Lead Opinion
Consolidated Rail Corporation (Conrail) appeals from judgments entered below, pursuant to jury verdicts, awarding Junior S. Jackson (Jackson) compensatory damages
The principal issue on appeal is whether the provisions of the Railway Labor Act (RLA) providing for a scheme of administrative grievance procedures and remedies, 45 U.S.C. § 153 First, preempt the state tort action for retaliatory discharge upon which Jackson relied. If the RLA does preempt the state action, a related issue is whether the preemptive effect is to divest the district court of subject matter jurisdiction over Jackson’s pendent claim, thereby making immaterial Conrail’s delay until after trial in raising the preemption defense.
I. FACTS
Jackson worked as a track maintenance foreman for Conrail. He was a membеr of the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Railway Employees (Union) and covered by the Union’s collective bargaining agreement.
On August 22, 1980, Jackson filed a two-count complaint against his employer pursuant to the FELA. Jackson alleged that he suffered work-related injuries on or about February 3, 1978 and, as a result, was hospitalized for approximately ten days that month.
On February 3, 1981, Jackson received a letter from Conrail. The letter advised him that a formal hearing would be held to determine whether he had violated the Railroad Safety Rules by, inter alia, failing to report his alleged injury of February 3, 1978. The hearing was held on February 25, 1981. A transcript of the hearing was sent to the Division Engineer so that he could determine what discipline was to be administered. Hammons, the Division Engineer, had learned previously of Jackson’s 1978 injury because he had received a copy of Jackson’s FELA complaint in November, 1980.
On April 10, 1981, Jackson had amended his claim to add a third count. He charged Conrail with job harassment and the intentional infliction of emotional distress.
On May 7, 1981, Jackson amended his complaint to add a fourth count alleging retaliatory discharge. He sought $250,000 compensatory damages and $500,000 puni
On April 19, 1982, a jury trial commenced b.efore Senior Judge J. Sam Perry. On April 27, 1982, the jury returned its verdicts awarding the plaintiff $13,500 in compensatory damages on the FELA claim, $182,000 compensatory damages on the retaliatory discharge claim, and $1,260,000 punitive damages on that action. Conrail subsequently filed its post-trial motions urging, inter alia, that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Jackson’s retaliatory discharge claim and that a new trial should be granted because of inflammatory remarks by Jackson’s counsel during opening and closing argument. Prior to filing this motion, Conrail had not objected to the district court’s exercise of pendent jurisdiction over the retaliatory discharge claim.
On July 28, 1982, the district court issued a memorandum order denying all Conrail’s post-trial motions. The court upheld the jury verdicts except for the $1,260,000 punitive damage award which was set aside on the ground that willful, malicious, or oppressive conduct could only be asserted against Jackson’s superior, who was not a party to the action, rather than against Conrail.
Conrail has appealed on the grounds that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the retaliatory discharge claim and that a new trial is required to determine the amount of compensatory damages because both compensatory awards were tainted by evidence and argument relevant, if at all, only to the question of punitive damages. Jackson urges on cross-appeal that the punitive damage award should be reinstated.
II. SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION
Conrail contends that the scheme of administrative remedies and procedures mandated by 45 U.S.C. § 153 First preempts the power of the district court to entertain, pursuant to pendent jurisdiction, Jackson’s claim of retaliatory discharge. Conrail’s argument turns on three analytically distinct points: (1) Jackson’s claim is a variety of wrongful discharge action and, under Andrews v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co.,
A. Preemptive Effect of the RLA
Andrews, upon which Conrail relies, involved a railroad employee who was unable to work for a period after he was involved in an automobile accident. When Andrews believed that he was physically able to return to work, the railroad refused to allow him to return. Andrews severed his connection with the railroad, characterized its refusal to grant him work as a wrongful discharge, and sought relief, in the form of
The Supreme Court affirmed the dismissal of Andrews’ suit. Two aspects of the Andrews opinion are particularly relevant to the present case. First, the Court reasoned that Andrews’ claim was a minor dispute, subject to the arbitration remedy provided under the RLA, 45 U.S.C. § 153 First (i), because the collective bargaining agreement was necessarily the source of Andrews’ claim that the discharge was wrongful. The Court noted that, absent the bargaining agreement, Andrews would have been subject to termination at the will of the railroad.
Jackson urges on appeal that the district judge correctly found his claim to be outside the scope of Andrews and therefore cognizable as a pendent claim in his FELA suit. There is no question that Jackson’s right not to be discharged at the will of Conrail grows out of the collective bargaining agreement. Similarly, there is no doubt that a “retaliatory discharge” is one variety of a “wrongful discharge” claim. Jackson’s argument is that retaliatory discharge implicates certain rights that distinguish it sufficiently from the discharge in Andrews to place Jackson’s claim outside the scope of the Andrews holding. Whether this is true is a question of first impression. The arguments and case law upon which Jackson relies are best grouped into two lines of analysis: (1) that his retaliatory discharge claim vindicates a federal FELA right, and (2) that an exception to preemption is justified in this case by Farmer v. United Brotherhood of Carpenters, Local 24,
1. Vindication of Federal Right.
Jackson analogizes this case to those in which a claim based on a federal statute has been upheld, despite petitioner’s failure to exhaust administrative remedies under the RLA or to obtain relief pursuant to those remedies. E.g., Barrentine v. Arkansas-Best Freight System, Inc.,
In Johnson v. American Airlines, Inc.,
The present case is distinguishable from Barrentine, Conrad, and Johnson because neither the FELA, the RLA, nor any other federal statute specifically provides a right of action to one discharged under the circumstances alleged by Jackson. The question is whether the state tort action for retaliatory discharge, buttressed by the policies underlying the FELA, is sufficiently analogous to a federal statutory right to rebut the preemption of the RLA.
The case most relevant to resolving this issue is Hendley v. Central of Georgia Railroad,
Several factors were relevant to the Fifth Circuit’s holding that Hendley’s claim was cognizable in federal court. The court noted that the case involved interpretation of a federal statute because it was necessary to determine whether 45 U.S.C. § 60 was applicable after the FELA action was concluded. The Fifth Circuit also analogized Hendley to Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Central of Georgia Railway,
The Hendley decision therefore recognizes an exception to preemption only if the suit is premised on a specific federal statutory section. It distinguishes such a claim from one in which the allegations constitute, if proven, only a violation of the policy underlying a federal statute. This distinction, recognized in Hendley, strongly suggests that the statutory procedures and remedies of the RLA are not rebutted in Jackson’s case.
There is admittedly a superficial appeal to reasoning that the FELA, particularly those sections stating the right to sue, 45 U.S.C. § 51, and the prohibition against coercing an employee not to volunteer information relative to a fellow employee’s FELA action, id. § 60, prohibits an employer from discharging an employee in retaliation fоr filing an FELA action. Such a
In a case like this involving a railway worker subject to the RLA, yet entitled to rely upon the FELA, there is a tension between the two federal statutes. In such a context, a court must be particularly reluctant to elevate an FELA policy to the status of a federal right. Such caution is illustrated by Bay v. Western Pacific Railroad,
2. Farmer Exception to Preemption.
The second argument urged by Jackson is that the “outrageous” conduct of Conrail requires recognition of an exception to the preemption doctrine in this case as it did in cases such as Farmer v. Brotherhood of Carpenters, Local 25,
In Farmer, the Court held that a California state court could exercise jurisdiction over the claim of a local union officer alleging intentional infliction of emotional distress. Hill, the petitioner’s decedent, had alleged that, as a result of disagreement with other union officials, he was subjected to a campaign of ridicule and personal abuse and was discriminated against by the union hiring hall. After reviewing exceptions to the preemption doctrine recognized in earlier' cases, Farmer,
In applying this test to Hill’s claim, the Court first noted that the state had a substantial interest in protecting its citizens from the alleged outrageous conduct. Id. at 302,
Similarly, in Sears, the Court held that Sears could rely on state trespass laws in seeking an injunction against union picketing on its private property. As in Farmer, the primary focus of the Sears Court was on whether recognition of the state trespass law would interfere with the federal regulatory scheme. The Court stated:
The critical inquiry, therefore, is not whether the State is enforcing a law relating specifically to labor relations or one of general application but whether the controversy presented to the state court is identical to (as in Gamer) or different from (as in Farmer) that which could have been, but was not, presented to the Labor Board.
Id.
Sears and Farmer both raised questions of preemption under the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 151-166 (NLRA), rather than under the RLA. Although this does not mean that the test articulated in Farmer and refined in Sears is inapplicable to the preemption issue in the present case, the difference between the impact of the NLRA and the RLA has significance. The focus of the NLRA is on specific conduct that Congress has deemed subject to either prohibition or protection, 29 U.S.C. §§ 157-158. Often, as illustrated by Sears, it is the objective of certain conduct, rather than the mere exercise thereof, that is relevant to determining whether actions are protected or prohibited by the NLRA. In contrast, the RLA has made any grievance arising out of the collective bargaining agreement subject to the exclusive arbitral remedies contained in that Act, 45 U.S.C. § 153 First (i). It follows from this difference that a state claim is more likely to impinge on an area of exclusive administrative jurisdiction under the RLA than under the NLRA.
The lower court cases that have applied the Farmer test in the RLA context illustrate this result. For instance, in Magnuson v. Burlington Northern, Inc.,
The Ninth Circuit affirmed the dismissal. In distinguishing Farmer, upon which Magnuson relied, the majority stated: “Unlike Farmer, this action is based on a matrix of facts which are inextricably intertwined with the collective bargaining agreement and the R.L.A.” Id. at 1369. The court noted that both the wrongful discharge aspects of Magnuson’s claim and those pertaining to the propriety of the investigation and hearing had a “ ‘not obviously insubstantial relationship to the labor contract.” Id. at 1369-70.
Similarly, in Majors v. U.S. Air, Inc.,
In applying Farmer to the instant case, we must examine “the state interest in regulating the conduct in question and the potential for interference with the federal regulatory scheme.”
It is significant that Frampton was a terminable-at-will employee whereas Jackson was not. Although no Indiana court has addressed whether an employee subject to a union collective bargaining agreement can sue for retaliatory discharge, other courts have limited the action to employees-at-will, reasoning that the retaliatory discharge action provides the only means for such an employee to seek redress. Eg., Cook v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.,
Conrail has waived any challenge to Jackson’s claim on the ground that it fails to state a cause of action. We need not re
The second inquiry mandated by Farmer is the potential interference with the federal regulatory scheme. It is established under Andrews that a claim of wrongful discharge is subject exclusively to the administrative remedies established by the RLA.
B. Impact of the Preemption on the District Court’s Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Having determined that Jackson’s claim is within the scope of Andrews and that his state tort remedy is accordingly preempted by the RLA, we turn to whether the effect of preemption in this case is to divest the district court of subject matter jurisdiction over Jackson’s pendent claim.
In Farmer, the Supreme Court clarified, in the NLRA context, the relationship between preemption and jurisdiction:
“[I]n referring to decisions holding state laws pre-empted by the NLRA, care must be taken to distinguish pre-emption based on federal protection of the conduct in question ... from that based predominantly on the primary jurisdiction of the National Labor Relations Board ..., although the two are often not easily separable.” Railroad Trainmen v. Jacksonville Terminal Co.,394 U.S. 369 , 383 n. 19 [89 S.Ct. 1109 , 1118 n. 19,22 L.Ed.2d 344 ] (1969). The branch of the pre-emption doctrine most applicable to the instant case concerns the primary jurisdiction of the National Labor Relations Board.
Consistent with the foregoing authorities, we hold that the court below lacked subject
C. Estoppel Regarding Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction
The question remains whether Conrail is estopped, by its previous consent to the exercise of jurisdiction by the district court over Jackson’s pendent claim, from raising the preemption of subject matter jurisdiction for the first time in its post-trial motions and, now, on appeal.
The general rule is that subject matter jurisdiction may be challenged by a party or raised sua sponte by the court at any point in the proceedings. E.g., American Fire & Casualty Co. v. Finn,
Two of the cases upon which Jackson relies are inapposite because the courts detеrmined that they did have subject matter jurisdiction over the claim. See Zipes v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
The final case relied upon by Jackson in support of his claim that Conrail is estopped from raising the issue of subject matter jurisdiction is DiFrischia v. New York Central Railroad,
Although the DiFrischia court does not elaborate at length as to the legal basis for its recognition of an exception to the general rule that the doctrine of estoppel is inapplicable to the issue of subject matter jurisdiction, the Third Circuit’s reference to Young v. Handwork,
DiFrischia is not persuasive support for Jackson’s contention that Conrail is es-topped from raising the preemptive effect of the RLA. The issue in DiFrischia involved diversity of citizenship, not preemption by federal law. Insofar as the rationale of DiFrischia turns on the distinction between the factual question of citizenship and the legal determination regarding jurisdiction, DiFrischia is clearly inapplicable to this case.
Further, this court has previously held, in a case involving diversity of citizenship, that it would not extend DiFrischia beyond its specific facts. Sadat v. Mertes,
While we in no way condone the failure of Conrail to raise earlier the dispositive question of whether subject matter jurisdiction over Jackson’s pendent claim of retaliatory discharge is preempted by the RLA,
III. REMAINING ISSUES RAISED BY THE PARTIES
In light of our conclusion that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Jackson’s retaliatory discharge claim, that claim must be dismissed and the judgment of compensatory damages awarded pursuant to that claim vacated. Our resolution of the jurisdictional question necessarily precludes Jackson’s assertion on cross-appeal that the punitive damage award pursuant to the retaliatory discharge claim should be reinstated.
The only remaining issue therefore is whether the compensatory damage award of $13,500 pursuant to Jackson’s FELA claim must be vacated and a new trial on damages granted. Conrail claims that the award was “tainted” by counsel’s argument and evidence appropriate, if at all, only to the question of punitive damages.
The evidence and argument of which Conrail complains pertains to Conrail’s net worth, the number of persons in Jackson’s family, impliedly dependent upon him for support, and counsel’s characterization of the case аs an opportunity for the jury to send a message in favor of all working men to corporations throughout the country.
Conrail’s argument is untenable because we find no indication that the FELA compensatory damage award was tainted. It is significant that the damages awarded Jackson on the FELA claim, $13,500 after a ten percent reduction for Jackson’s contributory negligence, is less than eight percent of the compensatory damages awarded on the retaliatory discharge claim. Even more striking, it is just over one percent of the punitive damages awarded Jackson on the retaliatory discharge claim. These comparisons compel the conclusion that the jury properly considered the FELA claim wholly separate and apart from the retaliatory discharge claim for the purpose of setting a damage figure and therefore no tainting occurred.
If any error did occur below pertaining to the admission of evidence or the tolerance of impermissible argument, a question that we do not decide, the error was harmless. The compensatory damagе award of $13,500 in favor of Jackson on his FELA claim will not be disturbed on appeal.
CONCLUSION
A federal interest embodied in the policies, but not the specific statutory provisions, of the FELA is insufficient to rebut the persuasive preemption of the RLA over Jackson’s retaliatory discharge claim. Similarly, Farmer v. Brotherhood of Carpenters, Local 25,
The jury award of compensatory damages for Jackson’s FELA claim shows no evidence of “tainting” by the admission of improper evidеnce or argument.
This cause is remanded to the district court with instructions to vacate the judgment and award of compensatory damages in favor of Jackson on his retaliatory discharge claim and to dismiss that claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The judgment in favor of Jackson on the FELA claim is affirmed. Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal. We express no view as to the allocation of costs reached by the judge below relative to the district court proceedings.
Reversed In Part; Affirmed In Part.
Notes
. Despite the parties’ extensive briefing as to the nature of Jackson’s claimed injuries, these facts are irrelevant to this appeal because Conrail has not challenged the jury verdict on the FELA action as being against the weight of the evidence. We therefore decline to recite the facts regarding these injuries.
. The copy of the complaint received by Hammons was accompanied by a letter from a Conrail claims agent suggesting that disciplinary action be instituted against Jackson.
. Conrail argues on appeal that Jackson was not “dischаrged” because he was entitled to a three-level appeal after Hammons’ serving of the initial discharge notice on April 20, 1981. Jackson did not avail himself of this appeal process. In view of our disposition of the issues presented by this appeal, whether Jackson’s discharge was final on April 20, 1981, is of no legal significance. We therefore will utilize the term “discharge” to describe the employment action taken against Jackson on that date.
.This claim Was withdrawn on April 27, 1982, when Jackson filed a Third Amended Complaint to conform to the proof adduced at trial. The Third Amended Complaint also increased the requested punitive damages to $5,000,000.
. The portion of 45 U.S.C. § 153 First particularly relevant to both Andrews and the present case provides:
The disputes between an employee or group of employees and a carrier or carriers growing out of grievances or out of the interpretation or application of agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, or working conditions, ... shall be handled in the usual manner up to and including the chief operating officer of the carrier designated to handle such disputes; but, failing to reach an adjustment in this manner, the disputes may be referred by petition of the parties or by either party to the appropriate division of the [NRAB] with a full statement of the facts and all supporting data bearing upon the disputes.
45 U.S.C. § 153 First (i).
. A third argument raised by Jackson requires only cursory consideration. Jackson contends that application of the Andrews preemption doctrine to the instant case would violate his Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial. This argument is not persuasive. In Essary v. Chicago & Northwestern Transp. Co.,
. Jackson has also urged in support of his position the Fifth Circuit disposition in Smith v. Atlas Off-Shore Boat Serv., Inc.,
Smith is distinguishable from Jackson’s case in several respects, the two most pertinent of which are that Smith was an at-will employeе and, absent recognition of the maritime tort, had no forum whatsoever in which to press his grievance and that the preemptive effect of the RLA was not at issue in Smith.
. The Sears Court also found relevant that Sears could not, on its own initiative, obtain an NLRB ruling regarding the picketing. The issue could be put before the NLRB only if the union alleged that Sears was violating its protected rights.
. In a case decided before Farmer and Sears, Colorado Anti-Discrimination Comm’n v. Continental Air Lines, Inc.,
. The parties have not contested on appeal the applicability of Indiana law to Jackson’s retaliatory discharge claim although portions of the record indicate some ambiguity as to whethеr Illinois or Indiana law was the basis of the claim. The difference is of little relevance, for our purposes, because it is unclear whether Jackson’s claim would be cognizable under the law of either state. See infra.
. While we respect the prose style and the innovative ability of our brother Posner, in his dissent, we are unable to agree with the underlying premises on which he rests his approach. We disagree with his conclusion that the case law is in disarray and, therefore, ripe for innovation. The case law, in fact, recognizes two clearly defined exceptions to the pervasive preemption of the RLA. See Sections 11(A)(1) and (2), supra. It is interpretation of the second exception, illustrated by Farmer v. Brotherhood of Carpenters, Local 24,
In sum, the dissent would create new law, an approach that we find inappropriate in light of the relevant precedent.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
The plaintiff, Jackson, a railroad worker, was injured on the job and sued the railroad (Conrail) under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 51 et seq. He later amended his complaint to add a pendent claim that the railroad, in violation of his rights under Indiana tort law, had fired him after and because he filed his FELA suit. He obtained a judgment awarding him damages of $13,500 for violation of the FELA and another $182,000 on his pendent claim, and the railroad has appealed. I agree with my brethren that the FELA damage award must be affirmed and for the reasons they give, but I disagree that the Railway Labor Act deprived the district court of jurisdiction over Jackson’s claim for retaliatory discharge.
There is another jurisdictional issue, though, and it requires, I believe, a remand to the district court. A pendent claim must arise from “a common nuсleus of operative fact” with the main claim. United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
There is an alternative route, also with support in Gibbs, see
Of course, if Jackson were alleging a federal rather than state tort, we could forget pendent jurisdiction. Though one might think that federal law would forbid retaliation against a railroad worker for exercising his rights under the FELA, a federal statute, probably it does not, see Graf v. Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Ry.,
But if Jackson and the railroad are citizens of different states, his state claim has an independent jurisdictional basis in 28 U.S.C. § 1332, the diversity statute, since the requirement that there be at least $10,-000 in dispute is satisfied. The complaint alleges that Jackson is a citizen of Indiana and that Conrail is “organized as a railroad corporation engaged in interstate commerce” in Illinois. It is unlikely that this is meant to be an allegation that Conrail is incorporated in Illinois; but in any event, since some public utilities and common carriers incorporate in many states, it is possible (though I should think unlikely) that Conrail is a corporate citizen of Indiana, which would defeat diversity. I am sure Conrail does not have its principal place of business in Indiana, which would also defeat diversity. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c).
So I would remand the case to determine whether Jackson’s state law claim is within the diversity jurisdiction. Not only do my brethren proceed by a different route, holding that the Railway Labor Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 151 et seq., bars jurisdiction over Jackson’s state law claim, but they do not discuss the question whether the claim is within either the pendent or diversity jurisdiction of the federal courts. Now one might think that it would make no difference why the federal courts lack jurisdiction over Jackson’s claim, provided they do, and that the majority’s approach is more economical than mine because it avoids the necessity of remanding. But I believe it does make- a difference. If a case is not within the jurisdiction conferred on the federal courts by Article III, they have no power to decide whether Congress has withdrawn their jurisdiction over a particular claim; they must dismiss before reaching that issue. To illustrate, suppose I brought a suit in federal court against Conrail complaining about its treatment of Mr. Jackson — brought the suit in my capacity as a public-spirited citizen. Article III would bar the federal court from adjudicating my claim. I would lack the constitutionаlly required standing; there would be no case within the meaning of Article III. The court could not ignore the issue of standing, proceed to the merits, and dismiss the suit on the ground that the Railway Labor Act barred it. This case is no different.
I also disagree with my brethren’s analysis of the effect of the Railway Labor Act on Jackson’s claim. They have applied the doctrine of exclusive jurisdiction; they should have applied the doctrine of primary jurisdiction. The Railway Labor Act does give the arbitration panels established under the Act exclusive jurisdiction to decide disputes between railroads and their employees “growing out of grievances or out of the interpretation or application of [collective bargaining] agreements .... ” 45 U.S.C. § 153 First (i). This means that if as in Andrews v. Louisville & Nashville R.R.,
It is not a grievance because it would exist even if there were no collective bargaining agreement, unlike the situation in Andrews. There it was “conceded by all that the only source of petitioner’s right not to be discharged, and therefore to treat an alleged discharge as a ‘wrongful’ one that entitles him to damages, is the collective-bargaining agreement between the employer and the union.”
All this is not to say that the collective bargaining agreement is irrelevant to this case. But it is relevant if at all as a defense to rather than as the foundation of Jackson’s claim. The railroad argues that it discharged Jackson not because he sued it under the FELA but because he violated work rules and that the collective bargaining agreement entitled it to fire him for such violations. Now if the railroad fired Jackson only because he sued it, it is immaterial that it could validly have fired him on another ground. But if it fired him both in retaliation and for violating work rules, and each reason would have resulted in his being fired even in the absence of the other, the retaliation did not injure him. He would have been fired anyway, so there was no “but for” causation and hence no tort, which presupposes injury. This assumes, however, that the collective bargaining agreement would have allowed the railroad to fire Jackson for violating work rules; and whether this assumption is correct depends on the interpretation of the agreement — a matter within the exclusive competence of the arbitration panels under the Railway Labor Act.
But it does not follow that because the interpretation of the collective bargaining agreement is outside the district court’s jurisdiction, yet may be material to Jackson’s tort claim, the district court lacked jurisdiction over that claim. It follows only that upon the railroad’s timely request the district court would have been required by the doctrine of primary jurisdiction to stay the proceedings before it while the parties repaired to the arbitrators for a definitive interpretation of the collective bargaining agreement. (On the doctrine generally see United States v. Western Pac. R.R.,
We noted recently that the doctrine of primary jurisdiction is applicable to proceedings in which an issue arises that is within the exclusive competence of the Railway Labor Act arbitrators, and that the application of the doctrine may — depending
Now in Andrews, it is true, even if the railroad had not objected to the employee’s failure to seek redress before the arbitrators, the court would have had no jurisdiction over his claim. “[T]he notion that the grievance and arbitration procedures provided for minor disputes in the Railway Labor Act are optional, to be availed of as the employee or the carrier chooses was never good history and is no longer good law.”
There are questions about the mеchanics of primary jurisdiction in a case such as this — who should ask for the reference (if the employee must go to the arbitrators before filing suit, then one would speak of “exhaustion of remedies” rather than of “primary jurisdiction,” but these are essentially the same doctrines, see City of Peoria v. General Electric Cablevision Corp.,
It puzzles me why we should go further and hold, as my brethren do in effect, that even if the arbitrators decide that the railroad had no contractual right to fire the employee, the employee may not maintain a tort action for retaliatory discharge. It is a grave matter for an employer to fire an employee for exercising a legal right. True, if he does this he may well be violating the collective bargaining agreement and the arbitrators can order the employee reinstated with back pay. But it would be surprising if compulsory arbitration of contract disputes was intended to wipe out the employee’s common law rights other than his right to enforce the very contracts that are subject to the scheme of compulsоry arbitration. It might be different if Congress had established an administrative agency to police tort or tort-like conduct in railroad employment, but it has not; it has contented itself with requiring arbitration of contract disputes.
My brethrеn’s review of precedent shows that the case law on the displacement of tort law by the Railway Labor Act is in disarray; the suggestion that there are “clearly defined exceptions to the pervasive preemption of the RLA” is a contradiction in terms — if the preemption were truly pervasive, there would be no exceptions. And their further effort to bring that body of case law into phase with the cases dealing with the displacement of tort law by the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 152 et seq., such as Farmer v. United Brotherhood of Carpenters,
To summarize, if the doctrine of pendent jurisdiction were applicable, the district court would in my view have jurisdiction over Jackson’s claim of retaliatory discharge despite the Railway Labor Act. But as I said earlier this is not a proper case for pendent jurisdiction and we cannot be certain that Jackson’s claim is within the diversity jurisdiction. We should remand, but I earnestly suggest not dismiss, that claim.
