Lonnie Kimbro sued his former employer, Frito-Lay, for having violated the federal age discrimination law by firing him, allegedly on account of his being over 40. He joined with this claim a supplemental claim under state law against two of his supervisors at Frito-Lay, plus Super Valu, Inc., doing business under the name of Shop ’N Save, and a Shop ’N Save store manager named Ansell, for tortious interference with his employment contract with Frito-Lay. (Other defendants have fallen by the wayside.) The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants.
With regard to the age discrimination claim, the judgment is unexceptionable; far from having presented evidence of age discrimination, Kimbro claims that his discharge was brought about by the hostility of the store manager to him on grounds unrelated to age, and this is virtually an admission that his age was not a factor in Frito-Lay’s decision to fire him. More interesting is the tort claim. The district judge held it preempted by section 301 of the Taft-Hartley Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, which has been construed to make federal law the exclusive remedy not only for claims based on collective bargaining contracts but also for claims that cannot be adjudicated without interpreting such a contract. E.g.,
United Steelworkers of America v. Rawson,
Here are the facts, construed as favorably to the plaintiff as the record permits: Kimbro was a route sales merchandiser for Frito-Lay whose duties included servicing several retail stores including the Shop ’N Save store managed by Ansell. Ansell was furious at Frito-Lay for delay in shipping goods that he had ordered and took his fury out on Kimbro. For when he noticed Kimbro eating a cookie taken from a package in the store’s receiving room, and discovered that Kimbro had not paid for the cookie, he reported to Frito-Lay that Kim-bro had violated Super Valu’s “no grazing” rule, even though the cookie was stale. Ansell told Kimbro’s supervisors (the other defendants in the tortious-interference claim along with Super Valu and Ansell) not to let Kimbro service any Shop ’N Save stores. Frito-Lay then discharged him. Kimbro alleges that his supervisors effected his discharge in order to conceal their own incompetence in failing to keep Ansell’s store supplied with Frito-Lay products, which had infuriated Ansell.
Kimbro’s employment had been governed by a collective bargaining contract between Frito-Lay and a teamsters local, but the union did not press his grievance that he had been fired without cause. He claims that Frito-Lay’s employee handbook gave him a contractual right to progressive discipline that Frito-Lay violated by firing him for a first offense of being excluded from a customer’s stores because of violating the customer’s rule. Interference with that contractual entitlement is the tort that he says Ansell (and Ansell’s employer, by virtue of the doctrine of re-spondeat superior) and Kimbro’s two supervisors at Frito-Lay committed.
Assuming without having to decide that Kimbro has presented a prima facie case of tortious interference with contract under Illinois law, on which see
Poulos v. Lutheran Social Services of Illinois, Inc.,
One of the forbidden recharac-terizations is recasting a breach of contract suit as a suit for tortious interference with contract. E.g.,
Lingle v. Norge Division of Magic Chef, Inc.,
But here we do have interference by a third party, and this can, one might think, make a big difference. Suppose that Kim-bro hadn’t stolen the cookie and that An-sell, acting from entirely private motives (such as a romantic interest in Kimbro’s wife), had framed Kimbro for the theft, fooling the union and Frito-Lay and thus (in an up-to-date version of the story of David, Uriah, and Bathsheba) dooming Kimbro. It seems odd to think that a suit against Ansell would be barred by the Taft-Hartley Act. The employer would not be involved in the suit, and the terms of the collective bargaining contract — even the fact that there
was
such a contract— would be irrelevant. Successful invocation of section 301 in such a case would thus leave the plaintiff remediless,
Brazinski v. Amoco Petroleum Additives Co.,
A few cases fill the remedial gap by holding that section 301 creates a tort right against interference with a collective bargaining contract, e.g.,
Antol v. Esposto,
It will not be necessary to pursue these questions in order to decide this case. Consider first the joinder as defendants of Kimbro’s two supervisors at Frito-Lay. It is a transparent effort to get around the exclusive federal-law jurisdiction created by section 301. The difference between suing your employer for breach of contract and calling it tortious interference, and suing your supervisors for tortious interference, is one of form rather than of substance. For if supervisors are exposed to such liability the employer will either have to pay them higher wages to compensate them for the risk of being sued, or have to agree to indemnify them for the costs of such a suit. In either case the burden of the liability will come to rest on the employer, making it the de facto defendant in a de facto suit under state law for breach of a collective bargaining contract. And this section 301 does not permit. E.g.,
Baker v. Farmers Electric Co-op., Inc.,
The question whether the suit can be maintained against Ansell and his employer is more difficult, but the answer is ultimately the same. It was inevitable that the collective bargaining contract between Frito-Lay and Kimbro’s union would be brought into this suit had it been allowed to proceed to trial. The reason is that the trier of fact would have had to decide whether Kimbro had a contractual right not to be fired for “grazing” (more precisely, for being banished permanently from a customer’s - premises because of grazing), an issue that depends on whether grazing is good cause for termination, within the meaning of the contract. The jurisdiction conferred by section 301 is, as we have said, exclusive not only against state-law suits based on such contracts but also against state-law suits to which the interpretation of such a contract is germane. It is true that in a case in which the defendant is not a party to the contract, the extinction of state causes of action is questionable because it could leave the plaintiff remediless. We have suggested that a possible way to preserve those causes of action in such a case might be somehow to refer any issues of contract interpretation to the arbitrators, the suit to abide their decision. But the plaintiff has not picked up on this suggestion in our Brazinski decision, and it is therefore waived.
AFFIRMED.
