We have moved some distance from the days when an employee “sold his soul to the company store” when he was hired. Plaintiffs Thomas and Cynthia Schmidt may have thought otherwise, however, when defendant Ameriteeh Corporation decided to use its unique access to its Message Unit Detail, or MUD, records to investigate what Thomas was doing while he was on a leave of absence from his Ameriteeh job. Thomas and Cynthia began this suit for invasion of privacy in Cook County Circuit Court, but Ameriteeh removed it to federal court, claiming that Thomas’s claims were preempted by section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (LMRA), 29 U.S.C. § 185. After some additional procedural moves, the district court denied the Schmidts’ motion to remand the case to state court and dismissed their action outright. We conclude that section 301 does not apply to this case, and as there was no independent basis for federal jurisdiction, the case must be remanded to state court for further proceedings.
I
Thomas Schmidt had a job with Ameriteeh as a Customer Service Technician; his wife, Cynthia Schmidt, was not an Ameriteeh employee, nor was Jeri Lynn Richie, who eventually became the third plaintiff in this case. Richie was the owner and operator of the “Reflections Salon of Beauty,” where Cynthia Schmidt worked. Like most people with residential telephone service in the greater Chicago area, the Schmidts were customers of Ameriteeh. Included in the materials they received from Ameriteeh was the statement that “[cjustomer information maintained by Ameriteeh is protected by law and can be released only through a court order.”
On June 26,1994, Thomas injured his knee and as a result took a disability leave of absence until August 4, 1994. On July 15, 1994, he had an MRI performed on the knee, and then he and Cynthia left for Canada on their honeymoon. During their time in Canada, Thomas periodically checked his residence for messages. In this way he learned on July 22 that his MRI results were available, but when he called his doctor he was told that the test results would not be released by telephone. He also learned that Herbert Mazanke, his supervisor at Ameri-tech, had left a message saying that he wanted the MRI results. Thomas therefore called Mazanke and left a message telling him that Thomas would give him the MRI results the following Monday, July 25. Back
On August 4, Schmidt returned to work. Mazanke immediately called him into a meeting, where he was questioned about his disability and his whereabouts on July 21,1994. Also present at this meeting was another member of Ameritech’s management, Doug Kotlinski. Thomas was told that he was being suspended pending Ameritech’s investigation into the circumstances of his disability leave. At another meeting on August 24, at which Mazanke and other Ameritech representatives were again present, Schmidt was told that Ameritech knew where he and his wife had gone and whom they had telephoned while they were away. He was told that they had obtained this knowledge by reviewing Ameriteeh’s MUD records. The next day, Ameritech fired him.
It turned out that during the time the Schmidts were away, Ameritech monitored calls made to and from their residential telephone, as well as calls the Schmidts made using their residential telephone calling card, and it kept a log of those calls. Based on the information it gained through this monitoring, Ameritech contacted the kennel where the Schmidts had boarded their dog, and it contacted the resort in Canada where they were staying. During the same time period, Ameritech also accessed and used the personal telephone records of Jeri Lynn Richie, Cynthia’s employer.
After he was fired,, Thomas filed a grievance with the company. The grievance went to an arbitrator, who ordered him reinstated, but refused a year’s back pay because he found that Schmidt had attempted to mislead Ameritech while he was on his Canadian trip. The Schmidts then filed a two-count complaint against Ameritech, Herbert Mazanke, and William Gerlich (collectively “Ameritech” for our purposes) in Cook County Circuit Court, alleging that Ameritech violated their state law right to privacy in two respects when it accessed the MUD records. Specifically, they claimed that Ameritech had “intruded upon their seclusion,” as that term may be recognized in Illinois law, Lovgren v. Citizens First National Bank of Princeton,
The district court agreed with Ameritech that the invasion of privacy claim was really a subject for the CBA, focusing on the company’s right to investigate its workers to make sure they were complying with applicable regulations and the fact that these kinds of claims are normally grievable. Indeed, that is precisely what Thomas did, at least with respect to his firing. To the extent that Thomas did not raise other claims before the arbitrator, the district court found that he had failed to exhaust his remedies as required for a § 301 suit. The court rejected Cynthia’s claims and Richie’s claims, which it considered as within its supplemental jurisdiction, on the merits.
II
In keeping with the goal of maintaining a uniform national labor policy, the Supreme
If the resolution of a state-law claim depends upon the meaning of a collective bargaining agreement, the application of state law (which might lead to inconsistent results since there could be as many state-law principles as there are States) is preempted and federal labor-law prinei-ples-neeessarily uniform throughout the Nation — must be employed to resolve the dispute.
Id. at 405-06,
To answer that question, we must look more carefully at exactly what Schmidt is and is not challenging in his lawsuit. He is not saying that Ameritech had no right to investigate possible misconduct by its employees, nor is he challenging the result of this particular investigation (either his termination or the subsequent result of the arbitration proceeding). He is arguing instead that he, in his capacity as an Ameritech customer, had the same right to protection for his customer information as all other Ameritech customers: namely, that Ameri-tech would keep this information confidential and release it only through a court order. Naturally, the claims of Cynthia Schmidt and Jeri Lynn Richie are even more clearly based on this theory, since they had no employment relationship with Ameritech to begin with.
Ameritech’s response is eerily reminiscent of Orwell’s Big Brother. Most Ameritech customers enjoy confidentiality in their telephone records, and Ameritech goes to great lengths to keep those records secure except in response to a court order, but Ameritech employees, it says, are in a unique position. Ameritech’s lawyer stressed at oral argument that the MUD records “belong” to Am-eritech, and from that he reasoned that Am-eritech had every right to consult those files in the course of its internal management of the company. This means, in essence, that every Ameritech employee, from the CEO on down to the lowliest worker, can expect to have Ameritech reading the records of telephone calls placed from his or her line (which is what MUD records are) at any time, for any reason. Furthermore, the logic of Am-eritech’s ownership argument suggests that Ameritech could listen in to anyone’s telephone calls whenever it wants, calling employees on the carpet for spending too much (or too little!) time in the evening on the telephone, criticizing them for patronizing the wrong “900” numbers, and reviewing their calling records every time they take a sick day off. Indeed, the logic of the “ownership” theory suggests that Ameritech could use even non-employees’ MUD records or telephone lines any way it wants. The lines belong to Ameritech, after all, and the records of calls belong to. it also. The only way to avoid such extreme intrusion would be for an employee to forego residential telephone service altogether, at least until local line competition develops into a more serious alternative than it was in 1994 or than it remains today. In today’s society, that is hardly a practical alternative, as Ameritech well knows. It is far from clear, moreover, that such a broad approach would pass muster under the federal Communications Act. See 47 U.S.C. § 605 (1997) (prohibiting the unauthorized publication or use of wire communications).
A second case on which Ameritech relies is Douglas v. American Information Technologies Corp.,
We find both Amoco and Douglas distinguishable from the present case. Most importantly, both arose out of complaints relating to conditions at the workplace, which are quintessential subjects of collective bargaining. Thomas Schmidt, it bears repeating, is not making any claim about surveillance of his workplace telephone, his workplace environment, or even about Ameritech’s use of surveillance techniques such as surreptitious photography of public behavior that would be available to any other employer to cheek on disability fraud. He is asking only that Am-eritech treat access to his residential telephone records the way that General Motors, Pepsi Co, or IBM would have to treat access to residential telephone records. His claim essentially rests on a dual capacity allegation. Ameritech had to respect his capacity as a residential telephone customer and treat his MUD records the same way it would treat all other MUD records, even though he fortuitously also was an Ameritech employee. Whether or not this is true depends not on the scope of the collective bargaining agreement between Ameritech and its employees, but upon the scope of Illinois privacy law. This is particularly true, we note, because the Ameritech CBA did not have a management rights clause along the lines of the clause in Amoco.
We find this case more like Keehr v. Consolidated Freightways of Delaware, Inc.,
Like the claims in Keehr, Schmidt’s claims do not purport to give meaning to the terms of the CBA. They are completely independent of the CBA. The legal question is whether Ameritech has a duty to treat all residential customers similarly for purposes of MUD records access, or if its employees stand in a different position. We note in this connection that Illinois has recognized a distinct privacy right in one’s telephone records based on Article I, Section 6 of the Illinois Constitution, which provides broader privacy protection than does the U.S. Constitution. See People v. DeLaire,
We therefore find that the district court lacked jurisdiction over this ease, because it was not governed by § 301 and there was no other basis of federal jurisdiction. Because it lacked jurisdiction over any federal claim, the court also lacked supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims, making its ruling and reasoning as to those claims void. The judgment below is Reversed and the case is RemaNDed with instructions to remand it to the state court for further proceedings.
