This appeal is a small piece of one of the most protracted disputes between labor and management in recent history. Appellant Troy McNealy, a former member of the United Auto Workers (UAW), brought suit alleging that appellee Caterpillar violated Illinois law when it dismissed him without just cause. The district judge held that a prior decision of the Illinois Appellate Court precluded McNealy from pursuing his suit, and, in the alternative, that the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) preempted McNealy’s state law claim. In this opinion, we hold that the decision of the Illinois court did not give rise to issue preclusion. We also find that McNealy and Caterpillar were not parties to an individual contract, and accordingly decline to reach whether the NLRA would preempt a state law claim based on breach of that contract. We conclude by suggesting that McNealy’s claim would be more appropriately framed as a suit under § 301 of the NLRA
I. Background
Troy McNealy was a production and maintenance employee at a Caterpillar plant from 1974 until he was involuntarily terminated in October 1992. In February 1991, McNealy went on short-term disability leave for foot surgery. Caterpillar extended this leave when McNealy manifested a form of epilepsy, and placed him on long-term disability leave in February 1992. But in October 1992, agents of Caterpillar saw McNealy driving an automobile. The company subsequently fired him for misrepresenting his medical condition. McNealy, who asserts that his illness does not prevent him from driving short distances, complained to his union, the UAW.
When Caterpillar fired McNealy, its employees were working without a formal collective bargaining agreement (CBA). That contract had expired in September 1991. Caterpillar and the UAW were unable to agree to the terms of a new CBA, and the UAW called a strike. After the UAW rejected three proposals by Caterpillar, the union and company had bargained to impasse. Eventually, Caterpillar notified the UAW that it would exercise its statutory right to unilaterally implement portions of its most recent contract proposal. On March 31, 1992, Caterpillar sent a letter to each UAW represented worker, including McNealy. The letter invited striking employees to return to work and summarized the unilaterally implemented terms.
The terms of the unilateral implementation provided that employees could be terminated only for just cause. However, the implementation did not include a means by which the just cause provision could be enforced. Caterpillar left intact the various steps of the grievance procedure antecedent to arbitration, but specifically disavowed the clause of the expired CBA under which Caterpillar had agreed to submit grievances to arbitration. The UAW filed a grievance with respect to McNealy’s firing, but was unsuccessful in obtaining relief for him. And because Caterpillar had eliminated the arbitration clause, the UAW was unable to pursue the issue before an arbitrator.
McNealy decided to take the matter to federal district court. In June 1996, he filed suit alleging that Caterpillar’s March 1992 letter constituted an individual contract with the company, that the contract protected his right not to be discharged without just cause and that Caterpillar had breached the contract under Illinois law. Caterpillar responded with a motion for judgment on the pleadings. In relevant part, the company argued that a prior decision of the Illinois Appellate Court precluded McNealy’s suit, or, in the alternative,, that the NLRA preempted McNealy’s state law claim. The district court granted the motion on both grounds.
II. Issue Preclusion
We begin by explaining why we disagree with the district court’s conclusion that
Young v. Caterpillar, Inc.,
In general terms, issue preclusion limits the litigation of issues that have been decided in a previous action. Whether a judgment of a state court results in issue preclusion depends upon the law of that state.
See Rekhi v. Wildwood Indus., Inc.,
Although there is some basis for preclusion, we find neither an identity of interests nor privity between the parties. With respect to the former, although both McNealy and the
Young
plaintiffs argued that the March 1992 letter constituted a contract with individual employees, there nonetheless is not an identity of interests. The
Young
plaintiffs litigated the issue whether federal labor law preempted a state law breach of contract claim stemming from Caterpillar’s failure to promptly reinstate its employees. And this was the only question on which the Illinois Appellate Court ruled.
See Young,
For a closely reláted reason, McNealy is not in privity with the
Young
plaintiffs. Under Illinois law, a party is in privity with another “if his own interests [are] so closely aligned to [the prior] party’s interests that the party was his virtual representative.”
Progressive Land,
III. Individual Contracts
But McNealy is not out of the woods yet. His state law claim is premised on the notion that the March 1992 letter was the foundation of an individual contract between McNealy and Caterpillar. In the district court, Caterpillar proffered an alternative basis for dismissing McNealy’s complaint: that
Young
notwithstanding, “the NLRA preempts [McNealy’s] claim that Caterpillar’s unilateral implementation of terms ... created an individual employment contract governed by state law.” Def.’s Mem. in Supp. of J. on Pleadings at 5. The district court agreed and held that the NLRA preempted McNealy’s state law claim under the doctrines set forth in
San Diego Bldg. Trades Council v. Garmon,
We too deny McNealy’s state law claim, for a reason similar to the one articulated by the district court. We take issue with the underpinning of McNealy’s state law claim— that by virtue of its March 1992 letter, Caterpillar and McNealy entered into an individual contract. In the district court and on appeal, the parties argued whether federal labor law proMbits an employer from entering into individual contracts with its union-represented employees. While the district judge never explicitly stated that federal labor law prohibited Caterpillar from entering into individual contracts, he apparently believed that the existence of such contracts was dubious. In deciding that the Garmon doctrine preempted any state law claim, the district court reasoned that if Caterpillar had entered into an individual contract, it arguably had committed an unfair labor practice given its ongoing obligation to the collective bargaining process. See Mem. Op. at 19. Hence the district judge ruled that an individual contract could not be enforced under state law because enforcement would conflict with the purposes of the federal labor scheme. We arrive at a similar conclusion: within the constraints of the federal labor scheme, an individual contract cannot even arise under the circumstances prevailing here. 2
McNealy argues that the mere fact of impasse opens the door to individual contracts. This is incorrect. While the Supreme Court has “reserve[d] a field for the individual contract, even in industries covered by the National Labor Relations Act,”
J.I. Case Co. v. NLRB,
In his appellate brief, McNealy urges us to view Caterpillar’s March 1992 letter as the basis for an individual contract because, among other reasons, “it is the individual employees ... who engage in the conduct that constitutes implicit acceptance [and] continuation of the employment relationship.” Appellant’s Br. at 30 n. 8. But we think that McNealy is disregarding the role the UAW played after negotiations were at an impasse. Caterpillar employees only began to work under the unilaterally implemented terms after the UAW instructed them to do so. After Caterpillar mailed its March 1992 letter, the UAW initially expanded the strike to additional Caterpillar facilities and filed unfair labor practices with the NLRB.
3
On April 14, 1992, the UAW recessed the strike and made an unconditional offer to return on behalf of its members. Strikers began to return to work on April 20.
See
Def.’s Mem. in Supp. of J. on Pleadings at 3;
Young,
IV. Disavowal of the Arbitration Clause
Perhaps our opinion could end here. The UAW and Caterpillar failed to negotiate a formal collective bargaining agreement. We have determined that McNealy does not have an individual contract. And Caterpillar, in its March 1992 letter, expressly stated that it would not submit grievances to arbitration. Thus it would seem that McNealy has no remedy, if indeed he was dismissed without just cause. But McNealy’s brief raises the possibility of a remedy that is based on an implied agreement between Caterpillar and the UAW. This is a possibility we must explore; if the just cause provision is to be meaningful, leaving McNealy without a remedy would be unsatisfactory and violative of the intent of the federal labor laws.
We begin by noting that Caterpillar disavowed the arbitration clause. The ■ NLRA mandates that the employer and union bargain over an arrangement for the arbitration of disputes, just as they must bargain over many other terms of employment.
See Litton Fin. Printing Div. v. NLRB,
At least one commentator understands the Court’s treatment of arbitration to reflect more “than the tautological proposition that a contract duty does not exist without a contractual basis to support it.” Joseph Weeks, Continuing Liability Under Expired Collective Bargaining Agreements: Parts II & III, 15 Okla. City U.L.Rev. 359, 379 (1990). Professor Weeks explains:
[T]he Court has gone to some lengths in a variety of contexts to make the point that the due process clause of the fifth and fourteenth amendments requires at a minimum the utilization of some form of judicial involvement before a party may be compelled by law to respond in damages to an asserted breach of contract. With respect to the NLRA, Congress in the Taft-Hartley amendments provided in section 301 for federal court jurisdiction to facilitate the judicial resolution of claims that a collective agreement has been breached and expressly rejected efforts to impose a regime of compulsory arbitration. Seen in this light, the Court’s insistence that a duty to arbitrate cannot be imposed by law reflects not simply the truism that a contractual obligation must be supported by a contractual obligation, but rather that in the absence of a contractual obligation to arbitrate a party to a contract has a statutory and constitutional right to a judicial resolution of claims that it has been breached.
MeNealy’s moribund status is particularly troubling given the nature of his claim. As a practical matter, one can question whether a just cause provision has any reality when the employee is deprived of neutral review of the firing decision. The textbook response to this concern might be to argue that in fact McNealy is
not
remediless. A no strike clause — the quid pro quo for an arbitration clause — is also excluded from the prohibition on unilateral change.
See Litton,
Finally, we offer a word or two about the larger context of this appeal. Caterpillar’s employees have worked without a formal collective bargaining agreement since 1991 and have twice gone on strike. The UAW remains certified, and is able to and does in fact negotiate with Caterpillar. But it may be that no formal agreement is on the immediate horizon.
5
We may assume that this stalemate represents a fine equilibrium between the opportunities for economic leverage that federal labor law confers upon employees and management, respectively.
See United Paperworkers Int’l Union, Local 274 v. Champion Int’l Corp.,
V. Implied-in-Fact Collective Bargaining Agreements
For these reasons, we avail ourselves of an approach raised in MeNealy’s brief and foreshadowed by our discussion of the UAW’s response to the March 1992 unilateral implementation. As we will elaborate, we would construe Caterpillar’s unilateral implementation, and the UAW’s response to it, as an interim implied-in-fact
The notion of an implied-in-fact CBA has a significant history. We have already recognized that “conduct manifesting an intention to abide and be bound by the terms of an agreement” suffices to support a finding of a
CBA Capitol-Husting Co. v. NLRB,
We first consider whether Caterpillar’s unilateral implementation resulted in an implied-in-fact CBA. This question requires us to jump two hurdles, but neither is insurmountable. The first is whether Caterpillar, by virtue of its implementation, can be understood as making an offer to the UAW. In the strictest sense of the word, Caterpillar did not “choose” which terms to implement. Under federal law, Caterpillar could not tinker with the status quo unless it had presented the change at the bargaining table, or the change affected a non-mandatory subject of bargaining or a mandatory subject of bargaining that did not survive the expiration of the CBA
See Litton,
But we do not perceive Caterpillar as a mere puppet acting out a role prescribed by federal law. Accordingly, we align ourselves with those courts that have found that a unilateral implementation can constitute an offer.
See Champion,
Next we leap the second hurdle and decide whether the UAW accepted Caterpillar’s interim offer. This inquiry admittedly has an Alice-in-Wonderland quality; Caterpillar, after all, implemented the same proposal that the UAW
rejected
at the bargaining table. But this does not preclude a finding of acceptance. Like the Eleventh Circuit, “[w]e have no conceptual difficulty in understanding that an employment arrangement that was unacceptable as a permanent, formal agreement might still be acceptable as a temporary, stop-gap measure.”
United Paperworkers,
We believe that federal labor policy encourages the recognition of an implied-infaet CBA that provides an employee may not be terminated without just cause. First, federal law recognizes that CBAs foster peaceful labor relations, and thus encourages courts to liberally apply contract law as a means of lessening strife and encouraging congenial relations between unions and companies.
See id.
at 358. Hence, “[a]s a general matter, implied-in-fact CBAs are eom-patible with federal labor law and advance the goals of federal labor policy.”
See id.
But second, and more specifically,
Luden’s
cautions that federal labor policy may not condone implied-in-fact CBAs that would lead to the federal courts infringing on the NLRB’s primary jurisdiction over suits that implicate unfair labor practices.
See id.
at 362: While federal courts and the NLRB have concurrent jurisdiction over breaches of CBAs that amount to unfair labor practices, see
Smith v. Evening News Ass’n,
However, and here there are major questions, McNealy did not invoke § 301 when he was before the district court. But, believing that we might favor this approach, his appellate brief includes a request that we remand so that he can amend his complaint to reflect
Notes
. In general terms, the
Garmon
doctrine preempts state regulation of conduct that is protected by § 7 of the NLRA, or prohibited by § 8 of the NLRA.
See Garmon,
. Accordingly, we do not make any specific finding on the merits of the preemption question. Because no individual contract exists, we do not have to explore whether the Garmon and Machinists doctrines would preempt a state law claim arising out of the contract.
. These charges were withdrawn after the regional director of the NLRB determined that there was insufficient evidence to issue a complaint.
. The record does not specifically disclose continuing negotiations after impasse, but we may judicially notice press accounts that the UAW and Caterpillar recently negotiated a tentative contract, which was later rejected by rank-and-file union members. See, e.g., Stephan Braun, Caterpillar’s UAW Rift Down to Nameless 50, L.A. Times, Mar. 2, 1998 at A1; Frank Swododa, Caterpillar, UAW at a Crossroads; Rank & File's Rejection of Deal Imperils Both Sides, The Wash. Post, Feb. 24, 1998 at D3; Stephan Franklin, Caterpillar, UAW Reach a Compromise, Chi. Trib., Feb. 14, 1998 at N1. For purposes of deciding whether individual contracts are possible, however, it is enough to recognize that there has been a substantial potential for active collective bargaining.
. See articles cited in note 4, supra.
. In
Chicago Typographical Union v. Chicago Sun-Times, Inc.,
. We also note that after the employees returned to work. Caterpillar proceeded as if it were operating under a CBA. To illustrate, Caterpillar heard grievances about alleged violations of the unilaterally implemented terms. As we have explained in previous cases, a grievance procedure means that "complaints about violations of the contract are made in the first instance to union representatives who ... will then try to resolve it by discussion with management.... A ‘grievance’ in such a setting is simply a complaint that the collective bargaining contract has been violated.”
Szabo,
. When a unilateral implementation is the foundation for an implied-in-fact CBA, the Eighth Circuit requires proof of acceptance "over and above the fact that the union members continued to work.”
Champion,
We also do not express an opinion as to whether the UAW's second strike, which began almost two years after McNealy was terminated, consti-luted rejection of Caterpillar's offer.
See Big Horn,
