Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
Concurring opinion filed by Circuit Judge HENDERSON.
Since at least 1947, the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB” or “Board”) has regulated the labor relations of United Parcel Service, Inc. (“UPS, Inc.” or “petitioner”) under the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”). See United Parcel Service of New York, Inc.,
BACKGROUND
The NLRA authorizes the NLRB “to prevent any person from engaging in any unfair labor practice ... affecting commerce.” 29 U.S.C. § 160; see also 29 U.S.C. § 152(6) (defining “commerce” in this Act to mean interstate commerce). This broad scope of authority has but a few, comparatively narrow exceptions. See 29 U.S.C. § 152(2) & (3). One of these limited exceptions excludes any “person subject to the Railway Labor Act” from the NLRA. 29 U.S.C. § 152(2); see also 29 U.S.C. § 152(3) (excepting “any individual employed by an employer subject to the Railway Labor Act” from the NLRA). This RLA exception denies the protections of the NLRA to all carriers of freight by rail, see 45 U.S.C. § 151 First, or by air, see id. at § 181, both of which are instead governed by the RLA as administered by the NMB.
In these few cases, the NLRB and the NMB have, in the absence of any statute addressing the point, jointly developed their own method for determining their mutual jurisdictional question of whether the NLRA or the RLA governs a particular trucking service. In some cases, the NLRB has chosen to refer unresolved jurisdictional questions to the NMB, and has then chosen to abide by its decision. See, e.g., Pan-American World Airways, Inc.,
United Parcel Services of America (“UPSA”) is a notable carrier of road and air freight. It has two primary corporate components. The larger of these two components, UPS, Inc.,
That stance changed abruptly in 1993. UPS, Inc. was in the process of defending itself against a claim that it had violated a section of the NLRA, the merits of which are not at issue in this appeal. See id. at 1. An administrative law judge had already ruled on the entire matter, and the ease was pending before the NLRB on exceptions to that decision. At this late stage in the proceeding, UPS, Inc,, though it had already admitted NLRB’s authority to review the matter in its answer, see id. at 2, suddenly challenged NLRB’s continued jurisdiction over the carrier. In particular, UPS, Inc. requested the NLRB to ask the NMB whether the RLA should now cover UPS, Inc., in light of the corporation’s corporate affiliation with the RLA carrier UPS, Co. In response, the NLRB remanded the, question to an administrative law judge, who concluded that the question of the NLRB’s continuing jurisdiction over UPS, Inc. should be certified to the NMB. See id. at 2-3.
UPS, Inc. now argues that the NLRB’s decision not to refer this matter to the NMB was illegally arbitrary or otherwise contrary to the law. It relies heavily on the NLRB’s recent decision to certify to the NMB the question of whether the' truck-delivery services owned by and operated for Federal Express (“FedEx”), a secondary competitor of UPS, should be governed by the RLA as proof that it was illegally mistreated. See Federal Express Corp.,
UPS, Inc. also disputes whether the NLRB correctly determined that UPS, Inc. should still be classified as an NLRA carrier, assuming that the NLRB could decide that question. UPS, Inc. relies on the result reached by the NMB in Federal Express Corp. which it claims holds that a trucking service affiliated with an RLA carrier should be thought an RLA carrier in its own right if its services are an integral part of the offerings of the RLA carrier. See Federal Express Corp., 23 NMB 32, 71-74 (1995). The NLRB counters that, as the trucking services of FedEx essentially exist only to service its RLA carriage, while the petitioner’s trucking services perform much business independent of its air-delivery affiliate, and as FedEx, unlike petitioner, has always been an RLA carrier, this NMB precedent, to the extent it is relevant at all, in fact supports the NLRB’s decision in the current case.
DISCUSSION
We must deny both petitions of UPS, Inc. The NLRB did not act improperly when it did not certify the question of whether UPS, Inc. was still an NLRA carrier to the NMB. Nor did it wrongly conclude that UPS, Inc. was such an NLRA carrier. A closer examination of each question demonstrates the reasons behind our results.
I. The Question of Referral
Petitioner first contends that the NLRB was required to refer a question as to whether a carrier was an RLA or an NLRA carrier to the NMB. According to UPS, Inc., because the NMB is the party that administers the RLA, and because a carrier cannot be an NLRA carrier unless it is first excepted from coverage under the RLA, the NMB must enjoy “primary jurisdiction” over any question of whether an entity is an NLRA carrier. As it is the agency with primary jurisdiction, petitioner argues that the NMB, as opposed to other agencies, must
The inaccuracy of this assumption-is two-fold and fundamental. First, an agency is not a court. See Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
Second, petitioner has not identified any sound basis on which we might order, as the petitioner asks us to do, the NLRB to defer challenges to its jurisdiction to the NMB. In 1971, the Sixth Circuit clearly declared that the NLRB did not need to refer a jurisdictional matter to the NMB. See Dobbs Houses, Inc.,
Nor are we persuaded by petitioner that the NLRB’s decision not to refer was arbitrary. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A); cf. United Food and Commercial. Workers Int’l Union v. NLRB,
In light of this reasoning, the NLRB’s decision to refer the matter of FedEx’s trucking services to the NMB is entirely, consistent with its refusal to refer this case. See Federal Express Corp.,
1) the “jurisdictional issue [was] doubtful” and requiring analysis of “very difficult questions of interpretation under the RLA;” id. at 1155; and
2) the NLRB had “never asserted jurisdiction over” the carrier involved, id. at 1155-56.
In this case, neither criterion was met. The jurisdictional issue here was not doubtful, as UPS, Inc. had not significantly changed the nature of its business vis-a-vis UPS, Co. since the last time UPS, Inc. had accepted NLRB jurisdiction, see infra Part II, and the NLRB had uniformly exercised jurisdiction over UPS, Inc. since 1947. Despite superficial similarities in the nature of the services provided by UPS and FedEx, then, the NLRB’s concise analysis in Federal Express Corp. merely underscores that the Board acted within its power and past policy when it declined to refer, this matter to the NMB.
II. The Question of Jurisdiction
Having concluded that the NLRB properly- refused to refer the jurisdictional question to the NMB, we now must examine whether the NLRB properly determined that petitioner is still an NLRA carrier. At some level, this jurisdictional determination is premised on an interpretation of the RLA, as only employers who are deemed excluded from the scope of the RLA may be regulated by the NLRA. As the scope of the NLRB’s jurisdiction thus depends on an interpretation of the RLA, which the NLRB does not administer, we cannot simply assume that the NLRB should receive Chevron deference in this case, see Chevron,
Decided some seven years before Chevron revolutionized federal administrative law, Bayside deference emerged from a general conclusion that the NLRB, as the leading labor agency, deserved some deference on difficult questions of labor law. In Bayside, the Court determined that it should defer to the NLRB’s reasonable interpretation of what constituted an “agricultural laborer” for purposes of - determining the scope of the NLRA, even though that term, according to explicit congressional instruction, was to be defined by the Fair Labor Standards Act. See
Even without any such deference, however, we conclude that the NLRB’s determination in this case is correct. See, e.g., Illinois Commerce Comm’n v. ICC,
The apparent meaning and traditional application of the statute supports our conclusion. The words of the statute underscore that trucking services are usually exempt from the dictates of the RLA, even if the services are provided by a company that is commonly owned and operated with an RLA carrier. See 45 U.S.C. § 151 First (“The term ‘carrier’ [for purposes of the RLA] includes any ... carrier by railroad ... and any company which is ... owned or controlled by ... any carrier by railroad [or air] and which ... performs any service (other than trucking service) in connection with the ... handling of property transported by railroad [or air].” (emphasis added)). Moreover, the NMB has typically required a tracking service that is commonly owned and operated with an RLA carrier to. meet at least three criteria before the NMB would consider exercising jurisdiction over the service:
1) the tracker must perform services principally for an RLA carrier with which it is affiliated;
2) the trucker must be an integral part of that affiliate; and
3) the tracker must provide services “esr sential to the [RLA] carrier’s operations.”
United Parcel Service, Inc.,
According to the facts found by the administrative law judge and affirmed by the NLRB, UPS, Inc. does not receive even a tenth of its business from its RLA associate, never mind receiving eight-tenths.' See
That the NMB did not specifically mention the requirement that a trucking service principally serve its affiliated RLA carrier in its recent decision in Federal Express Corp.,'see 23 NMB at 73-74, does not trouble our result. In that case, the NMB had no occasion to discuss its trucking-services test in detail because the test was not implicated by the facts of the case. However, in a passing dicta on that test, the NMB still explicitly endorsed case law that emphasizes the complete dependence of FedEx’s trucking services on its air-freight services. Id. at 74 (citing Federal Express Corp. v. California Pub. Util. Comm’n,
CONCLUSION
Petitioner has not presented, nor have we found, any legal or logical basis in this case to interfere with the NLRB’s long-standing practice of not referring resolved or clear jurisdictional questions to the NMB. Having reached this conclusion, we also see no sufficient reason to disturb the NLRB’s ultimate decision that petitioner here is still subject to the NLRA, as that determination is in accord with the relevant precedent and UPS, Inc.’s well-established status as an NLRA carrier.
Notes
. UPS, Inc. actually consists of two separate corporations, UPS, Inc. of New York and UPS, Inc. of Ohio. For purposes of this litigation, these two arms of the truck-delivery services of UPS will be viewed as a single corporate entity.
. The other party whose interests may be affected by this litigation, the National Mediation Board, declined our invitation to file an amicus brief as to either issue.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
Because I agree with my colleagues that the NLRB was not required to consult the NMB and that the petitioner is subject to the NLRB’s regulation under the NLRA, I concur. I do so, however, without regard to the question of deference. In my opinion, neither conclusion has anything to do with deference to the agencies involved. We are faced here with a simple jurisdictional question: Does the petitioner perform a “trucking service,” thereby coming within the RLA’s clear and explicit exception. We all agree that it does. .To the extent that our decision rests on our own reading of the statutory language, I am pleased to join it.
