A union of airline pilots violated the order of a federal court by continuing its work slowdown. The union has since paid substantial fines for violating the order and now faces suits seeking money damages under state law for the stoppage damages caused by the slowdown activity that violated the court order. These claimants attempt to run their state claims around Garmon preemption under an argument that state law would not here interfere with the federal labor machinery and its distinct remedial schemes for labor peace because the conflict complained of violates a federal court order. At the same time the state law claimants argue that they are not seeking to supplement the federal order by their suits. The district court accepted these arguments. We do not and reverse. We are persuaded that the claims are preempted under the Garmon doctrine and do not. reach the question of preemption under the Airline Deregulation Act.
I
The Allied Pilots Association is the exclusive bargaining agent for the pilots of American Airlines, Inc. From February 6 through February 9, 1999 the APA staged
This is a class action brought against the APA to recover economic damages claimed by over 300,000 displaced passengers as a result of the sick-out. The plaintiffs originally asserted both federal and state claims, 3 and the district court dismissed all claims with prejudice except a state claim of tortious interference with contract arising from post-TRO conduct of the APA. 4 Finding that this claim was not preempted by federal law, the district court dismissed the claim without prejudice to its being refiled in state court. The APA now appeals that decision.
II
A
We review questions of federal preemption
de novo,
including
Garmon
preemption, which gets its name from the Supreme Court’s ruling in
San Diego Building Trades Council v.
Garmon.
5
In
Garmon,
an employer sued a union in state court to recover damages from picketing that allegedly violated the National Labor Relations Act. The Court held that this state remedy was preempted by federal law because the state courts must yield to the exclusive jurisdiction of the NLRB — even when the NLRB has declined to take jurisdiction.
6
Preemption is necessary because “the exercise of state power over a particular area of activity threaten[s] interference with the clearly indicated policy of .industrial relations .... ”
7
Concerned with “conflict in its broadest sense” the Court eschewed a focus on the type of state regulation or claim, and adopted an approach that looks to the “nature of the activities which the States have sought to regulate.”
8
Garmon
has broad scope, and requires federal preemption of state causes of action “if they attach liability to conduct that is arguably
Garmon itself recognized two exceptions to preemption. First, some conduct will “touch[ ] interests so deeply rooted in local feeling and responsibility that ... [the Court] could not infer Congress had deprived the States of the power to act.” 10 The classic example of this exception, provided by the Court in Garmon itself, 11 is that of union activities involving violence. 12 The second exception is for matters only of “peripheral concern” to federal labor relations law. 13 Neither of these exceptions apply here. The sick-out was non-violent and certainly, irrespective of the TRO issue, cannot be characterized as “peripheral” to labor relations law, since it is itself a work stoppage, one which a district court found to be prohibited by the RLA. 14
The Court has explicitly rejected a formalistic implementation of Garmon, and invited a balancing of state interests and federal regulatory interests in analyzing the preemption question. 15 The Court has thus refused to apply Garmon preemption where “it is safe to presume that judicial supervision [by the states] will not disserve the interests promoted by the federal labor statutes.” 16
At the same time,
Garmon
preemption is not confined to state claims made by parties to the labor relationship and third-party claims may also be preempted, because they similarly threaten the balance of labor-management relations.
17
In
Wisconsin Department of Industry, Labor & Human Relations v. Gould, Inc.,
18
the Court reaffirmed the
Garmon
preemption principle as “preventing] states not only from setting forth
standards of conduct
inconsistent with the
B
We have previously stated that Garmon preemption is required when a state cause of action poses “a serious risk of conflict with national labor policy.” 22 The Court has directed that we look not to the effect on labor-management relations of allowing a particular claim to proceed, but rather to conflict in the “broadest sense.” 23 Gould reminds us that adding state remedies or penalties to the mix would be a “conflict” necessitating preemption. 24
The plaintiffs take a narrow view of what constitutes such a conflict and argue that the federal and state legal regimes cannot be in conflict in this case, since a violation of the TRO is, of course, a violation of federal law. If the two regimes are not contradictory, they reason, there can be no preemption. This argument cannot stand in light of Gould. In Gould the plaintiff was being punished by the state remedial scheme for its violations of federal labor law. There was no contradiction between the two regimes, only a supplementation of the federal remedial scheme by the state. Therefore, the plaintiffs’ niggardly view of “conflict” itself conflicts with the Supreme Court’s decision in Gould, and must be rejected.
Garmon
preemption does not depend on the merits of an adjudication of the conduct’s legality under federal labor law — both prohibited and protected conduct are shielded from liability under state law. Plaintiffs argue, however, and the district court agreed, that the TRO put the APA on notice that its conduct was illegal, and therefore
Garmon
preemption is not needed to vindicate the goals of federal labor law. We must disagree — if conduct is
dearly
protected or prohibited by federal labor law, to our eyes the case for preemption is stronger.
25
Consequentially,
The district court also found that attaching liability to post-TRO conduct that violates state law will not meaningfully disrupt labor-management relations — that is, that it will not seriously harm the federal regulatory scheme for labor relations. Garmon preemption requires the balancing of state interests with federal regulatory interests. 26 However, irrespective of the state interest in protecting private parties from interference with their freedom of contract, 27 the activities here are so fundamental that Garmon preemption must immunize them from state tort liability if the RLA structure is to be preserved. While courts have refused to apply Gar-mon preemption to state tort claims that served substantial state interests and did not threaten interference with the federal regulatory scheme, 28 this is not our ease. Slicing the claim into before and after the TRO does not change the reality that the state law is being asked to take hold of the same controversy as the federal labor laws.
Finally, we are not persuaded by the plaintiffs’ effort to distinguish the preTRO conduct of the APA from its post-TRO conduct.
29
“It is the conduct being regulated,
not the formal description of
III
The APA also argues that the plaintiffs’ claims are preempted by the Airline Deregulation Act. Since we have concluded that those claims are Garmon preempted, we need not reach the question of ADA preemption.
IV
Because the plaintiffs’ state law claims of tortious interference with contract are Garmon preempted, we REMAND this case to the district court and instruct that the claims be DISMISSED with prejudice.
Notes
.
Am. Airlines, Inc. v. Allied Pilots Ass'n,
.
Am. Airlines, Inc. v. Allied Pilots Ass’n,
. The plaintiffs originally asserted claims under (1) the Railway Labor Act; (2) the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act; (3) state common law claims of civil conspiracy, negligence per se, and tortious interference with contract.
. The district court dismissed all of the plaintiffs' claims that were predicated on pre-TRO conduct, including tortious interference with contract, which was dismissed on Garmon preemption grounds. The plaintiffs do not appeal the dismissal of their pre-TRO-based claims and apparently concede that those claims are properly Garmon preempted. Therefore, our only task is to decide whether the entering of the TRO changes this result for their post-TRO tortious interference claims.
.
.
Garmon,
.
Id.
at 243,
. Id.
.
Mobile Mechanical Contractors Ass’n, Inc. v. Carlough,
.
Garmon,
.
Id.
at 247,
.
See, e.g., Youngdahl v. Rainfair, Inc.,
.
Garmon,
. The RLA requires that "minor disputes” including those over the meaning of a collective bargaining agreement provision on pay, rules, or working conditions, be submitted to binding arbitration in the event that negotiations fail to produce a solution. 45 U.S.C. § 152. Federal district courts may (as here) enjoin strikes over minor disputes in enforcing the RLA.
Consolidated Rail Corp. v. Railway Labor Executives Ass’n,
.
Farmer v. United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of Am.,
.
Motor Coach Employees
v.
Lockridge,
.
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
.
.
Id.
at 286,
.
Id.
at 283,
.
Id.
at 289,
.
Carlough,
.
Garmon,
.
Gould,
.
Gould,
.
See Sheet Metal Workers Local Union No. 54, AFL-CIO v. E.F. Etie Sheet Metal Co.,
.
Cf. Local 926, Int’l Union of Operating Engineers AFL-CIO v. Jones,
.
See, e.g., Farmer,
. The plaintiffs argued in the district court that their claims based upon pre-TRO conduct were not Garmon preempted, but the district court held that those claims were preempted, and the plaintiffs do not appeal that determination.
.
Lockridge,
. Northside Realty Associates, Inc. v. United States, 605 F.2d 1348, 1356-57 (5th Cir.1979) (holding that compensatory damages for non-parties could not be granted as part of Government’s remedy in civil contempt proceeding against real estate corporation).
