Arbitral boards established pursuant to the Railway Labor Act have exclusive jurisdiction to resolve disputes over the application of collective bargaining agreements in the railroad and airline industries.
Hawaiian Airlines, Inc. v. Norris,
A valid regulation of the Federal Aviation Administration forbids a person to pilot a commercial aircraft after he reaches his sixtieth birthday. The plaintiffs are 14 American Airlines pilots who, having reached age 60 and thus become disqualified to pilot the airline’s planes, claim the right to downgrade to the position of flight officer. Some of the airline’s aircraft (rapidly being phased out) have three pilots in the cockpit — the captain, the first officer (copilot), and the flight officer. The flight officer must (with immaterial exceptions) be a pilot, but his duties do not involve flying the airplane, but rather monitoring *315 the fuel, electrical, and other systems of the plane. Apparently unique among U.S. airlines, American refuses to permit a captain — all the plaintiffs were captains before becoming disqualified to serve as captains or first officers — who has been disqualified as a pilot to downgrade to flight officer; instead he must retire. It is this refusal that the plaintiffs challenge as age discrimination.
The airline claims that it treats all disqualified captains alike. A captain disqualified from serving as a captain or first officer because he has reached the age of 60 is treated the same as a younger captain disqualified because of ill health or because he failed the airline’s proficiency test for pilots. If so, still this would not be a defense if the airline had unjustifiably decreed disqualification based on age, but that is not what it has done; it has merely complied with a valid government regulation. If it allowed captains disqualified by reason of age to become flight officers, but not captains disqualified for other reasons, it would be discriminating
in favor
of captains disqualified by reason of age,tand the age discrimination law does not require employers to discriminate against the young.
Tice v. Lampert Yards, Inc.,
But the question for us is not whether there may be a violation of the age discrimination law lurking somewhere here; the airline’s claim to treat all disqualified captains alike regardless of age is contested, and if it discriminates against captains disqualified by virtue of their age it is violating the law.
Trans World Airlines, Inc. v. Thurston,
Not only the existence but also the scope of the entitlement depends on the collective bargaining agreement. One provision states that “all pilots are required to qualify in turn for the next higher pilot category.” The airline contends that this provision establishes an “up or out” policy: a flight officer who cannot qualify for a higher position cannot remain in the cockpit. The plaintiffs qualify rather than reject this position, pointing to a provision which states that “a pilot will only be required to upgrade to captain one (1) time.” They interpret this to mean that the fact that their age precludes them from ever upgrading from the flight officer’s position which they seek to captain— that is, the fact that they are disqualified from ever again serving as a captain— cannot be used to disqualify them from the flight officer’s job, because they complied with the “up or out” provision once and for all when they qualified as captains. Having climbed the ladder once, they can return to the lowest rung even though they can never reclimb. The airline argues, to the contrary, that the qualify-once provision is inapplicable to a case in which the pilot can never again serve as captain. It is one thing, the airline argues, for an *316 eligible captain to bump a flight officer or first officer; when a captain’s position opens up for him, he’ll be entitled to it without having to requalify as a captain. It is another thing to let him bump the junior employee when he can never again become a captain.
This is a disagreement over the meaning of the collective bargaining agreement. The plaintiffs claim certain rights under it and the airline denies they have those rights. It is true as the plaintiffs point out that the agreement nowhere states in so many words that a permanently disqualified captain cannot bump a flight officer. But contracts, including collective bargaining agreements, frequently contain implied terms.
Consolidated Rail Corp. v. Railway Labor Executives’ Ass’n,
The applicability of this principle to the present case is confirmed by reflecting on the character of the considerations that are relevant to determining these plaintiffs’ rights under the collective bargaining agreement. The interpretation of a contract does not take place in a vacuum; it is not a purely semantic exercise; it has regard for the consequences of alternative interpretations, the parties being assumed to have intended something sensible by their contract. E.g.,
Rhode Island Charities Trust v. Engelhard Corp.,
The plaintiffs deny that the airline has a practice of refusing to allow any disqualified captain to hold the flight officer’s job. They argue that only if disqualification is based on the FAA’s age-60 rule is the captain refused permission to downgrade to flight officer. And nothing in the collective bargaining agreement authorizes such discrimination. If they are right, they will prevail in the arbitration and be reinstated with backpay. Might they then seek additional relief under the age discrimination law? Their argument would be that the airline had violated that law by discriminating on grounds of age against captains applying for flight-officer positions. The airline would have denied them their normal seniority rights solely on the basis of their age. We do not see why such a suit could not lie. When an employee has both a contractual right by virtue of a collective bargaining agreement (or other employment contract), and a statutory right to be free from discrimination, “both rights have legally independent origins and are equally available to the aggrieved employee.”
Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co.,
The analogy is to the doctrine, of primary jurisdiction. When, in a suit based on a federal statute, a potentially disposi-tive issue arises that is within the exclusive jurisdiction of an administrative agency, the suit must be stayed while the parties resort to the agency for that resolution. As we explained in
Arsberry v. Illinois,
We are mindful that in
Brown v. Illinois Central R.R.,
We don’t think the opinion in
Brown
meant anything different from this, despite the reference to potentially as distinct from actually dispositive arbitration. Brown was trying to avoid the arbitral route — improperly, because his claim depended critically on the resolution of a dispute over the meaning of the collective bargaining agreement, and as the court said there and we have said here, the arbitrators have exclusive jurisdiction over such disputes.
Brown v. Illinois Central R.R., supra,
The judgment is therefore modified to convert the dismissal of the plaintiffs’ suit to a stay of the suit pending referral of the *319 parties’ dispute to arbitration, and the case remanded to the district court accordingly.
