A union entered into a collective bargaining agreement with an
employer providing that there would be no strikes or work stoppages
and that grievances would be handled pursuant to a specified
procedure, the last step of which was arbitration. Grievances arose
and were processed through various steps in the grievance procedure
until the union's demands were finally denied by the employer. The
union requested arbitration, and the employer refused. Thereupon,
the union sued in a Federal District Court to compel
arbitration.
Held:
1. Under § 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act of
1947, the District Court properly decreed specific performance of
the agreement to arbitrate the grievance dispute. Pp.
353 U. S.
449-456.
2. The substantive law to be applied in suits under §
301(a) is federal law, which the courts must fashion from the
policy of our national labor laws. Pp.
353 U. S.
456-457.
3. As here construed, § 301(a) is constitutional. P.
353 U. S.
457.
4. Jurisdiction to compel arbitration of grievance disputes is
not withdrawn by the Norris-LaGuardia Act. Pp.
353 U. S.
457-459.
5. The employer in this case having ceased operations and
contracted to sell its mill properties, the case is moot insofar as
the union sought restoration of workloads and job assignments; but
it is not moot to the extent that it sought a monetary award. P.
353 U. S.
459.
230 F.2d 81, reversed.
Page 353 U. S. 449
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner union entered into a collective bargaining agreement
in 1953 with respondent employer, the agreement to run one year and
from year to year thereafter, unless terminated on specified
notices. The agreement provided that there would be no strikes or
work stoppages, and that grievances would be handled pursuant to a
specified procedure. The last step in the grievance procedure -- a
step that could be taken by either party was arbitration.
This controversy involves several grievances that concern work
loads and work assignments. The grievances were processed through
the various steps in the grievance procedure, and were finally
denied by the employer. The union requested arbitration, and the
employer refused. Thereupon the union brought this suit in the
District Court to compel arbitration.
The District Court concluded that it had jurisdiction, and
ordered the employer to comply with the grievance arbitration
provisions of the collective bargaining agreement. The Court of
Appeals reversed by a divided vote. 230 F.2d 81. It held that,
although the District Court had jurisdiction to entertain the suit,
the court had no authority founded either in federal or state law
to grant the relief. The case is here on a petition for a writ of
certiorari which we granted because of the importance of the
problem and the contrariety of views in the courts. 352 U.S.
821.
The starting point of our inquiry is § 301 of the Labor
Management Relations Act of 1947, 61 Stat. 156, 29 U.S.C. §
185, which provides:
"(a) Suits for violation of contracts between an employer and a
labor organization representing employees in an industry affecting
commerce, as
Page 353 U. S. 450
defined in this chapter, or between any such labor
organizations, may be brought in any district court of the United
States having jurisdiction of the parties, without respect to the
amount in controversy or without regard to the citizenship of the
parties."
"(b) Any labor organization which represents employees in an
industry affecting commerce as defined in this chapter and any
employer whose activities affect commerce as defined in this
chapter shall be bound by the acts of its agents. Any such labor
organization may sue or be sued as an entity and in behalf of the
employees whom it represents in the courts of the United States.
Any money judgment against a labor organization in a district court
of the United States shall be enforceable only against the
organization as an entity and against its assets, and shall not be
enforceable against any individual member or his assets."
There has been considerable litigation involving § 301, and
courts have construed it differently. There is one view that §
301(a) merely gives federal district courts jurisdiction in
controversies that involve labor organizations in industries
affecting commerce, without regard to diversity of citizenship or
the amount in controversy. [
Footnote 1] Under that view, § 301(a) would not be
the source of substantive law; it would neither supply federal law
to resolve these controversies nor turn the federal judges to state
law for answers to the questions. Other courts -- the overwhelming
number of them -- hold that § 301(a) is
Page 353 U. S. 451
more than jurisdictional [
Footnote 2] -- that it authorizes federal courts to
fashion a body of federal law for the enforcement of these
collective bargaining agreements, and includes within that federal
law specific performance of promises to arbitrate grievances under
collective bargaining agreements. Perhaps the leading decision
representing that point of view is the one rendered by Judge
Wyzanski in
Textile Workers Union v. American Thread
Co., 113 F.
Supp. 137. That is our construction of § 301(a), which
means that the agreement to arbitrate grievance disputes, contained
in this collective bargaining agreement, should be specifically
enforced.
From the face of the Act, it is apparent that § 301(a) and
§ 301(b) supplement one another. Section 301(b) makes it
possible for a labor organization, representing employees in an
industry affecting commerce, to sue and be sued as an entity in the
federal courts. Section 301(b), in other words, provides the
procedural remedy lacking at common law. Section 301(a) certainly
does something more than that. Plainly, it supplies the basis
Page 353 U. S. 452
upon which the federal district courts may take jurisdiction and
apply the procedural rule of § 301(b). The question is whether
§ 301(a) is more than jurisdictional.
The legislative history of § 301 is somewhat cloudy and
confusing. But there are a few shafts of light that illuminate our
problem.
The bills, as they passed the House and the Senate, contained
provisions which would have made the failure to abide by an
agreement to arbitrate an unfair labor practice. S.Rep. No. 105,
80th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 20 21, 23; H.R.Rep. No. 245, 80th Cong.,
1st Sess., p. 21. [
Footnote 3]
This feature of the law was dropped in Conference. As the
Conference Report stated,
"Once parties have made a collective bargaining contract, the
enforcement of that contract should be left to the usual processes
of the law, and not to the National Labor Relations Board."
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 510, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 42.
Page 353 U. S. 453
Both the Senate and the House took pains to provide for "the
usual processes of the law" by provisions which were the
substantial equivalent of § 301(a) in its present form. Both
the Senate Report and the House Report indicate a primary concern
that unions, as well as employees, should be bound to collective
bargaining contracts. But there was also a broader concern a
concern with a procedure for making such agreements enforceable in
the courts by either party. At one point, the Senate Report,
supra, p. 15, states,
"We feel that the aggrieved party should also have a right of
action in the Federal courts. Such a policy is completely in accord
with the purpose of the Wagner Act, which the Supreme Court
declared was"
"to compel employers to bargain collectively with their
employees to the end that an employment contract, binding on both
parties, should be made. . . ."
Congress was also interested in promoting collective bargaining
that ended with agreements not to strike. [
Footnote 4]
Page 353 U. S. 454
The Senate Report, supra, p. 16 states:
"If unions can break agreements with relative impunity, then
such agreements do not tend to stabilize industrial relations. The
execution of an agreement does not, by itself, promote industrial
peace. The chief advantage which an employer can reasonably expect
from a collective labor agreement is assurance of uninterrupted
operation during the term of the agreement. Without some effective
method of assuring freedom from economic warfare for the term of
the agreement, there is little reason why an employer would desire
to sign such a contract."
"Consequently, to encourage the making of agreements and to
promote industrial peace through faithful performance by the
parties, collective agreements affecting interstate commerce should
be enforceable in the Federal courts. Our amendment would provide
for suits by unions as legal entities and against unions as legal
entities in the Federal courts in disputes affecting commerce."
Thus, collective bargaining contracts were made "equally binding
and enforceable on both parties."
Id., p. 15. As stated in
the House Report,
supra, p. 6, the new provision
"makes labor organizations equally responsible with employers
for contract violations and provides for suit by either against the
other in the United States district courts."
To repeat, the Senate Report,
supra, p. 17, summed up
the philosophy of § 301 as follows:
"Statutory recognition of the collective agreement as a valid,
binding, and enforceable contract is a logical and necessary step.
It will promote a higher degree of responsibility upon the parties
to such agreements, and will thereby promote industrial peace.
"
Page 353 U. S. 455
Plainly, the agreement to arbitrate grievance disputes is the
quid pro quo for an agreement not to strike. Viewed in
this light, the legislation does more than confer jurisdiction in
the federal courts over labor organizations. It expresses a federal
policy that federal courts should enforce these agreements on
behalf of or against labor organizations, and that industrial peace
can be best obtained only in that way.
To be sure, there is a great medley of ideas reflected in the
hearings, reports, and debates on this Act. Yet, to repeat, the
entire tenor of the history indicates that the agreement to
arbitrate grievance disputes was considered as
quid pro
quo of a no-strike agreement. And when in the House the debate
narrowed to the question whether § 301 was more than
jurisdictional, it became abundantly clear that the purpose of the
section was to provide the necessary legal remedies. Section 302 of
the House bill, [
Footnote 5]
the substantial equivalent of the present § 301, was being
described by Mr. Hartley, the sponsor of the bill in the House:
"Mr. BARDEN. Mr. Chairman, I take this time for the purpose of
asking the Chairman a question, and, in asking the question I want
it understood that it is intended to make a part of the record that
may hereafter be referred to as history of the legislation."
"It is my understanding that section 302, the section dealing
with equal responsibility under collective bargaining contracts in
strike actions and proceedings
Page 353 U. S. 456
in district courts contemplates not only the ordinary lawsuits
for damages, but also such other remedial proceedings, both legal
and equitable, as might be appropriate in the circumstances; in
other words, proceedings could, for example, be brought by the
employers, the labor organizations, or interested individual
employees under the Declaratory Judgments Act in order to secure
declarations from the Court of legal rights under the
contract."
"Mr. HARTLEY. The interpretation the gentleman has just given of
that section is absolutely correct."
93 Cong.Rec. 3656 3657.
It seems, therefore, clear to us that Congress adopted a policy
which placed sanctions behind agreements to arbitrate grievance
disputes, [
Footnote 6] by
implication rejecting the common law rule, discussed in
Red
Cross Line v. Atlantic Fruit Co., 264 U.
S. 109, against enforcement of executory agreements to
arbitrate. [
Footnote 7] We
would undercut the Act and defeat its policy if we read § 301
narrowly as only conferring jurisdiction over labor
organizations.
The question, then is what is the substantive law to be applied
in suits under § 301(a)? We conclude that the substantive law
to apply in suits under § 301(a) is federal law, which the
courts must fashion from the policy of our national labor laws.
See Mendelsohn, Enforceability of
Page 353 U. S. 457
Arbitration Agreements Under Taft-Hartley Section 301, 66 Yale
L.J. 167. The Labor Management Relations Act expressly furnishes
some substantive law. It points out what the parties may or may not
do in certain situations. Other problems will lie in the penumbra
of express statutory mandates. Some will lack express statutory
sanction, but will be solved by looking at the policy of the
legislation and fashioning a remedy that will effectuate that
policy. The range of judicial inventiveness will be determined by
the nature of the problem.
See Board of Commissioners v. United
States, 308 U. S. 343,
308 U. S. 351.
Federal interpretation of the federal law will govern, not state
law.
Cf. Jerome v. United States, 318 U.
S. 101,
318 U. S. 104.
But state law, if compatible with the purpose of § 301, may be
resorted to in order to find the rule that will best effectuate the
federal policy.
See Board of Commissioners v. United States,
supra, at
308 U. S. 351
352. Any state law applied, however, will be absorbed as federal
law, and will not be an independent source of private rights.
It is not uncommon for federal courts to fashion federal law
where federal rights are concerned.
See Clearfield Trust Co. v.
United States, 318 U. S. 363,
318 U. S.
366-367;
National Metropolitan Bank v. United
States, 323 U. S. 454.
Congress has indicated by § 301(a) the purpose to follow that
course here. There is no constitutional difficulty. Article III,
§ 2, extends the judicial power to cases "arising under . . .
the Laws of the United States. . . ." The power of Congress to
regulate these labor-management controversies under the Commerce
Clause is plain.
Houston & Texas R. Co. v. United
States, 234 U. S. 342;
Labor Board v. Jones & Laughlin Corp., 301 U. S.
1. A case or controversy arising under § 301(a) is,
therefore, one within the purview of judicial power as defined in
Article III.
The question remains whether jurisdiction to compel arbitration
of grievance disputes is withdrawn by the
Page 353 U. S. 458
Norris-LaGuardia Act, 47 Stat. 70, 29 U.S.C. § 101. Section
7 of that Act prescribes stiff procedural requirements for issuing
an injunction in a labor dispute. The kinds of acts which had given
rise to abuse of the power to enjoin are listed in § 4. The
failure to arbitrate was not a part and parcel of the abuses
against which the Act was aimed. Section 8 of the Norris-LaGuardia
Act does, indeed, indicate a congressional policy toward settlement
of labor disputes by arbitration, for it denies injunctive relief
to any person who has failed to make "every reasonable effort" to
settle the dispute by negotiation, mediation, or "voluntary
arbitration." Though a literal reading might bring the dispute
within the terms of the Act (
see Cox, Grievance
Arbitration in the Federal Courts, 67 Harv.L.Rev. 591, 602-604), we
see no justification in policy for restricting § 301(a) to
damage suits, leaving specific performance of a contract to
arbitrate grievance disputes to the inapposite [
Footnote 8] procedural requirements of that Act.
Moreover, we held in
Virginia R. Co. v. System Federation,
300 U. S. 515, and
in
Graham v. Brotherhood of Firemen, 338 U.
S. 232,
338 U. S. 237,
that the Norris-LaGuardia Act does not deprive federal courts of
jurisdiction to compel compliance with the mandates of the Railway
Labor Act. The mandates there involved concerned racial
discrimination. Yet those decisions were not based on any
peculiarities of the Railway Labor Act. We followed the same course
in
Syres v. Oil Workers International Union, 350 U.S. 892,
which was governed by the National Labor Relations Act. There, an
injunction was sought against racial discrimination in application
of a collective bargaining agreement, and we allowed the injunction
to issue. The congressional policy in favor of the enforcement of
agreements to arbitrate
Page 353 U. S. 459
grievance disputes being clear, [
Footnote 9] there is no reason to submit them to the
requirements of § 7 of the Norris-LaGuardia Act.
A question of mootness was raised on oral argument. It appears
that, since the date of the decision in the Court of Appeals,
respondent has terminated its operations and has contracted to sell
its mill properties. All work in the mill ceased in March, 1957.
Some of the grievances, however, ask for back pay for increased
work loads; and the collective bargaining agreement provides that
"the Board of Arbitration shall have the right to adjust
compensation retroactive to the date of the change." Insofar as the
grievances sought restoration of workloads and job assignments, the
case is, of course, moot. But to the extent that they sought a
monetary award, the case is a continuing controversy.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the cause
is remanded to that court for proceedings in conformity with this
opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union v. Jay-Ann
Co., 228 F.2d 632 (C.A. 5th Cir.),
semble; United
Steelworkers v. Galland-Henning Mfg. Co., 241 F.2d 323, 325
(C.A. 7th Cir.);
Mercury Oil Refining Co. v. Oil Workers
Union, 187 F.2d 980, 983 (C.A. 10th Cir.).
[
Footnote 2]
The following decisions are to the effect that § 301(a)
creates substantive rights:
Shirley-Herman Co. v. International Hod Carriers Union,
182 F.2d 806, 809 (C.A. 2d Cir.),;
Rock Drilling Union v. Mason
& Hanger Co., 217 F.2d 687, 691-692 (C.A. 2d Cir.);
Signal-Stat. Corp. v. Local 475 235 F.2d 298, 300 (C.A. 2d
Cir.);
Association of Westinghouse Salaried Employees v.
Westinghouse Electric Corp., 210 F.2d 623, 625 (C.A. 3d Cir.),
affirmed on other grounds, 348 U. S. 348 U.S.
437;
Textile Workers Union v. Arista Mills, 193 F.2d 529,
533 (C.A. 4th Cir.);
Hamilton Foundry v. International Molders
& Foundry Union, 193 F.2d 209, 215 (C.A. 6th Cir.);
American Federation of Labor v. Western Union, 179 F.2d
535 (C.A. 6th Cir.);
Milk & Ice Cream Drivers v. Gillespie
Milk Prod. Corp., 203 F.2d 650, 651 (C.A. 6th Cir.);
United Electrical, R. & M. Workers v. Oliver Corp.,
205 F.2d 376, 384 385 (C.A. 8th Cir.);
Schatte v. International
Alliance, 182 F.2d 158, 164 (C.A. 9th Cir.).
[
Footnote 3]
The Senate bill contained provisions which would have made it an
unfair labor practice for either an employer or a union "to violate
the terms of a collective bargaining agreement or the terms of an
agreement to submit a labor dispute to arbitration." The Senate
Report indicated that these provisions would permit the Board to
grant relief in the same instances where suit might be maintained
under § 301.
"While title III of the committee bill treats this subject by
giving both parties rights to sue in the United States district
court, the committee believes that such action should also be
available before an administrative body."
The House bill defined the term "bargain collectively" so as to
require that,
"If an agreement is in effect between the parties providing a
procedure for adjusting or settling such disputes, following such
procedure."
Commenting on this definition in § 2 of the House bill, the
House Report stated:
"When parties have agreed upon a procedure for settling their
differences, and the agreement is in effect, they will be required
to follow the procedure or be held guilty of an unfair labor
practice. Most agreements provide procedures for settling
grievances, generally including some form of arbitration as the
last step. Consequently, this clause will operate in most cases,
except those involving the negotiation of new contracts."
[
Footnote 4]
S.Rep. No. 105, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 17 18 states:
"Statutory recognition of the collective agreement as a valid,
binding, and enforceable contract is a logical and necessary step.
It will promote a higher degree of responsibility upon the parties
to such agreements, and will thereby promote industrial peace."
"It has been argued that the result of making collective
agreements enforceable against unions would be that they would no
longer consent to the inclusion of a no-strike clause in a
contract."
"This argument is not supported by the record in the few States
which have enacted their own laws in an effort to secure some
measure of union responsibility for breaches of contract. Four
States -- Minnesota, Colorado, Wisconsin, and California -- have
thus far enacted such laws and, so far as can be learned, no-strike
clauses have been continued about as before."
"In any event, it is certainly a point to be bargained over, and
any union with the status of 'representative' under the NLRA which
has bargained in good faith with an employer should have no
reluctance in including a no-strike clause if it intends to live up
to the terms of the contract. The improvement that would result in
the stability of industrial relations is, of course, obvious."
[
Footnote 5]
Section 302(a), as it passed the House, read as follows:
"Any action for or proceeding involving a violation of an
agreement between an employer and a labor organization or other
representative of employees may be brought by either party in any
district court of the United States having jurisdiction of the
parties, without regard to the amount in controversy, if such
agreement affects commerce, or the court otherwise has jurisdiction
of the cause."
[
Footnote 6]
Association of Westinghouse Employees v. Westinghouse
Corp., 348 U. S. 437, is
quite a different case. There, the union sued to recover unpaid
wages on behalf of some 4,000 employees. The basic question
concerned the standing of the union to sue and recover on those
individual employment contracts. The question here concerns the
right of the union to enforce the agreement to arbitrate which it
has made with the employer.
[
Footnote 7]
We do not reach the question, which the Court reserved in
Red Cross Line v. Atlantic Fruit Co., supra, p.
264 U. S. 125,
whether, as a matter of federal law, executory agreements to
arbitrate are enforceable, absent congressional approval.
[
Footnote 8]
See Judge Magruder in
Local 205 v. General Electric
Co., 233 F.2d 85, 92.
[
Footnote 9]
Whether there are situations in which individual employees may
bring suit in an appropriate state or federal court to enforce
grievance rights under employment contracts where the collective
bargaining agreement provides for arbitration of those grievances
is a question we do not reach in this case.
Cf. Assn. of
Westinghouse Employees v. Westinghouse Corp., 348 U.
S. 437,
348 U. S. 460,
348 U. S. 464;
Moore v. Illinois Central R. Co., 312 U.
S. 630;
Slocum v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co.,
339 U. S. 239;
Transcontinental & Western Air v. Koppal, 345 U.
S. 653.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON, whom MR. JUSTICE HARLAN joins, concurring in
the result.
This suit was brought in a United States District Court under
§ 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act of
Page 353 U. S. 460
1947, 61 Stat. 156, 29 U.S.C. § 185, seeking specific
enforcement of the arbitration provisions of a collective
bargaining contract. The District Court had jurisdiction over the
action, since it involved an obligation running to a union a union
controversy and not uniquely personal rights of employees sought to
be enforced by a union.
Cf. Association of Westinghouse
Employees v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 348 U.
S. 437. Having jurisdiction over the suit, the court was
not powerless to fashion an appropriate federal remedy. The power
to decree specific performance of a collectively bargained
agreement to arbitrate finds its source in § 301 itself,
[
Footnote 2/1] and in a Federal
District Court's inherent equitable powers, nurtured by a
congressional policy to encourage and enforce labor arbitration in
industries affecting commerce. [
Footnote 2/2]
I do not subscribe to the conclusion of the Court that the
substantive law to be applied in a suit under § 301 is federal
law. At the same time, I agree with Judge Magruder in
International Brotherhood v. W. L. Mead, Inc., 230 F.2d
576, that some federal rights may necessarily be involved in a
§ 301 case, and hence that the constitutionality of § 301
can be upheld as a congressional grant to Federal District Courts
of what has been called "protective jurisdiction."
[
Footnote 2/1]
See the opinion of Judge Wyzanski in
Textile Workers Union
v. American Thread Co., 113 F.
Supp. 137.
[
Footnote 2/2]
See the dissent of Judge Brown in the Court of Appeals
in this case, 230 F.2d 81, 89.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER dissenting.
The Court has avoided the difficult problems raised by §
301 of the Taft-Hartley Act, 61 Stat. 156, 29 U.S.C.
Page 353 U. S. 461
§ 185, [
Footnote 3/1] by
attributing to the section an occult content. This plainly
procedural section is transmuted into a mandate to the federal
courts to fashion a whole body of substantive federal law
appropriate for the complicated and touchy problems raised by
collective bargaining. I have set forth in my opinion in
Employees v. Westinghouse Corp. the detailed reasons why I
believe that § 301 cannot be so construed, even if
constitutional questions
Page 353 U. S. 462
cannot be avoided.
348 U. S. 348 U.S.
437,
348 U. S.
441-449,
348 U. S.
452-459. But the Court has a "clear" and contrary
conclusion emerge from the "somewhat," to say the least, "cloudy
and confusing legislative history." This is more than can be fairly
asked even from the alchemy of construction. Since the Court relies
on a few isolated statements in the legislative history which do
not support its conclusion, however favoringly read, I have deemed
in necessary to set forth in an
353
U.S. 448app|>appendix the entire relevant legislative
history of the Taft-Hartley Act and its predecessor, the Case Bill.
This legislative history reinforces the natural meaning of the
statute as an exclusively procedural provision, affording, that is,
an accessible federal forum for suits on agreements between labor
organizations and employers, but not enacting federal law for such
suits.
See also Wollett and Wllington, Federalism and
Breach of the Labor Agreement, 7 Stan.L.Rev. 445.
I have also set forth, in my opinion in the
Westinghouse case, an outline of the vast problems that
the Court's present decision creates by bringing into conflict
state law and federal law, state courts and federal courts. 348
U.S. at
348 U. S.
454-455;
see also Judge Wyzanski's opinion in
Textile Workers Union of America v. American Thread
Co., 113 F.
Supp. 137, 140. These problems are not rendered nonexistent by
disregard of them. It should also be noted that, whatever may be a
union's
ad hoc benefit in a particular case, the meaning
of collective bargaining for labor does not remotely derive from
reliance on the sanction of litigation in the courts. Restrictions
made by legislation like the Clayton Act of 1914, 38 Stat. 738,
§§ 20, 22, and the Norris-LaGuardia Act of 1932, 47 Stat.
70, upon the use of familiar remedies theretofore available in the
federal courts, reflected deep fears of the labor movement of the
use of such remedies against labor. But a union, like any other
combatant engaged in a particular fight, is ready to make an ally
of an old enemy,
Page 353 U. S. 463
and so we also find unions resorting to the otherwise much
excoriated labor injunction. Such intermittent yielding to
expediency does not change the fact that judicial intervention is
ill suited to the special characteristics of the arbitration
process in labor disputes; nor are the conditions for its effective
functioning thereby altered.
"The arbitration is an integral part of the system of
self-government. And the system is designed to aid management in
its quest for efficiency, to assist union leadership in its
participation in the enterprise, and to secure justice for the
employees. It is a means of making collective bargaining work, and
thus preserving private enterprise in a free government. When it
works fairly well, it does not need the sanction of the law of
contracts or the law of arbitration. It is only when the system
breaks down completely that the courts' aid in these respects is
invoked. But the courts cannot, by occasional sporadic decision,
restore the parties' continuing relationship, and their
intervention in such cases may seriously affect the going systems
of self-government. When their autonomous system breaks down, might
not the parties better be left to the usual methods for adjustment
of labor disputes, rather than to court actions on the contract or
on the arbitration award?"
Shulman, Reason, Contract, and Law in Labor Relations, 68
Harv.L.Rev. 999, 1024.
These reflections summarized the vast and extraordinarily
successful experience of Dean Harry Shulman as labor arbitrator,
especially as umpire under the collective bargaining contract
between the Ford Motor Co. and the UAW-CIO. (
See his
Opinions of the Umpire, Ford Motor Co. and UAW-CIO, 1943-1946, and
the review by E. Merrick Dodd in 60 Harv.L.Rev. 486.) Arbitration
agreements are for specific terms, generally much shorter than the
time required for adjudication of a contested
Page 353 U. S. 464
lawsuit through the available stages of trial and appeal.
Renegotiation of agreements cannot await the outcome of such
litigation; nor can the parties' continuing relation await it.
Cases under § 301 will probably present unusual, rather than
representative, situations. A "rule" derived from them is more
likely to discombobulate than to compose. A "uniform corpus" cannot
be expected to evolve, certainly not within a time to serve its
assumed function.
The prickly and extensive problems that the supposed grant would
create further counsel against a finding that the grant was made.
They present hazardous opportunities for friction in the regulation
of contracts between employers and unions. They involve the
division of power between State and Nation, between state courts
and federal courts, including the effective functioning of this
Court. Wisdom suggests self-restraint in undertaking to solve these
problems unless the Court is clearly directed to do so. Section 301
is not such a direction. The legislative history contains no
suggestion that these problems were considered; the terms of the
section do not present them.
One word more remains to be said. The earliest declaration of
unconstitutionality of an act of Congress by the Justices on
circuit involved a refusal by the Justices to perform a function
imposed upon them by Congress because of the nonjudicial nature of
that function.
Hayburn's Case,
2 Dall. 409. Since then, the Court has many times declared
legislation unconstitutional because it imposed on the Court powers
or functions that were regarded as outside the scope of the
"judicial power" lodged in the Court by the Constitution.
See,
e.g., 5 U. S.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137;
United States v.
Ferreira, 13 How. 40;
Muskrat v. United
States, 219 U. S. 346;
Keller v. Potomac Electric Power Co., 261 U.
S. 428.
One may fairly generalize from these instances that the Court
has deemed itself peculiarly qualified, with due
Page 353 U. S. 465
regard to the contrary judgment of Congress, to determine what
is meet and fit for the exercise of "judicial power" as authorized
by the Constitution. Solicitude and respect for the confines of
"judicial power," and the difficult problem of marking those
confines apply equally in construing precisely what duties Congress
has cast upon the federal courts, especially when, as in this case,
the most that can be said in support of finding a congressional
desire to impose these "legislative" duties on the federal courts
is that Congress did not mention the problem in the statute, and
that, insofar as purpose may be gathered from congressional reports
and debates, they leave us in the dark.
The Court, however, sees no problem of "judicial power" in
casting upon the federal courts, with no guides except "judicial
inventiveness," the task of applying a whole industrial code that
is as yet in the bosom of the judiciary. There are severe limits on
"judicial inventiveness" even for the most imaginative judges. The
law is not a "brooding omnipresence in the sky," (Mr. Justice
Holmes, dissenting, in
Southern Pacific Co. v. Jensen,
244 U. S. 205,
244 U. S.
222), and it cannot be drawn from there like nitrogen
from the air. These problems created by the Court's interpretation
of § 301 cannot
"be solved by resort to the established canons of construction
that enable a court to look through awkward or clumsy expression,
or language wanting in precision, to the intent of the legislature.
For the vice of the statute here lies in the impossibility of
ascertaining, by any reasonable test, that the legislature meant
one thing, rather than another. . . ."
Connally v. General Construction Co., 269 U.
S. 385,
269 U. S. 394.
But the Court makes § 301 a mountain, instead of a molehill,
and, by giving an example of "judicial inventiveness," it thereby
solves all the constitutional problems that would otherwise have to
be faced.
Even on the Court's attribution to § 301 of a direction to
the federal courts to fashion, out of bits and pieces
Page 353 U. S. 466
elsewhere to be gathered, a federal common law of labor
contracts, it still does not follow that Congress has enacted that
an agreement to arbitrate industrial differences be specifically
enforceable in the federal courts. On the contrary, the body of
relevant federal law precludes such enforcement of arbitration
clauses in collective bargaining agreements.
Prior to 1925, the doctrine that executory agreements to
arbitrate any kind of dispute would not be specifically enforced
still held sway in the federal courts.
See, e.g., Judge
Hough's opinion in
United States Asphalt Refining Co. v.
Trinidad Lake Petroleum Co., 222 F. 1006; Judge Mack's opinion
in
Atlantic Fruit Co. v. Red Cross Line, 276 F. 319; and
Mr. Justice Brandeis' opinion in
Red Cross Line v. Atlantic
Fruit Co., 264 U. S. 109,
264 U. S. 123,
264 U. S. 125.
Legislation was deemed necessary to assure such power to the
federal courts. In 1925, Congress passed the United States
Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1
et seq., making
executory agreements to arbitrate specifically enforceable in the
federal courts, but explicitly excluding "contracts of employment"
of workers engaged in interstate commerce from its scope. Naturally
enough, I find rejection, though not explicit, of the availability
of the Federal Arbitration Act to enforce arbitration clauses in
collective bargaining agreements in the silent treatment given that
Act by the Court's opinion. If an Act that authorizes the federal
courts to enforce arbitration provisions in contracts generally,
but specifically denies authority to decree that remedy for
"contracts of employment," were available, the Court would hardly
spin such power out of the empty darkness of § 301. I would
make this rejection explicit, recognizing that, when Congress
passed legislation to enable arbitration agreements to be enforced
by the federal courts, it saw fit to exclude this remedy with
respect to labor contracts.
See Amalgamated Association, etc.
v. Pennsylvania Greyhound
Page 353 U. S. 467
Lines, 192 F.2d 310;
United Electrical, Radio &
Machine Workers v. Miller Metal Products, Inc., 215 F.2d 221;
Lincoln Mills v. Textile Workers Union, 230 F.2d 81;
United Steelworkers of America v. Galland-Henning Mfg.
Co., 241 F.2d 323; and the legislative history set forth by
the parties in the present cases. Congress heeded the resistance of
organized labor, uncompromisingly led in its hostility to this
measure by Andrew Furuseth, president of the International Seamen's
Union and most powerful voice expressing labor's fear of the use of
this remedy against it. [
Footnote
3/2]
Even though the Court glaringly ignores the Arbitration Act, it
does, at least, recognize the common law rule against enforcement
of executory agreements to arbitrate. It nevertheless enforces the
arbitration clause in the collective bargaining agreements in these
cases. It does so because it finds that Congress, "by implication,"
rejected the common law rule. I would add that the Court, in thus
deriving power from the unrevealing words of the Taft-Hartley Act,
has also found that Congress, "by implication," repealed its own
statutory exemption of collective bargaining agreements in the
Arbitration Act, an
Page 353 U. S. 468
exemption made as we have seen for well defined reasons of
policy.
The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, which reached the
conclusion that arbitration clauses in collective bargaining
agreements were enforceable under the Arbitration Act, nevertheless
found that such clauses would not have been enforceable by virtue
of § 301:
"A number of courts have held that § 301 itself is a
legislative authorization for decrees of specific performance of
arbitration agreements. . . . We think that is reading too much
into the very general language of § 301. The terms and
legislative history of § 301 sufficiently demonstrate, in our
view, that it was not intended either to create any new remedies or
to deny applicable existing remedies.
See H.R.Rep.No.245,
80th Cong., 1st Sess. 46 (1947); H.R.Rep.No.510 (Conference
Report), 80th Cong., 1st Sess. 42 (1947); 93 Cong.Rec. 3734, 6540
(daily ed. 1947). Arbitration was scarcely mentioned at all in the
legislative history. Furthermore, the same practical consideration
that militates against judicial overruling of the common law
doctrine applies against interpreting § 301 to give that
effect. The most that could be read into it would be that it
authorizes equitable remedies in general, including decrees for
specific performance of an arbitration agreement. Lacking are the
procedural specifications needed for administration of the power to
compel arbitration. . . . Thus, it seems to us that a firmer
statutory basis than § 301 should be found to justify
departure from the judicially formulated doctrines with reference
to arbitration agreements."
Local 205 v. General Electric Co., 233 F.2d 85, 96
97.
I would put the conclusion even more strongly, because, contrary
to the view of the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, the rule
that is departed from "by implication"
Page 353 U. S. 469
had not only been "judicially formulated," but had purposefully
been congressionally formulated in the Arbitration Act of 1925. And
it is being departed from on the tenuous basis of the legislative
history of § 301, for which the utmost that can be claimed is
that, insofar as there was any expectation at all, it was only that
conventional remedies, including equitable remedies, would be
available. But, of course, as we have seen, "equitable remedies" in
the federal courts had traditionally excluded specific performance
of arbitration clauses except as explicitly provided by the 1925
Act. Thus, even assuming that § 301 contains directions for
some federal substantive law of labor contracts, I see no
justification for translating the vague expectation concerning the
remedies to be applied into an overruling of previous federal
common law, and, more particularly, into the repeal of the previous
congressional exemption of collective bargaining agreements from
the class of agreements in which arbitration clauses were to be
enforced.
The second ground of my dissent from the Court's action is more
fundamental. [
Footnote 3/3] Since I
do not agree with the Court's conclusion that federal substantive
law is to govern in actions under § 301, I am forced to
consider the serious constitutional question that was adumbrated in
the
Westinghouse case, 348 U.S. at
348 U. S.
449-452, the constitutionality of a grant of
jurisdiction to federal courts over contracts that came into being
entirely by virtue of state substantive law, a jurisdiction not
based on diversity of citizenship, yet one in which a federal court
would, as in
Page 353 U. S. 470
diversity cases, act in effect merely as another court of the
State in which it sits. The scope of allowable federal judicial
power that this grant must satisfy is constitutionally described
as
"Cases, in Law and Equity, arising under this Constitution, the
Laws of the United States, and Treaties made, or which shall be
made, under their Authority."
Art. III, § 2. While interpretive decisions are legion
under general statutory grants of jurisdiction strikingly similar
to this constitutional wording, it is generally recognized that the
full constitutional power has not been exhausted by these statutes.
See, e.g., Mishkin, The Federal "Question" in the District
Courts, 53 Col.L.Rev. 157, 160; Shulman and Jaegerman, Some
Jurisdictional Limitations on Federal Procedure, 45 Yale L.J. 393,
405, n. 47; Wechsler, Federal Jurisdiction and the Revision of the
Judicial Code, 13 Law & Contemp. Prob., 216, 224-225.
Almost without exception, decisions under the general statutory
grants have tested jurisdiction in terms of the presence, as an
integral part of plaintiff's cause of action, of an issue calling
for interpretation or application of federal law.
E.g., Gully
v. First National Bank, 299 U. S. 109.
Although it has sometimes been suggested that the "cause of action"
must derive from federal law,
see American Well Works Co. v.
Layne & Bowler Co., 241 U. S. 257,
241 U. S. 260,
it has been found sufficient that some aspect of federal law is
essential to plaintiff's success.
Smith v. Kansas City Title
& Trust Co., 255 U. S. 180. The
litigation-provoking problem has been the degree to which federal
law must be in the forefront of the case and not collateral,
peripheral or remote.
In a few exceptional cases, arising under special jurisdictional
grants, the criteria by which the prominence of the federal
question is measured against constitutional requirements have been
found satisfied under circumstances suggesting a variant theory of
the nature of these
Page 353 U. S. 471
requirements. The first, and the leading case in the field, is
Osborn v. Bank of United
States, 9 Wheat. 738. There, Chief Justice Marshall
sustained federal jurisdiction in a situation hypothetical in the
case before him but presented by the companion case of
Bank of United States v.
Planters' Bank, 9 Wheat. 904, involving suit by a
federally incorporated bank upon a contract. Despite the assumption
that the cause of action and the interpretation of the contract
would be governed by state law, the case was found to "arise under
the laws of the United States" because the propriety and scope of a
federally granted authority to enter into contracts and to litigate
might well be challenged. This reasoning was subsequently applied
to sustain jurisdiction in actions against federally chartered
railroad corporations.
Pacific Railroad Removal Cases,
115 U. S. 1. The
traditional interpretation of this series of cases is that federal
jurisdiction under the "arising" clause of the Constitution, though
limited to cases involving potential federal questions, has such
flexibility that Congress may confer it whenever there exists in
the background some federal proposition that might be challenged,
despite the remoteness of the likelihood of actual presentation of
such a federal question. [
Footnote
3/4]
The views expressed in
Osborn and the
Pacific
Railroad Removal Cases were severely restricted in construing
general grants of jurisdiction. But the Court later sustained this
jurisdictional section of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898:
"The United States district courts shall have jurisdiction of
all controversies at law and in equity, as distinguished from
proceedings in bankruptcy, between
Page 353 U. S. 472
trustees as such and adverse claimants concerning the property
acquired or claimed by the trustees, in the same manner and to the
same extent only as though bankruptcy proceedings had not been
instituted and such controversies had been between the bankrupts
and such adverse claimants."
§ 23(a), as amended, 44 Stat. 664. Under this provision the
trustee could pursue in a federal court a private cause of action
arising under and wholly governed by state law.
Schumacher v.
Beeler, 293 U. S. 367;
Williams v. Austrian, 331 U. S. 642
(Chandler Act of 1938, 52 Stat. 840). To be sure, the cases did not
discuss the basis of jurisdiction. It has been suggested that they
merely represent an extension of the approach of the
Osborn case; the trustee's right to sue might be
challenged on obviously federal grounds absence of bankruptcy or
irregularity of the trustee's appointment or of the bankruptcy
proceedings.
National Mutual Ins. Co. v. Tidewater Transfer
Co., 337 U. S. 582,
337 U. S.
611-613 (Rutledge, J., concurring). So viewed, this type
of litigation implicates a potential federal question.
Apparently relying on the extent to which the bankruptcy cases
involve only remotely a federal question, Mr. Justice Jackson
concluded in
National Mutual Insurance Co. v. Tidewater
Transfer Co., 337 U. S. 582,
that Congress may confer jurisdiction on the District Courts as
incidental to its powers under Article I. No attempt was made to
reconcile this view with the restrictions of Article III; a
majority of the Court recognized that Article III defined the
bounds of valid jurisdictional legislation and rejected the notion
that jurisdictional grants can go outside these limits.
With this background, many theories have been proposed to
sustain the constitutional validity of § 301. In
Textile
Workers Union of America v. American Thread
Co., 113 F.
Supp. 137, 140, Judge Wyzanski suggested,
Page 353 U. S. 473
among other possibilities, that § 301 might be read as
containing a direction that controversies affecting interstate
commerce should be governed by federal law incorporating state law
by reference, and that such controversies would then arise under a
valid federal law as required by Article III. Whatever may be said
of the assumption regarding the validity of federal jurisdiction
under an affirmative declaration by Congress that state law should
be applied as federal law by federal courts to contract disputes
affecting commerce, we cannot argumentatively legislate for
Congress when Congress has failed to legislate. To do so
disrespects legislative responsibility and disregards judicial
limitations.
Another theory, relying on Osborn and the bankruptcy cases, has
been proposed which would achieve results similar to those
attainable under Mr. Justice Jackson's view, but which purports to
respect the "arising" clause of Article III.
See Hart and
Wechsler, The Federal Courts and the Federal System, pp. 744-747;
Wechsler, Federal Jurisdiction and the Revision of the Judicial
Code, 13 Law & Contemp.Prob. 216, 224 225;
International
Brotherhood of Teamsters v. W. L. Mead, Inc., 230 F.2d 576.
Called "protective jurisdiction," the suggestion is that in any
case for which Congress has the constitutional power to prescribe
federal rules of decision and thus confer "true" federal question
jurisdiction, it may, without so doing, enact a jurisdictional
statute, which will provide a federal forum for the application of
state statute and decisional law. Analysis of the "protective
jurisdiction" theory might also be attempted in terms of the
language of Article III construing "laws" to include jurisdictional
statutes where Congress could have legislated substantively in a
field. This is but another way of saying that because Congress
could have legislated substantively and thereby could give rise to
litigation under a statute of the United States, it can provide a
federal forum for state-created
Page 353 U. S. 474
rights although it chose not to adopt state law as federal law
or to originate federal rights.
Surely the truly technical restrictions of Article III are not
met or respected by a beguiling phrase that the greater power here
must necessarily include the lesser. In the compromise of federal
and state interests leading to distribution of jealously guarded
judicial power in a federal system,
see 13 Cornell L.Q.
499, it is obvious that very different considerations apply to
cases involving questions of federal law and those turning solely
on state law. It may be that the ambiguity of the phrase "arising
under the laws of the United States" leaves room for more than
traditional theory could accommodate. But, under the theory of
"protective jurisdiction," the "arising under" jurisdiction of the
federal courts would be vastly extended. For example, every
contract or tort arising out of a contract affecting commerce might
be a potential cause of action in the federal courts, even though
only state law was involved in the decision of the case. At least
in
Osborn and the bankruptcy cases, a substantive federal
law was present somewhere in the background.
See pp.
353 U. S.
470-472,
supra, and pp.
353 U. S.
480-484
infra. But this theory rests on the
supposition that Congress could enact substantive federal law to
govern the particular case. It was not held in those cases, nor is
it clear, that federal law could be held to govern the transactions
of all persons who subsequently become bankrupt, or of all suits of
a Bank of the United States.
See Mishkin, The Federal
"Question" in the District Courts, 53 Col.L.Rev. 157, 189.
"Protective jurisdiction," once the label is discarded, cannot
be justified under any view of the allowable scope to be given to
Article III. "Protective jurisdiction" is a misused label for the
statute we are here considering. That rubric is properly
descriptive of safeguarding some of the indisputable, staple
business of the federal courts. It is a radiation of an existing
jurisdiction.
See Adams
v.
Page 353 U. S. 475
United States ex rel. McCann, 371
U. S. 269. "Protective jurisdiction" cannot generate an
independent source for adjudication outside of the Article III
sanctions and what Congress has defined. The theory must have as
its sole justification a belief in the inadequacy of state
tribunals in determining state law. The Constitution reflects such
a belief in the specific situation within which the Diversity
Clause was confined. The intention to remedy such supposed defects
was exhausted in this provision of Article III. [
Footnote 3/5] That this "protective" theory was not
adopted by Chief Justice Marshall at a time when conditions might
have presented more substantial justification strongly suggests its
lack of constitutional merit. Moreover, Congress in its
consideration of § 301 nowhere suggested dissatisfaction with
the ability of state courts to administer state law properly. Its
concern was to provide access to the federal courts for easier
enforcement of state-created rights.
Another theory also relies on
Osborn and the bankruptcy
cases as an implicit recognition of the propriety of the exercise
of some sort of "protective jurisdiction" by the federal courts.
Mishkin,
op. cit. supra, 53 Col.L.Rev. 157, 184
et
seq. Professor Mishkin tends to view the assertion of such a
jurisdiction, in the absence of any
Page 353 U. S. 476
exercise of substantive powers, as irreconcilable with the
"arising" clause, since the case would then arise only under the
jurisdictional statute itself, and he is reluctant to find a
constitutional basis for the grant of power outside Article III.
Professor Mishkin also notes that the only purpose of such a
statute would be to insure impartiality to some litigant, an
objection inconsistent with Article III's recognition of
"protective jurisdiction" only in the specified situation of
diverse citizenship. But where Congress has "an articulated and
active federal policy regulating a field, the "arising under"
clause of Article III apparently permits the conferring of
jurisdiction on the national courts of all cases in the area
including those substantively governed by state law."
Id.
at 192. In such cases, the protection being offered is not to the
suitor, as in diversity cases, but to the "congressional
legislative program." Thus, he supports § 301:
"even though the rules governing collective bargaining
agreements continue to be state-fashioned, nonetheless the mode of
their application and enforcement may play a very substantial part
in the labor-management relations of interstate industry and
commerce an area in which the national government has labored long
and hard."
Id. at 196.
Insofar as state law governs the case, Professor Mishkin's
theory is quite similar to that advanced by Professors Hart and
Wechsler and followed by the Court of Appeals for the First
Circuit: the substantive power of Congress, although not exercised
to govern the particular "case," gives "arising under" jurisdiction
to the federal courts despite governing state law. The second
"protective jurisdiction" theory has the dubious advantage of
limiting incursions on state judicial power to situations in which
the State's feelings may have been tempered by early substantive
federal invasions.
Professor Mishkin's theory of "protective jurisdiction" may find
more constitutional justification if there is not
Page 353 U. S. 477
merely an "articulated and active" congressional policy
regulating the labor field but also federal rights existing in the
interstices of actions under § 301.
See Wollett and
Wellington, Federalism and Breach of the Labor Agreement, 7
Stan.L.Rev. 445, 475 479. Therefore, before resting on an
interpretation of § 301 that would compel a declaration of
unconstitutionality, we must, as was stated in Westinghouse, defer
to the strong presumption even as to such technical matters as
federal jurisdiction that Congress legislated in accordance with
the Constitution. The difficult nature of the problem of
construction to be faced if some federal rights are sought was set
forth in Westinghouse, where the constitutional questions were
involved only in their bearing on the construction of the statute.
Now that the constitutional questions themselves must be faced, the
nature of the problem bears repeating.
Legislation must, if possible, be given a meaning that will
enable it to survive. This rule of constitutional adjudication is
normally invoked to narrow what would otherwise be the natural but
constitutionally dubious scope of the language.
E.g., United
States v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U.
S. 366;
United States v. Jin Fuey Moy,
241 U. S. 394,
241 U. S. 401;
United States v. Rumely, 345 U. S. 41. Here
the endeavor of some lower courts and of this Court has resulted in
adding to the section substantive congressional regulation even
though Congress saw fit not to exercise such power or to give the
courts any concrete guidance for defining such regulation.
To be sure, the full scope of a substantive regulation is
frequently in dispute and must await authoritative determination by
courts. Congress declares its purpose imperfectly or partially, and
compatible judicial construction completes it. But in this case we
start with a provision that is wholly jurisdictional and as such
bristles with constitutional problems under Article III. To
avoid
Page 353 U. S. 478
them, interpolation of substantive regulation has been proposed.
From what materials are we to draw a determination that § 301
is something other than what it declares itself? Is the Court
justified in creating all the difficult problems of choice within a
sphere of delicate policy without any direction from Congress and
merely for the sake of giving effect to a provision that seems to
deal with a different subject? The somewhat Delphic wisdom of Mr.
Justice Cardozo, speaking for the whole Court, pulls us here in the
opposite direction:
"We think the light is so strong as to flood whatever places in
the statute might otherwise be dark. Courts have striven mightily
at times to canalize construction along the path of safety. . . .
When a statute is reasonably susceptible of two interpretations,
they have preferred the meaning that preserves to the meaning that
destroys. . . . 'But avoidance of a difficulty will not be pressed
to the point of disingenuous evasion.' . . . 'Here, the intention
of the Congress is revealed too distinctly to permit us to ignore
it because of mere misgivings as to power.'"
Hopkins Federal Savings & Loan Assn. v. Cleary,
296 U. S. 315,
296 U. S.
334-335.
Assuming, however, that we would be justified in pouring
substantive content into a merely procedural vehicle, what elements
of federal law could reasonably be put into the provisions of
§ 301? The suggestion that the section permits the federal
courts to work out, without more, a federal code governing
collective bargaining contracts must, for reasons that have already
been stated, be rejected. Likewise, the suggestion that § 301
may be viewed as a congressional authorization to the federal
courts to work out a concept of the nature of the collective
bargaining contract, leaving detailed questions of interpretation
to state law.
See 348 U.S. at
348 U. S.
455-459.
Nor will Congress' objective be furthered by an attempt to limit
the grant of a federal forum to certain types of
Page 353 U. S. 479
actions between unions and employers. It would be difficult to
find any basis for, or principles of, selection, either in the
terms of § 301 or in considerations relevant to promotion of
stability in labor relations. It is true that a fair reading of
§ 301 in the context of its enactment shows that the suit that
Congress primarily contemplated was the suit against a union for
strike in violation of contract. From this it might be possible to
imply a federal right to bring an action for damages based on such
an event. In the interest of mutuality, so close to the heart of
Congress, we might in turn find a federal right in the union to sue
for a lockout in violation of contract. But neither federal right
would be involved in the present cases. Moreover, it bears
repetition that Congress chose not to make this the basis of
federal law,
i.e., it chose not to make such conduct an
unfair labor practice.
There is a point, however, at which the search may be ended with
less misgiving regarding the propriety of judicial infusion of
substantive provisions into § 301. The contribution of federal
law might consist in postulating the right of a union, despite its
amorphous status as an unincorporated association, to enter into
binding collective bargaining contracts with an employer. The
federal courts might also give sanction to this right by refusing
to comply with any state law that does not admit that collective
bargaining may result in an enforceable contract. It is hard to see
what serious federal-state conflicts could arise under this view.
At most, a state court might dismiss the action, while a federal
court would entertain it. Moreover, such a function of federal law
is closely related to the removal of the procedural barriers to
suit. Section 301 would be futile if the union's status as a
contracting party were not recognized. The statement in §
301(b) that the acts of the agents of the union are to be regarded
as binding upon the union may be used in support of this
conclusion. This provision,
Page 353 U. S. 480
not confined in its application to suits in the District Court
under § 301(a), was primarily directed to responsibility of
the union for its agents' actions in authorizing strikes or
committing torts. It can be construed, however, as applicable to
the formation of a contract. So applied, it would imply that a
union must be regarded as contractually bound by the acts of its
agents, which, in turn, presupposes that the union is capable of
contract relations.
Of course, the possibility of a State's law's being counter to
such a limited federal proposition is hypothetical, and to base an
assertion of federal law on such a possibility, one never
considered by Congress, is an artifice. And were a State ever to
adopt a contrary attitude, its reasons for so doing might be such
that Congress would not be willing to disregard them. But these
difficulties are inherent in any attempt to expand § 301
substantively to meet constitutional requirements.
Even if this limited federal "right" were read into § 301,
a serious constitutional question would still be present. It does
elevate the situation to one closely analogous to that presented in
Osborn v. Bank of United
States, 9 Wheat. 738. [
Footnote 3/6] Section 301 would, under this view, imply
that a union is to be viewed as a juristic entity for purposes of
acquiring contract rights under a collective bargaining agreement,
and that it has the right to enter into such a contract and to sue
upon it. This was all that was immediately and expressly involved
in the
Osborn case, although the historical setting
was
Page 353 U. S. 481
vastly different and the juristic entity in that case was
completely the creature of federal law, one engaged in carrying out
essential governmental functions. Most of these special
considerations had disappeared, however, at the time and in the
circumstances of the decision of the
Pacific Railroad Removal
Cases, 115 U. S. 1,
see p.
353 U. S. 471,
supra. There is force in the view that regards the latter
as a "sport," and finds that the Court has so viewed it.
See Mishkin, 53 Col.L.Rev. at 160, n. 24, citing
Gully
v. First National Bank, 299 U. S. 109,
299 U. S.
113-114 ("Only recently, we said after full
consideration that the doctrine of the charter cases was to be
treated as exceptional, though, within their special field, there
was no thought to disturb them."), and
Puerto Rico v. Russell
& Co., 288 U. S. 476,
288 U. S. 485;
see also Mr. Justice Holmes in
Smith v. Kansas City
Title & Trust Co., 255 U. S. 180,
255 U. S.
214-215 (dissenting opinion). The question is whether we
should now so consider it and refuse to apply its holding to the
present situation.
I believe that we should not extend the precedents of
Osborn and the
Pacific Railroad Removal Cases to
this case even though there be some elements of analytical
similarity.
Osborn, the foundation for the
Removal
Cases, appears to have been based on premises that, today,
viewed in the light of the jurisdictional philosophy of
Gully
v. First National Bank, supra, are subject to criticism. The
basic premise was that every case in which a federal question might
arise must be capable of being commenced in the federal courts, and
when so commenced it might, because jurisdiction must be judged as
the outset, be concluded there despite the fact that the federal
question was never raised. Marshall's holding was undoubtedly
influenced by his fear that the bank might suffer hostile treatment
in the state courts that could not be remedied by an appeal on an
isolated federal question. There is nothing in Article III that
affirmatively supports the view that original jurisdiction over
cases involving
Page 353 U. S. 482
federal questions must extend to every case in which there is
the potentiality of appellate jurisdiction. We also have become
familiar with removal procedures that could be adapted to alleviate
any remaining fears by providing for removal to a federal court
whenever a federal question was raised. In view of these
developments, we would not be justified in perpetuating a principle
that permits assertion of original federal jurisdiction on the
remote possibility of presentation of a federal question. Indeed,
Congress, by largely withdrawing the jurisdiction that the
Pacific Railroad Removal Cases recognized, and this Court,
by refusing to perpetuate it under general grants of jurisdiction,
see Gully v. First National Bank, supra, have already done
much to recognize the changed atmosphere.
Analysis of the bankruptcy power also reveals a superficial
analogy to § 301. The trustee enforces a cause of action
acquired under state law by the bankrupt. Federal law merely
provides for the appointment of the trustee, vests the cause of
action in him, and confers jurisdiction on the federal courts.
Section 301 similarly takes the rights and liabilities which, under
state law, are vested distributively in the individual members of a
union and vests them in the union for purposes of actions in
federal courts, wherein the unions are authorized to sue and be
sued as an entity. While the authority of the trustee depends on
the existence of a bankrupt and on the propriety of the proceedings
leading to the trustee's appointment, both of which depend on
federal law, there are similar federal propositions that may be
essential to an action under § 301. Thus, the validity of the
contract may, in any case, be challenged on the ground that the
labor organization negotiating it was not the representative of the
employees concerned, a question that has been held to be federal,
La Crosse Telephone Corp. v. Wisconsin Employment Relations
Board, 336 U. S. 18, or on
the ground that subsequent change in the representative
Page 353 U. S. 483
status of the union has affected the continued validity of the
agreement. Perhaps also the qualifications imposed on a union's
right to utilize the facilities of the National Labor Relations
Board, dependent on the filing of non-Communist affidavits required
by § 9(h) and the information and reports required by §
9(f) and (g) might be read as restrictions on the right of the
union to sue under § 301, again providing a federal basis for
challenge to the union's authority. Consequently, were the
bankruptcy cases to be viewed as dependent solely on the background
existence of federal questions, there would be little analytical
basis for distinguishing actions under § 301. But the
bankruptcy decisions may be justified by the scope of the
bankruptcy power, which may be deemed to sweep within its scope
interests analytically outside the "federal question" category, but
sufficiently related to the main purpose of bankruptcy to call for
comprehensive treatment.
See National Mutual Ins. Co. v.
Tidewater Transfer Co., 337 U. S. 582,
337 U. S. 652,
n. 3 (concurring in part, dissenting in part). Also, although a
particular suit may be brought by a trustee in a district other
than the one in which the principal proceedings are pending, if all
the suits by the trustee, even though in many federal courts, are
regarded as one litigation for the collection and apportionment of
the bankrupt's property, a particular suit by the trustee, under
state law, to recover a specific piece of property might be
analogized to the ancillary or pendent jurisdiction cases in which,
in the disposition of a cause of action, federal courts may pass on
state grounds for recovery that are joined to federal grounds.
See Hurn v. Oursler, 289 U. S. 238;
Siler v. Louisville & Nashville, R. Co., 213 U.
S. 175;
but see Mishkin, 53 Col.L.Rev. at 194,
n. 161.
If there is in the phrase "arising under the laws of the United
States" leeway for expansion of our concepts of jurisdiction, the
history or Article III suggests that the area is not great, and
that it will require the presence of
Page 353 U. S. 484
some substantial federal interest, one of greater weight and
dignity than questionable doubt concerning the effectiveness of
state procedure. The bankruptcy cases might possibly be viewed as
such an expansion. But even so, not merely convenient judicial
administration, but the whole purpose of the congressional
legislative program -- conservation and equitable distribution of
the bankrupt's estate in carrying out the constitutional power over
bankruptcy -- required the availability of federal jurisdiction to
avoid expense and delay. Nothing pertaining to § 301 suggests
vesting the federal courts with sweeping power under the Commerce
Clause comparable to that vested in the federal courts under the
bankruptcy power.
In the wise distribution of governmental powers, this Court
cannot do what a President sometimes does in returning a bill to
Congress. We cannot return this provision to Congress and
respectfully request that body to face the responsibility placed
upon it by the Constitution to define the jurisdiction of the lower
courts with some particularity, and not to leave these courts at
large. Confronted as I am, I regretfully have no choice. For all
the reasons elaborated in this dissent, even reading into §
301 the limited federal rights consistent with the purposes of that
section, I am impelled to the view that it is unconstitutional in
cases such as the present ones, where it provides the sole basis
for exercise of jurisdiction by the federal courts. [
Footnote 3/7]
Page 353 U. S. 485
[
Footnote 3/1]
"Sec. 301. (a) Suits for violation of contracts between an
employer and a labor organization representing employees in an
industry affecting commerce as defined in this Act, or between any
such labor organizations, may be brought in any district court of
the United States having jurisdiction of the parties, without
respect to the amount in controversy or without regard to the
citizenship of the parties."
"(b) Any labor organization which represents employees in an
industry affecting commerce as defined in this Act and any employer
whose activities affect commerce as defined in this Act shall be
bound by the acts of its agents. Any such labor organization may
sue or be sued as an entity and in behalf of the employees whom it
represents in the courts of the United States. Any money judgment
against a labor organization in a district court of the United
States shall be enforceable only against the organization as a
entity and against its assets, and shall not be enforceable against
any individual member or his assets."
"(c) For the purposes of actions and proceedings by or against
labor organizations in the district courts of the United States,
district courts shall be deemed to have jurisdiction of a labor
organization (1) in the district in which such organization
maintains its principal office, or (2) in any district in which its
duly authorized officers or agents are engaged in representing or
acting for employee members."
"(d) The service of summons, subpoena, or other legal process of
any court of the United States upon an officer or agent of a labor
organization, in his capacity as such, shall constitute service
upon the labor organization."
"(e) For the purposes of this section, in determining whether
any person is acting as an 'agent' of another person so as to make
such other person responsible for his acts, the question of whether
the specific acts performed were actually authorized or
subsequently ratified shall not be controlling."
[
Footnote 3/2]
At the Seamen's Union convention in 1923, at a time when the
proposed Arbitration Act contained no exemptions, Furuseth, after
referring to the effect of the act on individual contracts,
stated:
"So far, we have dealt with the individual. What about those who
shall seek to protect themselves through mutual aid? Some
organizations are very strong in their cohesiveness. Cannot those
organizations save not only the individuals, but themselves?"
"The Supreme Court has decided that voluntary organizations may
be sued. If they shall enter into an agreement containing an
arbitration clause, there can be little doubt that the organization
will be bound."
Proceedings of the 26th Annual Convention of the International
Seamen's Union of America, p. 204 (1923).
The reference was to this Court's decision, the previous year,
in
United Mine Workers v. Coronado Coal Co., 259 U.
S. 344.
[
Footnote 3/3]
In view of the course that this litigation has taken, I put to
one side the bearing of the Norris-LaGuardia Act. It is not the
first time that unions have conveniently disregarded, when it
suited an immediate end, their vehement feelings that secured the
restriction upon the federal courts in granting injunctions in
labor disputes. Candor compels me to say that I do not think that
the conclusion reached by Judge Bailey Aldrich in
Local 205 v.
General Electric Co., 129 F. Supp. 665, has been persuasively
met.
[
Footnote 3/4]
Osborn might possibly be limited on the ground that a
federal instrumentality, the Bank of the United States, was
involved,
see 353
U.S. 448fn3/5|>note 5,
infra, but such an
explanation could not suffice to narrow the holding in the
Pacific Railroad Removal Cases.
[
Footnote 3/5]
To be sure, the Court upheld the removal statute for suits or
prosecutions commenced in a state court against federal revenue
officers on account of any act committed under color of office.
Tennessee v. Davis, 100 U. S. 257. The
Court, however, construed the action of Congress in defining the
powers of revenue agents as giving them a substantive defense
against prosecution under state law for commission of acts
"warranted by the Federal authority they possess."
Id. at
100 U. S. 263.
That put federal law in the forefront as a defense. In any event,
the fact that officers of the Federal Government were parties may
be considered sufficient to afford access to the federal forum.
See In re Debs, 158 U. S. 564,
158 U. S.
584-586; Mishkin, 53 Col.L.Rev. at 193:
"Without doubt, a federal forum should be available for all
suits involving the Government, its agents and instrumentalities,
regardless of the source of the substantive rule."
[
Footnote 3/6]
Enunciation of such a requirement could, in fact, bring federal
law somewhat further to the forefront than was true of
Osborn, the
Pacific Railroad Removal Cases, or
the bankruptcy cases in the few cases where an assertion could be
made that state law did not sufficiently recognize collective
agreements as contracts. But there appears to be no State that
today possesses such a rule. Most and probably, all cases arising
under § 301 -- certainly the present ones -- would never
present such a problem.
[
Footnote 3/7]
In No. 276, respondent's motion in the Court of Appeals to amend
its complaint to show diversity of citizenship was denied on
alternate grounds of possible mootness and Rule 17(b)'s reference
of questions of capacity to sue to state law. The view of §
301 that I have set forth would permit that section to be applied
constitutionally to situations, such as diversity of citizenship,
where there is jurisdiction in the federal courts apart from §
301. I would therefore remand this case to permit the amendment
alleging diversity of citizenship.
|
353
U.S. 448app|
APPENDIX -- LEGISLATIVE HISTORY
I
. The Case Bill (H.R. 4908, 79th Cong., 2d Sess.)
(The Federal Mediation Act of 1946.)
A.
Legislative history in the House:
1. Hearings before the Committee on Labor on H.R. 4908, 79th
Cong., 1st Sess.:
a. H.R. 4908, as considered by committee, provided for
factfinding boards. It had no provision concerning suits on
collective bargaining contracts.
b. During these hearings, there was, however, some concern with
breach of such contracts. Despite the filing of two memoranda
detailing the problems of enforcement of agreements against a union
(pp. 89, 96) there was no elucidation of the problem. The
prevalence of violation was noted, and the desire to do something
to promote enforceability expressed. (Pp. 15, 27, 28, 38, 41, 68,
73, 84, 88, 97, 101, 113.)
2. The House Report contained no comment on the problem.
(H.R.Rep. No. 1493, 79th Cong., 2d Sess.)
3. The bill, as introduced on the House floor (92 Cong.Rec.
765):
"Sec. 10. Binding effect of collective bargaining contracts --
All collective bargaining contracts shall be mutually and equally
binding and enforceable either at law or in equity against each of
the parties thereto, any other law to the contrary notwithstanding.
In the event of a breach of any such contract or of any agreement
contained in such contract by either party thereto, then, in
addition to any other remedy or remedies existing either in law or
equity, a suit for damages for such breach or for
Page 353 U. S. 486
injunctive relief in equity may be maintained by the other party
or parties in any United States district court having jurisdiction
of the parties. If the defendant against whom action is sought to
be commenced and maintained is a labor organization, such action
may be filed in the United States district court of any district
wherein any officer of such labor organization resides or may be
found."
4. House debate:
a. General comment on the desirability of mutual enforceability
of contracts: 92 Cong.Rec. 662, 668, 677, 679, 684, 686, 753,
767.
b. Representative Francis Case's only comments were not
pertinent.
Id. at 680, 765.
c. Representative Vorys, in offering corrective amendments to
Section 10, stated:
"We do create, if there is any doubt about its present
existence, an action for damages for breach of contract against a
labor organization or an employer, which means that either party,
the labor organization or the employer, may have the benefit of a
trial by jury in any such action."
". . . Since we are attempting to create no new right in the
equity side, there is no reason to refer to the equity side. . .
."
"
* * * *"
". . . It will take away any particular benefits or advantages
of one party or the other that now exist under other laws which
keep the obligations from being equal and mutual; will not give any
new rights by way of injunction to either party, but will
specifically provide for an action at law for damages to enforce
any act of violation of the contracts."
(
Id. at 853.)
Page 353 U. S. 487
d. Representative Thom, opposing Section 10 as an incursion on
States' rights, appears to have been the only member to have felt
that collective bargaining contracts already were enforceable in
state and federal courts.
Id. at 847.
5. As it finally passed the House, Section 10 read:
"Sec. 10. Binding effect of collective bargaining contracts --
All collective bargaining contracts shall be mutually and equally
binding and enforceable against each of the parties thereto, any
other law to the contrary notwithstanding. In the event of a breach
of any such contract or of any agreement contained in such contract
by either party thereto, then, in addition to any other remedy or
remedies existing, a suit for damages for such breach may be
maintained by the other party or parties in any State or United
States district court having jurisdiction of the parties."
B.
Legislative history in the Senate:
1. Hearings before Senate Committee on Education and Labor on S.
1661:
a. Hearings were held on a companion bill to the factfinding
bill on which House hearings were held. The Case bill had not yet
passed the House.
b. As in the House, however, concern was expressed over a
general impression that unions were not subject to suits for
damages for breach of contract to the same extent as employers.
(Pp. 138, 168, 354, 383, 400, 554, 623, 662, 740.) For the first
time, however, oral testimony directed the legislators to the
primary source of the problem. This testimony, with a supporting
memorandum, indicated that the problem lay in the status of the
union
Page 353 U. S. 488
as an unincorporated association. This memorandum, however, also
pointed out that, in some jurisdictions, the union was viewed as
acting as agent of the individual employees in negotiating the
collective agreement, and thus was not viewed as having, even in
theory, any rights or obligations on the contract. (P. 411.)
2. Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on
Education and Labor on H.R. 4908 (as it had passed the House):
a.
"Mr. CASE. Section 10, opening the miscellaneous provisions of
the bill, is very brief, and I would like to read it because I
think it speaks for itself."
"It almost would seem unnecessary to say that contracts entered
into between two parties call for mutual obligations and mutual
observance. That is implicit in all contracts, whether expressed or
not, by statutory provisions saying they are equally binding and
enforceable; but because of some interpretations or some theories
that they are not binding where labor organizations are involved, I
thought, in harmony with what the President said here, recognizing
a practical situation for which we have to find methods not only of
peaceful negotiation, but also of insuring that the contracts, once
made, must be lived up to, we should have a section in the bill on
that subject."
"This section was modified somewhat in the consideration in the
House. Originally I think we had in a provision authorizing
restraining orders, but that was eliminated . . . with the consent
of myself and others who had been studying the bill, with the
thought that this possibly met the situation by authorizing a suit
for damages for breach of contract. "
Page 353 U. S. 489
"Senator TAFT. Mr. Case, there are one or two minor questions on
that. It says:"
" All collective bargaining contracts shall be . . . enforceable
by a suit in a State or a United States district, court having
jurisdiction of the parties."
"Would you intend to give jurisdiction to the United States
district court in purely local collective bargaining contracts not
dealing with interstate commerce? Ought not that be limited in some
way?"
"Mr. CASE. That may be. There are other places in the bill where
we worked in, first of all, a declaration of public interest, and
my thought there was that resting on the general welfare clause, it
was clearly within the authority of Congress where substantial
public interest was involved to take cognizance "
"Senator TAFT . . . I would think that probably the jurisdiction
of the United States court should be confined to the type of
dispute which is interstate in character and under the jurisdiction
of the National Labor Relations Board."
"Mr. CASE. I certainly would have no objection to a
clarification on that point. . . ."
"Of course, the Senator is aware of the fact that the
interpretation of the Supreme Court recently, on the subject of
interstate commerce, has been so broad that anything which affects
interstate commerce, which is technically interstate commerce has
been ruled to be interstate commerce."
"Senator TAFT. On the other hand, there is still a field of
intrastate commerce. It doesn't destroy it, although it goes a long
way."
"Mr. CASE. As far as I am concerned, I would be glad to protect
that vanishing field of intrastate
Page 353 U. S. 490
commerce, and if the Senators wanted to clarify that, I would
have no objection."
"Senator TAFT. The other question relating to that section which
occurs to me is the effect of this 'binding and enforceable,' as
related to the incorporation of unions. As I understand it, a
collective bargaining agreement is already mutually and equally
binding and enforceable. I can't think of any circumstance where it
would not be. But the problem seems to be a practical problem, in
many States, of successfully suing a union which is not
incorporated. I don't take it that this section would change the
requirements in a State, we will say, to make every member of the
union a party. It doesn't really meet that particular difficulty,
which seems to be the chief difficulty in enforcing collective
bargaining agreements."
"Mr. CASE. I think that what this would do would be to make the
officers of a collective bargaining agent suable. I do not think it
would extend to individual members of the union, because the
language is that the contract is made 'mutually and equally binding
and enforceable against each of the parties thereto,' and, under
the Wagner Act, the party to the contract is the recognized
bargaining agent."
"Senator TAFT. No; the recognized bargaining agent is the union,
not the officers of the union; it is the union, and the union is
usually an unincorporated association. The point I was trying to
make is that, if you want to sue an unincorporated association in
many States, it is almost impossible to get them into court,
because they have requirements that you have to serve every member,
and you can't reach them, you can't find them in many cases. So
Page 353 U. S. 491
the whole thing is delayed, and it is a long and tedious
problem, if it can be done at all. In some States, that is not so.
You can sue an unincorporated association by serving the officers.
But we have before us a bill from Senator Byrd requiring that
unions be incorporated for the purpose of carrying out, as I see
it, the same purpose you have here, at least partially, and I just
wondered whether this really was effective to meet the actual
difficulty today in enforcing collective bargaining
agreements."
"Mr. CASE. Well, the intent of it is to make it possible to
bring the action against the union in the common name of the
association."
"Senator TAFT. I don't say it doesn't have that effect, but I
don't think it does. I don't think that 'other law to the contrary
notwithstanding' would affect the method by which you had to bring
a suit against an unincorporated association."
"Senator BALL. Would that make it possible to sue the union as
an entity in the Federal court by simply serving the officers?"
"Senator TAFT. I don't think so, unless you said so. You might
conceivably say so."
"Senator BALL. Then the other question is: could we, in effect,
waive State laws and make the same provision apply in State
courts?"
"Senator TAFT. No, I don't think you can. But this would
authorize suit to be brought in the Federal court, and I thought
that should be confined to interstate cases."
"Mr. CASE. Following the procedure probably, however, of the law
of the State in which the action was brought."
"Senator TAFT. I don't know; that is a complicated question, as
you know, in a Federal court as
Page 353 U. S. 492
to when you have to comply with the State law and when you do
not."
"Mr. CASE. The Senator is probably more familiar than I with
what is called the
Second Coronado case. I am not familiar
with the details of it, but, as I have read references to it, I
think there the Supreme Court held that an injunction could be
obtained against a union as such where the United States was the
party. Now of course, this section doesn't carry any injunctive
procedure; but there, at least, the Supreme Court seemed to
recognize that a union might be made the object of an action as an
association without reaching the individual members."
"Senator TAFT. This would carry to a civil injunction process if
it were one generally usable under laws of equity, I think, when
you say it is binding and enforceable; whatever the equitable
remedies might be in that State, or might be considered proper by
the court, could be used."
"
* * * *"
"Senator SMITH. I would like to ask Mr. CASE one question on
section 10. I have difficulty in seeing how that changes what the
situation would be if it just wasn't in there at all. I don't quite
see why we need to put that in this bill."
"Let me say first that I have not studied this carefully, so I
am raising the question as it comes to me."
"Mr. CASE. The intent primarily was to meet the technical legal
difficulty that at the present time the union isn't suable or
actionable as an association unless it is incorporated, and to
avoid the necessity of joining all members of the union as
parties."
"Senator TAFT. I would suggest if that is your purpose it ought
to say so in so many words. "
Page 353 U. S. 493
"Mr. CASE. I appreciate the Senator's suggestion."
"Senator Smith. That was my difficulty. It didn't seem to me it
did make that clear, if that is the intent."
(Pp. 8-11.)
b. The technical, procedural nature of the problem was also
stressed in testimony of some other witnesses.
See pp.
175-179; 198-200; 248-249.
c. Other less discerning discussion: pp. 34, 47, 48, 110, 125,
129, 135, 144, 148, 157, 225, 237, 240, 266, 371, 372, 378, 385,
409.
3. Senate Report (No. 1177, 79th Cong., 2d Sess.):
a. Majority:
"Your committee has also considered and rejected section 10 of
H.R. 4908, as passed by the House, which would explicitly declare
that all collective bargaining contracts shall be mutually binding
and enforceable by the parties thereto. In the first place, this
proposal appears to be based upon a misapprehension as to the legal
responsibility of the parties under such contracts. Collective
bargaining agreements are at present legally enforceable in the
courts, and in the Federal courts, if jurisdiction is otherwise
established according to applicable law, unions may be sued in
their own names under the doctrine of the first
Coronado
case (
United Mine Workers v. Coronado Coal Company,
259 U. S.
344). Legally, therefore, the proposed provision is
unnecessary. Practically, it presents serious dangers. By offering
easy access to the courts in cases where a breach of a collective
bargaining agreement is alleged, it would act as an inducement to
litigate every alleged grievance, and would result in a flood of
litigation making the courts again the battlefield
Page 353 U. S. 494
for industrial disputes, increasing, rather than eliminating,
the acrimony and conflict between the parties. In addition, your
committee wishes to point out the fallacy of a widely held notion
that breaches of contract are most often committed by labor
organizations and employees. On the contrary, most breaches of
contract are by employers. As has been elsewhere stated at greater
length in this report, your committee feels that labor disputes
should be settled by conference, negotiation, and compromise, and
not by the use of mandatory judicial processes. . . ."
(Pp. 8-9.)
b. Minority (Senators Ball, Taft, and H. Alexander Smith):
"Amendment No. 3 [the minority proposal] would make unions
suable as legal entities in the Federal courts for violation of
contract, with liability limited to union assets and not
enforceable against individual members or their property. A
subsection would provide that, where individual employees
participated in a 'wildcat' strike in violation of contract, not
sanctioned or approved by the union, the union itself would not be
liable, but such employees would lose their legal status as
employees under the Wagner Act, leaving the employer free to
discharge them or not. While collective bargaining agreements
theoretically are legally enforceable contracts, as a practical
matter, because of the many obstacles to suits against unions
imposed by most States, they are actually binding on only one
party, the employer. The minority believes this provision, imposing
equal responsibility on both parties to such contracts, is
absolutely essential to the stability of labor relations. The only
argument so far advanced against it is that some employers might
embarrass
Page 353 U. S. 495
unions by suits for enforcement of contract. This hardly is a
valid ground for continuing to regard such contracts as one-way
arrangements, wherein one party receives benefits and assumes no
binding obligations whatsoever."
(Pp. 3-4.)
"
TEXT OF AMENDMENT NO. 3"
"Amend H.R. 4908 by inserting at the proper place the following
new section:"
" Sec. ___ (a) Suits for violation of a contract concluded as
the result of collective bargaining between an employer and a labor
organization if such contract affects commerce as defined in this
Act may be brought in any district court of the United States
having jurisdiction of the parties."
" (b) Any labor organization whose activities affect commerce as
defined in this Act shall be bound by the acts of its duly
authorized agents acting within the scope of their authority from
the said labor organization and may sue or be sued as an entity and
in behalf of the employees whom it represents in the courts of the
United States:
Provided, That any money judgment against
such labor organization shall be enforceable only against the
organization as an entity and against its assets, and shall not be
enforceable against any individual member or his assets."
" (c) For the purposes of this section, district courts shall be
deemed to have jurisdiction of a labor organization (1) in the
district in which such organization maintains its principal office,
or (2) in any district in which its duly authorized officers or
agents are engaged in promoting or protecting the interests of
employee members. The service of summons, subpoena or other legal
process upon such officer or agent shall constitute service upon
the labor organization."
" (d) Any employee who participates in a strike or other
stoppage of work in violation of an existing collective bargaining
agreement, if such strike or stoppage is not ratified or approved
by the labor organization party to such agreement and having
exclusive bargaining rights for such employee, shall lose his
status as an employee of the employer
Page 353 U. S. 496
party to such agreement for the purposes of sections 8, 9, and
10 of the National Labor Relations Act:
Provided, That
such loss of status for such employee shall cease if and when he is
reemployed by such employer."
"
* * * *"
"The purpose of this amendment is simple: to make collective
bargaining contracts equally binding and enforceable on both
parties to them. The courts have held that the purpose of the
Wagner Act was --"
"to compel employers to bargain collectively with their
employees to the end that an employment contract, binding on both
parties, should be made."
"(
H. J. Heinz Co., 311 U. S. 514 -- 1941.) But
neither the Wagner Act nor any other Federal statute makes labor
unions legally responsible for carrying out their agreements."
"The laws of many States make it difficult to sue effectively
and to recover a judgment against an unincorporated labor union. It
is difficult to reach the funds of a union to satisfy a judgment
against it. In some States. it is necessary to serve all the
members before an action can be maintained against the union. This
is an almost impossible process (see testimony of Raymond S.
Smethurst before committee, February 25, 1946). Despite these
practical difficulties in the collection of a judgment against a
union, the National Labor Relations Board has held it an unfair
labor practice for an employer to insist that a union incorporate
or post a bond to establish some sort of legal responsibility under
a collective agreement."
"President Truman, in opening the management-labor conference in
November, 1945, took cognizance of this condition. He said very
plainly that collective
Page 353 U. S. 497
agreements should be mutually binding on both parties to the
contract:"
" We shall have to find methods not only of peaceful negotiation
of labor contracts, but also of insuring industrial peace for the
lifetime of such contracts. Contracts once made must be lived up
to, and should be changed only in the manner agreed upon by the
parties. If we expect confidence in agreements made, there must be
responsibility and integrity on both sides in carrying them
out."
"If unions can break agreements with relative impunity, then
such agreements do not tend to stabilize industrial relations. The
execution of an agreement does not, by itself, promote industrial
peace. The main reason for an employer to sign a collective labor
agreement is to assure uninterrupted operation during the term of
the agreement. Without some effective method of assuring freedom
from economic warfare for the term of the agreement, there is
little reason why an employer would desire to enter into an
agreement."
"Consequently, to encourage the making of agreements and to
promote industrial peace through faithful performance by the
parties, collective agreements dealing with interstate commerce
should be enforceable in the Federal courts. Our amendment would
provide for suits by unions as legal entities and against unions as
legal entitles in the Federal courts in disputes affecting commerce
(as defined by sec. 2(a)(1) of this act)."
"The amendment specifically provides that only the assets of the
union can be attached to satisfy a money judgment against it. The
property of the individual members of the organization would become
absolutely free from any liability under such a judgment. Thus, the
members of the union would
Page 353 U. S. 498
secure all the advantages of limited liability without
incorporation of the union."
"The proposed amendment relative to union liability specifically
provides that a labor organization would be bound by the acts of
its authorized agents only. Thus, a labor organization would not be
liable for damages arising as a result of an unauthorized strike
carried on in violation of a contract. If a union or an officer
thereof did not authorize the strike or participate in it, or
support it, or subsequently approve it, no liability would be
imposed on the union as a consequence of the work stoppage. To
protect the employer against work stoppages in violation of an
agreement but not approved by the union, employees who take part in
such strikes would lose their status as employees under sections 8,
9, and 10 of the National Labor Relations Act. The employer could
refuse to rehire them after the strike. Besides providing a remedy
for the employer for irresponsible interruptions of production,
such a provision would tend to strengthen sound union
discipline."
"The initial obstacle in enforcing the terms of a collective
agreement against a union which has breached its provisions is the
difficulty of subjecting the union to process. The great majority
of labor unions are unincorporated associations, and, at common
law, voluntary associations are not suable as such (
Wilson v.
Airline Coal Company, 215 Iowa 855;
Iron Molders' Union v.
Allis-Chalmers Company, 155 F. 45). As a consequence the rule
in all jurisdictions, in the absence of statute, is that
unincorporated labor unions cannot be sued in their common name
(
Grant v. Carpenters' District Council, 322 Pa. 62).
Accordingly, the difficulty or impossibility of enforcing the terms
of a collective
Page 353 U. S. 499
agreement in a suit at law against a union arises from the fact
that each individual member of the union must be named and made a
party to the suit."
"Some States have enacted statutes which subject unincorporated
associations to the jurisdiction of law courts. These statutes are
by no means uniform; some pertain to fraternal societies, welfare
organizations, associations doing business, etc., and in some
States the courts have excluded labor unions from their
application."
"On the other hand, some States, including California and
Montana, have construed statutes permitting common name suits
against associations doing business to apply to labor unions
(
Armstrong v. Superior Court, 173 Cal. 341;
Vance v.
McGinley, 39 Mont. 46). Similarly, but more restrictive, in a
considerable number of States, the action is permitted against the
union or representatives in proceedings in which the plaintiff
could have maintained such an action against all the associates.
Such States include Alabama, California, Connecticut, Delaware,
Maryland, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island,
South Carolina, and Vermont."
"In at least one jurisdiction, the District of Columbia, the
liberal view is held that unincorporated labor unions may be sued
as legal entities, even in the absence of statute (
Busby v.
Elec. Util. Emp. Union, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia, No. 8548, January 22, 1945)."
"In the Federal Courts, whether an unincorporated union can be
sued depends upon the procedural rules of the State in which the
action is brought (
Busby v. Elec. Util. Empl.
Union, [
323 U.S.
72], U.S. Supreme Court, 89 Law.Adv.Op. 108, December 4, 1944).
"
Page 353 U. S. 500
"The Norris-LaGuardia Act has insulated labor unions, in the
field of injunctions, against liability for breach of contract. It
has been held by a Federal court that strikes, picketing, or
boycotting, when carried on in breach of a collective agreement,
involve a 'labor dispute' under the act, so as to make the activity
not enjoyable [
sic] without a showing of the requirements
which condition the issuance of an injunction under the act
(
Wilson & Co. v. [Birl,] 105 F.2d 948)."
"A great number of States have enacted anti-injunction statutes
modeled after the Norris-LaGuardia Act, and the courts of many of
these jurisdictions have held that a strike in violation of a
collective agreement is a 'labor dispute,' and cannot be enjoined
(
The Nevins v. Kasmach, 279 N.Y. 323;
Bulkin v.
Sacks, 31 Pa.D & C 501)."
"There are no Federal laws giving either an employer or even the
Government itself any right of action against a union for any
breach of contract. Thus, there is no 'substantive right' to
enforce, in order to make the union suable as such in Federal
courts."
"Even where unions are suable, the union funds may not be
reached for payment of damages, and any judgments or decrees
rendered against the association as an entity may be unenforceable.
(
See Aalco Laundry Co. v. Laundry Linen Union, 115 S.W.2d
89 Mo.App.) However, only where statutes provide for recognition of
the legal status of associations do association funds become
subject to judgments (
Deeney v. Hotel & Apt. Clerks'
Union, 134 P.2d 328 (1943), California)."
"Financial statutory liability of associations is provided for
by some States, among which are Alabama, California, Colorado,
Connecticut, Delaware,
Page 353 U. S. 501
New Jersey, North Dakota, and South Carolina. Even in these
States, however, whether labor unions are included within the
definition of 'association' is a matter of local judicial
interpretation."
"It is apparent that, until all jurisdictions, and particularly
the Federal Government, authorize actions against labor unions as
legal entities, there will not be the mutual responsibility
necessary to vitalize collective bargaining agreements. The
Congress has protected the right of workers to organize. It has
passed laws to encourage and promote collective bargaining."
"Statutory recognition of the collective agreement as a valid,
binding and enforceable contract is a logical and necessary step.
It will promote a higher degree of responsibility upon the parties
to such agreements, and will thereby promote industrial peace."
"It has been argued that the result of making collective
agreements enforceable against unions would be that they would no
longer consent to the inclusion of a no-strike clause in a
contract."
"This argument is not supported by the record in the few States
which have enacted their own laws in an effort to secure some
measure of union responsibility for breaches of contract. Four
States -- Minnesota, Colorado, Wisconsin, and California -- have
thus far enacted such laws and, so far as can be learned, no-strike
clauses have been continued about as before."
"In any event, it is certainly a point to be bargained over and
any union with the status of 'representative' under the NLRA which
has bargained in good faith with an employer should have no
reluctance in including a no-strike clause if it intends to
Page 353 U. S. 502
live up to the terms of the contract. The improvement that would
result in the stability of industrial relations is, of course,
obvious."
(Pp. 10-14.)
4. Senate debate:
a. Senator Taft:
"Mr. President, this amendment is the third and last of the
amendments which attempt to strengthen the collective bargaining
process. I do not know of anything for which there has been greater
demand than recognition that labor unions shall be responsible on
their collective bargaining contracts exactly as the employer is
responsible. The United States Supreme Court has said that the
purpose of the Wagner Act was:"
" To compel employers to bargain collectively with their
employees to the end that an employment contract, binding on both
parties, should be made."
"I quote from President Truman's address to the Management-Labor
Conference in November, 1945:"
" We shall have to find methods not only of peaceful negotiation
of labor contracts, but also of insuring industrial peace for the
lifetime of such contracts."
"I quote still further from President Truman's address:"
" Contracts, once made, must be lived up to, and should be
changed only in the manner agreed upon by the parties. If we expect
confidence in agreements made, there must be responsibility and
integrity on both sides in carrying them out."
"A bill was introduced, as I recall, by the Senator from
Virginia (Mr. Byrd) to require all labor unions to incorporate. We
found that to be awkward, and we thought it unnecessary. All we
provide in the amendment is that voluntary associations shall,
in
Page 353 U. S. 503
effect, be suable as if they were corporations, and suable in
the Federal courts if the contract involves interstate commerce,
and therefore involves a Federal question. As a matter of fact,
labor unions, in theory, are responsible for their contracts. At
times, they have been sued, including actions for tort. In the
Danbury Hatters case, it will be remembered a judgment was
obtained, and because it was a voluntary association, the houses of
all the various members were levied upon and taken in satisfaction
of the judgment. We do not want to perpetuate such a condition.
Therefore, we provide very simply that a labor union may be sued as
if it were a corporation, and if it is sued, then the funds of the
labor organization and its assets are responsible for the judgment,
but the funds and the assets of the individual members are not
liable on such a judgment. In other words, we think in subsection
(a) and in subsection (b) we have fairly stated the
proposition."
"
* * * *"
"Let me finish discussing subsection (c) first. It simply
provides how labor unions may be sued, how they may be served, and
provides the machinery by which the suit may be brought. The
difficulty with respect to unincorporated associations is that,
under most State laws, they are very difficult to sue. In theory,
they are suable, but, as a practical matter, there are many States
in which it is almost impossible to sue them. It is necessary to
make practically every member of the labor organization a party to
the suit. Various other kinds of restrictions and difficulties
exist which, as a practical matter, in a large part of the United
States, makes it absolutely impossible to sue a labor union."
(92 Cong.Rec. 5705.)
Page 353 U. S. 504
"What good is a collective bargaining agreement if people are
not bound by it? If there is a collective bargaining agreement and
the men are bound by it, they ought to carry it out. If the union
wants to carry it out, and some of the men say, 'We will not do
it,' they ought to be liable. This provision applies only if the
action of the individual is a violation of the collective
bargaining agreement."
(
Id. at 5706.)
b. Senator Ball:
"The pending amendment very simply seeks to establish for unions
the same responsibility for carrying out their contracts that now
apply to employers. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"Mr. President, it is the contention of some of the opponents of
this amendment that unions are now suable in State courts. A lawyer
on my staff looked up a number of recent decisions. Several of them
show that in Kentucky, West Virginia, in Massachusetts, and in
Illinois, all of which are important industrial States, unions
cannot be sued as legal entities. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"Mr. President, it seems to me that equal responsibility by both
parties to a contract is a principle which the Senate should apply
in the field of labor relations. I hope the amendment will be
adopted."
(
Id. at 5722.)
c. Senator Murray, opposing the measure, argued, among other
things, that labor unions are peculiar in that they are
unincorporated associations, that state rules regarding them are
the same for all
Page 353 U. S. 505
unincorporated associations, and that it would be unjust to
subject the union to different rules in the federal courts. The
following quotations, relied upon by those seeking to find federal
substantive law in Section 301, must be viewed in the context of
this procedural discussion:
"By their proposal, the minority members of the committee
proposing this amendment would create a completely new Federal
right in the United States courts. It would not create this new
right as against all unincorporated associations, but it would set
up a new and special court right against unions."
"To realize the full implication of this matter, it should be
remembered that the courts of the United States, as distinguished
from the courts of each of the several States, operate under a very
longstanding set of laws defining their jurisdiction. It is not
possible to bring each and any case into the United States courts.
. . . The Federal courts were created solely for the purpose of
handling special matters which are appropriately in the
jurisdiction of a Federal agency. Thus, suits involving rights of a
citizen under Federal statute may go to a Federal court. Suits
involving citizens of more than one State may go to a Federal court
under appropriate circumstances."
"What is the state of the law today with respect to the right to
bring a suit in a Federal court for violation of a collective
bargaining agreement? The law in such a situation is identical with
that affecting all individuals, corporations, or associations.
Where there is diversity of citizenship plaintiffs and defendants
from different States, action may be brought in the Federal courts.
Where rights under a Federal statute are involved,
Page 353 U. S. 506
the matter may be brought to a Federal court. In short, where,
under general law, a matter appropriate for Federal jurisdiction is
involved, suits under labor contracts, as under any other type of
contract, may be brought in the Federal courts."
"The Senators making the present proposal are not satisfied with
this, however. Their proposal would take labor agreements out of
the category of normal State court operations, and would make them
at all times and under all circumstances a matter for the Federal
courts. The proposal would create a new and special Federal right
to enforce in the Federal courts the terms in a labor
agreement."
(
Id. at 5708.)
"Continuing my discussion of the amendment, I wish to say that
the first issue is not whether a collective bargaining agreement
may be enforced in court. Collective bargaining agreements are as
enforceable in the courts as any other kind of agreement under the
law today. The first question is whether collective bargaining
agreements, unlike any other agreements, are to be thrown into the
Federal courts and made the subject of Federal court
jurisdiction."
(
Id. at 5720.)
d. Senator Magnuson, opposing the amendment before it was
actually introduced, went into detailed consideration of the
amendment, which he described as one to "create a right of action,
under Federal statute, for breach of a collective bargaining
agreement." He asserted that such agreements were already fully
binding legally on both parties, and that the difficulty was in the
union's status as an unincorporated association. He defended the
necessity for the restrictive rules regarding suits against such
associations, and emphasized the modification of
Page 353 U. S. 507
the rule in many states designed to facilitate suits against
unions. Then:
"The minority views of the Senate Labor Committee, in urging the
adoption of the amendment, correctly assert that the Federal courts
must follow the laws of the States in suits on collective
bargaining agreements when a Federal statute is not involved. The
minority views however, give an incorrect picture of the laws of
the various States on the question. At the present time, fully
three-fourths of the States permit suits to be brought against
unincorporated associations in their own names. In other words, at
least three-fourths of the States allow a suit to be brought
against any employee or any group of employees for the violation of
a collective bargaining agreement."
"
* * * *"
"The comparative freedom of courts of equity also make
[
sic] it possible for them to limit recoveries to funds or
property belonging to the associations as a condition for
permitting this type of suit. Senators, in view of this progress
made by the States, I see no reason why it is necessary for the
Federal Government to invade the realm of the States to such an
extent as to furnish them laws governing suits for breaches of
purely private contracts. The law governing private contracts has
traditionally been a matter for State control, and we should not
lightly violate this separation of functions under the guise of
controlling interstate commerce."
"
* * * *"
"Mr. President, the minority views picture a dark future for a
party who wishes to enforce an agreement with a labor union.
Actually the picture given is quite misleading. For instance, it
says that
Page 353 U. S. 508
an employer or even the Government has no Federal right of
action to enforce a collective bargaining agreement."
"Of course, the amendment of the Senator from Minnesota would
allow a Federal right of action to enforce a collective bargaining
agreement. All of us who are lawyers know that a party who enters
into an ordinary private contract has practically no Federal right
of action to have the contract enforced."
"
* * * *"
". . . Under the amendment of the Senator from Minnesota, a
contract would be enforceable only in Federal courts, and would,
therefore, violate a long-time cardinal principle of law, namely,
that all contracts are enforceable, if at all, in State
courts."
"
* * * *"
"Mr. President, there is another point regarding the pending
amendment which I should like to mention. The amendment under
discussion is designed to make it easier for employers to bring
suit against labor unions. Do the Members of the Senate realize
that it is almost impossible for a labor union to sue an employer
for breach of contract? Collective bargaining agreements are
generally construed either as contracts between the employer and
the employees or contracts for the benefit of the employees. In
either case, injured employees must usually sue for themselves. A
union may not bring suit, because it has no interest in the matter.
Furthermore, even though its disability to sue as an unincorporated
association has now largely been removed, it still has the same
difficulties bringing suit as an employer does in bringing it into
court as a defendant. If the Senate is going to confer special
Page 353 U. S. 509
privileges on one side, it probably should also adopt an
amendment which would confer the same privileges on the other
side."
"
* * * *"
"Mr. BALL. . . . The Senator is complaining that unions have
difficulty in suing employers for violations of contract. This
amendment would cure that situation."
"Mr. MAGNUSON. I do not so understand it. Perhaps I have not
read the amendment too carefully, or perhaps the language has been
changed."
"Mr. BALL. The language of the amendment is 'may sue or be
sued.'"
(
Id. at 5412-5415).
e. Senator Magnuson's belief that the section was intended to
exclude State court jurisdiction was disposed of later by Senator
Ferguson, answering Senator Murray's similar assumption.
(
Id. at 5708.) These incorrect assumptions by Senator
Magnuson do much to explain his belief that a federal "right of
action" was granted by § 10. Moreover, his discourse occurred
prior to Senator Taft's explanation of the purpose of the
amendment.
5. Senator Taft's amendment was incorporated in the bill by the
Senate without substantial alteration. 92 Cong.Rec. 5723.
See I.D.,
infra.
C.
House debates:
1. The House accepted the Senate version of § 10 without
requesting a conference.
2. Representative Case:
"All this section on suability does is to carry out the same
purpose we had in the House bill, when we provided for making
contracts actually binding
Page 353 U. S. 510
upon both parties to it. It has been found that, while a few
States permit suing on a labor contract, many States do not. Unless
you have some such provision as this in Federal law, collective
bargaining contracts will not be good, in the words of the
President, 'for the lifetime of such contracts.'"
"So the Senate very carefully and properly drafted this
provision in the way they did, to insure that 'contracts,' again in
the words of President Truman, 'once made must be lived up to' and
'changed only in the manner agreed upon by the parties.'"
"Individual members of a union are not made liable for any money
judgment, I might point out, but only the union as an entity. . .
."
(92 Cong.Rec. 5930-5931.)
3. Representative Slaughter:
"The second point in the bill provides for mutuality of
contracts. Who is there in this body or in any labor union or among
any group of right-minded men and women who would say that both
parties to a contract are not mutually liable . . ."
"An employer is liable for his contracts and should be, and, by
the same token, so should the employee."
(
Id. at 5942.)
4. Representative Springer:
". . . It does, however, contain the provision that after
collective bargaining and the meeting of the minds upon a contract,
agreeable to both parties, that for the duration of that contract,
so agreed upon, both parties are bound by the terms and provisions
of that contract."
"Of course, that is merely the law under which every American is
guided. The sanctity of contracts must remain inviolate, and all
parties to a
Page 353 U. S. 511
contract fully agreed upon, . . . must be bound by the terms and
provisions contained therein; . . . it would be an assurance that
labor would carry out its contractual obligations under the
provisions of the contracts made and entered into. . . ."
(
Id. at 5944.)
5. Representative Robsion:
". . . It also provides for suits by labor organizations for
damages done to them by management for violation of contract and
the right of action is given to the employer against the labor
union for damages sustained by the breach of a contract between the
employer and the union. . . . When a contract is once entered into,
the aggrieved party should have the right of action against the
party at fault. . . ."
(
Id. at 5939.)
D.
The bill, as passed by both Houses:
"Sec. 10. (a) Suits for violation of a contract concluded as the
result of collective bargaining between an employer and a labor
organization if such contract affects commerce as defined in this
Act may be brought in any district court of the United States
having jurisdiction of the parties."
"(b) Any labor organization whose activities affect commerce as
defined in this Act shall be bound by the acts of its duly
authorized agents acting within the scope of their authority from
the said labor organization and may sue or be sued as an entity and
in behalf of the employees whom it represents in the courts of the
United States:
Provided, That any money judgment against
such labor organization shall be enforceable only against the
organization as an entity and against its assets, and shall not be
enforceable against any individual member or his assets. "
Page 353 U. S. 512
"(c) For the purposes of this section, district courts shall be
deemed to have jurisdiction of a labor organization (1) in the
district in which such organization maintains its principal office,
or (2) in any district in which its duly authorized officers or
agents are engaged in promoting or protecting the interests of
employee members. The service of summons, subpoena, or other legal
process upon such officer or agent shall constitute service upon
the labor organization."
"(d) Any employee who participates in a strike or other
interference with the performance of an existing collective
bargaining agreement, in violation of such agreement, if such
strike or interference is not ratified or approved by the labor
organization party to such agreement and having exclusive
bargaining rights for such employee, shall lose his status as an
employee of the employer party to such agreement for the purposes
of sections 8, 9, and 10 of the National Labor Relations Act:
Provided, That such loss of status for such employee shall
cease if and when he is reemployed by such employer."
E. Veto message (H.R.Doc. No. 651, 79th Cong., 2d Sess.):
"Section 10:"
"
* * * *"
"I am in accord with the principle that it is fair and right to
hold a labor union responsible for a violation of its contract.
However, this legislation goes much further than that. This
section, taken in conjunction with the next section, largely
repeals the Norris-LaGuardia Act, and changes a long-established
congressional policy."
"I am sure that, without repealing the Norris-LaGuardia Act, . .
. a sound and effective means of enforcing labor's responsibility
can be found. "
Page 353 U. S. 513
II
. THE TAFT-HARTLEY ACT.
A.
Legislative history in the House:
1. Hearings before Committee on Education and Labor on H.R. 8,
725, 880, 1095, and 1096, 80th Cong., 1st Sess.:
a. Among the bills under consideration, only H.R. 725 contained
a section concerning federal jurisdiction touching breach of
contract. It provided:
"
EQUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND LIABILITY"
"Sec. 305. (a) Suits for violations of contracts between an
employer and a labor organization if such contracts affect commerce
as defined in this Act may be brought by either party in any
district court of the United States having jurisdiction of the
parties."
"(b) Any labor organization whose activities affect commerce as
defined in this Act shall be bound by the acts of its duly
authorized agents acting within the scope of their authority from
the said labor organization, and may sue or be sued as an entity
and in behalf of the employees whom it represents in the courts of
the United States:
Provided, That any money judgment
against such labor organization shall be enforceable only against
the organization as an entity and against its assets, and shall not
be enforceable against any individual member or his assets."
"(c) For the purposes of this section, district courts shall be
deemed to have jurisdiction of a labor organization (1) in the
district in which such organization maintains its principal office,
or (2) in any district in which its duly authorized officers
Page 353 U. S. 514
or agents are engaged in promoting or protecting the interests
of employee members. The service of summons, subpoena, or other
legal process upon such officer or agent shall constitute service
upon the labor organization."
b. Discussion of the problem of contract responsibility was
frequent, but almost exclusively in general terms of the existence
of a problem and the desirability of having collective agreements
enforceable against the union as well as the employer.
See
pp. 4, 34 36, 90 91, 125, 135, 227, 229, 406, 533, 547, 558 559,
569 570, 582, 590 591, 593, 673, 1007 1008, 1074, 1088, 1218, 1804,
1891, 2292, 2345, 2368, 2530, 2532, 2631, 2695.
c. The only considered analysis of the problem, and the remedy
proposed, occurred in the testimony of Secretary of Labor
Schwellenbach:
"
SUITS BY AND AGAINST LABOR ORGANIZATIONS"
"H.R. 267, section 305 of H.R. 725, section 4 of H.R. 1430, and
section 2 of H.J.Res. 43, refer to suits by and against labor
organizations."
"Few subjects are so widely discussed and so little understood
as this one. I agree that labor unions should be subject to suit.
The general idea seems to be that labor unions are not subject to
suit because they are labor unions. Such a concept has no basis in
law."
"In some States, labor unions are not suable in their common
names because they are unincorporated associations."
"As a matter of fact, there are only 13 States where
unincorporated associations cannot be sued in their common name in
an action at law for breach of contract or tortious conduct. . . .
"
Page 353 U. S. 515
"Since the adoption of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,
there are 35 States where they can sue or be sued in the Federal
courts. Rule 17(b) of those rules provides in part [reading]:"
" . . . capacity to sue or be sued shall be determined by the
law of the State in which the district court is held, except that a
partnership or other unincorporated association, which has no such
capacity by the law of such State, may sue or be sued in its common
name for the purpose of enforcing for or against it a substantive
right existing under the Constitution or laws of the United
States."
"Since the field of necessary legislative action is so narrow, I
see no reason why the gates of the Federal courts should be opened
so wide as to invite litigation, as would be done by the bills
listed above."
"I have three suggestions to make concerning these bills."
"
* * * *"
"Second, I do not see why it is necessary in this field to
abandon the diversity of citizenship requirement. In fact, I doubt
that it can be abandoned constitutionally. The Constitution, as you
know, limits suits in the Federal courts to cases arising under the
Constitution and the laws of the United States or involving
diversity of citizenship."
"I grappled with the question of what the meaning of 'arising
under the laws of the United States' was a good many times, and I
make no categorical statement as to whether or not under this
proposed legislation the courts would hold that suits so started
would arise under the laws of the United States."
"However, the general concept always has been in private
litigation that a necessary prerequisite to Federal jurisdiction is
diversity of citizenship."
(Pp. 3016-3017.)
Page 353 U. S. 516
2. The bill, as reported from committee (H.R. 3020):
"
EQUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND LIABILITY"
"Sec. 302. (a) Any action for or proceeding involving a
violation of an agreement between an employer and a labor
organization or other representative of employees may be brought by
either party in any district court of the United States having
jurisdiction of the parties, without regard to the amount in
controversy, if such agreement affects commerce, or the court
otherwise has jurisdiction of the cause."
"(b) Any labor organization whose activities affect commerce
shall be bound by the acts of its agents, and may sue or be sued as
an entity and in behalf of the employees whom it represents in the
courts of the United States. Any money judgment against a labor
organization in a district court of the United States shall be
enforceable only against the organization as an entity and against
its assets, and shall not be enforceable against any individual
member or his assets."
"(c) For the purposes of actions and proceedings by or against
labor organizations in the district courts of the United States,
district courts shall be deemed to have jurisdiction of a labor
organization (1) in the district in which such organization
maintains its principal office, or (2) in any district in which its
duly authorized officers or agents are engaged in representing or
acting for employee members."
"(d) The service of summons, subpoena, or other legal process of
any court of the United States upon an officer or agent of a labor
organization, in his capacity as such, shall constitute service
upon the labor organization. "
Page 353 U. S. 517
"(e) In actions and proceedings involving violations of
agreements between an employer and a labor organization or other
representative of employees, the provisions of the Act of March 23,
1932, entitled 'An Act to amend the Judicial Code and to define and
limit the jurisdiction of courts sitting in equity and for other
purposes,' shall not have any application in respect of either
party."
3. House Report (No. 245, 80th Cong., 1st Sess.):
a. Majority:
"It makes labor organizations equally responsible with employers
for contract violations and provides for suit by either against the
other in the United States district courts."
(P. 6.)
"
Section 302 deals in improved form with another
subject which was included in last year's Case bill. It provides
that actions and proceedings involving violations of contracts
between employers and labor organizations may be brought by either
party in any district court of the United States. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"When labor organizations make contracts with employers, such
organizations should be subject to the same judicial remedies and
processes in respect of proceedings involving violations of such
contracts as those applicable to all other citizens. Labor
organizations cannot justifiably ask to be treated as responsible
contracting parties unless they are willing to assume the
responsibility of such contracts to the same extent as the other
party must assume his. Public opinion polls in evidence before the
committee show that nearly 75 percent of the union members
themselves concur in this view. For this reason, not only does the
section, as heretofore
Page 353 U. S. 518
pointed out, make the labor organization equally suable, but it
also makes the Norris-LaGuardia Act inapplicable. . . . Among other
things, this change makes applicable in such cases as these the
rules of evidence that apply in suits involving all other
citizens."
(Pp. 45-46.)
b. Minority:
"Section 302 of title III has the dual purpose first of giving
the Federal courts jurisdiction, without regard to the amount in
controversy, to entertain actions involving violations of
collective bargaining agreements affecting commerce or where the
court otherwise has jurisdiction of the cause; and, second, of
providing for suit against labor organizations whose activities
affect commerce, with judgment enforceable only against the union
assets. In any such suits the union would be bound by the acts of
its agents and the courts would have the power to grant injunctive
relief regardless of the provisions of the Norris-LaGuardia
Act."
"The question of amenability of unions to suit has been the
subject of much misunderstanding. Unions have never been exempt
from suit because they are labor unions. It has only been difficult
to reach union assets because unions are unincorporated
associations. And even here, these difficulties have been removed
in the great majority of States. Actually, there are only 13 States
where union funds cannot be easily reached under laws in effect
permitting satisfaction of judgments from the central funds of the
union. . . . Of the remaining 35 States, there are 10 which, by
statute, permit the union assets to be reached by representative
suits in any type of action, and there are 25 which permit suits
against unions in the common name of the
Page 353 U. S. 519
union, in some cases with liability attaching not only to the
union funds, but also to the assets of every individual member of
the union."
"This bill would seek to open the Federal courts generally to
suits by and against labor organizations. Since the adoption of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, however, the Federal courts have
already been authorized to entertain suits by and against labor
organizations in the 35 States which already permit effective
recovery against union funds. Rule 17(b) of those rules provides in
part as follows:"
" . . . The capacity of an individual, other than one acting in
a representative (sic), to sue or be sued shall be determined by
the law of his domicile. . . . In all other cases, capacity to sue
or be sued shall be determined by the law of the State in which the
district court is held, except that a partnership or other
unincorporated association, which has no such capacity by the law
of such State, may sue or be sued in its common name for the
purpose of enforcing for or against it a substantive right existing
under the Constitution or laws of the United States."
"It is concluded, therefore, that there now exists only a very
narrow field for necessary Federal legislative action. There is
perceived very little reason why the Federal courts should now be
opened to so wide a degree, inviting litigation, when rules
presently in existence effectively permit suit and may, in the
sound discretion of the United States Supreme Court, be broadened
even further to permit suit regardless of State procedural laws and
without the necessity of further legislation."
"The question of conferring upon Federal courts broad power to
entertain suits for violation of union agreements regardless of the
amount involved and apparently in complete disregard of the
constitutional requirement of diversity of citizenship is
Page 353 U. S. 520
fraught with grave issues of policy and legality. It would
appear particularly unwise to abandon in this field the present
requirement of the $3,000 amount in controversy as a prerequisite
to Federal jurisdiction. It is feared that the result would be to
involve the Federal courts, already overburdened, with a great mass
of petty litigation over amounts less than $3,000, easily capable
of being adjudicated effectively by the more numerous State courts.
This type of action would undoubtedly invite the return of
conditions in the Federal Courts during prohibition days, when they
bogged down in litigation ordinarily handled by the average police
court."
"As to legality, the bill would apparently give the Federal
courts jurisdiction of disputes over union agreements affecting
commerce regardless of diversity of citizenship of the parties. The
Constitution limits suits in the Federal courts to cases arising
under the Constitution and laws of the United States or involving
diversity of citizenship (Constitution, art. 3, sec. 2). The bill
apparently attempts to found jurisdiction upon the Constitution and
laws of the United States by the use of the words 'if such
agreement affects commerce.' There would be involved here, however,
no substantive right under the laws of the United States or under
the Constitution. Actually substantive legal questions as to a
contract dispute would be decided in accordance with applicable
State law. The United States Supreme Court has held that the fact
that the circumstances involve engaging in interstate commerce will
not permit the Federal courts to assume jurisdiction where there is
no diversity of citizenship (
In Re Metropolitan Railway
Receivership, 208 U. S. 90.)
Page 353 U. S. 521
It is therefore concluded that this aspect of the bill
constitutes an approach which is of doubtful legality, and
certainly is both hasty and unwise."
"It is noted that the bill makes an effort to secure union
responsibility for the acts of its agents. Very general language is
used. It is submitted, however, that, instead, care should be used
in determining what are acts of duly authorized agents acting
within the scope of their authority. . . ."
(Pp. 108-110.)
4. House debates:
a. Representative Hartley:
"It makes labor organizations equally responsible with employers
for contract violations and provides for suit by either against the
other in the United States district courts."
(93 Cong.Rec. 3424.)
b. Both Mr. Hartley and Mr. Case agreed to the following
statement by Representative Barden:
"It is my understanding that section 302, the section dealing
with equal responsibility under collective bargaining contracts in
strike actions and proceedings in district courts contemplates not
only the ordinary lawsuits for damages but also such other remedial
proceedings, both legal and equitable, as might be appropriate in
the circumstances; in other words, proceedings could, for example,
be brought by the employers, the labor organizations, or interested
individual employees under the Declaratory Judgments Act in order
to secure declarations from the Court of legal rights under the
contract."
(
Id. at 3656.)
c. No other member of the committee made a statement with regard
to the section. Nor did any other
Page 353 U. S. 522
member cast any light upon the section. Only casual references
to it appear. (Pp. 3529, 3531, 3666.)
5. The bill passed the House in the same form as introduced.
B.
Legislative history in the Senate:
1. Hearings before Committee on Labor and Public Welfare on S.
55 and S.J.Res. 22, 80th Cong., 1st Sess.:
a. S. 55, under consideration, was introduced by Senators Ball,
Taft and Smith, and contained as Section 203:
"
SUITS BY AND AGAINST LABOR ORGANIZATIONS"
"Sec. 203. (a) Suits for violation of contracts concluded as the
result of collective bargaining between an employer and a labor
organization representing employees in an industry affecting
commerce as defined in this Act may be brought in any district
court of the United States having jurisdiction of the parties."
"(b) Any labor organization which represents employees in an
industry affecting commerce as defined in this Act shall be bound
by the acts of its duly authorized agents acting within the scope
of their authority from the said labor organization and may sue or
be sued in its common name in the courts of the United States:
Provided, That any money judgment against such labor
organization shall be enforceable only against the organization as
an entity and against its assets, and shall not
Page 353 U. S. 523
be enforceable against any individual member or his assets."
"(c) For the purposes of this section district courts shall be
deemed to have jurisdiction of a labor organization (1) in the
district in which such organization maintains its principal office,
or (2) in any district in which its duly authorized officers or
agents are engaged in promoting or protecting the interests of
employee members. The service of summons, subpoena, or other legal
process upon such officer or agent shall constitute service upon
the labor organization."
"(d) Any employee who participates in a strike or other
interference with the performance of an existing collective
bargaining agreement, in violation of such agreement, if such
strike or interference is not ratified or approved by the labor
organization party to such agreement and having exclusive
bargaining rights for such employee, shall lose his status as an
employee of the employer party to such agreement for the purposes
of sections 8, 9, and 10 of the National Labor Relations Act:
Provided, That such loss of status for such employee shall
cease if and when he is reemployed by such employer."
b. Again, there was considerable general discussion regarding
the necessity for making unions responsible for their agreements.
(Pp. 389, 635, 780, 965, 1227, 1321, 1422, 1493, 1617, 1656, 1817,
2019, 2349, 2371.)
c. The unions, in testimony and filed statements, unanimously
opposed the section. One of the points constantly made was that the
belief that state law did not regard them as responsible on their
contracts was erroneous. (Pp. 1042, 1154, 1391, 1534,
Page 353 U. S. 524
1547, 2295.) The procedural nature of the problem was, however,
seldom made explicit. (Pp. 689, 1798, 2011.)
d. Again the most significant testimony occurred when Secretary
of Labor Schwellenbach appeared as a witness:
"Secretary SCHWELLENBACH. . . . Suits by and against labor
organizations: This is a subject upon which there is much
discussion and about which there is very little widespread
information. The general concept is that labor unions are exempt
from suits because they are labor unions. There is no legal basis
for this conclusion. They are exempt from suits because they are
unincorporated associations. Actually, there are only 13 States in
the Union where unincorporated associations are not subject to
suits. . . ."
"Since the adoption of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,
there are 35 States where they can sue or be sued, in the Federal
courts."
"
* * * *"
"Since the field of necessary legislative action is so narrow, I
see no reason why the gates of the Federal courts should be opened
so wide as to invite litigation, as is done by this proposed
section. Speaking as a lawyer and former member of the Federal
judiciary, I have an objection to the abandonment in this field of
the requirement of the $3,000 amount in controversy as a
prerequisite to Federal jurisdiction. This is a right which has
been jealously guarded by the Congress and by the Federal courts.
To have them cluttered up with a great mass of petty litigation
involving amounts less than $3,000 would bring them back to the
position which
Page 353 U. S. 525
they occupied during prohibition days, when they became just a
little bit above the level of the average police court insofar as
criminal work was concerned."
"I do not see why it is necessary in this field to abandon the
diversity of citizenship requirement. In fact, I doubt that it can
be abandoned constitutionally. The Constitution, as you know,
limits suits in the Federal courts to cases arising under the
Constitution and the laws of the United States or involving
diversity of citizenship."
"I grappled with the question of what the meaning of 'arising
under the laws of the United States' was a good many times, and I
make no categorical statement as to whether or not, under this
proposal [
sic] legislation, the courts would hold that
suits so started would arise under the laws of the United States.
However, the general concept always has been in private litigation
that a necessary prerequisite to Federal jurisdiction is diversity
of citizenship. In addition to that, care should be used in
determining what are acts of duly authorized agents operating
within the scope of their authority. To that extent, a distinction
must be made between labor unions and other organizations. The
question was fully discussed, studied, and argued by the Congress
at the time of the passage of the Norris-LaGuardia Act, and the
language there used limited the liability of the organization to
those 'unlawful acts of individual officers, members or agents,'
where there is 'clear proof of actual participation in or actual
authorization of such acts or of ratification of such acts after
actual knowledge thereof.' With few exceptions, I have found that
the officers of international unions were just as anxious to
prevent
Page 353 U. S. 526
the breaking of contracts as were the employers. I found that
the officers of local unions, by and large, were much more anxious
to prevent breaking of contracts than some small groups within the
union. I respectfully suggest that the language of the
Norris-LaGuardia Act should be inserted in the provision of this
section."
"The CHAIRMAN (Senator Taft). Mr. Secretary, of course, the
basis for the jurisdiction is the Federal law -- in other words, we
are saying that all matters of collective bargaining contracts
shall be made in certain ways; that both parties shall be compelled
to negotiate them, and they furnish the solution for the
difficulty, which is an interstate commerce difficulty. I don't
quite see why suits regarding such collective bargaining contracts,
when made, are not properly the subject of Federal law arising
under the laws of the United States, therefore subject properly to
the jurisdiction of the Federal courts. I don't understand how we
can cover the whole subject, as we do, in Federal laws, and then
say, when you come down to suing about it, that the Federal court
has no jurisdiction. I don't understand that."
"Secretary SCHWELLENBACH. I am not contending that the Federal
court should not have jurisdiction. My two objections are that you
should not clutter up the Federal courts with small suits, and
--"
"The CHAIRMAN. I should not think there would be many suits
against unions for violating collective bargaining contracts. I
think that would be only a club in a closet. It would be an awkward
suit. Many unions would not have any funds to collect, and I should
think that any suit brought
Page 353 U. S. 527
would certainly involve more than $3,000. It doesn't seem to me
that this would bring any great deluge of litigation upon the
Federal courts."
"Secretary SCHWELLENBACH. I am testifying as a former Federal
judge with a desire to protect the courts from a large volume of
small matters."
"Senator ELLENDER. What limitation would you make?"
"Secretary SCHWELLENBACH. You should have the same requirements
for jurisdiction in reference to these suits, $3,000 the amount in
controversy, and diversity of citizenship. They have got the right
to go into the State courts, you know, in 35 of the 48 States."
"Senator BALL. Aren't there some pretty important industrial
States among those 13, though, where they cannot go into the State
courts, such as Massachusetts and Virginia, Rhode Island?"
"Senator DONNELL. Don't have out Illinois and Missouri.
[Laughter.]"
"Secretary SCHWELLENBACH. I am not going to get into that
one."
"Senator PEPPER. Mr. Secretary, in any of these 13 States that
you have mentioned, where an unincorporated association is not
suable, if those States were to provide that they are suable, under
the Federal rules they would be suable in the Federal courts. So,
in those cases, the matter would be up to the State to determine
whether the Federal courts should have jurisdiction or not, and
whether they would be suable in the State courts or not."
"Secretary SCHWELLENBACH. I am not objecting to the provision,
except I don't like the idea."
"Senator PEPPER. That is the fact, isn't it?"
"Secretary SCHWELLENBACH. Yes. "
Page 353 U. S. 528
"Senator PEPPER. Now, in the second place, I get the intimation
from your statement that you made the decision [
sic],
which I was not quite sure the chairman recognized or agreed to,
namely, that there was a difference between entrusting a right that
exists under the Federal law or Federal Constitution, for which
there could be redress in the Federal court, and the attempt of
Congress merely to provide a Federal forum, Federal procedure, for
the determination of the substantive rights which might be enforced
by State law? Isn't that a distinction that you meant to
suggest?"
"Secretary SCHWELLENBACH. When I was on the bench, I suppose I
tried half a dozen or 10 cases involving the question of whether or
not there was jurisdiction, because they arose under the Federal
statute, and they are tough, very tough, very hard to distinguish.
And I am not making any categorical statement."
"Senator PEPPER. I mean to suggest this distinction: If Congress
should provide a forum --"
"Secretary SCHWELLENBACH. That is what this proposes to do;
provide a Federal forum for suits against labor."
"Senator PEPPER. For violation of substantive rights. If
Congress were to lay down rules of damages in cases within
congressional jurisdiction that is, involving interstate commerce
-- if Congress were to lay down the obligations of the parties and
prescribe the rules and measure of damages, and so forth, for the
violation of those obligations, then a suit for the enforcement of
the penalty provided, or for the redress allowed, might properly be
brought in the Federal courts, but what seems to be the intention
here is to transfer to the Federal courts
Page 353 U. S. 529
suits for breach of contract, the contracts being entered into
under local law, and redress in all but 13 States being available
now under local law."
(Pp. 56-58.)
2. The bill as reported:
"
SUITS BY AND AGAINST LABOR ORGANIZATIONS"
"Sec. 301. (a) Suits for violation of contracts concluded as the
result of collective bargaining between an employer and a labor
organization representing employees in an industry affecting
commerce as defined in this Act may be brought in any district
court of the United States having jurisdiction of the parties,
without respect to the amount in controversy or without regard to
the citizenship of the parties."
"(b) Any labor organization which represents employees in an
industry affecting commerce as defined in this Act may sue or be
sued in its common name in the courts of the United States:
Provided, That any money judgment against such labor
organization shall be enforceable only against the organization as
an entity and against its assets, and shall not be enforceable
against any individual member or his assets."
"(c) For the purposes of this section, district courts shall be
deemed to have jurisdiction of a labor organization (1) in the
district in which such organization maintains its principal office,
or (2) in any district in which its duly authorized officers or
agents are engaged in promoting or protecting the interests of
employee members. The service of legal process upon such officer or
agent shall constitute service upon the labor organization, and
make such organization a party to the suit. "
Page 353 U. S. 530
3. Senate Report (No. 105, 80th Cong., 1st Sess.):
a. Majority:
"
ENFORCEMENT OF CONTRACT RESPONSIBILITIES"
"The committee bill makes collective bargaining contracts
equally binding and enforceable on both parties. In the judgment of
the committee, breaches of collective agreement have become so
numerous that it is not sufficient to allow the parties to invoke
the processes of the National Labor Relations Board when such
breaches occur (as the bill proposes to do in title I). We feel
that the aggrieved party should also have a right of action in the
Federal courts. Such a policy is completely in accord with the
purpose of the Wagner Act, which the Supreme Court declared was 'to
compel employers to bargain collectively with their employees to
the end that an employment contract, binding on both parties,
should be made' (
H. J. Heinz & Co., 311 U. S.
514)."
"The laws of many States make it difficult to sue effectively
and to recover a judgment against an unincorporated labor union. It
is difficult to reach the funds of a union to satisfy a judgment
against it. In some States, it is necessary to serve all the
members before an action can be maintained against the union. This
is an almost impossible process. Despite these practical
difficulties in the collection of a judgment against a union, the
National Labor Relations Board has held it an unfair labor practice
for an employer to insist that a union incorporate or post a bond
to establish some sort of legal responsibility under a collective
agreement."
"President Truman, in opening the management-labor conference in
November, 1945, took cognizance
Page 353 U. S. 531
of this condition. He said very plainly that collective
agreements should be mutually binding on both parties to the
contract:"
" We shall have to find methods not only of peaceful
negotiations of labor contracts, but also of insuring industrial
peace for the lifetime of such contracts. Contracts once made must
be lived up to, and should be changed only in the manner agreed
upon by the parties. If we expect confidence in agreements made,
there must be responsibility and integrity on both sides in
carrying them out."
"If unions can break agreements with relative impunity, then
such agreements do not tend to stabilize industrial relations. The
execution of an agreement does not, by itself, promote industrial
peace. The chief advantage which an employer can reasonably expect
from a collective labor agreement is assurance of uninterrupted
operation during the term of the agreement. Without some effective
method of assuring freedom from economic warfare for the term of
the agreement, there is little reason why an employer would desire
to sign such a contract."
"Consequently, to encourage the making of agreements and to
promote industrial peace through faithful performance by the
parties, collective agreements affecting interstate commerce should
be enforceable in the Federal courts. Our amendment would provide
for suits by unions as legal entities and against unions as legal
entities in the Federal courts in disputes affecting commerce."
"The amendment specifically provides that only the assets of the
union can be attached to satisfy a money judgment against it; the
property of the individual members of the organization would not be
subject to any liability under such a judgment. Thus, the members
of the union would secure all
Page 353 U. S. 532
the advantages of limited liability without incorporation of the
union."
"The initial obstacle in enforcing the terms of a collective
agreement against a union which has breached its provisions is the
difficulty of subjecting the union to process. The great majority
of labor unions are unincorporated associations. At common law,
voluntary associations are not suable as such (
Wilson v.
Airline Coal Company, 215 Iowa 855;
Iron Molders' Union v.
Allis-Chalmers Company, 166 F. 45). As a consequence, the rule
in most jurisdictions, in the absence of statute, is that
unincorporated labor unions cannot be sued in their common name
(
Grant v. Carpenters' District Council, 322 Pa. 62, 185 A.
273). Accordingly, the difficulty or impossibility of enforcing the
terms of a collective agreement in a suit at law against a union
arises from the fact that each individual member of the union must
be named and made a party to the suit."
"Some States have enacted statutes which subject unincorporated
associations to the jurisdiction of law courts. These statutes are
by no means uniform; some pertain to fraternal societies, welfare
organizations, associations doing business, etc., and in some
States, the courts have excluded labor unions from their
application."
"On the other hand, some States, including California and
Montana, have construed statutes permitting common name suits
against associations doing business to apply to labor unions
(
Armstrong v. Superior Court, 173 Cal. 341;
Vance v.
McGinley, 39 Mont. 46). Similarly, but more restrictive, in a
considerable number of States, the action is permitted against the
union or representatives [
sic] in proceedings in which the
plaintiff could have
Page 353 U. S. 533
maintained such an action against all the associates. . . ."
"In at least one jurisdiction, the District of Columbia, the
liberal view is held that unincorporated labor unions may be sued
as legal entities, even in the absence of statute (
Busby v.
Elec. Util. Emp. Union, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia, No. 8548, Jan. 22, 1945)."
"In the Federal courts, whether an unincorporated union can be
sued depends upon the procedural rules of the State in which the
action is brought (
Busby v. Elec. Util. Empl.
Union, [
323 U.S.
72], U.S. Supreme Court, 89 Law.Adv.Op. 108, Dec. 4,
1944)."
"The Norris-LaGuardia Act has insulated labor unions, in the
field of injunctions, against liability for breach of contract. It
has been held by a Federal court that strikes, picketing, or
boycotting, when carried on in breach of a collective agreement,
involve a 'labor dispute' under the act so as to make the activity
not enjoyable [
sic] without a showing of the requirements
which condition the issuance of an injunction under the act
(
Wilson & Co. v. [Birl], 105 F.2d 948)."
"A great number of States have enacted anti-injunction statutes
modeled after the Norris-LaGuardia Act, and the courts of many of
these jurisdictions have held that a strike in violation of a
collective agreement is a 'labor dispute,' and cannot be enjoined
(
Nevins v. Kasmach, 279 N.Y. 323;
Bulkin v.
Sacks, 31 Pa.D and C 501)."
"There are no Federal laws giving either an employer or even the
Government itself any right of action against a union for any
breach of contract. Thus, there is no 'substantive right' to
enforce, in order to make the union suable as such in Federal
courts. "
Page 353 U. S. 534
"Even where unions are suable, the union funds may not be
reached for payment of damages and any judgments or decrees
rendered against the association as an entity may be unenforceable.
(
See Aalco Laundry Co. v. Laundry Linen Union, 115 S.W.2d
89 Mo.App.) However, only where statutes provide for recognition of
the legal status of associations do association funds become
subject to judgments (
Deeney v. Hotel & Apt. Clerks'
Union, 134 P.2d 328 (1943), California)."
"Financial statutory liability of associations is provided for
by some States, among which are Alabama, California, Colorado,
Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey, North Dakota, and South
Carolina. Even in these States, however, whether labor unions are
included within the definition of 'association' is a matter of
local judicial interpretation."
"It is apparent that, until all jurisdictions, and particularly
the Federal Government, authorize actions against labor unions as
legal entities, there will not be the mutual responsibility
necessary to vitalize collective bargaining agreements. The
Congress has protected the right of workers to organize. It has
passed laws to encourage and promote collective bargaining."
"Statutory recognition of the collective agreement as a valid,
binding, and enforceable contract is a logical and necessary step.
It will promote a higher degree of responsibility upon the parties
to such agreements, and will thereby promote industrial peace."
"It has been argued that the result of making collective
agreements enforceable against unions would be that they would no
longer consent to the inclusion of a no-strike clause in a
contract. "
Page 353 U. S. 535
"This argument is not supported by the record in the few States
which have enacted their own laws in an effort to secure some
measure of union responsibility for breaches of contract. Four
States -- Minnesota, Colorado, Wisconsin, and California -- have
thus far enacted such laws, and, so far as can be learned,
no-strike clauses have been continued about as before."
"In any event, it is certainly a point to be bargained over, and
any union with the status of 'representative' under the NLRA which
has bargained in good faith with an employer should have no
reluctance in including a no-strike clause if it intends to live up
to the terms of the contract. The improvement that would result in
the stability of industrial relations is, of course, obvious."
(Pp. 15-18.)
"Section 301 is the only section contained in [Title III]. It
relates to suits by and against labor organizations for breach of
collective bargaining agreements, and should be read in connection
with the provisions of section 8 of Title I also dealing with
breach of contracts. The legal effect of this section has been
described at some length in the main body of the report,
supra."
(P. 30.)
b. Minority:
"Finally, sections 8(a)(6) and 8(b)(5), together with section
301, would give rise to a conflict of jurisdiction between the
National Labor Relations Board and the United States district
courts. This latter section permits suits in the United States
district courts for violations of collective bargaining agreements.
Parties to such agreements thus have the choice of bringing their
action before the Board or the United States district courts.
Obviously,
Page 353 U. S. 536
the necessity for uniform decisions in such matters and the
avoidance of conflicting decisional rules by judicial bodies make
this legislative scheme wholly undesirable."
"
* * * *"
"(1)
Suits for violation of collective bargaining
agreements"
"The Federal courts have always had jurisdiction to entertain
suits for breach of collective bargaining contracts, and have
awarded money damages where the amount in controversy fulfills the
present $3,000 requirement and diversity of citizenship exists.
Nederlandsche Amerikaansche Stoomvaart Maatschappij v.
Stevedores and Longshoremen's Benevolent Society, ((1920), 265
F. 397). It is apparent from the language of section 301 that no
change is made in the application of State law for this purpose.
The section states that "
"suits for violation of contracts concluded . . . in an industry
affecting commerce . . . may be brought in any district court of
the United States. . . ."
"Every district court would still be required to look to State
substantive law to determine the question of violation. This
section does not, therefore, create a new cause of action, but
merely makes the existing remedy available to more persons by
removing the requirements of amount in controversy and of diversity
of citizenship where interstate commerce is affected."
"
* * * *"
". . . the Federal courts would be made an available tribunal
for every petty cause of action between citizens of the same State,
and, undoubtedly in many instances, residents of the same
community,
Page 353 U. S. 537
with application by the Federal judge of exactly the same
principles of law which would govern the controversy if it were
brought before a State judge in the more numerous State
courts."
"Added to these practical objections are serious questions
concerning the legality of abandoning the diversity of citizenship
requirement. The Constitution limits suits in the Federal courts,
inter alia, to cases arising under the Constitution and
laws of the United States or involving diversity of citizenship
(Constitution, art. iii, sec. 2)."
"Reflection upon these practical and legal objections to this
phase of the bill lead to the conclusion that very little useful
purpose would be served by making Federal courts more broadly
available for the adjudication of disputes under collective
bargaining agreements. The only advantage, if indeed it may be
called an advantage, is to give many disputing parties an otherwise
unavailable opportunity to choose a Federal forum, rather than a
State forum. The substantive law governing the settlement of the
dispute would not be changed in the least, no matter which forum
were chosen. It is our conviction that the added burdens upon the
Federal courts and the doubtful legality of this measure constitute
an extravagant price to pay for a needless indulgence benefiting
litigants whose remedies are now as adequate in the State courts as
they would be in the Federal courts."
(Pp. 13-14.)
4. Senate debates:
a. Senator Taft:
"Mr. President, title III of the bill, on page 53, makes unions
suable in the Federal courts for violation
Page 353 U. S. 538
of contract. As a matter of law unions, of course, are liable in
theory on their contracts today, but, as a practical matter, it is
difficult to sue them. They are not incorporated; they have many
members; in some States, all the members must be served; it is
difficult to know who is to be served. But the pending bill
provides they can be sued as if they were corporations, and, if a
judgment is found against the labor organization, even though it is
an unincorporated association, the liability is on the labor union
and the labor union funds, and it is not on the individual members
of the union, where it has fallen in some famous cases to the great
financial distress of the individual members of labor unions."
(93 Cong.Rec. 3839.)
"What is the purpose of Title III? The purpose of title III is
to give the employer and the employee the right to go to the
Federal courts to bring a suit to enforce the terms of a collective
bargaining agreement exactly the same subject matter which is
contained in titles I and II. It is impossible to separate
them."
(
Id. at 4141.)
"Finally, we have a provision in title III for bringing a
lawsuit for breach of contract. Breach of what kind of contract?
Breach of contract for collective bargaining."
(
Id. at 4262.)
"The Senator from Oregon, when speaking about paragraph (5)
(§ 8(b)(5)) on page 16, stated clearly that, for the purpose
of enforcing the collective bargaining agreement, we were
duplicating the two remedies, one by lawsuits in court for
violation of an agreement and the other by making the violation of
the agreement an unfair labor practice. I do not think that is a
legitimate objection to such an amendment."
(
Id. at 4437.)
Page 353 U. S. 539
b. Senator Ball:
"Fourth, we give to employers the right to sue a union in
interstate commerce, in a Federal court, for violation of contract.
It does not go beyond that. As a matter of law, I think they have
that right, now, but, because unions are voluntary associations,
the common law in a great many States requires service on every
member of the union, which is very difficult; and, if a judgment is
rendered, it holds every member liable for the judgment."
"The pending measure, by providing that the union may sue and be
sued as a legal entity for a violation of contract, and that
liability for damages will lie against union assets only, will
prevent a repetition of the
Danbury Hatters case, in which
many members lost their homes because of a judgment rendered
against the union which also ran against individual members of the
union."
(
Id. at 5014.)
c. Senator Smith:
"I now come to title III, which is very brief, and merely
provides for suits by and against labor organizations, and requires
that labor organizations, as well as employers, shall be
responsible for carrying out contracts legally entered into as the
result of collective bargaining. That is all title III does. I
cannot conceive of any sound reason why a party to a contract
should not be responsible for the fulfillment of the contract; it
is outside my comprehension how anyone can take such a
position."
"I have heard it argued that it is a terrible thing to make
labor unions responsible for carrying out their contracts, but I
have a quotation here, if I can find it, from Mr. Justice Brandeis,
who was the greatest friend of labor in the Federal judicial
field.
Page 353 U. S. 540
He said the greatest thing labor could do would be to recognize
its responsibility. This is a quotation from an address delivered
by him before the Economic Club of Boston on December 4, 1902:"
" The unions should take the position squarely that they are
amenable to law, prepared to take the consequences if they
transgress, and thus show that they are in full sympathy with the
spirit of our people, whose political system rests upon the
proposition that this is a government of law, and not of men."
"I cannot see how anyone can take issue with so clear-cut a
statement as that, or can take issue with the provisions of title
III, which simply carry out the idea, by providing that whichever
side is guilty of violating a contract solemnly entered into shall
be responsible for damages resulting from such violation."
"All that has been done in title III of the pending bill is to
state, in terms, the very principle that Mr. Brandeis lays down as
a precept to be followed by unions who desire to be respected in
the community."
(
Id. at 4281-4282.)
d. Senator O'Daniel:
"I believe that labor unions should be made responsible under
the laws with which other citizens must comply. I do not think
anyone is justified in giving labor unions legal immunity when they
practice coercion, or when they seek to exercise the secondary
boycott, or when they engage in violence, or when they seek to
evade their responsibility for damages with which they may rightly
be charged. There is no reason on earth why we should allow labor
unions special exemption from laws with which all other citizens
must comply."
(
Id. at 4758.)
Page 353 U. S. 541
e. Senator Murray read, word for word with minor exceptions, the
material contained in the Senate minority report, quoted above
(II.B.3.b.), which stressed the fact that Federal courts would be
required to look to state law, and that a serious constitutional
problem would be involved. (
Id. at 4033.) At a later
point, in connection with a substitute bill proposed by the
minority, he said:
"We of the minority do not see the wisdom of permitting suits in
the Federal courts concerning the violation of collective
bargaining agreements regardless of the amount involved or of the
constitutional requirement of diversity of citizenship. It is clear
that the Federal courts are already open to these suits where the
present Federal requirements are met, and we object to burdening
them with a host of petty litigation not heretofore countenanced in
any way. The State courts are adequate for the purposes of these
petty suits. We have nonetheless found that there is a present
inability of Federal courts to permit union assets to be reached
easily in the few States where the application of State procedural
laws prevent suits against unincorporated associations. For this
reason, section 601 would grant jurisdiction in otherwise
justiciable contract actions where suit is brought by or against a
union in its common name."
(
Id. at 4906.)
f. Senator Thomas:
"Or consider the provisions which open the Federal courts to
damage suits for breach of collective bargaining agreements. Not
content with the unfair labor practice provisions relative to
breaches of collective bargaining agreements, the authors of S.
1126 now propose to give the Government two bites at the cherry. It
must be remembered that
Page 353 U. S. 542
these provisions do not, in fact, give a remedy where none
previously existed, although some care has been taken to create the
impression that they do. What these provisions really do is to
invite the Federal district courts to police the parties in their
adherence to their collective bargaining agreements by dispensing
with the sensible statutory requirement of a jurisdictional amount
of $3,000 and the constitutional requirement of diversity of
citizenship. I am firmly convinced that this is a vain effort,
because I am sure that the suits contemplated by these provisions
will not be regarded by the courts as presented any Federal
question. . . ."
(
Id. at 4768.)
g. Senator Morse:
"One procedure is found in the title which permits, of course,
suits by employers against unions for breach of contract. That is
subject to a great deal of criticism on the part of unions. I do
not think the criticism is well founded, because, in my opinion,
when union officials sign a labor contract, their signature ought
to be given the same sanctity and the same effect as the signature
of an employer. So I am going along with the proposal for
legislation which permits suits for breach of contract against
unions. I think a careful reading by labor leaders of the
particular proposal contained in the bill will dispel their minds
of many of the exaggerated fears they seem to entertain. But, be
that as it may, I think it is only fair and proper that, when
unions damage the property rights of employers or third parties as
the result of breaches of contract, they should be held responsible
for the obligation they took unto themselves when they signed the
contract."
(
Id. at 4207.)
Page 353 U. S. 543
h. Other references to the section are of little importance
here. (
Id. at 3838, 4030, 4148, 4209, 4358, 4986, 5007,
and 6454.)
5. Section 301 remained unchanged in the bill as it passed the
Senate.
C.
Conference Report (H.R.Rep. No. 510, 80th Cong., 1st
Sess.):
1. The Conference's revised Section 301 was that presently in
force.
2. The Report stated:
"
SUITS BY AND AGAINST LABOR ORGANIZATIONS"
"Section 302 of the House bill and section 301 of the Senate
amendment contained provisions relating to suits by and against
labor organizations in the courts of the United States. The
conference agreement follows in general the provisions of the House
bill with changes therein hereafter noted."
"Section 302(a) of the House bill provided that any action for
or proceeding involving a violation of a contract between an
employer and a labor organization might be brought by either party
in any district court of the United States having jurisdiction of
the parties, without regard to the amount in controversy, if such
contract affected commerce, or the court otherwise had
jurisdiction. Under the Senate amendment, the jurisdictional test
was whether the employer was in an industry affecting commerce or
whether the labor organization represented employees in such an
industry. This test contained in the Senate amendment is also
contained in the conference agreement, rather than the
Page 353 U. S. 544
test in the House bill, which required that the 'contract affect
commerce.'"
"Section 302(b) of the House bill provided that any labor
organization whose activities affected commerce should be bound by
the acts of its agents and might sue or be sued as an entity in the
courts of the United States. Any money judgment in such a suit was
to be enforceable only against the organization as an entity and
against its assets and not against any individual member or his
assets. The conference agreement follows these provisions of the
House bill except that this subsection is made applicable to labor
organizations which represent employees in an industry affecting
commerce and to employers whose activities affect commerce, as
later defined. It is further provided that both the employer and
the labor organization are to be bound by the acts of their agents.
This subsection and the succeeding subsections of section 301 of
the conference agreement (as was the case in the House bill and
also in the Senate amendment) are general in their application, as
distinguished from subsection (a)."
(Pp. 65 66.)
D.
Debate on the Conference Report:
1. House:
a. Representative Case:
"The Taft-Hartley bill incorporates some other provisions which
were in the Case bill of last year and which are pretty much
accepted as proper subjects of legislation."
"For instance, the bill establishes suability for and by labor
organizations as entities. The bill last year did that. The
objection to suits against labor
Page 353 U. S. 545
organizations has stemmed from a proper resentment against the
travesty that took place in the old
Danbury Hatters case,
where individual members of a union were harried and their property
attached to satisfy a judgment for action taken by officers whom
they did not control. It was as bad as such action would be against
minority and individual stockholders of a corporation for acts they
could not control. Both in the bill last year, and in this
Taft-Hartley bill, the language, while making labor organizations
responsible under their contracts and for the acts of their agents,
limits judgments to the assets of the organization itself."
(93 Cong.Rec. 6283.)
2. Senate: None.
E.
Veto Message (H.R.Doc. No. 334, 80th Cong., 1st
Sess.):
"It would discourage the growing willingness of unions to
include 'no strike' provisions in bargaining agreements, since any
labor organization signing such an agreement would expose itself to
suit for contract violation if any of its members engaged in an
unauthorized 'wildcat' strike."
(P. 3.)
"The bill would invite unions to sue employers in the courts
regarding the thousands of minor grievances which arise every day
over the interpretation of bargaining agreements. . . ."
(P. 4.)
"At the same time, it would expose unions to suits for acts of
violence, wildcat strikes and other actions, none of which was
authorized or ratified by them. . . ."
(P. 5.)
Page 353 U. S. 546
F.
Subsequent debate:
1. House:
a. Representative Robsion:
"For a number of years high, responsible labor leaders have
stated over and over that they believe in the observance of
contracts by both parties. One of the purposes of organizing and
collective bargaining is to make a contract by management and the
workers. This bill provides that management and labor each shall
fairly and honestly live up to the terms of their contract, and if
either party breaks the contract and the other suffers loss or
damage thereby, the party who is at fault must respond in fair and
just damages. If the parties do not intend to live up to their
contract, why should they take the time, trouble, and incur expense
of making a contract? . . ."
(93 Cong.Rec. 7491.)
2. Senate:
a. Senator Taft:
"This is a perfectly reasonable bill in every respect. If we are
to have free collective bargaining, it must be between two
responsible parties. Some of the provisions of this bill deal with
the question of making the unions responsible. There is no reason
in the world why a union should not have the same responsibility
that a corporation has which is engaged in business. So we have
provided that a union may be sued as if it were a corporation. . .
."
(
Id. at 7537.)