On September 19, 1973, Eastern Air Lines discharged Thomas C. Hall for leaving work early without company approval. He filed a grievance and a hearing was held before the company’s Mechanical Department System Board of Adjustment, a body established pursuant to 45 U.S.C. § 184. The Board upheld the discharge decision, and Hall appealed to the district court, alleging he had been denied fundamental due process because the Board refused to consider his alibi defense.
The district court recognized that its scope of review is limited.
See
45 U.S.C. § 153, First (q). In general the Board’s decision on the merits is final and not subject to review. Gunther v. San Diego & Arizona Eastern Ry. Co.,
Appellants argue the Board did consider the evidence and then decided to accord it no weight. Yet a careful reading of its entire opinion compels us to find that the Board rejected the evidence because Hall was tardy in presenting it. Further, a refusal to consider the evidence was not harmless; the Board itself recognized that if the facts Hall relied on were true, they would constitute a complete defense to his discharge. The presentation of one’s defense is a basic due process right, and the district court properly remanded the case to afford Hall the opportunity to exercise that right in a de novo hearing.
Affirmed.
