference claims. The Court will examine Weaver’s defamation and tortious interference claims in turn.
A. Tortious Interference
To set forth a claim under Illinois law for tortious interference with existing business relations, Weaver would have to show:
(1) the existence of a valid and enforceable contract between the plaintiff and another; (2) the defendant’s awareness of this contractual relation; (3) the defendant’s intentional and unjustified inducement of a breach of the contract; (4) a subsequent breach by the other, caused by the defendant’s wrongful conduct; and (5) damages.
HPI Health Care Servs., Inc. v. Mt. Vernon Hosp., Inc.,
131 IIl.2d 145, 154-55,
(1) his reasonable expectation of entering into a valid business relationship; (2) the defendant’s knowledge of the plaintiffs expectancy; (3) purposeful interference by the defendant that prevents the plaintiffs legitimate expectancy from ripening into a valid business relationship; and (4) damages to the plaintiff resulting from such interference.
Fellhauer v. City of Geneva,
Prudential claims the Court cannot resolve the first element of either claim without referring to the CBA. Specifically, it contends that express and implied provisions of the CBA set forth the terms of the three-way relationship among Prudential, Prudential’s agents and Prudential’s policyholders. Prudential contends that the CBA prohibits the formation of contracts between its current agents and its policyholders by protecting all proprietary information regarding its policyholders and their insurance contracts and by making it clear that these contracts are between Prudential and its customers, not between agents and customers. It also points to provisions in the CBA which prohibit Prudential agents from selling or servicing other companies’ insurance products while employed at Prudential. Finally, it notes that departed Prudential agents are (1) required to turn in all written information *650 they have received or generated regarding policyholders and their contracts and (2) precluded from soliciting Prudential policyholders for two years.
The Court agrees with Prudential that, in light of these express terms of the CBA, as well as the implied terms of the three-way relationship which may have developed thereunder, it will be impossible to determine the scope of Weaver’s legitimate independent business relationships or reasonable business expectancies without construing the CBA.
In
Pelech,
Ordinarily, dismissals on grounds of preemption are with prejudice. Here, however, Weaver has asserted that the CBA ceased to apply to him when he left Prudential’s employ and that at least a portion of his claims arose after his termination. In response to this argument, Prudential cites
Merle v. Jewel Cos., Inc.,
B. Defamation
Prudential argues that the Court will have to construe the CBA in order to evaluate Prudential’s qualified privilege defense to Weaver’s defamation claim. In
Kuwik v. Starmark Star Marketing and Admin., Inc.,
(1) situations in which some interest of the person who publishes the defamatory matter is involved
(2) situations in which some interest of the person to whom the matter is published or of some other third person is involved
(3) situations in which a recognized interest of the public is concerned.
Id.,
Prudential claims it disclosed the alleged defamatory information to protect its own interests in maintaining relationships between itself and its policyholders. Prudential cites the same CBA sections it cites in defense of Weaver’s tortious interference claim, e.g., provisions allegedly making clear that Prudential’s policyholders were to be regarded as Prudential’s customers and not Weaver’s, prohibitions against Weaver’s use of customer information for any purposes other than selling Prudential products, and the provision barring solicitation of Prudential customers for two years following his termination.
To show that a statement is conditionally privileged because it protects the *651 publisher’s interest, the defendant must show that the circumstances under which it was made would “induce a correct or reasonable belief that (a) there is information that affects a sufficiently important interest of the publisher, and (b) the recipient’s knowledge of the defamatory matter will be of service in the lawful protection of the interest.” Id. (emphasis supplied), quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 594 (1977). Even assuming that the information Prudential allegedly imparted to its policyholders about Weaver affected the interests it cites, this Court fails to see how the policyholders’ knowledge of the information could possibly have been of service to Prudential in protecting those interests. Accordingly, Weaver’s claims for defamation are not preempted. 22
In
Pelech,
in light of plaintiffs allegations and defendants’ defenses, simply involves a determination of (1) whether Pelech did, or did not, steal a co-worker’s calculator, (2) whether defendants did, or did not, publish statements that Pelech was engaged in drug trafficking, (3) whether the latter statements are true, and (4) whether defendants made the alleged statements with malice. Nothing in such an evaluation requires us to look to the [CBA], let alone interpret it.
Id. at 531. Although the Court noted that interpretation of a labor agreement might become necessary “where a defendant-employer claims qualified privilege, thus necessitating'a review of the [CBA]’s terms to determine whether the disputed communications fell within the scope of defendant’s duties,” id. at 531 n. 8, in this case the Court has found that the alleged defamatory statements could not have fallen within the scope of Prudential’s duties or the legitimate protection of its interests.
Moreover, as the
Pelech
Court noted, qualified privilege serves in large part to enhance the plaintiffs burden of proof under Illinois defamation law, requiring a showing of malice rather than simple negligence; accordingly, since the plaintiff in that ease had alleged malice, the Court held that even if the defendants had asserted the qualified privilege as a defense' it would have made no difference to the Court’s determination that the defamation claim was not preempted.
Id. See also Evans v. Keystone Consol. Indus.,
Other courts have declined to preempt claims for defamation. In
Mulligan v. United Parcel Service, Inc.,
The cases Prudential cites are distinguishable. In
Kozlowsky v. K-Mart Corp.,
Similarly, in
Hurst v. Consolidated Freightways Corp. of Delaware,
Both
DeCoe,
■ Similarly, in
Johnson,
the plaintiff alleged that co-workers defamed him by falsely reporting that he had slashed the tires of a fellow employee during business hours in the workplace parking lot. Since the allegedly false report was made as part of the employer’s investigation under collective bargaining agreement provisions, the Court preempted the plaintiffs claims insofar as they arose out of statements made within the company.
Johnson,
In this case, the alleged defamatory statements were not even arguably made as part of any procedure or proceeding carried out pursuant to the CBA. Prudential does not claim that any provision specifically authorized or required it to inform its policyholders that Weaver was being investigated for ethical violations or to share with its policyholders its views on Weaver’s knowledge, competence or job performance.
Furillo v. Dana Corp. Parish Div.,
Accordingly, the Court finds that Weaver’s defamation claim is not preempted by section 301 and will allow the claim to proceed on the merits.
*653 CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will deny Prudential’s motion to compel arbitration and stay these proceedings. It will grant Prudential’s motion to dismiss, without prejudice, Weaver’s claims for tortious interference with business relations on the ground that section 301 preempts them, but will deny Prudential’s motion to dismiss Weaver’s defamation claim, Schulte’s claim for emotional distress, and the retaliatory discharge claims of Weaver, Schulte and Gordon.
An appropriate Order is attached.
ORDER
In accordance with the Court’s Opinion filed herewith,
It is on this 19th day of April, 1996
ORDERED that the motion of The Prudential Insurance Company of America (“Prudential”), to compel arbitration and stay these proceedings, is denied; and it is further
ORDERED that Prudential’s motion to dismiss plaintiff Michael R. Weaver’s (“Weaver”) claims for tortious interference with business relations is granted, without prejudice; and it is further
ORDERED that Prudential’s motion to dismiss Weaver’s defamation claim is denied; and it is further
ORDERED that Prudential’s motion to dismiss plaintiff Herbert Schulte’s (“Schulte”) claim for emotional distress is denied; and it is further
ORDERED that Prudential’s motion to dismiss the retaliatory discharge claims of plaintiffs Weaver, Schulte and Michael D. Gordon, is denied; and it is further
ORDERED that the age discrimination claim of Schulte is dismissed with prejudice.
Notes
. Gordon has not contested Prudential's motion to compel arbitration. Accordingly, the terms of his U-4 are not at issue.
. Each plaintiff's U-4 listed the National Association of Securities Dealers ("NASD”) as an organization with which he was to register.
. The Court finds this second difference insignificant. Under ordinary rules of grammar and syntax, the quoted phrase from the later version modifies the language immediately preceding it,
i.e.,
"as indicated in Item 10.” In other words, the "as amended” language refers to the list of organizations with which the signing agent has registered, not to the rules and regulations of these organizations. This interpretation finds further support in the fact that a similar phrase, “registration with the organizations and states indicated in Item 10 as may be amended from time to time,” appears in paragraph 2 of the later version. Thus, neither versioh specifically requires the agents to abide by the NASD arbitration rules “as amended;” however, such a specific provision was not necessary in' light of the agents’ clear agreement in paragraph 2 of the U-4 to comply With
all
NASD rules and regulations "as amended.”
See Wojcik v. Aetna Life Ins. and Annuity Co.,
. For purposes of the arbitration discussion in this Opinion, "agents” will refer to Schulte, Weaver, Young and Martin. As noted above, Gordon has not contested Prudential's motion to compel arbitration at this time.
. The preamendment version did not contain the language "or arising out of the employment or termination of employment of associated personas) with any member,"
. Subparts 2 and 3 were also amended in 1993. The pre-amended version contained only 3 sub-parts, the second of which read "between or among members and public customers, or others ...." Thus, the preamended version of Sec *633 tíon 1 did not specifically authorize arbitration between members and "associated persons."
. The preamendment version did not contain the language “or arising out of the employment or termination of employment of such associated person(s) with such member.”
. For purposes of the preemption discussion in this Opinion, “agents” will refer to Gordon, Schulte and Weaver.
. Over the course of the various agents' employment at Prudential, various versions of the CBA governed. As none of the differences are germane to this dispute, this Court’s references will be to a single CBA.
. The agents also argue that, even if Prudential had a right to arbitrate their claims, it waived that right when it moved to transfer the agents’ cases to this Court for pretrial proceedings. Given the Court’s disposition of the motion, it need not address this argument. The Court also notes that, given the extensive briefing and complexity of issues raised on these motions, this Opinion will not specifically address each point the parties raise or each case they cite. The parties should rest assured, however, that the Court has considered them.
. In a later opinion in the same case, the Wojcik court "ma[d]e clear that [its] earlier determination that [defendant] could compel arbitration under the terms of the NASD Code was based on the facts that some of the conduct that is the subject of the complaint took place after the effective date of the NASD amendment while [plaintiff] was employed with [defendant], and that [plaintiff] filed his complaint after that date." Id. at 1284 (emphasis added).
. The
Kidd
Court also found,.
. The Sixth Circuit has outlined a two-part test for determining preemption questions, asking first “whether proof of the state law claim requires interpretation of collective bargaining ' agreement terms” and second “whether the right claimed by the plaintiff is created by the collec
*644
tive bargaining agreement or by state law.”
DeCoe v. General Motors Corp.,
. The
Caterpillar
Court described the complete preemption doctrine as follows: "On occasion, the court has concluded that the pre-emptive force of a statute is so ‘extraordinary’ that it ‘converts and ordinary state common-law complaint into one stating a federal claim for purposes of the well-pleaded complaint rule.' ”
. The Sixth Circuit has taken the contrary position. In
DeCoe v. General Motors Corp.,
. Schulte concedes that his Illinois and federal age discrimination claims are preempted.
. Although the
Kube
plaintiff's claims arose under New Jersey law, the Court specifically found that the elements for a retaliatory discharge claim in New Jersey "closely mirror” those in Illinois.
Kube,
. Although the Court need not examine the question in detail, we reject the argument, which Schulte and Weaver advance, that the LPP policy is not a collectively bargained agreement and as such cannot provide a basis for § 301 preemption.
See Riccio v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America,
. As noted
supra
p. 644,
Hawaiian Airlines
arose under the RLA rather than the LMRA, but the Supreme Court noted that the standards for preemption under the two statutes are "virtually identical.”
Id.,
- U.S. at -.,
. Prudential overestimates the scope of the preemption doctrine when it argues that the Court should preempt Weaver’s and Schulte’s claims in order to forestall the possibility that a judgment for plaintiffs would nullify Prudential's "management right” under the CBA to establish and modify its LPP policy. (Prudential Br. p. 19) The Supreme Court rejected such an argument in
Hawaiian
Airlines, - U.S. at -,
. The Court notes, however, that Weaver’s pleadings on these claims would appear vulnerable to other dispositive motions from Prudential as well.
. The Court also notes, although Prudential does not raise the issue, that the alleged statements were not made under circumstances giving rise to a conditional privilege for protection of the recipient’s interest, either. To show that, Prudential would have had to show that the circumstances would "induce a correct or reasonable belief that (a) there is information that affects a sufficiently important interest of the recipient or a third person, and (b) the recipient is one to whom the publisher is under a legal duty to publish the defamatory matter.” Id., quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 595 (1977). Prudential has not alleged that it had a legal duty to discióse the alleged defamatory material to its policyholders.
