William BLOOM, Thomas J. Brogan, Otha D. Bumgarner, Charles
O. Cody, Norman E. Styres, and Norman W. Swart,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF TEAMSTERS LOCAL 468, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 83-2134.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted June 11, 1984.
Decided Oct. 26, 1984.
Kenneth N. Silbert, Beeson, Tayer & Silbert, San Francisco, Cal., for defendant-appellant.
Dan Siegel, Siegel, Friedman & Dickstein, Oakland, Cal., for plaintiffs-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.
Before GOODWIN, WALLACE, and BOOCHEVER, Circuit Judges.
WALLACE, Circuit Judge:
In a previous appeal of this case, we affirmed in an unpublished memorandum,
* In connection with the settlement of a labor dispute involving Safeway, the president of the union and a lawyer for the union promised the disputing members a preferential hiring agreement with another bargaining unit. When the president and the lawyer failed to secure the promised agreement, the union members sued for specific performance of the promise and for "money damages in an amount to be ascertained" based on a breach of the union's duty of fair representation. The union members did not attempt to state a cause of action for infliction of emotional distress.
The district court held the union had, in bad faith, breached its duty of fair representation, and awarded damages in a measure of the difference between the settlement the union members actually obtained from Safeway and the settlement they might have obtained by bargaining further instead of believing the union's false promise of preferential hiring. On appeal, we held that the union had acted recklessly and the district court had "acted properly in narrowly defining the injury for which the plaintiffs must be compensated." We affirmed as to liability for breach and as to attorneys' fees, but concluded the record did not support the speculative assumption that Safeway would have increased its monetary settlement to the members by $4,000 per person.
On remand, the union members did not attempt to cure the record's deficiencies. Instead, they argued that the breach of the duty of fair representation had caused them emotional distress. One of the union members provided no proof at all of emotional distress. Of the others, one "was disappointed and 'felt screwed,' " one had "high hopes" but was "let down," one felt "he got treated dirty" and that, like another, his layoff had contributed to a breakup with his wife. The district court awarded each union member $2,500 in damages. The union now argues that federal law will not permit such emotional distress damages, that law of the case precludes such an award, and that the union members are no longer prevailing parties entitled to attorneys' fees.
II
The union members sued for breach of the duty of fair representation under the Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. Secs. 159(a), 185 (LMRA), see generally Vaca v. Sipes,
At oral argument, counsel for the union admitted that in some cases, the remedy for a breach of the duty of fair representation might appropriately include damages for emotional distress. We need not reach that question. If the assertion is true, however, it seems sensible that, because "there is no magic inherent in the name given to a tort," W. Prosser, Law of Torts 52 (4th ed. 1971), such damages should not be available more freely than in a direct action for infliction of emotional distress. In Farmer,
In the case before us, the relation to the equivalent of employment discrimination is clear: liability itself depends on the breach of a labor law duty between a union and its membership. To paraphrase our language in Magnuson, see
If, in a breach of the duty of fair representation case, insufficient outrageous conduct exists also to sustain a direct suit for infliction of emotional distress, we conclude that insufficient facts exist to support an award of damages measured by emotional distress as a remedy for the breach itself. The minimum level of outrageous conduct was not shown in this case. We can therefore reject the union members' damage theory on this ground alone.
Analogies to cases brought under the Labor Management Relations Disclosure Act, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 412 (Landrum-Griffin Act), or the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. Sec. 1109 (ERISA), will not assist the union members either. Both sets of cases emphasize a requirement of emotional distress manifested in other actual injury. See generally W. Prosser, supra, at 59-60 (interrelation of outrageous conduct and physical injury standards).
The Landrum-Griffin Act provides union members free speech and assembly within a union, and, "[l]ike the judicially created duty of fair representation implied under LMRA, LMRDA was intended to protect union members in their relations with the union." Aguirre v. Automotive Teamsters,
Like the LMRA's duty of fair representation toward union members, ERISA imposes a special fiduciary duty in favor of employees. In Russell v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
Although these analogies do not favor the union members in this case, we find them more persuasive than the union members' analogy to the California "actual fraud" statute, Cal.Civ.Code Sec. 1572 (West 1982). Section 1572 has only a general relation to employment situations and, under Farmer, may have little scope for actual application in cases covered by federal labor law. See
We need not decide whether the union members' arguments would fail on grounds of proximate cause had they alleged emotional distress only from their temporary unemployments, because they alleged distress from the manner their union treated them instead. Cf. Soto Segarra v. Sea-Land Service, Inc.,
III
Although our narrow holding above leaves the union members without an award of damages, we will not reverse the award of attorneys' fees previously made. The award of fees made on the basis of prevailing party status is the law of the case not subject to alteration "unless the evidence on a subsequent trial was substantially different, controlling authority has since made a contrary decision of the law applicable to such issues, or the decision was clearly erroneous and would work a manifest injustice," Planned Parenthood v. Arizona,
In retrying the damages issue the union members presented a small amount of new evidence, but none "substantially different" and none that of itself would directly affect the question of prevailing parties. Similarly, no new controlling authority has supervened. Cf. Handi Investment Co. v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART.
BOOCHEVER, Circuit Judge, concurring:
Because I believe our holding regarding outrageous conduct is dispositive of the case, I would not reach the issue of the actual damages requirement. We are not required to rule on whether physical injury in addition to emotional distress is a requirement for relief. Before analogizing to Landrum-Griffin Act and Employee Retirement Income Security Act cases I would await a case in which the issue is dispositive. This is particularly so where, as here, the parties have not raised such arguments.
Notes
In his concurrence, Judge Boochever insists we need not reach the issue whether physical injury is a requirement for an award of damages based on emotional distress. But his assertion that an absence of outrageousness is sufficient to decide this case is erroneous. It rests on the mistaken premise that our decision states the following: We need not decide whether the remedy for a breach of the duty of fair representation under the LMRA might include damages for emotional distress because, even if it did, the plaintiffs would have to show both that the union's conduct was outrageous and that they suffered actual injury. His criticism would make sense if this were our holding, for then an absence of outrageousness would end the case
But our holding is better summarized as follows: We need not decide whether the remedy for a breach of the duty of fair representation under the LMRA might include damages for emotional distress because only two possible analogies lend support to such a conclusion and plaintiffs do not satisfy the requirements of either. Such a holding is narrower than the holding Judge Boochever implicitly accords to us in that it leaves to future courts the question whether the damages remedy for emotional distress under the LMRA would, if allowed, require plaintiffs to prove both outrageousness and actual injury. Our opinion goes only so far as to hold that, if allowed, the emotional distress remedy would, at the very least, require plaintiffs to demonstrate either outrageousness or actual injury. Thus, our opinion must show the absence of outrageousness and the absence of actual injury to avoid reaching the issue whether the LMRA includes among its remedies the remedy of damages for emotional distress. Therefore, the majority opinion is the narrowest possible holding while disposing of the issues.
