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To this day, Leonidas has kept you from screwing the West with your USAPA scam, DOH. So when you form your Persian LLC we have plenty of legal spike strips to keep you changing your tires to thwart your escape from arbitration and the APA will squash you like a pesky gnat.Black Swan said:85ER,
Greetings. Hope you are aware of the East pilots age. You should consider it. Lots leaving.
Are your leaders even considering arbitration? If you are, you're crazy. Look what happened to us. It could, be you. And you should get educated on the Nic. It would crush you guys. Consider when it was rendered, 2007. It has been successfully thwarted by the East, as the West was warned. They were informed by ALPA of the fact a change in bargaining reps would kill it. Killed it was. Affirmed by the Ninth.
I for one, want none of your stuff. Most of us want to finish out with what we have.
If you guys do strong arm us, I am sure our group will hardball back. Going to arbitration using the bill you guys have attached to your resume. Right or wrong, you own it. Take your chances. The Wilders have been hired. They authored it.
I have nothing but respect for you guys. Hope we can work it out. Good fences make good neighbors.
One other thing....
What exactly did the 9th affirm? How about doing a little catching up to keep up.
Adjunct Law Prof Blog
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Rare Cause of Action For Breach of Duty Of Fair Representation Stated
By Adjunct LawProfs
Addington v. U.S. Airlines, 588 F. Supp.2d 1051 (D. Az. 2008)Download 588_F_SUPP_2D_1051_2-11-09_1331.txt is a rare plaintiff DFR win-or at least the successful defeat of a motion to dismiss. This is an RLA case where pilots of a smaller airline that merged with a larger airline stated a claim that after the merger, the union breached its duty of fair representation to the minority. The court reasoned in part:
USAPA vehemently argues that it had every right to renounce its express obligation to the ALPA Merger Policy and the arbitrated seniority award, to which it is bound by the 2004 CBA and the Transition Agreement. It says it may recant a prior bargaining position and adopt a seniority policy based upon date of hire. Seniority rights are creations of the collective bargaining agreement, and so may be revised or abrogated by later negotiated changes in this agreement. Hass v. Darigold Dairy Prods. Co., 751 F.2d 1096, 1099 (9th Cir.1985). As a general proposition, the seniority scheme under the Nicolau Award is not the only permissible way to resolve post-merger seniority issues *1060 within unions. For instance, there is nothing per se unacceptable about a seniority agreement based on the date of hire. Laturner, 501 F.2d at 599; Rakestraw v. United Airlines, Inc., 981 F.2d 1524, 1533 (7th Cir.1992). USAPA refers repeatedly to these principles at their highest level of generality. The problem is, though the benefit of the Nicolau Award is surely what motivates the West Pilots, their legal objection to USAPA's date-of-hire seniority policy is not directly substantive, but rather procedural. The alleged breach of the duty stems from the bad faith manner of USAPA's determined attempts to evade the Award. Irrespective of whether seniority rights vest in a proprietary sense, a union may not arbitrarily abridge those rights after a merger solely for the sake of political expediency. Barton Brands, Ltd. v. NLRB, 529 F.2d 793, 800 (7th Cir.1976); see also Rakestraw, 981 F.2d at 1531.
The Ninth Circuit has not dealt directly with this fact situation, but the union's position flies against the headwind of cases from other circuits. The D.C. Circuit has held that a union breaches its duty of fair representation when it arbitrarily adopt