The plaintiffs, TA Musick and James Character, appeal from the district court’s order granting the defendant, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., summary judgment. In 1994, almost four years after Goodyear had laid them off from their jobs, the plaintiffs filed suits claiming that the lay-offs were motivated by Goodyear’s desire to deprive them of retirement benefits, in violation of section 510 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1140. They sought back pay and benefits as well as retirement eligibility credit for the time they were laid-off. The district court determined that a two-year statute of limitations was applicable to the plaintiffs’ lawsuits and dismissed them.
The plaintiffs concede that they filed their lawsuits more than two years after their claims accrued (on the date of the lay-offs). But they contend that a six-year statute of limitations governs section 510 actions in Alabama. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the district court was correct in determining that a two-year statute of limitations is applicable to section 510 actions brought in Alabama, at least insofar as back pay, back benefits, and retirement eligibility credit are the remedies sought. 1
I.
Until 1990, the plaintiffs worked as schedulers, a salaried position, at Goodyear’s tire manufacturing plant in Gadsden. The plaintiffs participated in Goodyear’s retirement plan for salaried employees. Under that plan, an employee is eligible for full retirement benefits when: (a) he reaches age 55 and has 10 years of service; or (b) he has 30 years of service, regardless of age. The plan is governed by ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. In early 1990, Goodyear notified a number of workers, including the plaintiffs, that due to a reduction in force they would be laid-off from work. At that time, Musick was 50 years old, and had been employed by Goodyear for 19 years, 10 months. Character was 45 years old, and had been employed by Goodyear for 25 years, 6 months.
In April of 1994, Character was recalled to work at Goodyear’s Gadsden plant. Musick was recalled in August , of 1994. However, they were not given credit, for purposes of calculating retirement eligibility, for the time they were laid-off. Consequently, the plaintiffs’ retirement eligibility dates were approximately four years later than they would have been but for the lay-offs.
II.
In early 1994, Musick and Character commenced separate actions against Goodyear. Each alleged that. Goodyear laid him off, faffed to transfer him to another department, and failed to recall him. to work in a timely fashion, all with the specific intent to deny him retirement and fringe benefits to which he was entitled under his ERISA plan. Each sought to recover past wages, benefits, and retirement eligibility credit equal to the length of time he was laid-off.
The district court consolidated the plaintiffs’ cases. Goodyear moved for summary judgment on the ground that the plaintiffs’ actions were barred by the applicable statute of limitations. The district court agreed with Goodyear that the plaintiffs’ section 510 claims are governed by a two-year statute of limitations. Applying that two-year limitations period, the district court held that claims arising from the plaintiffs’ lay-offs were time-barred because Musick was laid-off four years before commencing his action, and Character was laid-off more than three and one half years before commencing his action.
III.
ERISA does not contain a statute of limitations for section 510 . actions.
E.g., Clark v. Coats & Clark, Inc.,
“In selecting the state statute of limitations most appropriate to the federal cause of action, federal courts must first ‘characterize the essence of the claim in the pending case.’”
Id.
(quoting
Wilson v. Garcia,
In
Clark v. Coats & Clark, Inc.,
The Georgia statute of limitations applicable to wage claims is entitled “Enforcement of rights under statutes, acts of incorporation; recovery of wages, overtime, and damages.” O.C.G.A § 9-3-22 (1982). That section provides that “all actions for the recovery of wages, overtime, or damages and penalties accruing under laws respecting the payment of wages and overtime shall be brought within two years after the right of action has accrued.”
Id.
In upholding the application of that statute of limitations to the plaintiffs’ section 510 claims in
Clark,
we reásoned that “[t]he focus of this statute much more narrowly and specifically contemplates the action now before us than does the general language of O.C.G.A § 9-3-24 governing contract actions. Therefore, the two-year limitations period ... is the most analogous statute of limitations and governs appellants’ claims.”
Clark,
In
Byrd v. MacPapers, Inc.,
We concluded in
Byrd
that the district court, in determining the most closely analogous Florida cause of action, had erred by relying on
Clark’s
analysis of Georgia law.
Id.
Causes of action sometimes vary from state to state, as do statutes of limitations. Alabama, like Florida, has a provision in its workers’ compensation statutes addressing retaliatory discharge. Section 25-5-11.1 of the Alabama Code provides that “[n]o employee shall be terminated by an employer solely because the employee has instituted or maintained any action against the employer to recover workers’ compensation benefits undér this chapter.” The Alabama Supreme Court has held that claims brought under that section are subject to the two-year statute of limitations found in section 6-2-88.
ConAgra, Inc. v. Adams,
There is no provision of Alabama law more closely analogous to a section 510 action than those two provisions; therefore, the more analogous of those two Alabama provisions is the one that determines the statute of limitations period for section 510 ERÍSA claims in Alabama. The plaintiffs argue that Alabama’s general six-year statute of limitations governing “[a]etions upon any simple contract or specialty not enumerated [specifically],” Ala.Code § 6-2-34(9), should govern section 510 actions in Alabama. We reject this argument for the same reason we rejected it in
Clark:
other provisions of state law “more narrowly and specifically eontemplate[ ] the [section 510] action now before us than does the general language” of the state’s statute of limitations generally governing contract actions.
Because the two provisions of Alabama law most analogous to a section 510 ERISA action — one for wages, the other for retaliatory discharge — both have a two-year statute of limitations, we need not decide which is more analogous. Either way, there is a two-year statute of limitations for filing section 510 claims in Alabama. Accordingly, the district court correctly held that the plaintiffs’ lawsuits, which were filed more than two years after the alleged section 510 claims accrued, are time-barred.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. As explained in note 2 on p. 1710, infra, this case does not involve any prayer for reinstatement, so we have no occasion to decide whether a different statute of limitations might apply to such a remedy.
. As to the employees’ section 510 claims for reinstatement, however, this Court reversed, and held that Georgia’s 20-year statute of limitations applicable to claims for equitable enforcement of statutory rights was applicable.
Clark,
In this case, we have no occasion to determine which Alabama statute of limitations is applicable to a section 510 claim for reinstatement, because neither plaintiff in this case was seeking reinstatement at the time the district court dismissed the lawsuits. By that time, both plaintiffs had been called back to work, thus mooting any reinstatement remedy.
