117 Lab.Cas. P 10,446
Mary BROWNLEE, David Coco, Cynthia Landmann, and Palmer
Wade, Appellees,
v.
YELLOW FREIGHT SYSTEM, INC., Appellant,
and
Local 688, International Brotherhood of Teamsters,
Chauffeurs, Warehousemen, and Helpers of America, and Local
600 International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs,
Warehousemen, and Helpers of America.
Mary BROWNLEE, David Coco, Cynthia Landmann, and Palmer
Wade, Appellees,
v.
YELLOW FREIGHT SYSTEM, INC., and Local 688 International
Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen, and
Helpers of America, and, Local 600 International Brotherhood
of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen, and Helpers of
America, Appellant.
Nos. 88-2663EM, 88-2664EM.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted June 12, 1990.
Decided Dec. 10, 1990.
Ronald K. Fisher, Chesterfield, Mo., Cary Hammond, rebuttal argument, Clayton, Mo., for appellant.
Richard Greenberg, St. Louis, Mo., for appellees.
Before ARNOLD, Circuit Judge, HENLEY, Senior Circuit Judge, and MAGILL, Circuit Judge.
ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
This interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1292(b) presents the question whether Mary Brownlee, David Coco, Cynthia Landmann, and Palmer Wade will receive a jury trial on their claims against their union and their employer. The answer to that question depends upon whether their claims--that their union did not adequately represent them and that their employer broke its collective-bargaining agreement--require legal rights to be settled. The District Court1 decided that the plaintiffs were entitled to a jury, and the defendants have taken this appeal before proceeding to trial. We affirm and remand for trial. The plaintiffs' claims present both legal and equitable issues. A jury should hear and decide the legal issues before the trial court considers the equitable questions.
I.
The plaintiffs are members of two locals (No. 600 and No. 688) of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America. They worked for Yellow Forwarding Company. In 1986 Yellow Forwarding merged with Yellow Freight System, Inc. The plaintiffs' place of work in St. Louis was eliminated by the merger. They allege that under the terms of their collective-bargaining agreement they were entitled to follow the work to a local Yellow Freight terminal, and be dovetailed into the workforce there on the basis of their seniority at Yellow Forwarding. The plaintiffs were not offered these local jobs, and were instead terminated. They then filed a grievance with the Change-of-Operation Committee established by the collective-bargaining agreement. The Committee has both labor and management representatives, and operates as a forum for binding arbitration of contract disputes. The Committee agreed that the plaintiffs should be offered jobs, with no loss in seniority, but only at out-of-state facilities. It declined to recommend a similar opportunity at the local Yellow Freight operation.
After losing in that arbitration proceeding, the plaintiffs filed this action in federal court. Their complaint presents a hybrid claim. They allege that their union violated its judicially created duty to represent their interests fairly in the grievance proceeding. Underlying that allegation is the employees' contention that Yellow Freight violated Sec. 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 185, by breaking the collective-bargaining agreement. The plaintiffs sought a variety of remedies: back pay, lost benefits, reinstatement, attorney's fees, and any other relief the Court deemed proper.
The plaintiffs sought a jury trial on all the issues in their complaint. In the course of pre-trial motions, the union and Yellow Freight asked the Court to strike that request, arguing that this case was essentially equitable, and therefore should be tried to the Court. The plaintiffs, citing Minnis v. International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America,
This Court granted the union's and Yellow Freight's motion for an interlocutory appeal, and the case was set for oral argument. After the case was fully briefed and argued before our Court, the United States Supreme Court granted certiorari in a Fourth Circuit case having nearly identical issues and facts: Terry v. Chauffeurs, Teamsters, and Helpers, Local No. 391,
II.
We begin our analysis with the Terry case; it is factually and legally similar to our case, and it is the Supreme Court's most recent word on these questions. In Terry, a group of workers sued their trucking-company employer and their union over a dispute about seniority rights. As in this case, they alleged that their employer had broken the collective-bargaining agreement, and that their union had not fairly represented them during the mandatory grievance proceeding. The workers sought back pay and benefits, reinstatement, and an injunction against any future illegal acts by the employer. They sought a jury trial on all their claims. Before trial, however, the Terry plaintiffs' employer, McLean Trucking, went bankrupt. The company was accordingly dismissed from the suit, and all requests for equitable relief were dropped. The plaintiffs, however, persisted in their demand for a jury to evaluate their claims against their union. As in this case, the plaintiffs' claims in Terry presented hybrid Sec. 301 and fair-representation issues. The District Court granted the union's motion to strike the jury-trial request, finding that no such right exists in fair-representation cases. The Fourth Circuit reversed after an interlocutory appeal, and the Supreme Court affirmed that decision.
The Supreme Court held that an employee who "seeks relief in the form of backpay for a union's alleged breach of its duty of fair representation has a right to trial by jury."
Those cases teach that the right to a jury trial in a statutory action such as this one depends upon the presence of "legal rights and remedies," Curtis v. Loether,
The members of the Terry Court disagreed over the closest historical analog to the plaintiffs' hybrid Sec. 301/duty-of-representation action. Justice Marshall, joined by three other justices, found a close fit between a beneficiary's equitable suit against a faithless trustee and the fair-representation part of plaintiffs' claims. He rejected both the union's contention that the closest analog was an action to vacate an arbitration award and the employees' contention that an action at law for attorney malpractice was the nearest pre-merger suit. This, however, was not the end of Justice Marshall's analysis. He also concluded that the closest historical analog to the Sec. 301 aspect of the plaintiffs' claim was a breach-of-contract claim--an action at law. The first stage of the Court's Seventh Amendment analysis, the search for an analogous pre-merger cause of action, thus yielded no clear answer. Instead, as Justice Marshall put it, the case remained in "equipoise" between legal and equitable issues.2
Justice Marshall, now speaking for a six-justice majority, then took up the remedy question. The Court noted that the employees' request for backpay and benefits was presumptively legal in nature: it was a claim for compensatory damages. It rejected the union's argument that the remedy was merely restitutionary. The remedy was aimed, after all, at the union and not the employer for money wrongly withheld. The Court went on to also hold that the requested relief was not so intertwined with equitable remedies that it could be decided by the chancellor. After "[c]onsidering both parts of the Seventh Amendment inquiry ...," the Court concluded that the employees were "entitled to a jury trial on all issues presented in their suit."
III.
We reason from Terry. If this case were factually and legally identical to Terry, there would be no question about the employees' right to a jury trial on their claims. There are, however, important differences. The employer, Yellow Freight, is still a party to this action. The contract rights between the employees and Yellow Freight have been determined by a binding arbitration; that decision must be vacated if relief is to be granted against Yellow Freight. In addition, reinstatement, a form of equitable relief, is sought by the plaintiffs. Further, the damages in the amount of backpay and benefits are sought not only from the union, but also from Yellow Freight. The question, then, is whether these differences require a result different from Terry in our Seventh Amendment analysis.
We hold that they do not. It is clear that the plaintiffs' claims against their employer involve a traditionally equitable suit and seek equitable relief. Terry teaches, however, that their claims against the union for damages require that legal rights be "determined and ascertained." Parsons v. Bedford,
The employees' action against Yellow Freight is, however, a claim of a different kind. Considering the closest historic cause of action and the nature of relief requested, it is clear that this claim is one "where equitable rights alone [are] being recognized, and equitable remedies [are] administered." Parsons,
There are two defendants here, however, the union and the employer, and damages in the form of back pay and benefits are sought from the union. Where legal and equitable claims are joined in the same complaint, and where there are common issues of fact, the normal practice is to try both claims to a jury. See Beacon Theatres, Inc. v. Westover,
How does this analysis change when the plaintiff possesses both a legal and an equitable claim, but the claims run against different defendants? Plaintiffs have a right to a jury trial against the union. The jury would decide whether the union failed in its duty of fair representation, whether there had been a breach of the collective-bargaining agreement, and (assuming answers to these questions favorable to plaintiffs) what amount of back pay and benefits is necessary to make plaintiffs whole. If the plaintiffs lose before the jury on any issue determinative of liability, they would be bound by that result, and the case would be over. The employer, not a party to the unsuccessful legal claim, would still get the benefit of the jury's decision rejecting it, under the doctrine of defensive nonmutual collateral estoppel.
But what if the plaintiffs win against the union before the jury? Could the employer insist on relitigating the issues, either in a subsequent proceeding, or simultaneously in the same courtroom, with the judge deciding the issues of fact for purposes of the equitable claim against the employer? We think the Seventh Amendment would allow either a negative or an affirmative answer to this question. Allowing relitigation would not violate the Seventh Amendment under the reasoning of the Ross line of cases. As a non-party to the legal claim, the employer would not be bound, under normal principles of issue preclusion, by plaintiffs' victory against the union. On this reasoning, plaintiffs could win against the union, but lose against the company, and the judge could disagree (for purposes of the equitable claim against the company) with the jury's verdict as to the facts.
Such a result, however, though not unconstitutional, would be impractical and confusing, difficult to handle as a matter of judicial administration, and likely to produce feelings of incongruity and injustice among the parties. The better course is to try all common issues, with respect to both defendants, to the jury. The Seventh Amendment requires this result with respect to the defendant union, and we so hold, with respect to the defendant employer, as a matter of nonconstitutional decisional law. There is no constitutional right to a nonjury trial, Beacon Theatres, Inc.,
The order of the District Court, denying defendants' motion to strike plaintiffs' jury demand, is affirmed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
The Hon. Clyde S. Cahill, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri
Justice Stevens, disagreeing with the plurality's analysis here, found the closer historical analog to be the legal malpractice action. He nonetheless concurred in the judgment. Justice Brennan, in his concurrence, suggested abandoning the search for an analogous historical action as ultimately fruitless. The dissent, written by Justice Kennedy and joined by Justices O'Connor and Scalia, agreed with the plurality that the best analogy was to the equitable suit against a trustee. But the dissenters thought that should be the end of the case. The employees, the dissenters reasoned, were not entitled to a jury in their essentially equitable duty-of-fair-representation case
