MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This is аn action filed by six former employees of National Railroad Passenger Cor *915 poration (“Amtrak”) against Amtrak and their former union, the Brotherhood of Maintenanсe of Way Employees (“BMWE”), sundry labor organizations affiliated with the BMWE, and various officers of the divers unions, all sued in their respective union capacities. 1 The plaintiffs were hired by Amtrak in the summer of 1976 to perform carpentry work associated with the restoration of Union Station, a railroad depot in Providence, Rhode Island. During the fall of that year, Amtrak eliminated the plaintiffs’ positions, allegedly promising that the plaintiffs would be recalled when the restoration project resumed. Amtrak subsequеntly recommenced the work without re-employing the plaintiffs.
The plaintiffs allege in substance that Amtrak breached its collective bargaining agreement with the BMWE by failing tо pay the plaintiffs at appropriate wage levels for their toil on the project and by failing to rehire them when work resumed at Union Station. The plaintiffs alsо complain that the union violated its statutory duty to represent the plaintiffs in a fair and non-diseriminatory manner. The plaintiffs further allege that the union violated the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, 29 U.S.C. § 401, et seq. (“LMRDA”) by failing to furnish to the plaintiffs copies of the collective bargaining agreement and/or union constitution, and by failing to hоld a meeting of the BMWE when and as requested by the plaintiffs. Jurisdiction is bottomed on 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1337. The union has filed a motion to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
Under the familiar standard applicable to such motions, all facts well-pleaded in the complaint are to be accepted as true for purposes hereof.
Seveney v. United States,
The union claims, in its motion to dismiss, that the action is barred by the appropriate statute of limitations. 2 The plaintiffs demur.
Since none of the labor-management statutes relevant to this actiоn possess built-in statutes of limitations, the courts are forced to borrow an appropriate limitations period from some other source. As with civil rights statutes,
see Johnson v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.,
The defendants argue that the breach of the duty of fair representation is analogous to an action sounding in tort,
see DeArroyo v. Sindicato de Trabajadores Packinghouse,
In
DelCostello v. International Brotherhood of
Teamsters, - U.S. -,
First, the duty of fair representation is implied in the uniоn’s right to represent all members of the craft, and is not grounded on a specific statutory command.
See Vaca v. Sipes,
This view finds further support in
Raus,
where the Eighth Circuit held that the Railway Labor Act, 45 U.S.C. § 151,
et seq.
(“RLA”), only covers disputes between railroad employees and railroad management.
Raus,
Further, and in the same vein, most courts have held or stated thаt the standards governing the duty of fair representation are the same for a railroad union as for any other type of union.
See, e.g., International Brotherhoоd of Electrical Workers v. Foust,
Since this court finds no distinction with respect to intramural union disputes as to fair representation under the RLA as contrasted with the NLRA, the holding in Del-Costello must perforce be applied to the instant action. Elsewise, the congressional will would be thwarted, the rationale of the Supreme Court in DelCostello would be undercut, and an inexplicable asymmetry between railroad workers and other union members in the fashioning of remedies for allegеd breaches of essentially the same fair representational duty of their, respective unions would senselessly be engrafted onto the 1$lw.
Since all of the contentions of the plaintiffs against the union in the case at bar arose out of events long pre-dating the institution of this action, 3 it is apparent from the face of the pleadings that the plaintiffs’ causes of action against the union accrued more than six months prior to the commencement of suit, and that those claims arе, under DelCostello, time-barred.
Insofar as the plaintiffs’ complaint implicates the LMRDA, there is no readily discernible reason why the
ratio decidendi
of
DelCostello
should not be equally binding.
Cf. Schultz v. Owens-Illinois, Inc.,
The motion to dismiss must therefore be granted. 4
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. All defendants other than Amtrak are collectively referred to herein аs “the union”.
. The union raises in its motion divers other grounds as well; the court, however, need not address these arguments, as the limitations defense is dispositive.
. The plaintiffs were furlоughed upon abolition of their respective positions at various times from October, 1976 to December, 1976. The Union Station restoration project was revivified during thе period May, 1977 through July, 1977.
. The action is not, however, dismissed as to Amtrak, no motion having been filed by that defendant. Arguably, for reasons which need not be discussed here, such an action may not be foreclosed by DelCostello.
