Martin v. Shaw Supermarkets ( 1997 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion








    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 96-1863
    THERESA MARTIN,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.

    SHAW'S SUPERMARKETS, INC.,
    Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Morris E. Lasker,* Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________

    ____________________
    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________
    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Boudin, Circuit Judge. _____________
    ____________________

    Scott W. Lang with whom Susan Forgue Weiner and Lang, Xifaras & ______________ ____________________ _______________
    Bullard, P.A., Lisa M. Sheehan, Kate Mitchell & Associates, Betsy L. _____________ ________________ __________________________ ________
    Ehrenberg and Angoff, Goldman, Manning, Pyle & Wanger, P.C. were on _________ _______________________________________________
    briefs for appellant.
    Betsy L. Ehrenberg with whom Harold L. Lichten and Angoff, ____________________ ___________________ _______
    Goldman, _______
    Manning, Pyle & Wanger, P.C. were on brief for United Food and _______ _____________________
    Commercial Workers Local Union 791 and National Employment Lawyers
    Association, Massachusetts Chapter, Amici Curiae.
    Duane R. Batista with whom Sharon R. Burger and Nutter, McClennen ________________ _________________ _________________
    & Fish, LLP were on brief for appellee. ___________

    ____________________

    January 28, 1997
    ____________________







    ____________________

    *Of the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation.













    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. This case, presenting a ______________

    difficult preemption issue, began in January 1996 when

    Theresa Martin sued Shaw's Supermarkets, Inc., in

    Massachusetts state court for alleged violations of state

    employment-compensation laws. Martin, an employee of Shaw's

    since 1979, had injured her back in August 1994 while working

    as a bakery clerk. In September 1994, she began receiving

    workers' compensation benefits for temporary total

    disability. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 152, 34.

    In March 1995, Shaw's requested that Martin's physician,

    Dr. James Coleman, establish any necessary work restrictions

    for Martin. Coleman gave Shaw's a list of physical

    restrictions and indicated that Martin could return to work

    if these restrictions were respected. Shaw's then asked

    Martin to see a second doctor. Based on the second

    examination, Shaw's offered Martin four weeks of modified

    duty, to be followed by return to her former position without

    restrictions.

    Martin did not return to work. Instead, through her

    attorney, she again asked for a position fitting the

    restrictions set by Coleman. Shaw's responded by again

    offering Martin her former position with no restrictions.

    When discussion failed to resolve the matter, Shaw's sent

    Martin a letter in September 1995 informing her that she was





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    terminated. The letter referred to Shaw's "policy and

    contract language concerning extended periods of absence."

    On October 19, 1995, Martin reapplied for full-time

    employment with Shaw's, requesting a position with duties

    modified as Coleman had recommended. Shaw's did not respond.

    Later in the month, Martin's union filed a grievance on her

    behalf under its collective bargaining agreement with Shaw's,

    alleging that Martin had been unjustly terminated and

    requesting her reinstatement with reasonable accommodations.

    Three months later, Martin filed the present action in

    Massachusetts state court, claiming that Shaw's had violated

    Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 152, 75A, 75B(2), by failing to rehire

    her. These sections provide, respectively, that an employee

    who lost her job as a result of compensable injury must be

    given rehiring preference by the former employer over non-

    employee applicants, id. 75A, and that no employer may ___

    refuse to hire an employee because she asserted a workers'

    compensation claim, id. 75B(2). Martin's suit did not ___

    contest Shaw's right to discharge her in the first instance.

    In March 1996, Shaw's removed the action to federal

    court, premising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. 1331, and

    moved to dismiss, Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). The district

    court granted Shaw's motion, agreeing that Martin's claims

    were preempted by section 301 of the Labor Management

    Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. 185. Martin now appeals this



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    ruling. The sole issue on appeal is whether section 301

    preempts Martin's state-law claims.1

    Section 301 modestly provides only that "[s]uits for

    violation of contracts between an employer and a labor

    organization representing employees . . . may be brought in

    any district court of the United States having jurisdiction

    of the parties . . . ." 29 U.S.C. 185. But jurisdiction

    begat substantive authority. In Textile Workers v. Lincoln ________________ _______

    Mills, 353 U.S. 448, 451 (1957), the Supreme Court ruled that _____

    this section "authorizes federal courts to fashion a body of

    federal law for the enforcement of . . . collective

    bargaining agreements."

    In turn, substantive authority gave rise to preemption.

    In Teamsters v. Lucas Flour Co., 369 U.S. 95, 103 (1962), the _________ _______________

    Supreme Court held that state law is displaced when courts

    are "called upon to enforce" collective bargaining

    agreements, because those agreements should be governed by

    federal doctrine, rather than varying state contract-law

    principles. Then, two decades later, the Supreme Court said

    that "the pre-emptive effect of 301 must extend beyond

    [state-law] suits alleging contract violations." Allis- ______

    Chalmers Corp. v. Lueck, 471 U.S. 202, 210 (1985). ______________ _____

    ____________________

    1The asserted jurisdictional basis for removal--
    preemption--might appear to offend the well-pleaded complaint
    rule, but where section 301 preemption is concerned, the
    Supreme Court has held that removal is proper. Caterpillar ___________
    Inc. v. Williams, 482 U.S. 386, 393-94 (1987). ____ ________

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    Just how far beyond has never been precisely settled.

    Allis-Chalmers preempted a state-law tort claim closely ______________

    relating to the handling of a labor-agreement grievance.

    Shortly thereafter the Court declared that state-law claims--

    seemingly of whatever character--are preempted if they

    "require construing the collective-bargaining agreement."

    Lingle v. Norge Div. of Magic Chef, Inc., 486 U.S. 399, 407 ______ _______________________________

    (1988). Yet recently, the Supreme Court cautioned that

    section 301 "cannot be read broadly to pre-empt nonnegotiable

    rights conferred on individual employees as a matter of state

    law." Livadas v. Bradshaw, 114 S. Ct. 2068, 2078 (1994). _______ ________

    Nevertheless, Livadas repeated the basic test laid down _______

    by Lingle--namely, that section 301 preempts a state-law ______

    claim wherever a court, in passing upon the asserted state-

    law claim, would be required to interpret a plausibly

    disputed provision of the collective bargaining agreement.

    Id. At first blush, this might seem a puzzling test: both ___

    state and federal courts have authority to enforce collective

    bargaining agreements, and so to interpret their provisions.

    See Charles Dowd Box Co. v. Courtney, 368 U.S. 502, 506 ___ ______________________ ________

    (1962).

    The explanation lies in the Supreme Court's concern to

    enforce arbitration clauses, almost always a feature of labor

    contracts. If judges construed labor agreements in the first

    instance, the Court believed that the arbitration process



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    would be undermined, and there might be divergent readings of

    the labor agreement and interference with the grievance

    process itself. Livadas, 114 S. Ct. at 2078; Allis-Chalmers, _______ ______________

    471 U.S. at 219. Such an arbitration clause is present in

    this case.

    We thus begin by asking, as we have done in the past,

    e.g., Quesnel v. Prudential Ins. Co., 66 F.3d 8, 10-11 (1st ____ _______ ____________________

    Cir. 1995), whether resolution of Martin's claims would

    require an interpretation of the collective bargaining

    agreement. Our premise is that this means a real ____

    interpretive dispute and not merely a pretended dispute.

    Indeed, the Supreme Court has said that the need merely to

    refer in passing to the agreement will not necessarily

    preempt. Livadas, 114 S. Ct. at 2078. _______

    Martin has alleged violations of Mass. Gen. Laws ch.

    152, 75A, 75B(2). Section 75A creates a priority for

    rehiring:

    Any person who has lost a job as a result of an
    injury compensable under this chapter shall be
    given preference in hiring by the employer for whom
    he worked at the time of compensable injury over
    any persons not at the time of application for
    reemployment employed by such employer; provided,
    however, that a suitable job is available.

    The relevant portion of section 75B(2)--a conventional

    prohibition against retaliation--states that "[n]o employer .

    . . shall . . . refuse to hire or in any other manner

    discriminate against an employee because the employee has



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    exercised a right afforded by this [workers compensation]

    chapter."

    If the statutes stopped here, this might be a different

    case. But both statutory sections also contain a proviso

    that "[i]n the event any right set forth in this section is

    inconsistent with an applicable collective bargaining

    agreement," the agreement shall prevail. Id. 75A, 75B(3). ___

    Shaw's argues that both of Martin's statutory claims are

    inconsistent with the labor agreement; that resolution of

    this "inconsistency" charge requires interpretation of the

    agreement; and that the claims are therefore preempted under

    the Supreme Court's own rubric.

    It is very doubtful whether, without this last-quoted

    proviso, Shaw's would have any plausible claim of federal

    preemption. Massachusetts has an independent interest in

    regulating injury compensation; and apart from the proviso,

    the elements of both Martin's state-law claims appear to be

    independent of bargaining agreement provisions. There are

    other types of labor preemption, apart from Lingle's "require ______

    construing" test,2 but Shaw's does not argue that Martin's

    state claims would be preempted absent the proviso.


    ____________________

    2Broadly speaking, most cases of preemption in the labor
    field involve conflict, or potential conflict, between state
    law and federal labor policy. But sometimes the conflict
    arises out of some source other than the need to interpret a
    labor agreement. E.g., Livadas; San Diego Bldg. Trades ____ _______ ________________________
    Council v. Garmon, 359 U.S. 236 (1959). _______ ______

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    Rather, Shaw's argues that Massachusetts has as a matter

    of state law chosen to make the substantive rights conferred ______

    by the statutes depend upon their not being "inconsistent"

    with a labor agreement. This court endorsed just such a

    reading of the proviso of section 75B, which is identical in

    substance to the provision of section 75A, in Magerer v. John _______ ____

    Sexton & Co., 912 F.2d 525, 529-30 (1st Cir. 1990). And _____________

    Magerer merely holds Massachusetts to the literal wording of _______

    its own statute.

    The question remains whether Shaw's labor agreement is

    colorably inconsistent with Martin's state-law claims.

    Shaw's best argument rests upon the agreement's "management

    rights" clause, which states that Shaw's has the "sole right

    to manage its business including . . . the right[] . . . to

    hire, assign and promote Employees." Shaw's says that Martin

    is a former employee seeking to be rehired, that the

    agreement regulates this subject (but not in a way that

    protects Martin in this case), and that in all other respects

    the union has agreed to management's right to choose which

    former employees to rehire.

    Martin responds that the "management rights" clause

    cannot be inconsistent with her state-law claims in this case

    because she is no longer covered by the agreement. Yet the

    agreement does give former Shaw's employees some specific

    priority rights to be rehired. See Collective Bargaining ___



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    Agreement Art. 12(B) ("Full-time employees laid off because

    of lack of work when no other full-time work is available

    shall be offered part-time work [if available] . . . .").

    And the "management rights" clause by its terms embraces

    decisions as to hiring.

    Martin next says that Shaw's employee handbook

    guarantees to her the very right to priority in rehiring

    established by section 75A. The handbook does contain

    language that is fairly close to the rehiring priority

    contained in section 75A, suggesting that Shaw's itself

    treats this priority right (although not necessarily the

    protection against retaliation) as consistent with its

    "management rights" clause. But for purposes of construing

    the "management rights" clause, the handbook is at best a

    gloss.

    Whether the handbook does constitute a gloss and, if so,

    what weight it should be given are issues of interpreting the

    collective bargaining agreement. The handbook may well

    weaken Shaw's reliance on the "management rights" clause; but

    the handbook may simply be a reference to state law, whose

    application Shaw's has now rethought in the face of

    litigation. To entertain Martin's state-law claims would

    still require a court to interpret the agreement, which is

    precisely what Supreme Court precedents forbid.

    Accord Magerer, 912 F.2d at 530. ______ _______



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    Martin next asserts that any waiver of statutory rights

    by a union and management in a collective bargaining

    agreement must be "clear and unmistakable." See Livadas, 114 ___ _______

    S. Ct. at 2079 (citations omitted). But Shaw's preemption

    claim does not depend upon a "waiver" of statutory

    protections; indeed, it is unclear under Massachusetts law

    that the statutory protections can be "waived." Cf. Mass. ___

    Gen. Laws ch. 152, 75B(3) (limiting waiver). Rather, the

    statutes themselves expressly withhold protection where it

    would be "inconsistent" with labor agreements, without

    requiring the inconsistency to be "clear and unmistakable."

    We conclude that under Supreme Court and First Circuit

    precedent, Martin's state law claims are preempted. This is

    not because the collective bargaining agreement is __

    inconsistent with the state claims asserted, but because it

    may be so and requires interpretation. We could ourselves ___

    remove the doubt by interpreting the agreement one way or the

    other, but this course has been foreclosed in deference to

    the arbitration clause. As all of this appears to follow

    logically, the question remains why the outcome may seem

    faintly troubling.

    One reason is that Massachusetts' statutory proviso,

    making the rights conferred yield to inconsistent labor

    agreements, may be producing some results that the

    legislature did not intend. When the statutes were enacted



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    in December 1985, Massachusetts might have thought that the

    proviso was necessary to avoid preemption; the legislature _____

    might be chagrined to discover that the proviso has

    unnecessarily curtailed workers' rights. But this is at best

    a debatable inference,3 and we have found no helpful

    legislative history.

    Possibly, the proviso could be construed to require more

    than mere inconsistency. Or a state court could hold that

    the rights conferred yield only to highly specific provisions

    in a labor agreement and not to a generic "management rights"

    clause. But both readings would ignore the explicit language

    of the proviso. Perhaps the state did intend to defer to the

    labor agreement even where it assisted the employer. Despite

    the clear warning sent by Magerer in 1990, Massachusetts has _______

    not chosen to amend the statutes.

    The other reason why the outcome may seem troubling is

    that it could result in Martin having no claim at all against

    Shaw's, even for retaliation. This charge is, of course,

    merely an allegation; but even if it proved to have

    substance, it would be preempted because of the collective


    ____________________

    3Shortly before the legislature acted in 1985, the
    Supreme Court made clear that section 301 does not "give the
    substantive provisions of private agreements the force of
    federal law, ousting any inconsistent state regulation."
    Allis-Chalmers, 471 U.S. at 212. See also Metropolitan Life ______________ ________ _________________
    Ins. Co. v. Massachusetts, 471 U.S. 724, 755-56 (1985) _________ _____________
    (holding that state mandated-benefits laws were not generally
    preempted).

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    bargaining agreement, and yet the agreement may itself

    provide no remedy. Preemption sometimes does result in a

    complete denial of remedies for obvious wrong, e.g., Smith v. ____ _____

    Dunham-Busch, Inc., 959 F.2d 6, 11 (2d Cir. 1992), but this __________________

    is not a result one eagerly embraces.

    Various possibilities may cushion this outcome. If the

    employee handbook is a gloss on the collective bargaining __

    agreement, perhaps the language already mentioned may not

    only defeat the "management rights" defense but also give

    rise to affirmative obligations on the part of the employer

    enforceable through arbitration. Or, perhaps arbitration

    would yield a definitive ruling that the "management rights"

    clause, and any other clause relied upon by Shaw's, is not

    "inconsistent" with the rights contingently secured by the

    statutes.

    If all else fails, the union is free to negotiate

    language that eliminates this issue the next time it renews

    its labor agreement. The parties entered the current

    agreement in 1994, well after Magerer was decided, but the _______

    absence of such language in the present agreement may be an

    oversight. All that it would take to prevent preemption is

    an explicit provision stating that nothing in the agreement

    is intended to create management rights inconsistent with any

    workers' rights under sections 75A and 75B.





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    Finally, in a reply brief, Martin and her union (which

    appears as an amicus and has ably supported Martin) offer a

    preemption claim of their own. They say that a discharged

    non-union worker could invoke the Massachusetts statutes and

    that by allowing the collective bargaining agreement to

    extinguish Martin's rights, the Massachusetts proviso

    discriminates against members or former members of unions,

    thereby offending federal labor policy. This, they say,

    Livadas itself forbids. _______

    Livadas struck down a state administrative practice _______

    because it effectively discriminated against union members as

    compared with non-members, 114 S. Ct. at 2074-75, a

    preemption theory that has nothing to do with section 301.

    On the reasoning of Livadas, Massachusetts arguably could not _______

    provide that a rehiring priority, or a claim against

    retaliation, would be made available only to workers who were

    not members of a union. But here Massachusetts has done

    nothing of the kind.

    Instead, the proviso in question permits the union on

    behalf of its members to craft its own regime (the agreement)

    and in it, either to preserve or displace another regime

    (specified provisions of state law). Viewed in the large,

    there is no discrimination whatever against union members;

    Massachusetts simply allows the union to negotiate for a





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    different package of benefits. Next time, as we have noted,

    the union is free to bargain differently.

    Affirmed. ________















































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