Paula O’Donnell, a former employee of the Boston Globe Employees Credit Union (“the Credit Union”), appeals from the dismissal on summary judgment of her Massachusetts state law claims alleging tortious interference with contractual relations by her supervisor and others. On this appeal, the central issue concerns preemption of state law claims under Supreme Court precedent designed to protect the collective bargaining process governed by federal labor law.
O’Donnell began working at the Credit Union as a teller in 1974. Her employment was governed by a collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) between the Credit Union and the Office and Professional Employees International Union, Local 6, AFL-CIO (“Local 6”), of which she was a member. During the relevant period, defendant Marion Doucette was Manager/CEO of the Credit Union and was also a member of its board of directors (“the Board”) along with Donna Boggs, Brendan Hall, William Francis, and Mary Lou Meighan.
According to O’Donnell, in 1998 as head teller she reported fraud and embezzlement by Gene Farrell, then Manager/CEO of the Credit Union, which “engendered hostility and antagonism from certain Board members.” Farrell was replaced later that year by Doucette. Within the next year or so, O’Donnell was promoted to bookkeeper and then systems manager, positions in which she had some auditing and oversight functions.
In November 2000, Doucette hired her daughter Linda as bookkeeper. O’Donnell complained to Doucette and the Board that Linda was not qualified and was being paid more than the CBA schedule provided. O’Donnell says that then Doucette
began a course of retaliation, intimidation and interference directed at Mrs. O’Donnell .... [including] verbally harassing] and intimidating] Mrs. O’Donnell, obstructing] performance of her duties, and preventing] her from fully participating in managerial tasks that would allow her to maintain or advance her position in the Credit Union.
On O’Donnell’s account, Doucette’s behavior toward O’Donnell worsened when O’Donnell reported serious misconduct by Linda, 1 who was finally terminated in February 2003.
When the most serious charges of wrongdoing by Linda were reported to the state banking commission, O’Donnell claims Credit Union Board members Francis and Boggs blamed her and “hostile[ly] and antagonistically] ... retaliated by obstructing the performance of her duties.” O’Donnell discovered that she had been locked out of a computer system and could no longer monitor Linda’s still-active Credit Union account; when she told the Board, Boggs simply ordered her to clear certain checks submitted by Linda. By August 2003, O’Donnell says Doucette had expanded her retaliatory and intimidating conduct, including “daily verbal abuse, almost weekly acts of physical violence ... and weekly interference with the performance of Mrs. O’Donnell’s duties,” which “resulted in both actual physical, emotional and professional injury” to O’Donnell.
After a further warning that O’Donnell must return to work or face termination, O’Donnell was terminated. Local 6 filed a grievance on her behalf, claiming unjust termination in violation of the CBA; but it eventually withdrew the grievance, stating that the case lacked merit and that the Credit Union had not violated the CBA. O’Donnell then charged Local 6 with inadequate representation, but a regional director of the National Labor Relations Board dismissed the charge and O’Donnell’s internal administrative appeal failed.
In the meantime, in April 2005, O’Donnell filed a lawsuit in Massachusetts Superior Court, alleging two counts of tortious interference of contractual relations — one against her supervisor Doucette, and one against Board members Boggs, Hall, Francis, and Meighan. The defendants removed the case to federal district court, arguing that section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (“LMRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 185(a) (2006), preempted O’Donnell’s state law tort claims; and they thereafter moved for summary judgment on the same ground.
There followed a second complaint by O’Donnell in federal court, which added another claim and was consolidated with the first; the district court permitted O’Donnell to file an amended complaint in the consolidated case that added yet another claim; and magistrate judge recommendations were issued on the first complaint and the amended one.
In the end the district court agreed that the tortious interference claims were preempted and their dismissal alone is challenged by O’Donnell on this appeal. Several other claims made by O’Donnell were dismissed on other grounds but O’Donnell has not challenged those dispositions. The district court’s preemption ruling is primarily a legal issue subject to
de novo
review.
Southex Exhibitions, Inc. v. R.I. Builders Ass’n,
On its face, section 301 merely confers federal court jurisdiction over “[sjuits for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization representing employees in an industry affecting commerce,” 29 U.S.C. § 185(a), but the Supreme Court has deemed such contracts creatures of federal law, whatever the intent of the parties,
Textile Workers v. Lincoln Mills,
The phrase “complete preemption” is often used in describing this state of affairs,
Beneficial Nat'l Bank v. Anderson,
Pertinent to the present appeal, the Supreme Court has declared that state law claims are preempted under section 301 if they “require construing the collective-bargaining agreement” because of the congressional interest in uniform interpretation of collective bargaining agreements.
Lingle v. Norge Div. of Magic Chef, Inc.,
Whether a given claim is completely preempted depends importantly on the elements of that claim under state law and the content of the applicable CBA.
DeCoe v. Gen. Motors Corp.,
The elements of tortious interference with contractual relations, common to both theories of the toft under Massachusetts law, are as follows:
[T]he plaintiff must prove that (1) he had a contract with a third party; (2) the defendant knowingly interfered with that contract [by inhibiting the third party’s or the plaintiffs performance thereof, depending on the theory]; (3) the defendant’s interference, in addition to being intentional, was improper in motive or means; and (4) the plaintiff was harmed by the defendant’s actions.
Harrison v. NetCentric Corp.,
What is special about O’Donnell’s claim in this case is that the defendants accused of interfering with O’Donnell’s contractual rights with her employer — her supervisor Doucette and several members of the Board — are agents of the employer itself. The problems of separating unlawful interference from management’s lawful control of its employees are obvious and Massachusetts law imposes special restrictions on tortious interference claims by employees against agents of the employer. 3
O’Donnell’s claim based on what she calls the “second distinct period of tortious interference” — the Board’s decision to terminate her employment — is clearly preempted. No court or jury could decide whether the Board’s termination of O’Donnell was improper without interpreting the CBA’s terms, including articles XV and XX concerning leaves of absence and permissible discharges.
4
As the Eighth Circuit explained in Holschen,
On appeal, O’Donnell claims the district court did not adequately separate out and examine the “first discrete period” of alleged tortious interference — namely, the claimed harassment and retaliation by Doucette (and perhaps on one or more occasions by individual Board members) that led up to O’Donnell’s August 15, 2003, abandonment of work. The parties dispute whether O’Donnell preserved this line of argument in the district court, but O’Donnell did invoke such conduct as interference. Anyway, claims based on that first period are also preempted even if examined independently.
O’Donnell’s argument is that the actions of Doucette (and perhaps other Board members) were sufficiently hostile and disruptive that they made her unable to carry out her own duties, caused her need for medical leave, and made it impossible for her to return to work in accordance with her contractual obligations after her leave was exhausted. This claim might fit the latter of the two theories of tortious interference under Massachusetts law set forth above, subject to the further requirement under state law to show malice. See note 3, above.
The question remains whether such a claim would require interpreting the CBA, and the answer is not straightforward. On the one hand, O’Donnell has alleged
as facts
classic abusive treatment by Doucette motivated purely by personal resentment for the unmasking of misconduct by Doucette’s daughter.
Hawaiian Airlines v. Norris,
Specifically, recognizing that the gravamen of the claim is “interference” with the contract, Doucette and any Board member
The CBA has a standard, broad management rights clause which reserves for the Credit Union “all management rights, powers, authority and functions” and “the sole and exclusive right to manage its business in every respect and to take any other action which the Credit Union deems desirable to the conduct of its business.” This clause seemingly bears on Doucette’s authority and that of any Board member acting individually, and a number of cases, including one of our own, rely on such clauses as the basis for complete preemption of employee claims of interference with contractual relations. 5
O’Donnell’s claim cannot be resolved without deciding, at a minimum, whether Doucette’s and the Board members’ conduct constituted — in the language of the management rights clause — “action which the Credit Union deems desirable to the conduct of its business.” This is so even if Doucette (or, less plausibly, the other defendants) had personal motives. O’Donnell and the defendants disagree about whether the clause encompasses that eon-duct; thus there is a “real interpretive dispute” implicating the CBA.
Martin,
The Supreme Court has carved out and protected from complete preemption certain types of claims which it has variously characterized; but the common denominator is that they depend on an obligation, usually rooted in public policy, that goes beyond the interests of the individual claimant. 6 So far as they concern interference with contractual obligations, the tort claims in this case are not of that character. O’Donnell did make a different claim based on a whistleblower statute, but it was dismissed on other grounds and that dismissal has not been appealed.
Finally, although not part of our analysis, we note that O’Donnell’s wrongful discharge claim was the subject of a grievance by the union, which included its assertion that “one of the root causes for Paula’s absences was on the job stress from a relationship between Paula and Marion Doucette.” The union ultimately decided the grievance lacked merit, but at least this is not the more troubling case in which there is a preempted claim without the availability of a remedy under the CBA.
Affirmed.
Notes
. O’Donnell reported successively that Linda had bounced over a hundred checks on her personal Credit Union account (which were processed at Doucette's direction despite insufficient funds and against Credit Union policy), deliberately overridden security procedures on the accounting system to clear a personal check despite insufficient funds, and manipulated the clearing account and falsified financial records to fraudulently obtain funds.
.
E.g., Magerer v. John Sexton & Co.,
. If the contract is for employment and the defendant is the plaintiff's supervisor or a corporate official of her employer acting within the scope of his or her employment or corporate responsibilities, the plaintiff must
.
See Magerer,
.
Steinbach,
.
Hawaiian Airlines,
