International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers - Transportation Division v. Norfolk Southern Railway Company

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedSeptember 24, 2025
Docket1:21-cv-01870
StatusUnknown

This text of International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers - Transportation Division v. Norfolk Southern Railway Company (International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers - Transportation Division v. Norfolk Southern Railway Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers - Transportation Division v. Norfolk Southern Railway Company, (N.D. Ohio 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION ) CASE NO. 1:21-cv-01870 OF SHEET METAL, AIR, RAIL AND ) TRANSPORTATION WORKERS, ) JUDGE DAVID A. RUIZ TRANSPORTATION DIVISION, et ) al., ) } Plaintiffs, ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER ) V. ) ) NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILWAY ) COMPANY, ) ) Defendant. )

Plaintiffs International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers, Transportation Division, Smart-TD General Committee of Adjustments GO-169, Smart-TD GCA-680, Smart-TD GCA-687, and Smart-TD GCA-898 (hereafter collectively “Plaintiffs” or “SMART-TD”) filed the present action to which Defendant Norfolk Southern Railway Company (“NSR”) filed an Answer and Counterclaim. (R. 1; R. 9). The matter was reassigned to the undersigned District Judge and following a telephone conference the Court established a limited discovery and briefing schedule for the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment. (R. 28).

A ll pending motions at that juncture were denied without prejudice as moot. (R. 29). The parties have received multiple extensions of time for discovery while considering potential resolution. Now pending before the Court are the following: the parties’ Joint Stipulated Facts and Stipulated Record (R. 40),1 the parties’ respective motions for summary judgment (R. 42 & 43),

their respective briefs in opposition (R. 45 & 46), and their respective reply briefs. (R. 47 & 48). Plaintiffs accuses Defendant of unilaterally abrogating their agreement, “which prohibit the Carrier from utilizing Engineers to perform Conductor work.” (R. 431, PageID# 1144). However, Plaintiffs’ position is actually far less absolute, as made clear in their reply: “At all times, the issue in dispute has been that NS has been calling Engineers to fill Conductor vacancies when there are rested Conductors available and ready to work.” (R. 48, PageID# 1450- 1451) (emphasis in original). Thus, the dispute does not revolve around the assertion that the underlying crew consist agreements outright prohibit Defendant from calling Engineers to fill temporary Conductor vacancies, but only that such a practice is prohibited when there are rested Conductors available. Defendant NSR maintains it has a “decades-old practice of calling

employees who maintain Conductor seniority to fill temporary Conductor vacancies, even if the employee was holding an Engineer position at the time” and that any dispute over the interpretation of the parties’ agreements amounts to a “minor dispute” in the parlance of the RLA, and deprives this Court of subject-matter jurisdiction. (R. 42-1, PageID# 780-781). I. Relevant Facts Plaintiff SMART-TD is the duly authorized “representative” of train service employees, including Conductors, employed by NSR, and the GCAs are the bodies with jurisdiction over

1 The parties were only able to agree on the most basic facts despite the lengthy period of discovery. (R. 40). ne gotiating collective bargaining agreements and handling claims and grievances arising thereunder. (R. 40, PageID# 768). Defendant NSR is a “carrier” as defined by the RLA. Id. The respective SMART-TD GCAs and NSR are parties to several collective bargaining agreements that control the terms and conditions of employment for the class and/or craft of train service

employees represented by SMART-TD. (R. 40, PageID# 769). The crafts of Engineer and Conductor are distinct crafts with distinct collective bargaining agreements governing the terms and conditions of employment. Id. The union Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (“BLET”) is the duly authorized “representative” of Engineers employed by NS. (R. 40, PageID# 768).2 A. Crew-Consist Agreements from 1984 The parties stipulate that “[Defendant] NSR and the [Plaintiffs] SMART-TD GCAs are parties to [collective bargaining agreements] which contain what are called “Crew-Consist Agreements.” (R. 40, PageID# 769, ¶8). These Crew Consist Agreements “establish the composition of the train crews,” and Article 4 of each of these respective agreements contains

the following provision: (b) No Carrier supervisor, yardmaster, official, engine or non-craft employee will be used to supplement, supplant or substitute in the work of any train or yard crew working under UTU Agreements. (R. 40, PageID# 769, ¶8) (emphasis added). Article 4 of the 1984 Crew Consist Agreement between NSR and GO-680 is “virtually 2 The Court notes that a parallel lawsuit was filed by BLET, which represents the engineers, in Case No. 1:21-cv-1866 against the same Defendant—Norfolk Southern, which is also before this Court. While the Court addresses these lawsuits separately, the Court is mindful of the interplay between these two crafts and their common employer. The decision in this case and in Case No. 1:21-cv-1866 are intended to be read consistently and in pari materia. id entical,” and states, in pertinent part, as follows: (b) No Carrier supervisor, yardmaster, official, engine or non-train service employee will be used to supplement, supplant or substitute in the performance of service which is assigned to any road or yard service employee(s) and to which entitled under applicable UTU Agreements. Id. (emphasis added). B. Conductor Craft Becomes Source for New Engineers Not long after the 1984 Crew Consist Agreements, collective bargaining agreements between BLET, SMART-TD and NSR, eliminated the craft designation of Fireman, and new Engineers were promoted from the Conductors craft. (R. 42-2, PageID# 802, Decl. of Andrew Shepard at ¶¶5-6).3 Engineers hired after November 1, 1985—virtually all engineers—hold seniority both as Engineers and as Conductors, and “such employees who are qualified and hold seniority in both crafts are required to fill or – in railroad terminology – ‘protect’ vacancies in either craft, depending on the needs of service and the employee’s seniority.” Id. at ¶¶5, 8, 10. Under current labor agreements, Defendant must assign both an Engineer and a Conductor to most trains, and an unfilled vacancy in either craft prevents the train from moving. Id. at ¶5.4 The parties stipulate that “[t]he entry or return to the Conductor or Engineer craft is governed by the appropriate CBA. The CBAs governing the Conductor craft generally prohibit other crafts from being assigned to perform Conductor work.” (R. 40, PageID# 769, ¶7). The parties further stipulate that “Conductors working pool assignments are called, or

3 Andrew Shepard is an Assistant Vice President of Labor Relations for the parent company of Defendant NSR. (R. 42-2, PageID# 800, Shepard Decl. at ¶1). 4 Engineers who are working as Conductors are sometimes referred to as “demoted Engineers,” and his or her rate of pay, while working as a Conductor, are governed by the collective bargaining agreement between NSR and with SMART-TD, which represents Conductors. (R. 42- 2, PageID# 804-805, Shepard Decl. at ¶¶11-13). as signed, to fill positions based on seniority, on a first in, first out basis. First in, first out means those who are first in, get rested and stand to be called again in the order that they arrive into the home or away-from-home terminal. The system for calling or assigning Conductors to craft assignments when an unplanned vacancy exists is set forth in what is referred to as decision

tables. These tables detail how employees will be called, or assigned, within a specific district when a vacancy exists in that pool.” (R. 40, PageID# 769-770, ¶9).

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International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers - Transportation Division v. Norfolk Southern Railway Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-association-of-sheet-metal-air-rail-and-transportation-ohnd-2025.