When the Burlington Northern Railroad acquired the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway in 1980, it had to provide for the protection of employees affected by the transaction. 49 U.S.C. § 11347. It negotiated with several unions, including the United Transportation Union (the Union), an agreement incorporating the
New York Dock
conditions, named after
New York Dock Ry. v. United States,
Some of the Union’s members in central Illinois noticed that fewer and shorter trains were passing through their territory
Many members of the local union were dissatisfied and continued to submit claims for compensation. These fall into three groups. (1) The two employees deemed “affected” by the rerouted train but not “displaced” during the months covered by the award sought compensation for other months when, they said, they had lost wages. (2) Employees not among the ten deemed “affected” by the rerouting contended that they, too, had lost work as a result of the shift. (3) Still other employees continued to insist that the merger had rerouted more than one train out of their territory, and they wanted compensation for the loss they perceived. The record is unclear about which of these persons protested, when, and to whom; we need not resolve any disputes of this character. The Union asked the Railroad to recognize the validity of the claims; the Railroad refused, contending that the whole subject was closed by the January 1983 settlement.
In early 1984 the Union took a second group of cases to arbitration. It pressed claims in the first two categories, apparently abandoning hope of persuading a panel that more than one train had been diverted. Special Board of Adjustment No. 918 held in August 1984 that the earlier award, plus the settlement, disposed of all possible claims in the first two groups. Asked to set aside both the earlier decision and the settlement on a number of grounds, Board No. 918 refused. No one asked the ICC to review this decision, and none of the three grounds of judicial review is present.
The employees in central Illinois instead filed this class action in late 1984 against both the Union and the Railroad, contending that the Railroad violated the agreement of 1980, and the Union violated its duty of fair representation. This “hybrid” contract-duty of fair representation suit is governed by a six-month statute of limitations, and it is unlikely that the suit is timely, since as Board No. 918 held everything of substance was over and done with in January 1983. See
Bonds v. Coca-Cola Co.,
This court has no power to review the merits of decisions of arbitral panels under the Railway Labor Act. See
Sheehan
and, e.g.,
Andrews v. Louisville & Nashville R.R.,
As a suit against the Union, however, this case is doomed by
Graf
and the many other decisions of this court holding that only discrimination or other intentional misconduct violates the duty of fair representation. E.g.,
Grant v. Burlington Industries,
The plaintiffs do not claim that the Union took their race, politics, or other prohibited criteria into account. It seems unlikely that internecine disputes account for the outcome; among the losers was the president of the local union, whose claims have been rejected consistently. The Union has gone to arbitration twice, the second time in an effort to extend the extent to which it had prevailed before the first panel. There is a genuine dispute about the cause of the diminished work in central Illinois; the first panel agreed with the Union in part and with the Railroad in part. The Union has not had the success for which its adherents hoped, but this is hardly a ground of liability. A union also might be liable to its members for dishonoring a more specific contractual promise, see James D. Hol-zhauer, The Contractual Duty of Competent Representation, 63 Chi.-Kent L.Rev. 255 (1987), but none has been urged in this case.
Perhaps the Union erred by basing the settlement of January 1983 on only two months’ work, which forever denied benefits to two workers deemed “affected” but not “displaced” in those months and to any workers who were not “affected” in those months but could be in the future. But any settlement is a compromise in which each side gets less than its maximum objective. The record contains nary a clue that this settlement was drafted as it was in order to disadvantage unpopular members of the union, or otherwise depended on forbidden grounds of action.
Plaintiffs’ evidence of intentional misconduct (taken in the light most favorable to them) is principally a string of unfulfilled promises by the president of the local and the representative of the international, who kept urging the members to submit claims for benefits and implied they would get results. Exaggerated promises — perhaps in an effort avoid unrest that might be reflected at the ballot box in union elections — are not the sort of “intentional” wrongdoing with which
Graf, Camacho,
and similar cases are concerned. Lying to the members (if that is what happened) is far removed from invidious discrimination among them. It is the use of forbidden grounds of decision that creates a legitimate claim of “unfair” representation. The other bits of evidence do not carry the day. The plaintiffs complain, for example, that the president of the local did not post the January 1983 settlement agreement but instead discussed it at a meeting. Edgar Allen Poe made a nice tale out of the stratagem of hiding something by putting it just where people would look first, and perhaps the president of the local had this in mind. Apparently the last place where the members of this local expect to receive important information is at a meeting— which may be why, the record discloses, the local’s meetings are sparsely attended. Still, it is hardly a breach of the duty of fair representation to suppose that information of general interest to the members might be revealed at their meeting. The plaintiffs also insist that the Union’s bad faith appears in the fact that the settlement agreement did not dole out benefits in seniority order. Doubtless many benefits go by seniority; the
New York Dock
condi
So the claim against the Union fails. We held in
Graf,
Affirmed.
