International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers and local affiliates (IAMA), appeal the dismissal of their action for want of jurisdiction. IAMA sued to enjoin Alaska Airlines, Inc. (Alaska), from
IAMA represents two separate divisions of Alaska Airlines employees. One division represents clerical, office and professional employees and the other division represents mechanics and employees in related occupations. The two divisions have had separate collective bargaining agreements with Alaska for a number of years. The. bargaining agreements of the two divisions expire at different times.
In December 1983, the mechanics’ agreement was opened for negotiations through procedures required by 45 U.S.C. § 156 of the RLA. After extended negotiations mediated by the National Mediation Board, the mechanics and Alaska were unable to agree on a new contract. On March 4, 1985, the mechanics called a strike. The strike was ultimately resolved by a back-to-work agreement which applied only to the mechanics’ division.
Throughout the strike, the collective bargaining agreement of the clerical, office and professional workers with Alaska contained a “no-strike” clause prohibiting those employees from striking for the duration of their contract. During the course of the mechanics’ strike, however, approximately 95 clerical, office and professional workers honored the mechanics’ picket lines. Alaska hired replacement workers to fill the positions vacated by sympathy strikers. At the conclusion of the mechanics’ strike, Alaska refused to rehire the clerical, office and professional sympathy strikers and rejected their offers to return to work.
Instead, Alaska established a recall plan under which priority for new jobs was given to employees who were hired as replacements and to clerical, office and professional employees who crossed the picket lines. A number of sympathy strikers have been denied recall, or if recalled, have been placed in jobs of lower status than they held before the strike.
IAMA alleges that various features of Alaska’s recall plan violate the RLA. Specifically, the complaint alleges that Alaska’s (1) hiring of permanent replacements, (2) grant of superseniority status to replacements, and (3) refusal to provide relevant information relating to outstanding contractual grievances, all violate the RLA. Alaska’s counterclaim asserts that the sympathy strikers violated the “no-strike” clause of the agreement and accordingly were properly discharged and replaced.
The district court,
The district court held it lacked subject matter jurisdiction because IAMA’s claims involved a “minor dispute” subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the System Board of Adjustment.
The RLA is made applicable to the airline industry by 45 U.S.C. §§ 181-187. See International Ass’n of Machinists v. Central Airlines,
Because this case does not involve a dispute over the formation of a collective bargaining agreement or efforts to secure new rights, IAMA understandably contends that the dispute is neither major nor minor, but involves violations of Section 2 of the RLA.
However, the authority IAMA cites is inapplicable to the facts before us. In each cited case, judicial involvement was the only means of enforcing the RLA. For example, in Conrad and Burke, plaintiffs were individual employees who alleged they were discharged for attempting to organize a union. As their discharges took place before their unions were certified, they could not get union representation or an administrative hearing.
In Ruby, the defendant airline had attempted to nullify the collective bargaining agreement by moving its operations to El Salvador. The case thus involved a fundamental attack on the collective bargaining process, rather than a breach of the agreement’s terms. Further, only the federal courts had the power to enjoin the airline from carrying out its plan. This case, by contrast, does not involve a direct attempt to destroy a union. The System Board of Adjustment is fully equipped to decide the merits of the contract dispute.
IAMA’s reliance on Central of Georgia is also misplaced. In that case, the court exercised jurisdiction over a union’s claims that the carrier’s discipline of a union representative was an attempt to interfere with its employees in their choice of representation. Central of Georgia has been limited to its facts. Northwest Airlines,
IAMA does not contend that Alaska was attempting to interfere with the workers’ choice of a bargaining representative; the union alleges only that the recall plan weakens their union by replacing members, and so violated the RLA. This roundabout effort to reach a statutory violation is not a
Because IAMA cannot show a statutory violation sufficient to invoke the federal courts’ jurisdiction, and does not contend that its claim involves a “major” dispute under the RLA, the district court properly dismissed the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Section 2 establishes the rights of parties to choose their own bargaining representatives and prohibits company interference with Union affairs.
