delivered the opinion of the Court.
This hоary litigation presents the question whether a carrier by contracts with individual employees made in 1930 could supersede or expand terms of an agreement collectively bargained between the employer and the union in 1917, in view of the provisions of the Railway Labor Act of 1926, which was applicable when the controversy arose.
Petitioner was a union designated to represent certain crafts and classes of employees of carriers by railroad. Employees herе involved are agents at stations on the Seaboard Airline Railroad, who primarily are employees of the railway and secondarily of the railway express agency; they receive compensation from each employer. Fоr some years they were represented by the union in bargaining collective agreements with predecessor express companies. The last was executed in 1917 and was assumed by this respondent March 1, 1929.
In 1930, the Express Company began to handle nеw business consisting mainly of carload shipments of perishables which formerly had been handled by the railroad company as freight. The Express Company thought the change in volume and character of its shipments warranted an adjustment of rates of pay applicable to certain of the agencies where the shipments originated. The Railway Labor Act of 1926, then in effect, provided that
The local chairman of the union protested and insistеd that collective bargaining must control the compensation of the agents. The Express Company declined to accede to the claims, and the union’s claim that the agents must be compensated under the collective agreemеnt remained unadjusted. Attempts to adjust were renewed by the general chairman, but no voluntary Board of Adjustment was agreed upon as provided under § 3 of the 1926 Act.
2
1. The Company contends that special voluntary individual contraсts as to rates of pay, rules, and conditions of employment may validly be made, notwithstanding the existence of a collective agreement, and that the terms of the individual agreements supersede those of the collectively bargained one. If this were true, statutes requiring collective bargaining would have little substance, for what was made collectively could be promptly unmade individually. It is said, however, that in this case the agreements affect relatively few agents and that those are specially and uniquely situated. This apparently is true, for the application of the collective agreement results in an award of some $40,000 to one agent over the period and less than $2,000 to all of the others, and most of the awards arе for a few hundred dollars.
Collective bargaining was not defined by the statute which provided for it, but it generally has been considered to absorb and give statutory approval to the philosophy of bargaining as worked out in the labor movement in the United States.
6
From the first the position of labor with reference to the wage structure of an industry has been much like that of the carriers about rate structures.
7
It is insisted that exceptional situations often have an importance to the whole becausе they introduce competitions and discriminations that are upsetting to the entire structure.
The decision in J. I. Case Co. v. Labor Board, ante, p. 332, considers more generally the relation of individual contracts to collective bargaining, and muсh that is said in that opinion is applicable here.
We hold that the failure of the carrier to proceed as provided by the Railway Labor Act of 1926, then applicable, left the collective agreement in force throughout the pеriod and that the carrier’s efforts to modify its terms through individual agreements are not effective. The award, therefore, was in accordance with the law.
2. The Circuit Court of Appeals held the claims barred by the state six-year statute of limitations applicable in the forum. It is true that the enforcement of the award results in entering judgment in 1942 on claims that began to accrue in 1930 and some of which ceased to accrue over six years before the suit in the District Court was commenced. It also is true that some of these have accrued in large amounts.
If, therefore, these claims are barred, it must be because the time ocсupied in their litigation before the Adjustment Board operates to defeat them. A state statute of limitations can hardly destroy a claim because the period of actual contest over it in a federal tribunal extends beyond the limitation pеriod.
Statutes of limitation, like the equitable doctrine of laches, in their conclusive effects are designed to promote justice by preventing surprises through the revival of
Regrettable as the long delay has been it has bеen caused by the exigencies of the contest, not by the neglect to proceed. We find no basis for applying a state statute of limitations to cut off the right of the Adjustment Board to consider the claims or to absolve the courts from the duty to еnforce an award.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
Notes
§ 6,44 Stat. 582. This provided: “Carriers and the representatives of the employees shall give at least thirty days’ writtеn notice of an intended change affecting rates of pay, rules, or working conditions, and the time and place for conference between the representatives of the parties interested in such intended changes shall be agreed upon within ten days after the receipt of said notice, and said time shall be within the thirty days provided in the notice. . . .” The 1934 Act contains a similar provision. § 6, 48 Stat. 1197, 45 U. S. C. § 156.
44 Stat. 578.
Act of 1934, §3, 48 Stat. 1189. §3, First (i) provides: “The disputes between an employee or group of employees and a carrier or carriers growing out of grievances or out of the interpretation or application of agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, or working conditions, including cases pending and unadjusted on the date of aрproval of this Act, shall be handled in the usual manner up to and including the chief operating officer of the carrier designated to handle such disputes; but, failing to reach an adjustment in this manner, the disputes may be referred by petition of the parties оr by either party to the appropriate division of the Adjustment Board with a full statement of the facts and all supporting data bearing upon the disputes.”
Cf.
H. J. Heinz Co.
v.
Labor Board,
See Lenhoff, The Present Status of Collective Contracts in the American Legal System, 39 Mich. L. Rev. 1109; Daugherty, Labor Problems in American Industry (1933) p. 415; Taylor, Labor Problems and Labor Law (1938) p. 85 et seq.; Golden and Ruttenberg, The Dynamics of Industrial Democracy (1942) pp. 23-26, 82 et seq.
Act of 1934, § 3, First (q), 48 Stat. 1192, 45 U. S. C. § 153, First (q): “All actions at law based upon the provisions of this section shall be begun within two years from the time the cause of action accrues under the award of the division of the Adjustment Board, and not after.”
