OPINION
This case arises from a labor dispute between a railroad and a union that was submitted to arbitration under the Railway Labor Act. The arbitration Board ruled against the railroad after drawing an adverse inference from the railroad’s refusal to produce evidence. The district court granted enforcement of the arbitration award, and thе railroad appeals, arguing that the arbitration Board exceeded its contractual jurisdiction. We affirm.
*698 I.
Appellee Transportation Communications International Union (TCU) is the recognized collective bargaining representative for the clerical employees of appellant Norfolk & Western Railway Co. (N & W). Certain of these employees — “clerk-callers” and “ice house foremen” — are employed by N & W to provide transportation to N & Ws train crews in and around its Portsmouth, Ohio, railyard. They share this work with N & W management and an outside contractor.
In November 1986, N & W switched outside contractors, replacing the Yellow Cab Company with the Brown Limousine Company. In January 1987, TCU submitted a claim to N & W alleging that, in violation of the scope clause of the collective bargаining agreement, 1 Brown Limousine was performing work previously performed by members of TCU. TCU sought compensation of a full day’s wages for the senior clerical employee on each shift for each day since N & W began using Brown Limousine. N & W rejected this claim at all levels of the internal grievance process. The parties then submitted the claim to Public Law Boаrd 4454, a private arbitration panel established by agreement between N & W and TCU, pursuant to the Railway Labor Act (RLA). See 45 U.S.C. § 153 Second.
In October 1988, this Board received written submissions from the parties and conducted a hearing. The submissions consisted primarily of statistics on the number of trips Brown Limousine made during different periods. N & W’s statistics, gleaned from its records, showed that in the months immediately after the switch Brown Limousine made fewer trips per day than Yellow Cab had made; TCU’s statistics, collected in a study covering a later time period, showed that it made many more. In May 1991, the Board determined that the submissions were inconclusive, but that TCU’s statistical study was sufficient to shift the burden of production to N & W. 2 Concluding that a joint check of N & W records was necessary to determine if Brown Limousine was performing union work, the Board ordered the parties to undertake such a check. The Board cautioned, however, that because many factors influenced the number of trips made, the results of the check would not necessarily be conclusive. See J.A. at 339-40.
N & W refused to submit to the joint check and sued in federal district court to have the order invalidated, on the grounds that the agreement creating the Board did not grant the Board authority to compel a check of its records. The district court dismissed the claim for lack of a reviewable final order.
See Norfolk & W. Ry. Co. v. Transp. Communications Int’l Union,
In February 1992, the Board issued its final order. Although it acknowledged that under the arbitration agreement it could only “request,” not compel, the submission of additional evidence, the Board concluded that it could draw adverse inferences from a refusal to produce requested evidence. It then reasoned that N & Ws refusal to submit to the joint check of its records supported an inference that the information within those records was adverse to N & Ws position. Based primarily on this adverse inference, the Board sustained TCU’s claim. See J.A. at 344-46.
*699 Significantly, the Board was at pains to emphasize that its decision was dictated by the course of the proceedings between N & W and TCU and that it was not promulgating a general rule:
[W]e do not view our decision as any future license for the Organization to have unfettered access to the Carrier’s records. Our determination in this matter relates only to the specific and unique facts in this case. It is not our intention that our action in this matter be interpreted as requiring a joint check of the Carrier’s records merely because the Organization alleges, without any proof, that scope rule protected work has been given to strangers to the Agreement.
Id. at 347 n. 4. Specifically, the Board believed that аn adverse inference was warranted because N & W had refused to produce records that it had argued were disposi-tive of the dispute, and some of which N & W actually had relied upon in support of its claim that it had not breached its duties to TCU. The Board reasoned that:
[i]t was the Carrier who first cited the numbers of trips shown by its records.... [I]t was the Carrier who relied so heavily upon the numbers demonstrated by its records and argued that the Organization could not adequately refute that evidence.
Having first raised the issue, the Carrier cannot now rely upon the data in its records and at the same time refuse to divulge the contents of its records.
Id. at 345 n. 3; id. at 347 n. 4 (“Here, the Carrier first raised the issue, refused to disclose information and the Organization was able to demonstrate through evidence it was able to gather that its position was more than just wishful speculation.”).
N & W thereafter filed the instant suit to have the Board’s award vacated and set aside under 45 U.S.C. § 153, First (q). On cross motions for summary judgment, the district court held that the Board, by drawing an adverse inference from N & Ws refusal to comply with its request for evidence, exceeded its authority under the arbitration agreement, as well as its own understanding of that authority. The court nevertheless granted enforcement of the Board’s order, concluding that
Richmond, Fredricksburg & Potomac R.R. v. Transp. Communications Int’l Union,
II.
We said in
RF & P
that a court could inquire only “whether the arbitrators did the job they were told to do — not whether they did it well, or correctly, or reasonably, but simply whether they did it.”
The orders of a railway labor arbitration panel constituted under the RLA, including those interpreting the panel’s own authority,
see W.R. Grace & Co. v. Local Union 759, Int’l Union of United Rubber Workers,
for failure of the [Board] to comply with the [RLA]; [2] for failure of the order to conform, or confine itself, to matters within the scope of the [Board’s] jurisdiction; or [3] for fraud or corruption....
45 U.S.C. § 153 First (q).
See also Sheehan,
RF & P
is not, as the district court assumed, to the contrary. We addressed in
RF & P
whether arbitrators were free to define the scope of authorities that could be consulted in resolving a dispute, where the parties had submitted “a broad issue without any limitations as to the permissible sources of authority.”
RF & P,
III.
The question for us thus becomes whether the Board’s award did exceed its jurisdiction, as the district court concluded and N & W now contends. The agreement creating the Board conferred on it the power to “request” the production of evidence in addition to that initially submitted by the parties. 3 The Board concluded that, while it was without *701 the power to compel compliance with its requests, it could draw adverse inferences from a refusal to produce the requested evidence in the limited circumstance where that evidence lay in the sole control of the refusing party and that party had introduced selected parts of that evidence in support of its case.
A.
N & W first contends that, by concluding it could draw an adverse inference from N & W’s refusal of the Board’s evidentiary request, the Board ignored the express terms of the arbitration agreement empowering the Board only to “request” additional evidence. N & W relies principally on
Mallard v. United States District Court,
To request that somebody do something is to express a desire that he do it, even though he may not generally be disciplined or sanctioned if he declines. Of course, somebody who frequently refuses another person’s requests might not win his favor. A soldier who regularly fails to fulfill his superior’s requests might not rise in the ranks as rapidly as would someone who was more compliant. But somebody who refuses a request, as the word is ordinarily used, may not be penalized formally for doing so, as a soldier who disobeyed orders might be court-martialed. In everyday speech, the closest synonyms of thе verb “request” are “ask,” “petition,” and “entreat.” The verbs “require” and “demand” are not usually interchangeable with it.
Id. at 301 (citation omitted). N & W argues that the Board, by drawing adverse inferences from N & W’s refusal to accede to its evidentiary request, formally penalized it for its refusal and thereby transformed its power to “request” into a power to “require” or “compel.” Sinсe, it says, this contravened the plain language of the arbitration agreement, the Board’s decision did not draw its essence from that agreement.
We disagree with N & W that the Board violated the plain language of the arbitration agreement. The contract creating Public Law Board 4454 confers upon the Board the power to request additional evidence. It does not address the powers of the Board to draw inferences or to assign particular weights to evidence or its absence. Nor, specifically, does it address the powers of the Board in the circumstance where, as here, a party refuses to comply with a Board request for additional evidence. Indeed, the agreement is completely silent as to how the Board is to make its decisions, stating only that it is to “make findings of fact and render awards on the cases submitted to it.” J.A. at 145. In drawing an adverse inference from N & W’s refusal to produce its records, therefore, the Board did not ignore the “plain contractual mandate” presented in the “clear dictates” of the arbitration agreement, as N & W contends.
Compare Williams v. North Western Transp. Co.,
Having determined that the Board did not ignore the plain meaning of the language of the arbitration agreement, we need not (indeed cannot) address whether the Board’s interpretation of its powers was the correct one. Even if incorrect, it was at least arguably rational and “drew its essence” from the *702 arbitration agreement which, without any explicit restrictions, empowered the Board to decide the claims referred to it. The drawing of an adverse inference against a party who fails to come forward with relevant evidence within its control is a reasonable and well-recognized evidentiary rule, see, e.g., Frank Elkouri & Edna A. Elkouri, How Arbitration Works 310-11 (BNA 4th ed. 1985); cf. Edward W. Cleary, McCormick on Evidence § 272 (3d ed. 1984), which has been routinely applied in labor arbitrations, see, e.g., Piscataway Township Bd. of Educ., 74 Lab.Arb. 1107, 1110 (1980) (Jacobson, Arb.); Vickers Petroleum Corp., 73 Lab.Arb. 623, 625 (1979) (Carter, Arb.); Pettibone Corp., 70 Lab.Arb. 383, 387 (1978) (Gootnick, Arb.); Bh’d of Ry. & S.S. Clerks v. Midland Valley R.R. Co., NRAB 3d Div., Award No. 7351, at 6 (1956) (Coffey, Arb.); Bh’d of Ry. & S.S. Clerks v. St. Joseph Union Depot, NRAB 3d Div., Award No. 6657, at 17 (1954) (Wyckoff, Arb.).
Contrary to N & Ws assertions, the Board’s decision was not irrational for contradicting its own understanding of its powers under the agreement.
Cf. Upshur Coals,
B.
N & W argues alternatively that, even if the Board could properly have drawn adverse inferences, the inference drawn against it operated as a conclusive presumption, amounting to what was essentially a default judgment.
See Rockingham Machine-Lunex v. NLRB,
We disagree. Under section 153 First (q) we are without authоrity to second-guess the findings of the Board as long as they are not “wholly baseless and completely without reason.”
See Gunther,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The collective bargaining agreement provides:
Positions within the scope of this Agreement belong to the employes [sic] covered thereby and nothing in this agreement shall be construed to permit removal of positions from the application of these rules....
J.A. at 310.
. The Board stated:
[W]e find that the Organization’s study takes this case out of the realm of those cases where only unsupported assertions are made which ordinarily requires a denying award due to lack of evidence to support unfounded allegations. But, given the approach the parties have taken in this matter, the Organization’s showing is sufficient to shift the burden to the Carrier not to rebut the Organization’s evidence, but to at least warrant a more detailed examination of the Carrier’s records. The Carrier cannot now attack the validity of the Organization’s study when the data needed to resolve this dispute is solely within the control of the Carrier.
J.A. at 339 (emphasis added).
. The agreement provided in pertinent part:
7. ... The Board shall have authority to request the production of additional evidence from any party, except in [circumstances not relevant here].
9. Each party is charged with the duty and responsibility of including in its written submissions all known relevant facts and documents as evidence. Submissions must be confined to data presented to the duly authorized representative of the parties in the handling of the cases on the property [i.e., in the intracom-pany grievance system] with the exception of [circumstances not relevant here].
J.A. at 143-45 (emphasis added).
