OPINION
Teodoro Toledo and Joseph Tucker claim that the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) breached their rights under a colleсtive bargaining agreement. Because Toledo and Tucker failed to establish the district court’s jurisdiction over their suit, we affirm.
Toledo and Tucker tried, and failеd, to obtain “community builder” positions within HUD. After HUD rejected their transfer applications, the American Federation of Government Employees (the union) askеd HUD on behalf of Toledo and Tucker to release the placement records that it had considered in filling the positions. Unsatisfied with HUD’s response, the union filеd a complaint with the Federal Labor Relations Authority, after which the Authority ordered HUD to provide additional records to the union. While HUD provided some оf the relevant records, it failed to send all of them. “Despite a diligent search,” the agency explained, it “was unable to locate all of the competitive placement records.” JA 50.
Toledo, Tucker and Deborah Knight— a third unsuccessful community-builder applicant — responded by pursuing a grievance against HUD under the union’s collective bargaining agreement. Lisa Lowery, the president of the local union chapter, filed the grievance on their behalf.
During step one of the three-step grievance procedure, Lowery and Deborah Swann, a HUD representative, negotiated a settlement agreement. The agreement (1) granted Toledo, Tucker and Knight “[pjriority [consideration” for future vacancies at HUD and (2) acknowledged that the settlement “constitutе^ a waiver of all appeal rights respective of this action to any Federal administrative agency or Federal court.” JA 53.
Apparently unsatisfied with this rеsolution of the grievance, Toledo and Tucker (though not Knight) filed a claim in federal court alleging that HUD violated then-rights under the collective bargaining agreement. Their complaint repeated, word for word, the allegations in the grievance filed with the agency. The district court dismissed the case, concluding thаt no statute granted it jurisdiction to resolve disputes “concerning employment-related matters within the scope of a federal employee’s cоllective bargaining agreement.” JA 17. Toledo and Tucker appeal.
II.
The district court did not reach the merits of Toledo and Tucker’s claim, and neither do we, for they have not established that the district court had jurisdiction over their claim.
See Welsh v. Gibbs,
Section 1331 is the general federal-question-jurisdiction statute. Because Toledo and Tucker namеd the secretary of HUD in his official capacity, they must do more than invoke this general statute; they also must “identify a waiver of sovereign immunity in order to proсeed.”
Reetz v. United States,
Toledo and Tucker have failed to satisfy this requirement. Rather than invoking an applicable waiver of immunity, they essentially have used the federal-question statute to bring a claim for breaсh of contract — breach namely of the collective bargaining agreement between HUD and
Sections 1343 and 2201, for their part, do no better when it comes to giving the federal courts jurisdiction over this matter. Section 1343 grants district courts jurisdiction over civil actions to, among other things, “recover damages or to secure equitable ... relief under аny Act of Congress providing for the protection of civil rights.” 28 U.S.C. § 1343(a)(4). But plaintiffs filed this lawsuit under “the labor agreement in effect between” the union and HUD, JA 5, not under any statute, muсh less under a civil rights statute. Despite the ruling against them below, plaintiffs have not pointed to any authority for the proposition that § 1343 gives the federal courts аuthority to resolve such a collective-bargaining dispute against a federal agency.
Section 2201 is part of the Declaratory Judgment Act. Before “invоking the Act,” however, a federal court must “have jurisdiction already” under some other federal statute.
Heydon v. MediaOne of S.E. Mich., Inc.,
Also unavаiling is plaintiffs’ reliance on a line of cases from the Federal Circuit. In
Carter v. Gibbs,
In 1994, however, Congress amended § 7121(a)(1), adding one word. The provision now says that “the procedures [set out in the collective bargaining agreement]
Even if for the sake of argument we were to accept
Mudge
as accurately construing the CSRA, that does not solve plaintiffs’ problem. For one, they still have not identified an applicable waiver of sovereign immunity — by, say, invoking the Administrative Procedure Act.
See
5 U.S.C. § 702. For another, they cannot tenably claim that § 7121(a)(1) by itself confers jurisdiction. It is one thing to say that the statute does not restrict an employee’s right of action, which is what
Mudge
says; it is quite аnother to say that the statute creates jurisdiction to hear the right of action, which no case says. As the Supreme Court confirmed in
Whitman v. Department of Transportation,
— U.S. -,
III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
