No. 294, Docket 92-4074.United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.Submitted November 16, 1992.
Decided January 25, 1993.
Page 1196
Anthony J. McMahon, Washington, DC (Galland, Kharasch, Morse
Garfinkle, P.C.; Jeffrey I. Pasek, Cohen, Shapiro, Polisher, Shiekman and Cohen, Philadelphia, PA, of counsel), for petitioner.
Edward D. Sieger, Washington, DC (Marshall J. Breger, Allen H. Feldman, Steven J. Mandel, Deborah Greenfield, U.S. Dept. of Labor, of counsel), for respondent.
Ronald G. Dunn, Albany, N Y (Gleason, Dunn, Walsh O’Shea, of counsel), for intervenor.
John C. Russell, Pasadena, CA (russell, Hancock Jeffries, of counsel), for amicus curiae California Trucking Ass’n.
Appeal from the Department of Labor.
Page 1197
Before PRATT, ALTIMARI, Circuit Judges, and GERALD W. HEANEY, Senior Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation.
HEANEY, Senior Circuit Judge:
[1] After administrative proceedings authorized under section 405 of the Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1982 (“STAA”), 49 U.S.C.App. § 2305 (1988), the Secretary of Labor ordered Yellow Freight System, Inc. (“Yellow”) to reinstate a discharged employee and pay compensatory damages and back pay. Yellow appeals from that order. We affirm. I
[2] Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations require covered drivers to complete at the end of the day a “driver vehicle inspection report” that identifies the motor vehicle and any defects or deficiencies that would affect the safety of the vehicle’s operation or result in mechanical breakdown. 49 C.F.R. § 396.11 (1988). A legible copy of the last vehicle inspection report must be carried in the power unit of each vehicle. Id.
Before each trip, a driver must review the last vehicle inspection report and be satisfied that the vehicle is in safe operating condition. 49 C.F.R. § 396.13 (1988).
II
[6] On 5 October 1989 Spinner filed a complaint with the Department of Labor, alleging that his termination by Yellow was a violation of sections 405(a) and (b) of the STAA. These provisions prohibit a motor carrier from discharging an employee in retaliation for making safety-related complaints or for refusing to operate a motor vehicle when such operation constitutes a violation of federal safety regulations. 49 U.S.C.App. § 2305(a), (b) (1988).
Page 1198
cause to believe the discharge violated section 405(b) of the STAA. On 15 December 1989 the Assistant Secretary issued those findings and ordered Spinner’s reinstatement. Yellow disobeyed the order,[1] objected to the finding, and requested a hearing before an administrative law judge (“ALJ”).
[8] At about the same time, a grievance was filed under the terms of Spinner’s collective bargaining agreement alleging wrongful discharge. The Assistant Secretary moved to postpone the administrative proceedings pending the outcome of the grievance arbitration proceeding. The ALJ granted the motion. An arbitrator heard that grievance on 30 March 1990, and ruled in favor of Yellow on 31 May 1990. The Assistant Secretary later deferred to the decision of the arbitrator on the 405(b) claim, and “decline[d] the role of prosecuting party,” noting that Spinner and Yellow would “assume the roles” of complainant and respondent as provided for in the regulations.[2] [9] The arbitrator did not hear or resolve the section 405(a) (whistle-blower) claim, however, and Spinner requested a ruling from the Assistant Secretary on that claim. The Assistant Secretary then made a formal finding of no reasonable cause to believe a violation occurred under section 405(a). Spinner objected to the finding and requested a hearing. The claims were consolidated, and the proceedings before the ALJ continued without the prosecutorial assistance of the Assistant Secretary. [10] The ALJ ruled in favor of Spinner on both claims. Over objections by Yellow, the Secretary of Labor affirmed the findings of the ALJ, ordering Yellow to reinstate Spinner and pay compensatory damages and back pay. This appeal followed. III
[11] Yellow asserts that Spinner’s claims of section 405 violations are without merit, and that we should reverse the contrary findings of the Secretary of Labor. After a review of the record, however, we find that the conclusions of the ALJ and the Secretary are sound and based on careful, well-substantiated findings.
Page 1199
forms OD-199. The policy required that if drivers found these forms missing or lost, they would have to conduct a pre-trip inspection themselves, and if they found nothing wrong, depart the terminal without incident. Spinner thought the policy was wrong and threatened in a meeting with a New York manager to complain to federal safety authorities. The manager admonished him against writing any more letters, but Spinner wrote on 7 and 8 September 1989 to the FHA regarding his complaints over driver fatigue and the vehicle inspection reports. The FHA discussed these letters with Yellow management.
[15] Spinner was terminated less than a month later, during yet another confrontation with the Cleveland dispatchers over concerns about another vehicle inspection report. Both the ALJ and the Secretary, after reviewing these and related facts and after having the opportunity to assess the credibility of the witnesses, determined that Spinner’s termination was motivated by his protected “whistle-blowing” conduct. We agree that the conclusions of the Secretary, finding a violation of section 405(a), are supported by substantial evidence in the record, and we therefore affirm. [16] Spinner’s section 405(b) claim alleges he was terminated for refusing to operate a vehicle when such operation would have constituted a violation of federal regulations. To be meritorious on a 405(b) claim, a driver must show that the operation would have been a genuine violation of a federal safety regulation at the time he refused to drive — a mere good-faith belief in a violation does not suffice. Yellow argues that the Secretary’s ruling was based on an erroneous interpretation of the relevant Department of Transportation regulations, that there would have been no violation if Spinner had driven the assigned vehicle on 3 October 1989, and that his refusal to drive was therefore a legitimate cause for dismissal. [17] In retrospect, we now know that the error on the vehicle inspection report on 3 October 1989 was merely clerical. When Spinner was discharged that morning, however, neither the dispatchers nor Spinner had any tangible evidence to support such a determination. To have concluded at the time Spinner was terminated that the error was clerical and that the form OD-199 could safely be altered without infringing the regulations would have been pure speculation. To rule in hindsight that Spinner should have operated the vehicle in apparent violation of the regulations would serve neither good public policy nor the intent of Congress — particularly when the misunderstanding could have been clarified with the minimal cooperation of the dispatchers.[3] We conclude that substantial evidence in the record also supports the findings and order of the Secretary on Spinner’s 405(b) claim, and we find no basis on which to reverse.IV
[18] Yellow next contends that we must find the Assistant Secretary’s deferral to the arbitral ruling to have been a final administrative determination of this matter. In support of this contention, Yellow argues that the statute does not allow a hearing when there is no preliminary finding that the complaint is meritorious, that policy requires definitive deferral to arbitral rulings, and that to allow a private complainant to proceed in an administrative forum, after a finding of no reasonable cause, deprives Yellow of constitutional rights.
A
[19] Yellow interprets the language of the statute to authorize a hearing only if the Secretary, or her delegate, finds reasonable cause that a complaint has merit and issues a preliminary order. Yellow thus argues that department regulations allowing a hearing on a preliminary finding
Page 1200
of no reasonable cause offend the underlying statute.
[20] After a careful reading of the statute, we disagree with Yellow. The statute requires the Secretary to conduct an initial investigation to determine if reasonable cause exists, and to inform the parties of her findings. 4-9 U.S.C.App. § 2305(c)(2)(A) (1988). If the Secretary finds that reasonable cause exists, a preliminary order must accompany those findings Id. After the Secretary issues her findings, the statute provides that “either the person alleged to have committed the violation or the complainant may, within thirty days, file objections to the findings or preliminary order, or both, and request a hearing on the record.” Id. The statute does not condition the right to a hearing on a finding that reasonable cause exists.B
[21] Yellow cites to cases arising under the National Labor Relations Act for the proposition that a deferral to an arbitral ruling is required and is determinative of the complaint. See, e.g., NLRB v. Motor Convoy, Inc., 673 F.2d 734 (4th Cir. 1982). Yellow’s reliance on cases arising out of this district regulatory scheme is misplaced, however, because as the Motor Convoy court held, the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) has a decades-old policy of deferral to arbitration awards resolving unfair labor practice charges, and the NLRB must follow that policy until it explicitly adopts a different policy through formal rulemaking or adjudicative procedures. Id. at 735-36. No similarly explicit, long-standing departmental policy is implicated in the instant case.
C
[24] Yellow also asserts that the statute and regulations are constitutionally infirm if they permit a complainant to prosecute his own claim after the Assistant Secretary makes a finding of no reasonable cause to believe a violation has occurred, and declines to prosecute. Yellow argues that once the Assistant Secretary makes a preliminary finding of no reasonable cause or defers to an arbitration that finds no violation, the public interest to be protected has been served; to allow a complainant to continue to press his case before the ALJ subjects Yellow to a strictly private claim for damages in violation of its Seventh Amendment right to an Article III court and a jury. We do not agree.
Page 1201
an extensive public regulatory scheme that includes parts of the STAA. In enacting the STAA, “Congress recognized that employees in the transportation industry are often best able to detect safety violations and yet, because they may be threatened with discharge for cooperating with enforcement agencies, they need express protection against retaliation for reporting these violations.” Brock v. Roadway Express, Inc., 481 U.S. 252, 258, 107 S.Ct. 1740, 1746, 95 L.Ed.2d 239 (1987) (citations omitted). Thus, while Spinner’s continued prosecution of his own case without the participation of the Department of Labor may seemingly subject Yellow to the enforcement of merely private rights, we hold that those rights are integrated sufficiently closely into a public regulatory scheme as to be appropriate for agency resolution.
V
[27] Yellow also asserts the affirmative defense that Spinner failed properly to mitigate his damages. After a careful review of the record, we find the Secretary’s decision that Spinner mitigated his damages to be reasonably supported by the facts and the law. We accordingly decline to reverse the order to pay back wages.