United Food Workers v. Brown Group, 517 U.S. 544 (1996)
United Food & Commercial Workers v. Brown Group, Inc.,
No. 95-340
Argued February 20, 1996
Decided May 13, 1996
517 U.S. 544
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
Syllabus
Petitioner union filed this suit, alleging that respondent company began to lay off workers in connection with the closing of one of its plants before giving the union the closing notice required by the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (the WARN Act), and seeking backpay for each of its affected members. The District Court dismissed the complaint, and the Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that the suit was barred because the union failed to meet the third part of the test for determining associational standing.
Held:
1. The WARN Act grants a union authority to sue for damages on behalf of its members, North Star Steel Co. v. Thomas, 515 U.S. 29, 31; the writ of certiorari therefore was not improvidently granted. Pp. 548-550.
2. The union has standing to bring this action. Pp. 551-558.
(a) Under modern associational standing doctrine, an organization may sue to redress its members’ injuries when: "(a) its members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right; (b) the interests it seeks to protect are germane to the organization’s purpose; and (c) neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested requires the participation of individual members in the lawsuit." Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Comm’n, 432 U.S. 333, 343. The requirement of individual participation has been understood to preclude associational standing when an organization seeks damages on behalf of its members. The question here is whether a bar to the union’s suit found in this third prong of the test is constitutional and absolute, or prudential and malleable by Congress. The Court of Appeals apparently concluded that the test’s third prong is of constitutional character, for it denied standing even though the WARN Act permits the union to sue for its members’ damages. Pp. 551-554.
(b) The test’s first prong is grounded in Article III as an element of the constitutional case or controversy requirement. Resort to general principles, however, leads to the conclusion that the third prong is a prudential impediment that Congress may abrogate. Hunt’s requirement that an organization suing as representative include at least one member with standing to present, in his or her own right, the claim pleaded by the association is an Article III necessity for the an association’s representative suit. Hunt’s second prong is complementary to the first, because it raises an assurance that the association’s litigators will themselves have a stake in the resolution of the dispute, and thus be in a position to serve as the defendant’s natural adversary. But once an association has satisfied Hunt’s first and second prongs assuring adversarial vigor in pursuing a claim for which member Article III standing exists, it is difficult to see a constitutional necessity for anything more.
The third prong is best seen as focusing on matters of administrative convenience and efficiency, not on elements of a case or controversy. Circumstantial evidence of that prong’s prudential nature is seen in the wide variety of other contexts in which a statute, federal rule, or accepted common law practice permits one person to sue on behalf of another, even where damages are sought. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(1). Pp. 554-558.
50 F.3d 1426, reversed and remanded.
SOUTER, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.