This litigation is a procedural tangle, and an effort to disentangle it may provide helpful guidance for the future. It began more than two decades ago, in 1976, when William Ford, a former officer of a labor union in Chicago, brought suit against the union and its then-current officers to enforce his democratic rights under the Landrum-Griffin Act. The suit was settled in 1978 by an agreement that required the defendants, among other things, to pay for Ford’s contributions to the union’s pension plan for two years, and to pay throughout his lifetime for his life insurance and health policies with the union. In exchange, he agreed to drop the suit (and appended to the agreement is a comprehensive release executed by him), to quit the union, and to stop running for union office. The agreement is recited in an order signed by the district judge which ends by dismissing the suit “without prejudice to reinstatement in the event that the ... payments are not made by the defendant union” in accordance with the agreement.
In 1991 Ford filed a motion in the district court requesting that his suit be reinstated for the purpose of enforcing the settlement agreement. He claimed primarily that the union had failed to make some of the required payments for his health policy. The district judge (a different one — the original one having retired) agreed, ordered the union to make the payments, and again dismissed the suit without prejudice and with leave to reinstate should the agreement again not be complied with. In 1994, Ford filed another, similar motion. The judge again agreed with Ford and ordered the union to make the payments. But the 1994 motion had a new wrinkle. The union had terminated the pension plan in which Ford had been enrolled. Ford had received an annuity upon termination, and he claimed that he was entitled to a cost of living adjustment to the annuity. The judge held that this was a claim under ERISA, and “should be addressed as a separate lawsuit brought under ERISA. That procedure would allow an appropriate iraming of the issues, which can be refined through motions to dismiss and motions for summary judgment, to the great benefit of the parties and the courts.” The judge’s order grants Ford the other relief he asked for, but not the COLA, and he has appealed, arguing among other things that the release that he executed back in 1978 prevents him from bringing a separate suit with regard to the COLA. The defendants have not appealed from the part of the order that runs against them.
The judge said that his order is “final and appealable.” It is appealable, but it may not be final; we cannot find any order actually dismissing Ford’s reinstated suit. The order, however, is appealable even if not
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final. The judge made clear in his opinion that he will treat the union’s breach of the order as a contempt. The order must therefore be injunctive in character, and therefore appealable without regard to finality. 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1);
Board of Education v. Illinois State Board of Education,
The reason the judge gave for refusing to decide whether Ford is entitled to the COLA is not good. Any framing and refining of issues, en route to a disposition of the claim, can be as easily accomplished on the basis of the motion to reinstate as it could be on the basis of a complaint that incorporated the allegations in the motion. A better ground for dismissing the claim, though not good enough, is that, as we noted just the other day in
Unelko Corp. v. Prestone Products Corp.,
It would be helpful to all concerned if when judges retained jurisdiction of a case they said so rather than using the Aesopian “dismissed with leave to reinstate” formula, which they do presumably so that the case will not be carried on their docket where it might mar the judge’s statistical showing of prompt disposition of the cases assigned to him.
Otis v. City of Chicago,
Ford has in any event an independent jurisdictional basis for his COLA claim— ERISA. The COLA claim is based on an
ERISA case, Hickey v. Chicago Truck Drivers Union,
It doesn’t follow from the fact that the COLA claim is separate from the pending suit (the continuing 1976 suit) that Ford has to bring a brand-new suit in order to press the claim. Joinder of claims in a single complaint is of course permitted, Fed. R.Civ.P. 18(a), so he can move to amend his original complaint (now reinstated) to add an ERISA claim. Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a). Obviously, however, the fact that you have a suit pending against someone doesn’t entitle you to keep adding claims against him, year after year. Amending in 1997 a complaint filed in 1976 is not routine; the district judge would have discretion to refuse to allow Ford to do it.
Foman v. Davis,
Vacated And Remanded, With Directions.
