In an unpublished but nonetheless significant opinion, the Ninth Circuit recently affirmed the lower court’s dismissal of a consolidated lawsuit filed by SAG-AFTRA members against their union, finding the claims time-barred and preempted.  In relevant part, the dispute was rooted in allegations that SAG-AFTRA, by negotiating a return-to-work agreement that allowed SAG-AFTRA’s studio and producer bargaining partners to impose COVID-19 vaccine mandates, had violated its duty of fair representation (and related state-law claims) to the plaintiffs, who opposed receiving the COVID-19 vaccine for various reasons.   

Agreement’s Vaccine Mandate Triggers LMRA Preemption; Strikes Do Not “Toll” Limitations Period

The U.S. District Court for the Central District of California had previously dismissed the plaintiffs’ consolidated claims for two primary reasons.  First, it found that the Labor Management Relations Act (“LMRA”) preempted the plaintiffs’ state-law claims—including for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, and emotional distress—because the state-law claims all arose out of the union’s purported failure to represent its members fairly, an analysis that required interpreting the agreement in question and, thus, triggered the LMRA.  

As for the duty-of-fair-representation claim itself, the District Court found that it was time-barred and dismissed it for that reason.  Notably, the District Court rejected the plaintiffs’ argument that the SAG-AFTRA strike of 2023 equitably tolled the statute of limitations for this claim, declining to find that a work stoppage somehow prevented the plaintiffs from becoming aware of their purported injuries from SAG-AFTRA’s COVID-era bargaining.

On appeal, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the District Court’s dismissal and reasoning.

Takeaways for Employers

While the Ninth Circuit’s decision is unpublished and therefore of limited precedential value, it serves as an important reminder that disputes over vaccination mandates and other contentious bargaining-agreement provisions remain subject to LMRA preemption despite the charged emotions that often surround such disputes.  We will continue to monitor this case for any updates.

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Photo of Joshua Fox Joshua Fox

Joshua S. Fox is a partner in the Labor & Employment Law Department and a member of the Sports, Labor-Management Relations, Class and Collective Actions and Wage and Hour Groups.

As a member of the Sports Law Group, Josh has represented a number…

Joshua S. Fox is a partner in the Labor & Employment Law Department and a member of the Sports, Labor-Management Relations, Class and Collective Actions and Wage and Hour Groups.

As a member of the Sports Law Group, Josh has represented a number of Major League Baseball Clubs in all aspects of the salary arbitration process.  Josh also has extensive experience representing professional sports leagues and teams in grievance-arbitration proceedings, and has played a key role in representing professional sports leagues in all aspects of their collective bargaining negotiations with players and officials, including the Major League Baseball, National Hockey League, the National Football League, Major League Soccer, the Professional Referee Organization, and the National Basketball Association.  Josh has also represented teams and arenas in all aspects of labor relations involving labor unions representing arena staff.

In addition, Josh has extensive experience representing clients in the performing arts industry, including the New York City Ballet, New York City Opera, Big Apple Circus, among many others, in collective bargaining negotiations with performers and musicians, the administration of their collective bargaining agreements, and in grievance arbitrations.

Josh also represents a diverse range of clients, including real estate developers and contractors, pipe line contractors, hospitals, hotels, manufacturers and public employers, in collective bargaining, counseling on general employment matters and proceedings before the National Labor Relations Board, New York State Public Employment Relations Board and arbitrators.

Josh also serves as an adjunct professor at Cornell University’s School of Industrial Labor Relations for several years, teaching a course regarding Major League Baseball salary arbitration.

Prior to joining Proskauer, Josh worked for a year and a half at the National Hockey League, where he was involved in all labor and employment matters, including preparations for collective bargaining, grievance arbitration, contract drafting and reviewing and employment counseling. Josh also interned in the labor relations department of Major League Baseball and at Region 2 of the National Labor Relations Board. He was a member of the Brooklyn Law Review and the Appellate Moot Court Honor Society and served as president of the Brooklyn Entertainment and Sports Law Society.

Photo of Dixie Morrison Dixie Morrison

Dixie Morrison is an associate in the Labor & Employment Department and a member of the Employment Litigation & Arbitration Group. She is a member of the Discrimination, Harassment, & Title VII and the Labor-Management Relations practice groups.

Dixie assists clients across a…

Dixie Morrison is an associate in the Labor & Employment Department and a member of the Employment Litigation & Arbitration Group. She is a member of the Discrimination, Harassment, & Title VII and the Labor-Management Relations practice groups.

Dixie assists clients across a variety of industries in litigation and arbitration relating to wrongful termination, discrimination, harassment, retaliation, wage and hour, trade secrets, breach of contract, and whistleblower matters in both the single-plaintiff and class and collective action contexts. She also maintains an active traditional labor and collective bargaining practice and regularly counsels employers on a diverse range of workplace issues.

Dixie earned her J.D. from Harvard Law School, where she was the Executive Editor of Submissions for the Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law. Dixie received her B.A., magna cum laude, from Pomona College. Prior to law school, she served as a labor and economic policy aide in the United States Senate.