Robert Haphey and Carl Bondietti (appellants) brought this action against Linn County, Oregon, in which they alleged that the Sheriff of Linn County (Sheriff) had discriminated against them because of their union activities. The district court granted summary judgment against appellants.
Haphey v. Linn County,
We now set aside the decision of the panel to the extent that it determined that appellants’ action was barred by the doctrine of election of remedies. We return this case to the panel for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND FACTS
The background facts are well stated in
Haphey II,
Appellants were sheriffs deputies who were laid off in May of 1986. After that, they applied for recall and to be newly hired. Although others were hired, they were not. They claimed that the Sheriff failed to give them jobs because they had engaged in union activities.
As a result, appellants filed unfair labor practice charges with the Oregon State Employment Relations Board (ERB). In September of 1989 the ERB found that the failure to hire appellants was, indeed, because they had engaged in protected union activities. It ordered the Sheriff to offer them reinstatement and back pay. It also assessed a penalty against the Sheriff, and awarded attorneys’ fees to appellants. No appeal was taken from that decision.
In the meantime, appellants had filed this action in the district court, but that court granted summary judgment against them. Hence, this appeal.
JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
The district court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1343 and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review the grant of a summary judgment de novo.
Kruso v. International Tel. & Tel. Corp.,
DISCUSSION
The issue presented to us is whether appellants’ exercise of the right to a remedy before the ERB bars them from pursuing a further remedy in the federal courts.
There can be no doubt that the actions of the Sheriff constituted an unfair labor practice under Oregon law. Or.Rev.Stat. § 243.672(l)(c). The ERB held as much and its decision is final. However, appellants claim that the actions of the Sheriff also violated their first amendment rights and that they are entitled to a remedy under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for that violation. That the unfair labor practice and the first amendment violations arose out of the same course of conduct cannot be gainsaid.
The panel properly recognized that this case subtends serious issues regarding the effect to be given to unreviewed decisions of state administrative agencies when later actions are brought in federal court. The Supreme Court has spoken to the claim and issue preclusive effect of state court decisions.
See Migra v. Warren City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ.,
This case also presents questions regarding the scope of the ERB’s authority to consider constitutional claims and the amount of recognition that the ERB’s determination of those claims would be given
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in the courts of Oregon.
Cf. Elvin v. Oregon Public Employees Union,
However, the panel did not believe that it could undertake an in-depth review of those issues because it felt itself bound to decide that appellants’ claims were barred by the doctrine of election of remedies. It believed that
Punton v. City of Seattle,
The operative facts of
Punton are
stated at
In reversing the district court
Punton
did not explicitly rely upon the doctrine of claim preclusion, but
Clark v. Yosemite Community College Dist.,
Similarly,
Punton
alluded to the concept of election of remedies and in so doing referred to
Cohen v. City of Philadelphia,
Thus, we think that the panel erred when it decided that
Punton
required it to apply the election of remedies doctrine and prevented it from approaching this case from the standpoint of the other troublesome issues which we have already identified. However, to the extent that
Punton
does rest on the election of remedies doctrine,
1
we hold that it was decided incorrectly. Whatever the proper uses of that somewhat arcane doctrine might be, they are ill-
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suited to the resolution of the issues that confronted the
Punton
court and the
Ha-phey II
panel.
See
25 Am.Jur.2d
Election of Remedies
§ 1-13 (1966).
Punton
presented a rather straightforward issue regarding the effect of prior state court proceedings on claims brought in federal court. To that extent, normal state claim preclusion rules would apply. If
Punton
chose to use election of remedies principles instead, it went contrary to Supreme Court doctrine.
See Migra,
CONCLUSION
We hold that when an employee of a state or local governmental entity presents a claim for reinstatement to a state administrative agency, that is not an election of remedies which will preclude the later pursuit of claims for violation of federal constitutional rights in federal court. We do not decide whether, or in what circumstances, an opposing party may assert the doctrine of claim preclusion or that of mootness in the federal court action.
Compare Gjellum v. City of Birmingham,
In so doing, we do not intend to preclude the panel from calling for additional briefing, seeking advice regarding Oregon law from the supreme court of that state, returning this case to the district court for further development, or taking other steps that it deems necessary or advisable under the circumstances. We only clear away what the panel thought was an ineluctable
impediment
— Punton. To the extent that case is inconsistent with this opinion, we now overrule it. We also set aside Parts III-B-2, III-B-3, III-B-4, and IV of the panel’s decision.
Haphey II,
We return this case to the panel for further proceedings.
Notes
. There is some reason to think it did because it did say that Punton’s action amounted to an election of remedies.
