Justice Stevens
delivered the opinion of the Court.
A railroad has a duty to use reasonable care in furnishing its employees with a safe place to work. That duty was recognized at common law, see
Bailey
v.
Central Vermont R. Co.,
319 U. S. 350, 352-353 (1943), is given force through the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA), 45 U. S. C. § 51
et seq.,
and is confirmed in some, if not all, collective-bargaining agreements. Breaches of the duty may at times give rise to typical labor disputes for which the Railway Labor Act (RLA), 44 Stat. 577, as amended, 45 U. S. C. §151
et seq.,
sets forth binding arbitration procedures.
Breaches may also result in injuries to a railroad’s employees — injuries for which the FELA would appear to give employees a cause of action for damages. The question in this case is whether the possibility of pursuing a labor grievance under the RLA deprives an employee of his right to bring an FELA action.
I
Respondent, a carman employed by petitioner, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company (Railroad), filed an FELA complaint in Federal District Court, alleging that he had suffered severe personal injuries as a result of the Railroad’s failure
“to provide [him] with a safe place to work, including, but not limited to, having fellow employees harass, threaten, intimidate [him], and in particular, foreman Ed Wright threatened, harassed, and intimidated [him] maliciously and oppressively, negligently, and intentionally, in order to cause personal injury to [him] and to cause mental and emotional suffering. All said acts were condoned and approved by [the Railroad] and as a direct and proximate result of said negligence and intentional acts, [he] was caused to suffer an emotional breakdown, thus inflicting on [him] injuries and damages as hereinafter alleged.” App. 7.
The Railroad filed an answer, asserting, among other defenses, that respondent’s sole remedy was before the National Railroad Adjustment Board (Adjustment Board) pursuant to the RLA.
Id.,
at 10-13.
Through the ensuing discovery, the Railroad identified various incidents of harassment that were embraced within the complaint’s allegations,
and also established that its
collective-bargaining agreement with respondent’s union allowed an employee to prosecute a grievance through successive levels of appeal up to and including mutually binding arbitration before the Adjustment Board.
Discovery also brought out that respondent had suffered a mental breakdown, and certain associated physical disorders, that required his hospitalization for 17 days.
The Railroad then moved for dismissal or for summary judgment. The ground for its motion, in the Railroad’s own words, was that “there is no subject matter jurisdiction in the district court to entertain an action concerning a labor dispute between a ‘carrier’ subject to the Railway Labor Act and its employees.” Record Doc. No. 42, p. 6. The District Court accepted this argument, and granted summary judgment on “the narrow question of the availability to an employee covered by the RLA of an FELA remedy based on an alleged negligent failure to maintain a safe workplace.” App. to Pet. for Cert. 11a. The Court of Appeals reversed. It held that respondent’s claims were not arbitrable under the RLA, and that an FELA action was therefore not precluded. 771 F. 2d 1320, 1323-1324 (CA9 1985). Additionally, although the question had neither been raised by the parties
nor addressed by the District Court,
the Court of
Appeals proclaimed that a relevant “issue, one of first impression in this circuit, is whether a Railroad employee’s wholly mental injury stemming from his railroad employment is compensable under the [FELA].”
Id.,
at 1321. The Court of Appeals concluded that the FELA does authorize recovery for emotional injury. Because of the important role these two statutes play in railway labor relations, we granted certiorari. 476 U. S. 1103 (1986).
I — I
I
— \
In 1906,
Congress enacted the FELA to provide a federal remedy for railroad workers who suffer personal injuries as a result of the negligence of their employer or their fellow employees. A primary purpose of the Act was to eliminate a number of traditional defenses to tort liability and to facilitate recovery in meritorious cases. The Act expressly prohibits covered carriers from adopting any regulation, or entering into any contract, to limit their FELA liability.
The coverage of the statute is defined in broad language,
which
has been construed even more broadly.
We have recognized generally that the FELA is a broad remedial statute, and have adopted a “standard of liberal construction in order to accomplish [Congress’] objects.”
Urie
v.
Thompson,
337 U. S. 163, 180 (1949).
The RLA, by contrast, provides a comprehensive framework for the resolution of labor disputes in the railroad industry. Enacted in 1926, the text of the RLA does not mention the FELA or otherwise deal with the subject of tort liability. Rather, the RLA establishes elaborate administrative procedures for the resolution of both major and minor labor disputes.
The statutory procedures for resolving “major
disputes” — those arising “out of the formation or change of collective [bargaining] agreements covering rates of pay, rules, or working conditions,”
Detroit & T. S. L. R. Co.
v.
Transportation Union,
396 U. S. 142, 145, n. 7 (1969) — are not relevant to this case. The “minor dispute” provisions are relevant, however, because the Railroad argues that the underlying dangerous condition in this case could have been grieved as a minor dispute — one “growing out of grievances or out of the interpretation or application of agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, or working conditions,” 45 U. S. C. § 153, First (i).
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Justice Stevens
delivered the opinion of the Court.
A railroad has a duty to use reasonable care in furnishing its employees with a safe place to work. That duty was recognized at common law, see
Bailey
v.
Central Vermont R. Co.,
319 U. S. 350, 352-353 (1943), is given force through the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA), 45 U. S. C. § 51
et seq.,
and is confirmed in some, if not all, collective-bargaining agreements. Breaches of the duty may at times give rise to typical labor disputes for which the Railway Labor Act (RLA), 44 Stat. 577, as amended, 45 U. S. C. §151
et seq.,
sets forth binding arbitration procedures.
Breaches may also result in injuries to a railroad’s employees — injuries for which the FELA would appear to give employees a cause of action for damages. The question in this case is whether the possibility of pursuing a labor grievance under the RLA deprives an employee of his right to bring an FELA action.
I
Respondent, a carman employed by petitioner, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company (Railroad), filed an FELA complaint in Federal District Court, alleging that he had suffered severe personal injuries as a result of the Railroad’s failure
“to provide [him] with a safe place to work, including, but not limited to, having fellow employees harass, threaten, intimidate [him], and in particular, foreman Ed Wright threatened, harassed, and intimidated [him] maliciously and oppressively, negligently, and intentionally, in order to cause personal injury to [him] and to cause mental and emotional suffering. All said acts were condoned and approved by [the Railroad] and as a direct and proximate result of said negligence and intentional acts, [he] was caused to suffer an emotional breakdown, thus inflicting on [him] injuries and damages as hereinafter alleged.” App. 7.
The Railroad filed an answer, asserting, among other defenses, that respondent’s sole remedy was before the National Railroad Adjustment Board (Adjustment Board) pursuant to the RLA.
Id.,
at 10-13.
Through the ensuing discovery, the Railroad identified various incidents of harassment that were embraced within the complaint’s allegations,
and also established that its
collective-bargaining agreement with respondent’s union allowed an employee to prosecute a grievance through successive levels of appeal up to and including mutually binding arbitration before the Adjustment Board.
Discovery also brought out that respondent had suffered a mental breakdown, and certain associated physical disorders, that required his hospitalization for 17 days.
The Railroad then moved for dismissal or for summary judgment. The ground for its motion, in the Railroad’s own words, was that “there is no subject matter jurisdiction in the district court to entertain an action concerning a labor dispute between a ‘carrier’ subject to the Railway Labor Act and its employees.” Record Doc. No. 42, p. 6. The District Court accepted this argument, and granted summary judgment on “the narrow question of the availability to an employee covered by the RLA of an FELA remedy based on an alleged negligent failure to maintain a safe workplace.” App. to Pet. for Cert. 11a. The Court of Appeals reversed. It held that respondent’s claims were not arbitrable under the RLA, and that an FELA action was therefore not precluded. 771 F. 2d 1320, 1323-1324 (CA9 1985). Additionally, although the question had neither been raised by the parties
nor addressed by the District Court,
the Court of
Appeals proclaimed that a relevant “issue, one of first impression in this circuit, is whether a Railroad employee’s wholly mental injury stemming from his railroad employment is compensable under the [FELA].”
Id.,
at 1321. The Court of Appeals concluded that the FELA does authorize recovery for emotional injury. Because of the important role these two statutes play in railway labor relations, we granted certiorari. 476 U. S. 1103 (1986).
I — I
I
— \
In 1906,
Congress enacted the FELA to provide a federal remedy for railroad workers who suffer personal injuries as a result of the negligence of their employer or their fellow employees. A primary purpose of the Act was to eliminate a number of traditional defenses to tort liability and to facilitate recovery in meritorious cases. The Act expressly prohibits covered carriers from adopting any regulation, or entering into any contract, to limit their FELA liability.
The coverage of the statute is defined in broad language,
which
has been construed even more broadly.
We have recognized generally that the FELA is a broad remedial statute, and have adopted a “standard of liberal construction in order to accomplish [Congress’] objects.”
Urie
v.
Thompson,
337 U. S. 163, 180 (1949).
The RLA, by contrast, provides a comprehensive framework for the resolution of labor disputes in the railroad industry. Enacted in 1926, the text of the RLA does not mention the FELA or otherwise deal with the subject of tort liability. Rather, the RLA establishes elaborate administrative procedures for the resolution of both major and minor labor disputes.
The statutory procedures for resolving “major
disputes” — those arising “out of the formation or change of collective [bargaining] agreements covering rates of pay, rules, or working conditions,”
Detroit & T. S. L. R. Co.
v.
Transportation Union,
396 U. S. 142, 145, n. 7 (1969) — are not relevant to this case. The “minor dispute” provisions are relevant, however, because the Railroad argues that the underlying dangerous condition in this case could have been grieved as a minor dispute — one “growing out of grievances or out of the interpretation or application of agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, or working conditions,” 45 U. S. C. § 153, First (i). Minor disputes initially must be dealt with through a railroad’s internal dispute resolution processes, and if not settled there, may be submitted to a division of the Adjustment Board, or to a Public Law Board, which is an arbitration board chosen by the parties. Judicial review of these Boards’ determinations has been characterized as “‘among the narrowest known to the law.’”
Union Pacific R. Co.
v.
Sheehan,
439 U. S. 89, 91 (1978) (citation omitted).
The Railroad makes three arguments in support of its contention that respondent may not bring an FELA action for his injuries. First, it argues that the exclusive forum for any dispute arising out of workplace conditions is the RLA. Second, it argues that even if many workplace injuries are actionable under the FELA, emotional injuries should not be actionable because of their close relationship to minor disputes that are to be brought under the RLA. Finally, the Railroad responds to the Court of Appeals’ discussion of whether the term “injury” as used in the FELA includes purely emotional injury, and argues that it does not. We reject the Railroad’s first two arguments.
As for the third
argument, which focuses on the scope of the FELA, we believe that the record is insufficiently developed at this preliminary stage to allow us, or the Court of Appeals, to express an opinion on respondent’s ultimate chances of recovery under the FELA.
Ill
The Railroad asserts first that employees have the right to have defects in the workplace corrected by resorting to the grievance machinery that is in place pursuant to the RLA, and that the RLA is the exclusive remedy for such minor disputes. Indeed, in this case, preliminary though abortive steps in that direction were actually taken. Thus, the Railroad argues that an FELA action for damages is barred. We find no merit in this argument. The fact that an injury otherwise compensable under the FELA was caused by conduct that may have been subject to arbitration under the RLA does not deprive an employee of his opportunity to bring an FELA action for damages. Presumably a host of personal injuries suffered by railroad employees are caused by negligent practices and conditions that might have been cured or avoided by the timely invocation of the grievance machinery.
See
Yawn
v.
Southern R. Co.,
591 F. 2d 312, 317 (CA5 1979). But we have never considered that possibility a bar to an employee’s bringing an FELA claim for personal injuries, and the Railroad has not persuaded us to do so now.
This Court has, on numerous occasions, declined to hold that individual employees are, because of the availability of arbitration, barred from bringing claims under federal statutes. See,
e. g., McDonald
v.
West Branch,
466 U. S. 284
(1984);
Barrentine
v.
Arkansas-Best Freight System, Inc.,
450 U. S. 728 (1981);
Alexander
v.
Gardner-Denver Co.,
415 U. S. 36 (1974). Although the analysis of the question under each statute is quite distinct, the theory running through these cases is that notwithstanding the strong policies encouraging arbitration, “different considerations apply where the employee’s claim is based on rights arising out of a statute designed to provide minimum substantive guarantees to individual workers.”
Barrentine, supra,
at 737.
This principle is instructive on the question before us. The FELA not only provides railroad workers with substantive protection against negligent conduct that is independent of the employer’s obligations under its collective-bargaining agreement, but also affords injured workers a remedy suited to their needs, unlike the limited relief that seems to be available through the Adjustment Board.
It is inconceivable that Congress intended that a worker who suffered a disabling injury would be denied recovery under the FELA simply because he might also be able to process a narrow labor grievance under the RLA to a successful conclusion. As then District Judge J. Skelly Wright concluded, “the Railway Labor Act . . . has no application to a claim for damages to the employee resulting from the negligence of an employer railroad.”
Barnes
v.
Public Belt R. R. Comm’n for City of New York,
101 F. Supp. 200, 203 (ED La. 1951).
It is true that the RLA remedy for the resolution of minor disputes is “in at least some situations” exclusive.
Andrews
v.
Louisville & Nashville R. Co.,
406 U. S. 320, 325 (1972).
In
Andrews,
an employee brought a state wrongful discharge claim based squarely on an alleged breach of the collective-bargaining agreement. We held that Congress had intended the RLA dispute resolution mechanism to be mandatory for that type of dispute, and that courts were therefore foreclosed from addressing claims that properly arise under the RLA. In this case, by contrast, Congress has enacted the FELA to serve as the statutory basis for the award of damages to employees injured through an employer’s or coworker’s negligence.
Unwilling to rely solely on the argument that
any
injury caused by a condition that could have been the subject of a grievance under the RLA is not actionable under the FELA, petitioner and various
amici
argue, in the alternative, that the RLA requires that a narrow “emotional injury” exception be carved out of the FELA. Because they fear that many workers alleging emotional injuries are really complaining of unhappiness arising out of everyday workplace disputes, they ask us to hold that the RLA provides the exclusive remedy for this ill-defined class of injuries. Even if we were to find some authority allowing us to rewrite the FELA in this manner, we are not persuaded that it would be appropriate to do so. There is no basis for assuming that allowing FELA actions for emotional injury will wreak havoc with the general scheme of RLA arbitration,
and absent an intolerable
conflict between the two statutes, we are unwilling to read the RLA as repealing any part of the FELA. See
Morton
v.
Mancari,
417 U. S. 535, 550 (1974). Although we do not decide today whether purely emotional injuries are cognizable under the FELA, we stress that it is the FELA that controls that inquiry, not the RLA. As far as a worker’s right to damages under the FELA is concerned, Congress’ enactment of the RLA has had no effect.
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I — I
The Railroad also contends that the judgment of the Court of Appeals should be reversed because it erroneously concluded that a railroad employee’s “wholly mental injury” is compensable under the FELA. The problem with our addressing this argument is that, because of the posture in which this case comes before us, the record has never been developed on the exact nature of the allegedly tortious activity, or the extent of the injuries that respondent claims to have suffered. As we have mentioned, petitioner’s motion for dismissal or for summary judgment was based on the sole ground that an employee’s exclusive remedy for a railroad’s failure to maintain a safe workplace is to file a grievance-
under the RLA.
Respondent's memorandum, of course, sought to respond to that narrow argument alone, and did not deal with the question whether emotional injury is actionable under the FELA.
The question whether “emotional injury” is cognizable under the FELA is not necessarily an abstract point of law or a pure question of statutory construction that might be answerable without exacting scrutiny of the facts of the case. Assuming, as we have, that FELA jurisprudence gleans guidance from common-law developments, see
Urie
v.
Thompson,
337 U. S., at 174, whether one can recover for emotional injury might rest on a variety of subtle and intricate distinctions related to the nature of the injury and the character of the tortious activity. For example, while most States now recognize a tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress,
they vary in the degree of intent required to
establish liability,
and the level of physical manifestation of the emotional injury required to support recovery.
Moreover, some States consider the context and the relationship between the parties significant, placing special emphasis on the workplace.
In addition, although many States have now recognized a tort of negligent infliction of emotional distress,
they too vary in the degree of objective symptomatol-
ogy the victim must demonstrate.
These issues are only-exemplary of the doctrinal divergences in this area. In short, the question whether one can recover for emotional injury may not be susceptible to an all-inclusive “yes” or “no” answer. As in other areas of law, broad pronouncements in this area may have to bow to the precise application of developing legal principles to the particular facts at hand.
Since, through no fault of either party, we do not know what all those facts are in this case, we cannot begin to decide whether respondent will be able to support his allegation that petitioners are liable to him under the FELA.
Given the posture of the case, there was no reason for the Court of Appeals to express an opinion on this issue. Without agreeing or disagreeing with the merits of the Court of Appeals’ discussion of the emotional injury issue, we affirm its judgment
only to the extent that it rejects the RLA preclusion argument advanced by the Railroad.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed in part and vacated in part, and the case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.