JOHNS-MANVILLE PRODUCTS CORPORATION,
Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross-Appellee,
v.
F. C. DOYAL, Jr., Administrator, Louisiana Department of
Employment Security, et al.,
Defendants-Appellees-Cross-Appellants,
Louisiana AFL-CIO, Intervenor-Appellee.
No. 74--1620.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
April 4, 1975.
David L. McComb, G. Phillip Shuler, III, New Orleans, La., John D. O'Brien, Washington, D.C., for plaintiff-appellant-cross-appellee.
Marion Weimer, James A. Piler, La. Dept. of Employment Security, Baton Rouge, La., for F. C. Doyal, Jr.
Victor H. Hess, Jr., Leonard A. Washofsky, New Orleans, La., for Oil, Chemical.
C. Paul Barker, New Orleans, La., for La. AFL--CIO.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana.
Before TUTTLE, DYER and GEE, Circuit Judges.
GEE, Circuit Judge:
Despite negotiation, Johns-Manville Products Corporatiоn, Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International and its Local 4--390 were unable to agree on a new collective bargaining contract covering workers at a New Orleans, Louisiana, plant after the October 12, 1973, expiration of the previous agreement. Nevertheless, the workers continued on the job after expiration of the contract until Johns-Manville closed the plant on October 31, 1973, having notified their employees that the plant would not be reopened until a new collective bargaining agreement was reached. The plant was closed due to equipment failures posing, management said, dangers to safety. Management contends that the failures were the work of union saboteurs seeking to enhance the union's bargaining position in the contract negotiations. After the plant closing, some employees applied for and were awarded unemployment compensation by the State of Louisiana, despite Johns-Manville's charge that the employees were unemployed due to a labor dispute and thus disqualified from receiving benefits under Louisiana law.1 Johns-Manville filed suit in federal court, claiming that thе Louisiana administrative orders awarding their employees unemployment compensation were preempted by federal labor law, violative of the Fourteenth Amendment and contrary to the Louisiana Employment Security Law. The court below abstained for Pullman2 reasons.
To the contrary, Pullman does not mandate abstention in this case, one of its prerequisites being absent.3 The Supreme Court has made it clear that invocation of Pullman is proper only when an issue of state law is uncertain. Reetz v. Bozanich,
The question of interest in and participation in a labor dispute has been subjected to state judicial scrutiny several times. Senegal v. Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc.,
As for policy, the state supreme court has given one reason for the legislation:
The Louisiana Employment Security Law requires the employer to pay substantial sums into a fund from which unemployment compensation benefits are paid. The employee contributes nothing to this fund. Avoiding placing an employer in a position of being compelled by statute to subsidize a strike undoubtedly was one of the reasons which prompted the Legislature to disqualify those who are participating in or interested in the labor dispute, and we consider that a broad disqualification was intended by those categories.
Senegal v. Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., supra,
On cross-appeal, the defendants seek to support dismissal of the suit. First, they argue that California Dep't of Human Resources Development v. Javа,
We decline to accept the invitation to dismiss for nonjusticiаbility. There are standards to determine whether federal labor law is preemptive. See Cox, Labor Law Preemption Revisited, 85 Harv.L.Rev. 1337 (1972). To the extent that the court is also required to consider national and state unemployment compensation statutes, the task is not an unfamiliar one. Courts are often called upon to resolve statutory differences. See, e.g., FPC v. Memphis Light, Gаs & Water Div.,
Finally, we decline to pass on preemption at this time. The trial court did not reach the issue on the merits; indeed, that was the reason for abstention. Feeling we could benefit from development of the record and the lower court's analysis on both the possibility of mootness4 and, if necessary, the merits, we reverse and remand for consideration in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
DYER, Circuit Judge (dissenting):
I respectfully dissent. In the circumstances of this case the district court exercised sound discretion in abstaining, and I would thus affirm.
The majority rests its decision on the clarity of state law. Finding the Louisiana law in question to be relatively clear, it holds that abstention is improper. I agree that the state law is settled, but we do not stop there; we must go on to ask whether a conflict then exists between state and federal law.
As the majority points out, the Louisiana statute, LSA--R.S. 23:1601, denies unemployment compensation benefits to those unemployed due to a labor dispute in active progress. The referee found in this case that the company shut down the plant because of 'breaks in production and fear of possible further damage to equipment and injury to workers.' Noting that the employer testified at the hearing that there was no lockout, the referee found that the unemployment was due not to a labor dispute, but to a 'layoff when the employer decided to close the plant.' Johns-Manville asserts, perhaps correctly, that the referee and subsequently the Board of Review simply refuse to recognize what is obviously a lockout, and that this refusal undermines federal labor law. Johns-Manville claims that the state administrative agency has not followed the law of its own state. Accepting Johns-Manville's characterization of the facts, the majority and I agree that the agency has not followed Louisiana law. Our disagreement centers on the proper respective roles of the federal and state courts.
The Louisiana courts have spoken frequently and decisively on the statute in question. In addition to the obvious intent of the statute that strikers be disqualified from receiving benefits, Louisiana appellate courts have held that the following are disqualified: those who refuse to cross picket lines, Hanndyman Homes, Inc. v. Administratоr, Div. of Employment Security, La.App.1966,
The Louisiana Supreme Court on November 22, 1974, issued a writ of review in the National Gypsum case.
Hence, I agree with the majority that the state law is relatively clear, and that it has been construed by the state courts and fleshed out with policy guidelines. But I most emphatically disagree that this precludes the federal court from abstaining.
In the leading abstention case, the United States Supreme Court ordered the district court to abstain from exercising its jurisdiction in a situation where the state law was unsettled, and where resolution of that state law would avoid the constitutional question. Railroad Commission of Texas v. Pullman Co., 1941,
The majority relies on the post-Pullman cases of Harman v. Forssenius, 1965,
In Reetz, the Court likewise ordered abstention in a сase where a state court decision 'could conceivably avoid any decision under the Fourteenth Amendment and would avoid any possible irritant in the federal-state relationship.' Reetz v. Bozanich, supra,
(w)here resolution of the federal constitutional question is dependent upon, or may be materially altered by, the determination of an uncertain issue of state law.
Id.
The statutes in question in Harman were 'clear and unambiguous in all material respects.' The Harman Court stated that if the state statute
is not fairly subject to an interpretation which will render unnecessary . . . the federаl constitutional question, it is the duty of the federal court to exercise its properly invoked jurisdiction. (Emphasis supplied).
Id. at 535,
The obverse is that if the state statute is fairly subject to such an interpretation, the federal court should abstain. A fortiori, if the only reasonable interpretation of the state statute is one which will avoid the federal question, as is the case here, the federal сourt should abstain.
Thus, a fair reading of Pullman, Reetz, and Harman reveals that abstention is proper if the state law is unclear, and if it is subject to an interpretation which would render adjudication of the federal question unnecessary. If the state law is clear and in conflict with federal law, abstention is improper because the constitutional question cannot be avoided in state litigаtion. But if the state law is clear and there is no conflict with federal law, abstention is entirely proper.
Here, as the majority acknowledges, the state law is settled. Furthermore, it is settled in the manner urged by the plaintiff, Johns-Manville. Absolutely nothing in the record suggests that the Louisiana courts will not enforce Louisiana law in a manner entirely consistent with prior interpretations of the Louisiana courts and thus avoid the federal question raised by Johns-Manville. The important question is not whether the state law is clear, but whether by deferring to state court adjudication, the federal question might altogether be avoided.
The First Circuit has upheld abstention when it appeared likely that the state courts would support the plaintiff's claims. A dismissed school teacher, successful in his bid for reinstatemеnt in the initial stages of the arbitral process, feared reversal on appeal because of prior state court decisions, so he took his constitutional claim to federal court. The First Circuit approved abstention because, '(w)hile it is surely an open question, we think that there is a substantial possibility that the arbitrator's award will be upheld.' Steele v. Haley, 1 Cir. 1971,
It is of course also important that federal rights not be prejudiced should the federal court abstain. The case is currently on appeal in state court where statutory preference is given to these appeals. LSA--R.S. 23:1634. Johns-Manville argues that the state remedies are inadequate to protect its federal right to free collective bargaining, largely because of the delays inherent in the state courts. Much of that argument fails when it is recognized that benefits are no longer being paid to the employees in question. Hence, even if adjudication in state court is more laborious than in federal court, as asserted by counsel, no further injury will be done to the employer should he have to proceed solely in state court. The damage allegedly done to the company's bargaining position more than a year ago cannot be rectified by either state or federal court. Furthermore, the fact that vindication of those rights will be delayed is not usually enough to prеvent the federal court from abstaining. The Supreme Court has often ordered abstention in the face of such an argument. Harris County Commissioner Court v. Moore, 1975,
In sum, this case presents a question similar to that faced by this Court in Simmons v. Jones, 5 Cir. 1973,
As adequate state court review of an administrative order based upon predominantly local factors is available to appellee, intervention of a federal court is not necessary for the protection of federal rights.
Id. at 349,
Judge Simpson, speaking for this Court in Simmons, noted that Simmons' complaint was 'an effort to enlist a federal court in a campaign to achieve a more faithful application' of the Georgia statute in a single county. Johns-Manville has attempted exactly the same thing hеre. The remedy should be that adopted in Simmons:
We must assume that the Georgia court system is capable of enforcing Section 59--106 of the Georgia Code. As a matter of comity, the district court should have afforded the Georgia courts the opportunity to rectify alleged deviations from the requirements of Georgia law regarding the selection of traverse jurors in Long County. Sound prinсiples of federalism dictate this result.
Simmons v. Jones, supra,
We have spoken with disfavor in the past about a plaintiff attempting to
bring about that unseemly conflict between two sovereignties which the doctrines of comity and abstention are designed to avoid.
Glen Oaks Util., Inc. v. City of Houston, 5 Cir. 1960,
The same principles should operate here. Thе district court abstained on the ground that if the company's contention is correct that the administrative decision was erroneous under Louisiana law, then 'a decision on the constitutional question will be rendered unnecessary.' I am firmly convinced that the district court is correct. If we are to emphasize rather than to undermine the concept of federalism this is a classic сase for the application of the abstention doctrine. I would affirm.
Notes
'An individual shall be disqualified for benefits: . . . For any week with respect to which the administrator finds that his unemployment is due to a labor dispute which is in active progress at the factory, establishment, or other premises at which he is or was last employed; but such disqualification shall not apply if it is shown to the satisfaction of the administrator that he is not participating in or interested in the labor dispute which caused his unemployment.'
LSA--R.S. 23:1601(4).
Railroad Comm'n of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
Our opinion is focused on clarity of state law; however, Johns-Manville contended that abstention was improper since the second Pullman prerequisite--a federal constitutional question--was missing. The court below did rely only on the Supremacy Clause; however, we will not speak to this point since Johns-Manville did charge due process and equal protection violations in the complaint
See Super Tire Eng'ring Co. v. McCorkle,
