Court Opinion

ID: 9955608
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-28 20:08:15.888971+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:15:09.205398
License: Public Domain

Dale Cecil v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, No. 2049,
Sept. Term, 2022. Opinion filed on March 28, 2024, by Albright, J.

ADMINISTRATIVE EXHAUSTION – DUTY OF FAIR REPRESENTATION – STATE
LABOR RELATIONS BOARD

The administrative cause of action for breach of the duty of fair representation under Md.
Code, State Pers. & Pens. § 3-306 (repealed 2023) (“SP&P § 3-306 (2022)”) is concurrent
to the judicial cause of action for breach of the duty of fair representation under Md. Code,
Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-120 (“CJP § 5-120”). Exhaustion of administrative remedies is thus
not required before commencing a judicial action for a fair representation claim. A plaintiff
may bring a claim under CJP § 5-120 in a Maryland circuit court before or after bringing a
claim under SP&P § 3-306 (2022) with the Maryland State Labor Relations Board.

TREATMENT OF FEDERAL LABOR LAW – STATE LABOR LAW – FEDERAL
PREEMPTION – STATE STATUTORY ABROGATION OF COMMON LAW

Because Maryland labor law is at least partially modeled after federal labor law, federal
labor law is persuasive to courts interpreting Maryland labor law. When deciding whether
a state labor statute abrogates common law, courts may consider whether a similar federal
labor statute preempts state law.

STATUTORY ABROGATION OF COMMON LAW – FIELD PREEMPTION –
FEDERAL PREEMPTION

State statutory abrogation of common law may be explicit or implicit. There are two ways
a state statute may implicitly abrogate common law: through conflict preemption or field
preemption. Under conflict preemption, a state statute abrogates the common law when the
statute is in direct conflict with the common law. Under field preemption, a state statute
abrogates the common law when, by enacting the state statute, the legislature intended to
occupy the whole field of law, subsuming the common law in the process.

STATUTORY ABROGATION OF COMMON LAW – LEGISLATIVE INTENT –
STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION – CONSIDERATION OF POLICY

When determining whether a state statute abrogates common law, the central question is
whether the legislature intended such a result. In examining legislative intent, courts may
consider whether the policy behind the statute supports or contradicts abrogation of the
common law.
STATUTORY ABROGATION OF COMMON LAW –                                   DUTY      OF     FAIR
REPRESENTATION – NEGLIGENCE – FIELD PREEMPTION

The existence of the judicial cause of action for a state union’s alleged breach of the duty
of fair representation abrogates related negligence claims. In codifying state employees’
claims against a state union for breach of the duty of fair representation, the legislature
intended to occupy the entire field of state fair representation claims. Therefore, in a
situation covered by a state union’s duty of fair representation, a claimant does not have an
additional cause of action against the state union for negligence.

STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS – 28 U.S.C. § 1367(D) TOLLING – RELATION BACK
OF STATE CLAIMS

A state claim is tolled by 28 U.S.C. § 1367(d) when the state claim was expressly asserted
in a federal complaint filed within the state statute of limitations. If an amended federal
complaint filed outside the state statute of limitations adds a state claim, then that state
claim does not relate back to the date of the original federal complaint. However, if an
amended federal complaint filed outside the state statute of limitations merely clarifies a
state claim that was already asserted in the original federal complaint, then that state claim
does relate back to the date of the original federal complaint, and 28 U.S.C. § 1367(d) may
toll the statute of limitations on the state claim during the pendency of the federal case.

STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS – 28 U.S.C. § 1367(D) TOLLING – RELATION BACK
OF STATE CLAIMS – ADDING VERSUS CLARIFYING A STATE CLAIM

When a plaintiff asserts only one claim in an original federal complaint and subsequently
asserts a federal claim and a state claim in an amended federal complaint, the state claim
does not relate back to the original federal complaint for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1367(d)
tolling. In this situation, the amended federal complaint added the state claim, rather than
clarifying it.
Circuit Court for Baltimore City
Case No. 24-C-22-003835
                                                                     REPORTED

                                                           IN THE APPELLATE COURT

                                                                  OF MARYLAND

                                                                      No. 2049

                                                              September Term, 2022
                                                    ______________________________________

                                                                    DALE CECIL

                                                                            v.

                                                      AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE,
                                                    COUNTY, AND MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES
                                                    ______________________________________

                                                    Arthur,
                                                    Albright,
                                                    Wright, Alexander, Jr.
                                                          (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

                                                                      JJ.
                                                    ______________________________________

                                                              Opinion by Albright, J.
                                                    ______________________________________

                                                    Filed: March 28, 2024

Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State
Government Article) this document is authentic.

                                2024.03.28
                                14:58:05
                                -04'00'

Gregory Hilton, Clerk
       This appeal comes to us from the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. In essence, it

presents a dispute between an employee, Appellant, Dale Cecil (“Mr. Cecil”), and his

union, Appellee, the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees,

Maryland Council 3, AFL-CIO (“AFSCME,” “the Union”). The dispute arises out of Mr.

Cecil’s allegedly wrongful termination by his employer, the Maryland State Highway

Administration (“SHA”), and the Union’s handling of Mr. Cecil’s administrative appeal

from that termination. After Mr. Cecil’s administrative appeal was dismissed, Mr. Cecil

sued the Union in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland, alleging that the

Union had breached its duty of fair representation to him by failing to file his

administrative appeal on time.

       Upon conceding that the U.S. District Court likely did not have jurisdiction over

the state Union, Mr. Cecil voluntarily dismissed his federal complaint. He then reasserted

his fair representation claim as a state-law claim in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City.

As for limitations, Mr. Cecil claimed that it was tolled by 28 U.S.C. § 1367(d) while his

claims were in federal court. Mr. Cecil also asserted a claim for negligence. The circuit

court dismissed Mr. Cecil’s complaint, concluding that the fair representation claim was

untimely 1 and that his negligence claim was abrogated by Maryland’s fair representation

statute. Mr. Cecil then timely filed this appeal.

       1
        Within this appeal, there are two contentions of failure to timely file. First, Mr.
Cecil contends that the Union failed to timely file his wrongful termination appeal (an
administrative appeal) with Maryland’s Office of Administrative Hearings (“OAH”).
Second, the Union contends that Mr. Cecil failed to timely file his fair representation
       Mr. Cecil presents the following questions, which we have rephrased: 2

             1. Did Mr. Cecil timely file his state court complaint against the
                Union for breach of the duty of fair representation?

             2. Does breach of the duty of fair representation under Md. Code,
                State Pers. & Pens. § 3-306 (repealed 2023) (“SP&P § 3-306
                (2022)”), as this statute existed before its repeal, abrogate
                common-law negligence? 3

claim against the Union. Our opinion today is primarily concerned with the latter
contention, as it is dispositive in this case.
       2
           Mr. Cecil’s brief stated his questions presented as follows:

             1. Whether Appellant Timely Filed the Circuit Court Complaint for
             Breach of the Duty of Fair Representation in the Circuit Court for
             Baltimore City on September 2, 2022.
             2. Whether a Claim for Breach of Duty of Fair Representation Is
             Actionable Based on When a Union Representative Fails to File an
             Administrative Appeal.
             3. Whether Common Law Claims for Negligence Against an
             Employee Organization Are Preempted by Md. Code Ann., State
             Pens. & Pers. § 3-306.

Because we conclude that Mr. Cecil’s fair representation claim was untimely, we
do not reach his second question regarding whether a claim for breach of the duty
of fair representation is actionable when based on a union representative’s failure
to timely file an appeal.
       3
           The Union presents an alternative ground for affirmance that Mr. Cecil was
required to exhaust his administrative remedies before pursuing judicial action. Because
the circuit court’s holding was wholly in the Union’s favor, the Union was not required to
cross-appeal in order to present this alternative ground, and we may consider this
argument as another issue before us. See Offutt v. Montgomery Cnty. Bd. of Ed., 285 Md.
557, 564 n.4 (1979) (“Where a party has an issue resolved adversely in the trial court, but
. . . receives a wholly favorable judgment on another ground, that party may, as an
appellee and without taking a cross-appeal, argue as a ground for affirmance the matter
that was resolved against it at trial.” (emphasis added)).

                                               2
       We affirm the judgment of the circuit court for the reasons explained below.

                     FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

       Before this cause of action arose, Mr. Cecil was a Maryland State employee and a

member of AFSCME, the exclusive union for certain Maryland State employees. Mr.

Cecil first sought the Union’s assistance in representing him upon his termination from a

position in the State Highway Administration (“SHA”) (a unit of the Maryland

Department of Transportation (“MDOT”)). He was terminated for allegedly failing to

comply with a mandatory alcohol test, so he sought to appeal his termination pursuant to

MDOT employee procedures. The Union represented Mr. Cecil in a settlement

conference with SHA, but the parties were unable to reach a resolution. Following the

settlement conference, Mr. Cecil decided to continue with his appeal to the OAH. The

OAH dismissed the appeal on December 22, 2021, concluding Mr. Cecil’s administrative

wrongful termination claim.

       Just under six months later, Mr. Cecil brought a case in the U.S. District Court for

the District of Maryland, alleging that the Union failed to timely file his appeal to the

        Additionally, we may reach the issue of administrative exhaustion as a “threshold
issue . . . regardless of what has been raised by the parties.” See Renaissance Centro
Columbia, LLC v. Broida, 421 Md. 474, 487 (2011) (“This Court has pointed out, time
after time, that because of the important public policy involved, the Court will address
sua sponte the related issues of primary jurisdiction, exhaustion of administrative
remedies, finality of administrative decisions, and the availability of declaratory
judgment actions. These are threshold issues which the Court will consider regardless of
the positions that have been taken by the parties and regardless of what has been raised
by the parties.”).

                                              3
OAH. 4 His original complaint in the U.S. District Court (“the original federal complaint,”

“the original complaint”), filed June 17, 2022, alleged one count of breach of the duty of

fair representation. Mr. Cecil contended that by failing to timely file his wrongful

termination appeal, the Union had breached its duty of fair representation. Given that Mr.

Cecil cited the Labor Management Relations Act (“LMRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 185 5 as the

basis for his claim, federal jurisdiction was grounded on the presence of a federal

question. The Union filed a motion to dismiss Mr. Cecil’s complaint, stating that since it

was a state public union, the federal duty of fair representation did not apply to it.

       Another month later, Mr. Cecil filed an amended complaint (“the amended federal

complaint,” “the amended complaint”). This complaint alleged two counts of breach of

the duty of fair representation—one count under federal law, LMRA, 29 U.S.C. § 185

and one count under state law, SP&P § 3-306 (2022). 6 This complaint continued to allege

       4
         Shortly before commencing his claim in the U.S. District Court, Mr. Cecil
brought a claim with the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”), but he dismissed
that claim shortly thereafter.
       5
           29 U.S.C. § 185 states, in relevant part:

             (a) . . . Suits for violation of contracts between an employer and a
             labor organization representing employees in an industry affecting
             commerce as defined in this chapter, or between any such labor
             organizations, may be brought in any district court of the United
             States having jurisdiction of the parties, without respect to the amount
             in controversy or without regard to the citizenship of the parties.
       6
         Although since repealed and moved to Md. Code, State Gov’t § 22-206 (2023),
with the exact same wording, SP&P § 3-306, as it existed at the time of the alleged
breach, stated in relevant part:

                                                4
federal question jurisdiction (by citing the LMRA, 29 U.S.C. § 185) but added a

paragraph stating, “AFSCME is a labor organization within the meaning of 29 U.S.C. §

152(5) 7 and/or Md. Code Ann., Cts. & Jud. Proc. § [5-120(a)].” (emphasis added)

(footnotes added).

            (b) Employee organizations and their agents or representatives are
            prohibited from engaging in any unfair labor practice, including:
                                              ***
                (6) not fairly representing employees in collective bargaining or in
                any other matter in which the employee organization has the duty
                of fair representation.

(2022). We refer to this 2022 version infra as applicable to this case.

        The duty of fair representation has a full and detailed history, but there is some
debate as to where in our law the duty originates. We have previously said the duty
originates under state contract law. See Stanley v. AFSCME, 165 Md. App. at 15; Byrne,
58 Md. App. 501, 508 (1984). However, other sources have said that the duty is a
statutory obligation and arises from a union’s designation as the exclusive representative
of certain employees. Rawson, 495 U.S. 362, 373 (1990) (“The Union’s duty of fair
representation arises from the National Labor Relations Act itself. . . . The duty of fair
representation is thus a matter of status rather than contract.”); CJP § 5-120 (stating the
statute applies to a breach of the duty of fair representation by an exclusive
representative); F.T. Golder & D.R. Golder, Labor and Employment Law: Compliance
and Litigation § 2:29 (“A union’s duty of fair representation derives from its status as the
exclusive bargaining representative of employees in a specified unit. . . . Without the
exclusive bargaining representative status, the statutory justification for the imposition of
a duty of fair representation does not exist.”).

       From where the duty of fair representation at issue here originates (statute or
contract) appears to be of no consequence to this appeal. Neither party contends
otherwise. Therefore, we need not explore that issue further today. See Md. Rule 8-131
(“Ordinarily, an appellate court will not decide any other issue [besides jurisdiction]
unless it plainly appears by the record to have been raised in or decided by the trial
court[.]”).
       7
           29 U.S.C. § 152(5) provides:

                                               5
       Eventually, Mr. Cecil conceded that the Union’s liability under the LMRA was

“unlikely,” and he moved to voluntarily dismiss both the federal and state claims. His

voluntary dismissal stated that it was “pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a) & (d) 8 and Fed. R.

Civ. P. 41(a)(i)[.] 9” (footnotes added). The federal court approved the voluntary dismissal

without prejudice.

             When used in this subchapter—
               (5) The term “labor organization” means any organization of any
               kind, or any agency or employee representation committee or plan,
               in which employees participate and which exists for the purpose,
               in whole or in part, of dealing with employers concerning
               grievances, labor disputes, wages, rates of pay, hours of
               employment, or conditions of work.
       8
           28 U.S.C. § 1367(a) states:

             Except as provided in subsections (b) and (c) or as expressly provided
             otherwise by Federal statute, in any civil action of which the district
             courts have original jurisdiction, the district courts shall have
             supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims that are so related to
             claims in the action within such original jurisdiction that they form
             part of the same case or controversy under Article III of the United
             States Constitution. Such supplemental jurisdiction shall include
             claims that involve the joinder or intervention of additional parties.

While (d) states:

             The period of limitations for any claim asserted under subsection (a),
             and for any other claim in the same action that is voluntarily dismissed
             at the same time as or after the dismissal of the claim under subsection
             (a), shall be tolled while the claim is pending and for a period of 30
             days after it is dismissed unless State law provides for a longer tolling
             period.
       9
          Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(1)(A)(i) provides that “the plaintiff may
dismiss an action without a court order by filing: . . . a stipulation of dismissal signed by
all parties who have appeared.”

                                                6
       Before his voluntary dismissal was even filed in federal court, Mr. Cecil filed a

new complaint (“the state complaint”) in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. His state

complaint repeated his state-law claim for breach of the duty of fair representation and

added one count of negligence. At the time of the alleged breach, the Maryland Code

provided an administrative remedy for a union’s breach of its duty of fair representation.

That remedy was available through the Maryland State Labor Relations Board

(“SLRB”). 10 The SLRB was “responsible for administering and enforcing certain

provisions of” the State Personnel and Pensions title, including “investigat[ing] and

tak[ing] appropriate action in response to complaints of unfair labor practices and

lockouts.” SP&P § 3-205 (2022) (“Powers and duties of Board”). The Maryland Code

also provides a judicial cause of action for a union’s breach of its duty of fair

representation in Courts and Judicial Proceedings, Section 5-120 (“CJP § 5-120”)

(providing for a six-month statute of limitations). 11 Mr. Cecil did not clarify in his state

        Around the same time, Mr. Cecil also filed a claim with the SLRB. The SLRB
       10

dismissed Mr. Cecil’s claim for failure to file within the ninety-day statute of limitations.
       11
            CJP § 5-120 provides:

             (a) This section applies to an action for injunctive relief or damages
             for:
                 (1) A violation of a collective bargaining agreement covering an
                 employee of the State or a political subdivision of the State; or
                 (2) A breach by an exclusive representative of the duty of fair
                 representation owed to an employee of the State or a political
                 subdivision of the State.
             (b) An action subject to this section shall be commenced within 6
             months after the later of:

                                                7
complaint under which statute he was asserting his fair representation claim. However,

both parties agree that because AFSCME was the exclusive representative of certain

Maryland employees, including Mr. Cecil, the Union owed Mr. Cecil a duty of fair

representation under Maryland law. 12

       The Union moved to dismiss the state complaint for failure to state a claim under

Maryland Rule 2-322(b). 13 The Union contended that Mr. Cecil had filed his fair

representation claim outside the six-month limitations period and that Mr. Cecil had

failed to exhaust his administrative remedies. For its limitations argument, the Union

                (1) The date on which the claim accrued; or
                (2) The date on which the complainant knew or should
                reasonably have known of the breach.
       12
         Although the collective bargaining agreement is not a part of the record before
us, we observe that collective bargaining law prohibits exclusive representatives,
including AFSCME, from breaching their duty of fair representation. See SP&P § 3-
306(b)(6) (2022) (“(b) Employee organizations and their agents or representatives are
prohibited from engaging in any unfair labor practice, including: . . . (6) not fairly
representing employees in collective bargaining or in any other matter in which the
employee organization has the duty of fair representation.”). The parties here agree that
AFSCME owed Mr. Cecil a duty of fair representation.
       13
            Maryland Rule 2-322(b) states:

             The following defenses may be made by motion to dismiss filed
             before the answer, if an answer is required: (1) lack of jurisdiction
             over the subject matter, (2) failure to state a claim upon which relief
             can be granted, (3) failure to join a party under Rule 2-211, (4)
             discharge in bankruptcy, and (5) governmental immunity. If not so
             made, these defenses and objections may be made in the answer, or in
             any other appropriate manner after answer is filed.

(emphasis added). The Union argued Mr. Cecil failed to state a claim upon which relief
could be granted.

                                               8
argued that because the federal court never had jurisdiction over Mr. Cecil’s federal fair

representation claim, limitations on his state-law claim was never tolled. The federal

court never had original jurisdiction, according to the Union, because a fair representation

claim will not lie under the LMRA against a state union. See Adams v. Am. Fed’n of

State, Cnty. & Mun. Emps. Int’l, 167 F. Supp. 3d 730, 741 (D. Md. 2013) (emphasizing

that the LMRA does not apply to employees of state unions). Because the federal court

did not have original jurisdiction, the Union argued, the federal court also did not have

supplemental jurisdiction over Mr. Cecil’s state-law fair representation claim. The Union

also argued that Mr. Cecil’s causes of action for fair representation and/or negligence

accrued earlier than December 17, 2021, so that Mr. Cecil’s original federal complaint,

filed on June 17, 2022, was already untimely under the six-month limitations period in

CJP § 5-120(b) (establishing the statute of limitations for the judicial cause of action as

six months). The Union further asserted that the tolling provision of 28 U.S.C. § 1367(d)

would not have rendered Mr. Cecil’s fair representation claim timely because he had

voluntarily dismissed the fair representation claim in federal court. The Union also

claimed that Mr. Cecil’s amended federal complaint did not relate back to his original

federal complaint for purposes of § 1367(d) tolling, leading again to the conclusion that

his state-law fair representation claim was outside the six-month limitations period.

                                              9
       The Union also argued in its motion to dismiss that Maryland’s breach of the duty

of fair representation statutes abrogate, or preempt, 14 Maryland’s common-law

negligence. The Union contended that it only owes its members a duty of fair

representation, so its members could only bring a claim for breach of the duty of fair

representation, not a claim for negligence. 15

       Finally, the Union argued that Mr. Cecil was required to exhaust his administrative

remedies before bringing a judicial action. The Union claimed that the SLRB is the

primary forum for unfair labor practice claims and that statutory breach of the duty of fair

representation is an unfair labor practice. Therefore, the Union asserted that the

administrative remedies for a breach of the duty of fair representation were the primary

       14
          Historically, courts have referred to abrogation and preemption of common law
interchangeably. For clarity, we primarily use the word “abrogation” to refer to state
statutory abrogation of common law and the word “preemption” to refer to federal
preemption of state law.

        One type of federal preemption of state law is field preemption. Field preemption
occurs when it is clear from a federal statutory scheme that Congress meant to occupy an
entire field of law. State statutory abrogation of common law borrows this reasoning for
its own type of field preemption: a state statutory scheme may abrogate common law
when it is clear the legislature intended the state statutory scheme to occupy an entire
field of law. Because this analysis of whether a legislature occupied an entire field is the
same for both preemption and abrogation, we refer to it as “field preemption” for both.

       The issues of abrogation and preemption will be discussed fully infra, Discussion,
Section II.
       15
         The Union also argued that Mr. Cecil’s state complaint failed to state a claim for
breach of the duty of fair representation, but the circuit court did not reach this issue, so
we need not either.

                                             10
remedies, rather than concurrent, and Mr. Cecil should have exhausted these

administrative remedies before pursuing the instant judicial action. 16

       Mr. Cecil filed an opposition to the Union’s motion to dismiss. He contended that

under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(d), the filing of his state-law fair representation claim in federal

court tolled limitations, pausing the running of the limitations period until he dismissed

his federal complaint. Because limitations had been tolled, Mr. Cecil argued, his state-law

claim (as it appeared in his state complaint) had been filed within the six-month

limitations period for fair representation claims. See CJP § 5-120(b). Mr. Cecil also

contended that the legislature’s codification of fair representation claims did not abrogate

common-law negligence and that he was not required to exhaust his administrative

remedies before bringing a judicial action.

       The circuit court, Judge Lawrence Fletcher-Hill presiding, heard argument on the

Union’s motion and dismissed Mr. Cecil’s state complaint. The court held that Mr. Cecil

was not required to exhaust his administrative remedies prior to bringing a judicial action.

As to the claims themselves, though, the circuit court held that Mr. Cecil’s common-law

negligence claim would not lie because it was abrogated by his fair representation claim.

Mr. Cecil’s fair representation claim (under CJP § 5-120) could not go forward because it

was untimely.

       16
         Mr. Cecil responded to the Union’s claims in his Opposition to Defendant’s
Motion to Dismiss Complaint, to which the Union responded with Defendant’s Reply in
Support of Motion to Dismiss Complaint.

                                              11
       With regard to exhaustion, the circuit court held that Mr. Cecil was not required to

exhaust his administrative remedies because he could bring a judicial action for statutory

breach of the duty of fair representation concurrently with the administrative remedies

available to him. The court based this holding primarily on CJP § 5-120. That statute

provides:

            (a) This section applies to an action for injunctive relief or damages
                for:

               (1) A violation of a collective bargaining agreement 17 covering
               an employee of the State or a political subdivision of the State; or
               (2) A breach by an exclusive representative of the duty of fair
               representation owed to an employee of the State or a political
               subdivision of the State.

            (b) An action subject to this section shall be commenced within 6
            months after the later of:

               (1) The date on which the claim accrued; or
               (2) The date on which the complainant knew or should
               reasonably have known of the breach.

CJP § 5-120 (footnote added).

       The circuit court reasoned that the legislature would not establish a six-month

statute of limitations for a claim under this statute unless it intended to allow plaintiffs to

       17
          A collective bargaining agreement is a labor contract between an employer and
a union representing employees that sets the terms and conditions of employment. See
Collective Bargaining Agreement, Westlaw Practical Law, Glossary, ID 4-504-1300,
https://1.next.westlaw.com/Glossary/PracticalLaw/Ibb09e90eef0511e28578f7ccc38dcbee
?transitionType=Default&contextData=(sc.Default) (last visited Feb. 22, 2024);
Collective Bargaining Agreement, Merriam Webster, https://www.merriam-
webster.com/legal/collective%20bargaining%20agreement (last visited Feb. 22, 2024).

                                              12
bring the claim at the same time as the available administrative remedies. If a plaintiff

were required to exhaust their administrative remedies first, then establishing a judicial

cause of action with a six-month statute of limitations would be ineffective.

       With regard to abrogation, the circuit court held that Mr. Cecil’s negligence claim

was abrogated by the statutory claim for breach of duty of fair representation. It

explained that allowing a plaintiff to bring a negligence claim “akin to . . . malpractice”

in addition to a fair representation claim would “do away with the specialized law that is

built up around breach of duty of fair representation.” It reasoned that the legislature

intended to regulate this area closely, including through various provisions concerning

the duty of fair representation. The circuit court explained that this interpretation is in line

with the federal interpretation of federal statutes, i.e., that breach of the federal duty of

fair representation preempts state common-law negligence. Therefore, the circuit court

dismissed Mr. Cecil’s negligence claim as abrogated.

       With regard to the timeliness of Mr. Cecil’s fair representation claim, the circuit

court held that it was not timely because his amended federal complaint did not relate

back to his original federal complaint. While the circuit court found that the accrual date

for Mr. Cecil’s cause of action was December 22, 2021— the date the OAH issued its

dismissal and less than six months before Mr. Cecil filed his original federal complaint—

it also found that Mr. Cecil’s original federal complaint did not assert a state-law claim.

The court reasoned that the amended federal complaint did not relate back to the original

federal complaint for purposes of § 1367(d) tolling because the amended complaint added

                                               13
a new cause of action (Mr. Cecil’s state-law claim), rather than simply clarifying the

original complaint’s federal claim.

       Moreover, the circuit court ruled that Mr. Cecil’s voluntary dismissal of his

amended federal complaint disqualified him from using § 1367(d) tolling to reinstate his

claims in state court. It held that for a plaintiff to take advantage of § 1367(d) tolling, the

federal court must have dismissed at least the federal claim. Under § 1367(d), once the

federal court has dismissed the federal claim, then either the federal court can dismiss the

state claim along with the federal claim, or the plaintiff can voluntarily dismiss the state

claim. However, here, because Mr. Cecil voluntarily dismissed the federal claim, the

federal court did not dismiss it, so he did not meet that prerequisite for § 1367(d) tolling.

Thus, the court dismissed Mr. Cecil’s state-law fair representation claim on two grounds:

that the amended complaint did not relate back and that Mr. Cecil had voluntarily

dismissed the claim. But the court added that its dismissal would have been appropriate

on either ground alone. 18

       18
          A plaintiff must meet each of the requirements set forth in § 1367(d) to take
advantage of tolling; if a plaintiff fails just one requirement, their claim will not be tolled.
The circuit court ruled that Mr. Cecil met the first requirement: he filed his federal claim
within six months from his claim’s date of accrual. However, the court ruled that Mr.
Cecil failed on the second requirement, relation back, and again on the third requirement,
affirmative dismissal by the federal court. The court dismissed Mr. Cecil’s claim for
failure to meet the second requirement. However, it explained that even if Mr. Cecil had
met that requirement, he failed the third requirement, so it dismissed his claim on that
ground as well. Thus, according to the circuit court, to proceed, Mr. Cecil would have
had to meet both the relation back and the dismissal by the federal court requirements.
Because it held that Mr. Cecil failed the second and third requirements, the court did not
examine any further requirements.

                                              14
       This timely appeal followed.

                               STANDARD OF REVIEW

       Because this appeal comes to us from a motion to dismiss, we review the circuit

court’s rulings de novo. See Stanton v. State, 258 Md. App. 371, 378-79 (2023).

“Generally, the standard of review of the grant or denial of a motion to dismiss is whether

the trial court was legally correct.” Blackstone v. Sharma, 461 Md. 87, 110 (2018)

(internal quotations omitted). In reviewing the rulings, “‘we assume the truth of all well-

pleaded facts and allegations in the complaint, as well as the reasonable inferences drawn

from them, in a light most favorable to the non-moving party.’” Green Healthcare Sols.,

LLC v. Natalie M. LaPrade Md. Med. Cannabis Comm’n, 254 Md. App. 547, 565-66

(2022) (quoting Forster v. State, Off. of Pub. Def., 426 Md. 565, 579 (2012)). Thus, we

view the facts and inferences in a light most favorable to Mr. Cecil.

                                        DISCUSSION

       We conclude that the circuit court properly dismissed Mr. Cecil’s complaint.

Although Mr. Cecil need not have exhausted his administrative remedies before filing his

circuit court complaint, his negligence claim fails because Maryland’s statutory duty of

fair representation abrogates common-law negligence. Mr. Cecil’s fair representation

claim fails because it is untimely. Thus, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

                                   I.     EXHAUSTION

       It is uncontested that Mr. Cecil failed to exhaust his administrative remedies prior

to bringing this suit. However, the parties disagree about whether exhaustion was

                                            15
required. Mr. Cecil would not be able to maintain this action if he was required to exhaust

his administrative remedies first. See Zappone v. Liberty Life Ins., 349 Md. 45, 60 (1998)

(explaining that where administrative remedies are the primary remedies, the plaintiff

must first exhaust the administrative remedies and seek judicial review of an adverse

administrative decision before proceeding with alternative judicial remedies). Mr. Cecil

contends that exhaustion was not required because the administrative and judicial

remedies were meant to be concurrent, meaning he could have sought his administrative

remedies at the same time as, or even after, bringing this judicial action. Conversely, the

Union argues that Mr. Cecil was required to exhaust his administrative remedies because

they are the primary remedies. 19 Consequently, we start by considering whether

exhaustion was required.

       The Maryland Supreme Court stated in Zappone v. Liberty Life Insurance that

when administrative remedies are available, they are either the exclusive remedies, the

primary remedies, or concurrent remedies. 349 Md. at 60; see also Prince George’s

County v. Ray’s Used Cars, 398 Md. 632, 644-45 (2007) (reiterating and further

explaining the process for examining the three types of administrative remedies). An

exclusive administrative remedy is the only remedy available, to the exclusion of judicial

remedies. Zappone, 349 Md. at 60. When an administrative remedy is the primary

       19
         Another option is that administrative remedies are exclusive, meaning, as we
explain below, that judicial remedies are not available. Here, neither party contends that
the administrative remedies available to Mr. Cecil were exclusive.

                                             16
remedy, a plaintiff must exhaust their administrative remedies before pursuing judicial

action. Id. (“[A] claimant must invoke and exhaust the administrative remedy, and seek

judicial review of an adverse administrative decision, before a court can properly

adjudicate the merits of the alternative judicial remedy.”). When administrative remedies

are concurrent, a plaintiff can pursue their judicial remedies at the same time as or even

before the administrative remedies. Id. at 61 (“the plaintiff at his or her option may

pursue the judicial remedy without the necessity of invoking and exhausting the

administrative remedy[.]”).

       For Mr. Cecil’s present action to be justiciable, the administrative remedies must

be concurrent with the judicial remedies because Mr. Cecil did not exhaust his

administrative remedies before filing this action. First, this action would not be able to

proceed if the administrative remedies were exclusive because then no judicial action

would be allowed. Second, this action would not be able to proceed if the administrative

remedies were primary because then Mr. Cecil must first have obtained a final decision

from the SLRB. Mr. Cecil did bring an administrative action with the SLRB; however, he

filed that action around the same time that he filed the present action. The SLRB action

was not close to final when Mr. Cecil brought the present action. Thus, for Mr. Cecil’s

case to proceed, the administrative remedies must be concurrent.

       The extent to which someone must exhaust their administrative remedies before

pursuing judicial action is “a question of legislative intent.” Zappone, 349 Md. at 60.

Courts first look to whether the legislature has expressly set forth its intent in creating the

                                              17
administrative remedy. Id. at 62 (explaining it is rare for the legislature to do so). Where

the legislature does not expressly set forth its intent, we begin with the rebuttable

presumption that the administrative remedies are the primary remedies, and we consider

whether various factors, set forth in Zappone, rebut this presumption. Id. at 63-64. These

factors include other indications of legislative intent, the comprehensiveness of the

administrative scheme, the administrative agency’s view of its own jurisdiction, and the

nature of the alternative judicial cause of action, including the extent of reliance on the

statutory scheme and on the administration’s expertise. See id. at 64-66 (describing each

of these factors and providing examples).

       In Zappone, for example, our Supreme Court held that the administrative remedies

at issue were concurrent, and no exhaustion was required. Id. at 67. In that case, an

insurance company offered a man a life insurance policy that would generate wealth

quickly with only one premium payment. Id. at 53. The man took out a loan and

purchased the policy. Id. However, upon issuance of the policy, the man discovered that

the interest on his loan was not tax-deductible as the insurer had maintained, and the one-

time premium payment exceeded the maximum limits established by Congress, resulting

in more taxes. Id. at 53-54. Although the insurer told the man they would fix it, they

never did. Id. at 55. Further, because of the insurer’s misrepresentations, at the end of its

term, the insurance policy would not nearly meet its face value as represented to the man.

Id. at 55-56. The man brought a multi-count complaint in the Circuit Court for

Montgomery County. Id. at 56. The circuit court dismissed the man’s complaint, holding

                                              18
that the administrative remedies available under the Unfair Trade Practices subsection of

the Insurance Code, Md. Code (1957, 1994 Repl. Vol.), Art. 48A, subtitle 15, §§ 212-40J,

were the exclusive remedies. Zappone, 349 Md. at 57. The case proceeded to this Court

and eventually our Supreme Court. Id.

       Our Supreme Court concluded that there was no express legislative intent and that

the administrative remedies were not exclusive. Id. at 66-67. The court found that the

legislature had not expressly set forth its intent because there was no language in the

Insurance Code’s Unfair Trade Practices subsection indicating how to treat the

administrative remedies. Id. Additionally, the court noted that the administrative

remedies could not be exclusive because the plaintiffs had available judicial causes of

action. Id. at 67. Therefore, the court began with the presumption that the administrative

remedies were primary.

       However, upon weighing the factors, the court held the presumption was rebutted,

and the administrative remedies were concurrent. Id. at 67-68. It found that the plaintiff’s

judicial remedies were completely independent of the Insurance Code; for example, their

right to recover money damages was based on common-law tort principles. Id. at 67. The

court also found that the adjudication of these judicial remedies did not rely on the

expertise of the Insurance Commissioner. Id. Further, the court noted that while the

administrative scheme was comprehensive, it was not all-encompassing, and the

Insurance Commissioner did not view the administrative remedies as the primary

remedies. Id. at 67-68. Taken together, the court ruled that these factors weighed against

                                             19
the presumption that the available administrative remedies were “primary.” As a

consequence, the court ruled that the administrative remedies were concurrent and that

exhaustion was not required. Id. at 68.

       Likewise, Mr. Cecil was not required to exhaust his administrative remedies

because the administrative remedies here are concurrent remedies, rather than primary or

exclusive. The Union argues that the administrative remedies are the primary remedies in

this case, meaning Mr. Cecil was required to exhaust his administrative remedies before

pursuing judicial remedies. Mr. Cecil did not contend that he had exhausted his

administrative remedies. Rather, Mr. Cecil argued 20 that the available administrative

remedies are concurrent to the available judicial remedies, so his failure to exhaust his

administrative remedies is inconsequential to the present action.

       To start, there is no express statement in the statutory language of SP&P § 3-306

or CJP § 5-120 that clarifies whether the administrative remedies are exclusive, primary,

or concurrent. See SP&P § 3-306 (2022) (providing the powers and duties of the SLRB);

CJP § 5-120 (establishing a statute of limitations for bringing a judicial action). However,

creating a judicial remedy in CJP § 5-120 at least means that the legislature did not intend

for the administrative remedies to be exclusive. Therefore, we begin with the rebuttable

presumption that the administrative remedies through the SLRB are the primary

remedies, but we find the Zappone factors rebut that presumption.

       20
         Mr. Cecil’s brief does not cover this issue, so we draw on his arguments during
the hearing on the motion to dismiss.

                                             20
       Although CJP § 5-120 and SP&P § 3-306 (2022) do not expressly state how the

judicial and administrative remedies should interact, other legislative intent indicators,

such as the statutory and regulatory frameworks, provide insight on the issue. See

Zappone, 349 Md. at 67 (analyzing legislative intent indicators). For example, as Mr.

Cecil’s counsel pointed out during oral argument at the circuit court, the statute of

limitations for judicial relief does not reasonably allow for administrative exhaustion

when compared with the statute of limitations for administrative relief. The

administrative statute of limitations is ninety days, or three months, while the judicial

statute of limitations is six months. See COMAR 14.32.05.01(C); CJP § 5-120(b). The

SLRB took 93 days to decide whether to dismiss Mr. Cecil’s claim for breach of the duty

of fair representation. 21

       Using the timeline of Mr. Cecil’s claim as an example, a plaintiff may not be able

to timely bring a judicial cause of action if we considered the administrative remedies to

be primary and to require exhaustion. If a plaintiff filed for administrative relief 89 days

after their claim accrued, they would be within the administrative statute of limitations.

However, assuming the SLRB took 93 days to even decide whether to dismiss the claim

(as it did here), the administrative decision would not be final until six months and two

days after the claim accrued. Therefore, if plaintiffs were required to exhaust their

administrative remedies before bringing a judicial action, they would not be able to bring

       21
         Mr. Cecil brought the current case concurrently with a claim in the SLRB for
breach of the duty of fair representation, a claim the SLRB eventually dismissed.

                                             21
the judicial action under CJP § 5-120 timely within the six-month statute of limitations.

This scenario also only considers how long it took for the SLRB to decide whether to

dismiss Mr. Cecil’s claim; deciding Mr. Cecil’s claim on the merits likely would have

taken the SLRB even longer. Thus, if a plaintiff were required to wait to bring a judicial

action until after exhausting their administrative remedies, it would often be impossible

to bring the judicial action within the six-month statute of limitations.

       At the time of the suit, the administrative scheme also was not comprehensive

enough to afford Mr. Cecil all the remedies that he sought. Id. (finding that while the

administrative scheme was comprehensive, it was not “all-encompassing”). At that time,

the SLRB 22 was “responsible for administering and enforcing provisions of” the

Collective Bargaining Title of the Maryland Code, State Personnel and Pensions. SP&P §

3-205(a) (2022). 23 The SLRB’s powers included the ability to “investigate and take

       22
          The legislature recently amended the relevant statutes, and the SLRB no longer
exists. Instead, claimants may now seek redress through the Public Employee Relations
Board (PERB). See Md. Code, State Gov’t § 22-301 (2023) (establishing the PERB).
Because the SLRB was in place at the relevant times in this action, we analyze the
powers the SLRB had. Our conclusions about the SLRB pertain only to the SLRB; we
express no opinion about the PERB herein.
       23
         In full, SP&P § 3-205(a) (2022) stated, “The Board is responsible for
administering and enforcing provisions of this title relating to employees described in §
3-102(a)(1)(i) through (iv) and (vi) through (xii), (2), and (3) of this title.”

          SP&P § 3-205(b)(3) (2022) provided for the administrative cause of action: “In
addition to any other powers or duties provided for elsewhere in this title, the Board may:
. . . investigate and take appropriate action in response to complaints of unfair labor
practices and lockouts.

                                             22
appropriate action in response to complaints of unfair labor practices[,]” which would

include a breach of the duty of fair representation. SP&P § 3-205(b)(3) (2022). Further,

under Code of Maryland Regulations (COMAR) 14.32.05.02(L)(3), 24 the SLRB was

granted the power to reinstate employees if it found an unfair labor practice and deemed

it necessary to remedy such practice.

      However, the administrative scheme was not all-encompassing because the SLRB

generally did not award damages. In a concurrence in 2007, Interim SLRB Chairman

Allen G. Siegel lamented the SLRB’s inability to award damages. 25 Md. State Emps.

Union, AFSCME, Council 92 v. Dep’t of Md. State Police, SLRB ULP Case No. 05-U-

04, Op. No. 8, at 6 (Apr. 6, 2007). He compared the SLRB’s powers to the powers of the

federal analogue, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), stating, “[I]t is well

settled under the [National Labor Relations Act (NLRA)], 26 for example, that the sole

redress available under the [NLRA] is to ‘remedy’ the illegal conduct, excluding any

      24
          COMAR 14.32.05.02(L)(3) says, “If the Board finds an unfair labor practice has
been or is being committed, the Board shall take the action that it deems necessary to
remedy the unfair labor practice including: . . . Reinstatement[.]”
      25
         According to H.B. 1280, 2013 Leg., 433rd Sess. (Md. 2013), a 2010 SLRB
majority opinion confirmed that the SLRB does not have the statutory authority to award
back pay. See AFSCME MD v. Department of Budget and Management, SLRB Case No.
10-U-04 at 15 (Sept. 16, 2010). However, this case was not made public through any
online sources.
      26
          The NLRA is a federal act that protects employees’ rights to self-organize and
engage in collective bargaining. See 29 U.S.C. § 151. It also empowers the NLRB to
settle labor disputes and prevent unfair labor practices. See 29 U.S.C. § 160.

                                            23
punitive action. . . . I would, if authorized by the statute, also assess an appropriate

penalty.” Id. (footnote added). Thus, at least a concurrence has recognized that the SLRB

did not have the power to grant such damages. In that case, the SLRB restored the status

quo by reinstating the leave policy in place prior to the unfairly enacted leave policy and

restoring any leave lost by employees. However, it did not issue any backpay or other

monetary damages. Likewise, although it could have reinstated Mr. Cecil, the SLRB

likely would not have been able to issue Mr. Cecil his requested backpay in this case, and

Mr. Cecil’s only available method of redress for backpay would have been the courts.

       In considering the agency’s view of its own jurisdiction, the SLRB has not ruled

on whether claimants need to exhaust their administrative remedies before resorting to

the courts. Cf. Nat’l Asphalt Pavement Ass’n, Inc. v. Prince George’s County, 292 Md.

75, 80 (1981) (giving weight to the agency’s interpretation of its own jurisdiction in

relation to the courts’); Zappone, 349 Md. at 67-68 (noting the Insurance Commissioner

did not view the administrative remedies as primary). The SLRB has heard and decided

one case in which the respondent argued the petitioner needed to exhaust his

administrative remedies, but the Board dismissed the claim as untimely, thus not reaching

the exhaustion claim. Jerome Lewis v. J. Deweese Carter Youth Facility, SLRB Case No.

2018-U-04 (Jan. 31, 2018). Therefore, this factor does not weigh for or against a finding

that administrative exhaustion is required.

       Regarding the nature of the alternative judicial cause of action, CJP § 5-120’s

statutory scheme does not heavily rely on SP&P § 3-306’s administrative scheme, and

                                              24
CJP § 5-120’s judicial cause of action is not reliant on the SLRB’s expertise. See

Zappone, 349 Md. at 67 (finding the statutes were independent of each other). The statute

establishing the judicial cause of action and the process for administrative remedies are

two separate statutes contained in two entirely separate articles of the Maryland Code.

And neither statute references the other.

       Further, unlike other schemes, each statutory scheme lacks any consideration for

the other that would indicate the administrative scheme is supposed to take priority.

COMAR 14.32.05.01(C) sets the administrative statute of limitations at ninety days: “The

complaint shall be filed with the Board within 90 days from the later of the alleged

violation or following the time that a reasonable person would, upon exercising due

diligence, have discovered the occurrence of the alleged violation.” CJP § 5-120(b) sets

the judicial statute of limitations at six months: “An action subject to this section shall be

commenced within 6 months after the later of: (1) The date on which the claim accrued;

or (2) The date on which the complainant knew or should reasonably have known of the

breach.” Comparatively, the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission

(“EEOC”) allows for an extension on its statute of limitations in consideration of state

administrative proceedings. 42 U.S.C. 2000e-5(e)(1). 27 The EEOC statute establishes the

       27
            That subsection says:

             A charge under this section shall be filed within one hundred and
             eighty days after the alleged unlawful employment practice occurred
             and notice of the charge (including the date, place and circumstances
             of the alleged unlawful employment practice) shall be served upon the

                                              25
statute of limitations for filing a claim with the EEOC as 180 days. Id. However, if the

claimant also files with a state court or agency, the EEOC statute of limitations is

extended to three hundred days. Id. That statutory scheme thus accommodates, i.e.,

allows time for a claimant to pursue, state remedies.

       In the SLRB’s case, the legislature could have similarly tolled the statute of

limitations for filing a judicial action while an SLRB action was pending, but it did not.

That the legislature did not include any consideration in the judicial statute for the

administrative procedures further suggests that the legislature intended each scheme to

function independently of each other and each remedy to progress concurrently. See

COMAR 14.32.05.01(C); CJP § 5-120(b).

       Moreover, before it was replaced by the PERB, the SLRB did not lend any

particular expertise to the judicial proceedings for fair representation breaches. To be

sure, the SLRB held subject matter expertise in labor disputes. However, when compared

          person against whom such charge is made within ten days thereafter,
          except that in a case of an unlawful employment practice with respect
          to which the person aggrieved has initially instituted proceedings with
          a State or local agency with authority to grant or seek relief from such
          practice or to institute criminal proceedings with respect thereto upon
          receiving notice thereof, such charge shall be filed by or on behalf of
          the person aggrieved within three hundred days after the alleged
          unlawful employment practice occurred, or within thirty days after
          receiving notice that the State or local agency has terminated the
          proceedings under the State or local law, whichever is earlier, and a
          copy of such charge shall be filed by the Commission with the State
          or local agency.

42 U.S.C. 2000e-5(e)(1).

                                             26
to courts, the SLRB did not hold particular expertise in fair representation claims. 28 Since

fair representation claims are based on unions’ collective bargaining agreements and their

duty to employees, resolving fair representation disputes is ordinarily a matter of contract

interpretation or determining whether the union met its duty of care, similar to

negligence. See Byrne v. Mass Transit Admin., 58 Md. App. at 508 (“The duty of fair

representation does not arise under the LMRA, but rather as a private cause of action

under State law for breach of contract.”); see also Guss v. Fort Hays State Univ., 173

P.3d 1159, 1165 (Kan. App. 2008) (“The issues presented here are matters of ordinary

contract interpretation in the familiar context of an employment agreement. They involve

no specialized or arcane expertise[.]”). Courts are accustomed to adjudicating contract

disputes and negligence claims. Further, the legislature has already recognized that courts

need no specific expertise to resolve fair representation claims because it already

entrusted that duty to courts in CJP § 5-120.

       Thus, similar to the judicial causes of action in Zappone, judicial proceedings for

fair representation claims under CJP § 5-120 are “wholly independent” of the State

Personnel and Pensions title. See Zappone, 349 Md. at 67 (explaining the common-law

       28
          That an agency holds expertise in one area does not necessarily mean that that
agency holds particular expertise in a type of dispute within that area. Compare Zappone,
349 Md. at 67 (finding the Insurance Commissioner’s expertise was irrelevant to the
judicial cause of action), with United Ins. Co. of Am. v. Md. Ins. Admin., 450 Md. 1, 31
(2016) (concluding that the claims depended upon the Maryland Insurance
Administration’s expertise because they involved “the nature and extent of retroactive
enforcement to their in-force policies, including the impact of enforcement on matters
concerning reasonable reliance and settled expectations”).

                                             27
causes of action at issue were “wholly independent of the Insurance Code’s Unfair Trade

Practices subtitle”). Compare CJP § 5-120 (establishing the judicial cause of action), with

SP&P § 3-205(b)(3) (2022) (establishing the administrative cause of action). Therefore,

the statutory scheme for the alternative judicial cause of action does not rely on the

SLRB’s expertise.

       Because almost all of the factors weigh against the SLRB providing the primary

remedies, we find that it provided concurrent remedies. Mr. Cecil need not have

exhausted his administrative remedies before resort to the courts for his judicial remedies.

           II.    STATUTORY ABROGATION OF COMMON-LAW NEGLIGENCE

       We conclude that by enacting duty of fair representation statutes, the legislature

occupied the field of law pertaining to fair representation claims, thereby abrogating

common-law negligence. Therefore, the circuit court was correct to dismiss Mr. Cecil’s

claim for negligence.

       Mr. Cecil argues that the duty of fair representation does not abrogate negligence

and that he should be able to maintain his negligence claim separately from his fair

representation claim. He asserts that the legislature did not expressly state that a fair

representation claim should preempt negligence, and abrogation of the common law by

implication is strongly disfavored.

       The Union argues that Mr. Cecil’s claim for negligence is abrogated by the

existence of a statutory cause of action for breach of the duty of fair representation. It

contends, as the circuit court held, that similar to federal law, under field preemption,

                                              28
Maryland’s General Assembly has occupied the field of state labor relations so fully as to

exclude other causes of action. Further, under conflict preemption, a negligence claim

would be inconsistent with a duty of fair representation claim because they entail

different standards. Thus, Maryland’s statutory fair representation framework abrogates

common-law negligence.

       Maryland’s General Assembly “‘is authorized to change or abrogate the common

law as it may think most conducive to the general welfare, provided it does not in the

process run afoul of the federal and state constitutions[,]’” and it may do so either

expressly or impliedly. WSC/2005 LLC v. Trio Ventures Assocs., 460 Md. 244, 257-58

(2018) (quoting Jones v. State, 303 Md. 323, 343-44 (1985) (Cole, J., concurring)). The

first way to abrogate common law is express abrogation through statutory language. For

this method, we require a “strong pronouncement” by the legislature. Id. at 258.

       Regarding the second way, it is the rare case that the common law is impliedly

abrogated. Maryland law long ago established “that statutes are not presumed to repeal

the common law ‘further than is expressly declared, and that a statute, made in the

affirmative without any negative expressed or implied, does not take away the common

law.’” Robinson v. State, 353 Md. 683, 693 (1999) (quoting Lutz v. State, 167 Md. 12, 15

(1934) (internal citations omitted)). However, a statute may impliedly abrogate the

common law in two ways: “[w]here a statute and the common law are in conflict [conflict

preemption], or where a statute deals with an entire subject matter [field preemption].” Id.

                                             29
       Maryland’s duty of fair representation originally arose as “a private cause of

action . . . for breach of contract[.]” Byrne, 58 Md. App. at 508; Vaca v. Sipes, 386 U.S.

171 (1967) (holding state courts had jurisdiction to decide such claims). We recognized

the duty of fair representation under state law in Stanley v. Am. Fed’n of State & Mun.

Emps. Loc. No. 553 (“Stanley v. AFSCME”), 165 Md. App. 1 (2005). We stated that,

regarding claims for breach of the duty of fair representation, a plaintiff employee carries

the burden of showing that the union’s conduct was arbitrary or in bad faith. Id. at 20. We

stated that mere negligence would not be sufficient to state a claim for breach of the duty

of fair representation. Id. at 15; accord United Steelworkers of Am., AFL-CIO-CLC v.

Rawson, 495 U.S. 362, 372-73 (1990) (holding the same under federal law). Rather, to

breach the duty of fair representation, the union’s actions must be outrageous or “so far

outside a wide range of reasonableness as to be irrational.” Stanley v. AFSCME, 165 Md.

App. at 15 (internal quotations and alterations omitted).

       In 2006, SP&P § 3-306 codified the duty of fair representation that state unions

owe to state employees. In 2022, it said:

       (b) Employee organizations and their agents or representatives are
       prohibited from engaging in any unfair labor practice, including:

                                         ***
          (6) not fairly representing employees in collective bargaining or in any
          other matter in which the employee organization has the duty of fair
          representation.

SP&P § 3-306 (2022).

                                             30
       Since SP&P § 3-306 does not expressly abrogate common-law negligence, 29 we

must determine whether the legislature intended to abrogate the common-law claim for

negligence by implication. Robinson, 353 Md. at 694 (“It is a cardinal rule of statutory

construction to give effect to the intent of the Legislature.”). We conclude that the

legislature has so occupied the field of fair representation claims that it has preempted

related common-law negligence claims. In developing and eventually codifying the duty,

the legislature sought to create a system for holding state unions and their representatives

accountable, to the exclusion of remedies that may normally be available for common-

law negligence.

       Before moving further in our explanation, it is important at this point to

distinguish between federal preemption of state law and statutory abrogation of common

law. Many of the cases to which the parties cite discuss preemption of state law by

federal law. While the ultimate issue in this case concerns the abrogation of common law

by state statutory law, the federal preemption cases are still relevant. The concepts of

federal preemption and abrogation of common law are analogous. A state law is

preempted by a federal law when the federal law takes precedence over and thus replaces

the state law. Similarly, common law is abrogated by state statutory law when a statute

takes precedence over and thus replaces common law. Moreover, we have previously

found that federal labor law may inform state labor law. See Stanley v. AFSCME, 165

Md. App. at 15-16 (using federal labor law cases to guide interpretation of the duty of fair

       29
            Neither party contends that the statute expressly abrogates the common law.

                                              31
representation). Likewise, here, federal labor cases concerning federal preemption are

instructive on the mechanics of the Maryland statutory duty of fair representation and its

relation to the common law. Thus, we turn now to the federal duty of fair representation

and its impact on fair representation claims that are based on state statutes.

       Generally, a federal duty of fair representation claim preempts a state claim “if the

resolution of [the state] claim depends upon the meaning of a collective-bargaining

agreement.” Lingle v. Norge Div. of Magic Chef, Inc., 486 U.S. 399, 405-06 (1988). For

example, the federal duty of fair representation preempted a state claim for negligence

concerning mine inspections because the claim was not independent of the collective

bargaining agreement. Rawson, 495 U.S. at 374-75. In that case, the U.S. Supreme Court

explained, “[t]he doctrine of fair representation is an important check on the arbitrary

exercise of union power, but it is a purposefully limited check, for a ‘wide range of

reasonableness must be allowed a statutory bargaining representative in serving the unit it

represents.’” Id. at 374 (quoting Ford Motor Co. v. Huffman, 345 U.S. 330, 338 (1953)).

Later, the U.S. Supreme Court similarly held that a plaintiff employee’s “state-law tort

action that necessarily rests on an interpretation of [the] terms” of the collective

bargaining agreement is preempted by the federal duty of fair representation. Int’l Bhd. of

Elec. Workers, AFL-CIO v. Hechler, 481 U.S. at 859. The Court further clarified that

state remedies are not “pre-empted where the activity regulated was a merely peripheral

concern of the [federal duty of fair representation].” Vaca, 386 U.S. 171, 180 (1967)

(internal quotations omitted).

                                              32
       Since then, lower federal courts have followed this doctrine in many cases. See,

e.g., Chappell v. Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers Loc. Union 772, 120 F. Supp. 3d 492 (D.S.C.

2015) (finding that plaintiff’s negligence and breach of contract claims were preempted

by the federal duty of fair representation); Adkins v. Mireles, 526 F.3d 531 (9th Cir.

2008) (ruling the federal duty of fair representation preempted union members’ breach of

contract claims); Cahoon v. Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers Loc. 261, 175 F. Supp. 2d 220 (D.

Conn. 2001) (holding that claims for negligent hiring were preempted by the federal duty

of fair representation). Thus, it is well-established that the federal duty of fair

representation preempts state common-law claims when the act at issue is covered by the

collective bargaining agreement.

       Similarly, several state courts have held that statutory duty of fair representation

claims abrogate common-law negligence claims that arise out of the union’s

representation. See Killian v. Seattle Pub. Schs., 403 P.3d 58 (Wash. 2017) (en banc)

(holding that claims arising out of the union’s representation, like negligent and

unauthorized practice of law, are “subsumed” in a duty of fair representation claim);

Brown v. Me. State Emps. Ass’n, 690 A.2d 956 (Me. 1997) (holding a union attorney’s

failure to meet a filing deadline fell under the duty of fair representation, thereby

precluding a negligence claim); Best v. Rome, 858 F. Supp 271 (D. Mass. 1994) (holding

that the imposition of the duty of fair representation on unions precludes a remedy for

negligence because a union must be afforded deference in their representation); Weiner v.

Beatty, 116 P.3d 829 (Nev. 2005) (holding that the union lawyer’s representation of the

                                              33
plaintiff arose out of the collective bargaining agreement, that the union lawyer was

therefore an agent of the union, and that the union lawyer was only subject to claims

under the duty of fair representation and not under a malpractice theory); cf. Grahame v.

Rochester Tchrs. Ass’n, 262 A.D.2d 963, 964 (S. Ct. N.Y. 1999) (holding that a negligent

misrepresentation claim was not subsumed by the union’s duty of fair representation

because the collective bargaining agreement did not address the benefits at issue).

       We conclude that like federal labor law, the field of state labor relations is so

occupied by legislation that Maryland’s General Assembly must have intended for the

duty of fair representation to abrogate common-law negligence relating to a state union’s

representation of state employees. Therefore, when related to a state union’s

representation of state employees, a statutory fair representation claim abrogates a related

common-law negligence claim.

       The type of state statutory abrogation of common law relevant here is known as

field preemption; field preemption occurs when a state statutory scheme is so

comprehensive as to cover the whole field. See, e.g., Robinson v. State, 353 Md. 683,

694-701 (1999) (holding that statutory assault abrogates common-law assault because the

assault statute was meant to occupy the entire field). The Maryland General Assembly

has completely occupied the field of state fair representation claims. The legislature

created administrative agencies to help oversee this relationship. It even gave the SLRB

the power to create new state unions. SP&P § 3-205 (2022). In addition to the

administrative process, the legislature also provided for a judicial cause of action through

                                             34
CJP § 5-120. Having a judicial cause of action in addition to the administrative

framework occupies the field even more and protects state employees while maintaining

deference to state unions’ actions and decisions. That the statutes establishing the

administrative and judicial causes of action for fair representation claims apply only to

state unions further compels our result today: Maryland’s General Assembly has a special

interest in occupying labor relations when the state itself is the employer.

       Our legislature also enumerated examples of unfair labor practices in which state

unions are prohibited from engaging, including breaches of the duty of fair

representation. SP&P § 3-306 (2022). Further, it is clear that mere negligence does not

“‘state a claim for breach of the duty of fair representation[.]’” Stanley v. AFSCME, 165

Md. App. at 15 (alterations in original) (quoting Rawson, 495 U.S. at 372-73). By

explicitly establishing these prohibitions on union behavior, the legislature intended to

make statutory claims for breach of the duty of fair representation the exclusive remedies,

precluding claims for common-law negligence where the contested action or inaction

relates to a state union’s representation of employees.

       Of course, our General Assembly did not intend for fair representation claims to

abrogate all other claims against state unions. For obvious reasons, the scope of the

legislature’s intended abrogation must be limited to situations that relate to a state union’s

representation of employees: fair representation claims can only abrogate common-law

negligence where the duty of fair representation applies in the first place. This limitation

avoids the problem Mr. Cecil’s counsel raised in arguments before the circuit court,

                                             35
where a pedestrian slips and falls outside a union’s headquarters. In that situation, a slip-

and-fall would not be covered by the duty of fair representation, so the plaintiff could still

sue for common-law negligence. Therefore, a claim that does not relate to a state union’s

representation of employees or only does so peripherally would not fall under the duty of

fair representation, and so, common-law negligence claims in that case would not be

abrogated.

       Because abrogation (or not) depends on legislative intent, policy often provides

further insight into a legislature’s intended purpose in enacting a statute. See Harris v.

State, 479 Md. 84, 109-10 (2022) (explaining that particular policy judgments support the

court’s conclusion that the statute at issue did not abrogate the common-law felony

murder rule). Here, the policy behind the duty of fair representation provides context

when considering the effects abrogation may have. See Vaca, 386 U.S. 171, 180 (1967)

(“[T]he decision to pre-empt federal and state court jurisdiction over a given class of

cases must depend upon the nature of the particular interests being asserted and the effect

upon the administration of national labor policies of concurrent judicial and

administrative remedies.”). Thus, we next examine the policies behind the duty of fair

representation to corroborate our conclusions above.

       The policies and goals behind the duty of fair representation support our

conclusion that the legislature intended to abrogate common-law negligence. A union is

meant to protect workers, but within a union, there are often splits among members. A

union gives workers the advantage of having a larger, unified voice, but in doing so,

                                             36
some individual voices will lose out to others. As is inevitable in a collective bargaining

process, certain decisions will benefit certain employees but harm others. To accomplish

its job, a union must be able to make strategic decisions that may harm some employees

for the benefit of the majority. See Archibald Cox, The Duty of Fair Representation, 2

Vill. L. Rev. 151, 151-52 (1957) (explaining that union representatives possess great

power to arrange terms and conditions with which a majority of workers agree but which

would bind both the majority and the minority).

       Therefore, a union must be allowed deference in its actions so that it can make

these strategic decisions. Otherwise, the union would not be able to function effectively.

See id. at 167 (“Too strict judicial or administrative supervision through the concept of

fair representation would impair the flexibility and adaptability of collective bargaining

while substituting governmental decisions for self-determination.”). Further, holding

unions to a negligence standard, rather than the duty of fair representation standard,

would put the costs on union members, discourage unions from representing their

members, and allow interference with unions’ decisions. See DeGrio v. Am. Fed’n of

Gov’t Emps., 484 So. 2d 1, 3 (Fla. 1986) (recognizing that the federal duty of fair

representation preempts common-law negligence and discussing the policy reasons

behind the duty of fair representation).

       However, the minority must also be protected from exploitation by the majority.

See Steele v. Louisville & N.R. Co., 323 U.S. 192, 202 (1944) (“[T]he organization

chosen to represent a craft is to represent all its members, the majority as well as the

                                             37
minority[.]”). Thus, the union must owe even minority members some duty to fairly

represent their interests, even if the union ultimately decides against those interests. 30

Creating the duty of fair representation, then, sought to balance the need to give unions

deference in their decision-making and the need to protect employees in their

representation by the union. “Freeing a union from liability for ordinary acts of

negligence in the performance of its representational responsibilities requiring judgment

on its part, reflects a balance of the union’s organizational interest against the individual

interests of its members.” Peterson v. Kennedy, 771 F.2d 1244, 1255 (9th Cir. 1985). To

obtain that necessary balance, the duty of fair representation sets both a floor and a

ceiling on a union’s duty to employees.

       In light of this comprehensive scheme, allowing plaintiff employees to bring

negligence claims in tandem with a claim for breach of the duty of fair representation

would frustrate the policy goals of the duty of fair representation. As discussed, there are

reasons for setting both a floor and a ceiling for a union representative’s requisite

       30
          Much of the law surrounding the duty of fair representation originates in cases
of racial discrimination, where a union’s white majority could bargain for higher pay,
more promotions, and a stronger likelihood of retention than employees of color. See
Steele v. Louisville & N.R. Co., 323 U.S. 192, 202 (1944) (reversing an agreement that
discriminated against Black firefighters in favor of white firefighters); Syres v. Oil
Workers Int’l Union, Loc. No. 23, 350 U.S. 892 (1955) (reversing and remanding where
the majority white union negotiated more promotions and better pay for the company’s
predominantly white division compared to the company’s predominantly Black division);
Bhd. of R.R. Trainmen v. Howard, 343 U.S. 768 (1952) (finding that the collective
bargaining agreement, which had been negotiated by the white employees’ union had the
effect of discriminating against Black employees). See generally Cox, supra at 152-58
(discussing multiple foundational duty of fair representation cases involving racial
discrimination by a union’s white majority).

                                              38
standard of care. If the legislature were to allow a negligence claim to be brought

alongside a claim for breach of the duty of fair representation, then unions would not

have the deference needed to function effectively. See Killian, 403 P.3d at 64 (citing

Peterson, 771 F.2d at 1255) (“[N]egligence is the essence of a malpractice action, but

negligence is insufficient to support a breach of [the duty of fair representation]. Thus,

certain union employees—namely, attorneys—would be held to a higher standard than

the union itself.”). The legislature cannot have intended such a result but must have

intended for the statutory language to preempt the entire field.

       Turning to the present case, both parties agree that the duty of fair representation

covers the situation out of which Mr. Cecil’s claims arose. In fact, Mr. Cecil asserts

essentially the same facts to support both his fair representation claim and his negligence

claim, further supporting that his negligence claim relies on the Union’s duty to Mr.

Cecil. Because Mr. Cecil’s negligence claim is not independent of the Union’s

representation of him, his negligence claim is abrogated by his statutory fair

representation claim. See Brown, 690 A.2d at 957, 960 (holding that the plaintiff’s duty

of fair representation claim preempted his negligence claim when the claim was based on

a union lawyer’s failure to timely file a request to move forward). Because Mr. Cecil’s

claim is already covered by the duty of fair representation, his claim for negligence is

abrogated, and it must be dismissed. We affirm the judgment of the circuit court

dismissing that claim.

                                             39
                  III.   TIMELINESS AND 28 U.S.C. § 1367(D) TOLLING

   a. Parties’ Contentions

       Mr. Cecil argues that the circuit court was incorrect in finding his fair

representation claim was ultimately untimely. He begins by contending that the court was

correct that his cause of action began to accrue on December 22, 2021, so his original

federal complaint was timely. However, Mr. Cecil contends that the circuit court erred in

finding that his amended federal complaint did not relate back to his original federal

complaint. 31 Mr. Cecil claims that while he did not reference the Maryland statute for fair

representation claims until his amended complaint (and thus, outside the statute of

limitations), his amended complaint merely clarified his original complaint. Because he

was only clarifying his original complaint, he argues the circuit court should have used

the filing date of his original federal complaint to determine the timeliness of his circuit

court fair representation claim.

       Conversely, the Union contends that the circuit court was correct in finding Mr.

Cecil’s fair representation claim was untimely because his amended federal complaint

does not relate back to his original complaint. The Union claims that for a state court to

conclude that a state limitations period is tolled by § 1367(d), a plaintiff must have

expressly asserted the state claim in federal court within the statute of limitations. The

Union maintains that Mr. Cecil’s singular fair representation claim in his original federal

       31
         Mr. Cecil also raised other reasons why he believes the circuit court erred in
finding his claim untimely. Given our analysis here, we do not reach these other
arguments.

                                             40
complaint implicitly referred to a federal claim, rather than a state claim. The Union notes

that Mr. Cecil did not expressly assert his state claim or even mention state law until his

amended federal complaint. According to the Union, because asserting his state claim in

the amended federal complaint added a claim rather than simply clarifying one, Mr.

Cecil’s amended federal complaint cannot relate back to the original federal complaint.

Because it cannot relate back to the original complaint, the Union asserts, the state claim

should be treated as being filed outside the statute of limitations.

   b. Mr. Cecil’s Complaint Was Not Timely Because The Amended Complaint
      Did Not Relate Back For Purposes Of 28 U.S.C. § 1367(d) Tolling.

       28 U.S.C. § 1367(d) states:

            The period of limitations for any claim asserted under subsection
            (a), 32 and for any other claim in the same action that is voluntarily
            dismissed at the same time as or after the dismissal of the claim under
            subsection (a), shall be tolled while the claim is pending and for a
            period of 30 days after it is dismissed unless State law provides for a
            longer tolling period.

(footnote added). Section 1367(d) tolls Maryland’s statutory limitations periods for

claims “(i) that are brought in a U.S. District Court, (ii) that are within the ‘supplemental

jurisdiction’ of that court, but (iii) over which the court eventually declines to exercise

jurisdiction.” Turner v. Kight, 406 Md. 167, 169 (2008). Section 1367(d) thus tolls a state

statute of limitations while a federal case is pending so that a federal court does not have

to worry about the possible inequitable consequences of state limitations law when

       32
          Subsection (a) provides federal district courts with supplemental jurisdiction
“over all other claims that are so related to claims in the action within such original
jurisdiction that they form part of the same case or controversy.” 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a).

                                              41
deciding whether to dismiss a case. See John B. Oakley, Prospectus for the American

Law Institute’s Federal Judicial Code Revision Project, 31 U.C. Davis L. Rev. 855, 945

(1998) (discussing § 1367(d)’s intricacies and Congress’s intent in enacting it).

       The complexities of § 1367(d) have spawned many cases, but we need not concern

ourselves with those complexities here. We affirm the dismissal of Mr. Cecil’s fair

representation claim because his amended federal complaint did not relate back to his

original federal complaint under Maryland’s established procedure for concluding when

state-law claims are tolled by § 1367(d). See Rounds v. Md.-Nat. Cap. Park & Plan.

Comm’n, 441 Md. 621, 659-62 (2015) (choosing to follow In re Vertrue Mktg. & Sales

Pracs. Litig., 712 F. Supp. 2d 703, 721 (N.D. Ohio 2010), aff’d, 719 F.3d 474 (6th Cir.

2013)).

       To determine when Mr. Cecil’s limitations period ran out, we must first determine

when it began to run. CJP § 5-120(b) provides that a fair representation claim begins to

run upon “the later of: (1) The date on which the claim accrued; or (2) The date on

which the complainant knew or should reasonably have known of the breach.” (emphasis

added).

       We agree with the circuit court that Mr. Cecil’s cause of action accrued on

December 22, 2021. The deadline for the Union to file Mr. Cecil’s appeal was September

15, 2021. The OAH dismissed the appeal on December 22, 2021. The Union contends

that Mr. Cecil must have known of the Union’s failure to timely file before the OAH

dismissed the appeal. The Union reasons that for the OAH to dismiss the appeal,

                                            42
someone must have filed a motion because the OAH is not allowed to dismiss cases sua

sponte. See COMAR 28.02.01.12(C). 33 However, CJP § 5-120 provides that limitations

begins to run upon the occurrence of the later option: when Mr. Cecil’s claim actually

accrued or when Mr. Cecil knew or should reasonably have known of the Union’s breach

of the duty of fair representation. See CJP § 5-120(b). Regardless of when Mr. Cecil

knew or should reasonably have known of the Union’s breach, his fair representation

claim did not accrue until the OAH dismissed his appeal because, until that point, he had

not been injured by the Union’s alleged inaction. Therefore, we agree with the circuit

court that Mr. Cecil’s fair representation claim accrued on December 22, 2021, and

expired on June 22, 2022.

       Because he filed his original federal complaint on June 17, 2022, that complaint

was within the limitations period and was timely brought. However, Mr. Cecil only

amended his federal complaint to cite the state statute for breach of the duty of fair

representation on July 26, 2022. If Mr. Cecil’s state claim in his amended federal

complaint related back to his original federal complaint for tolling purposes, then it, too,

would qualify as having been brought within the limitations period. But, if Mr. Cecil’s

state claim in his amended federal complaint did not relate back to his original federal

complaint for tolling purposes, then it was brought outside the limitations period because

it was filed on July 26.

       33
          COMAR 28.02.01.12(C) says, “Upon motion, the ALJ may issue a proposed or
final decision dismissing an initial pleading that fails to state a claim for which relief may
be granted.”

                                             43
       To determine whether a claim relates back to an original complaint for purposes of

tolling, we follow the standard set forth in Rounds v. Maryland-National Capital Park

and Planning Commission, 441 Md. at 661. The plaintiffs in Rounds asserted several

claims against the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, alleging

that the Commission failed to issue home addresses to the plaintiffs. Id. at 632-33.

Although the plaintiffs originally brought their complaint in federal court, it was

eventually dismissed, and the plaintiffs attempted to reassert it in the Circuit Court for

Montgomery County. Id. at 633-34. When the plaintiffs brought suit in the circuit court,

they added a count of wrongful elimination of easement rights. Id. at 634. Our Supreme

Court, affirming the circuit court, held that § 1367(d) did not toll the limitations period on

plaintiffs’ claim for wrongful elimination of easement rights because that claim was not

included in plaintiffs’ initial federal complaint. Id. at 661-62.

       Under Rounds, to take advantage of § 1367(d) tolling, a plaintiff must expressly

assert their state-law claim in their original federal complaint, filed within the state statute

of limitations. Id. at 661. If the plaintiff does not raise their state-law claim until after the

state statute of limitations has run, they cannot raise it in state court. Id. Doing so would

allow a plaintiff to disregard the statute of limitations and resurrect a time-barred claim.

       In the case of a federal complaint that is amended after the state statute of

limitations has passed, the Rounds court established a test. Id. If the amended complaint

is simply clarifying what was in the original complaint, then the court considers the state

                                               44
claim expressly and timely asserted. Id. However, if the amended complaint raises a

completely new cause of action, then the court considers the claim time-barred. Id.

       The Rounds court distinguished the case from Estate of Belden v. Brown County,

261 P.3d 943 (Ct. App. Kan. 2011). In that case, the plaintiffs had not specifically stated

the phrases “respondeat superior” or “vicarious liability” in their initial federal complaint.

Id. at 975. But otherwise, the plaintiffs’ complaint put the defendants on notice that their

claim rested on vicarious liability because the plaintiffs had asserted in their initial

federal complaint that the defendants were acting in the scope of their employment. Id.

Because the defendants were on notice of the vicarious liability theory, the Court of

Appeals of Kansas allowed the plaintiffs’ claim to go forward. Id. The Supreme Court of

Maryland distinguished the Rounds case from Estate of Belden by explaining that the

plaintiffs in Estate of Belden had simply refined their claim from their initial federal

complaint. Rounds, 441 Md. at 661. Conversely, the plaintiffs in Rounds had added a new

cause of action. Id.

       Here, Mr. Cecil’s state-law claim did not relate back to his original federal

complaint for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1367(d). Mr. Cecil’s original federal complaint

only contained one count of breach of the duty of fair representation. Mr. Cecil’s original

complaint did not state anything about supplemental jurisdiction. Nor did it refer to any

specific state laws. The only statute the original complaint mentioned was 29 U.S.C. §

185, which Mr. Cecil claimed established subject matter jurisdiction, i.e., federal question

                                              45
jurisdiction. 34 Since Mr. Cecil asserted no other counts in his original complaint, his

claim in his original complaint must have been based on federal law. The federal court

could not have exercised supplemental jurisdiction over the one and only count in Mr.

Cecil’s original complaint because at that point there was nothing to which the one count

could be supplemental.

       In his amended complaint, Mr. Cecil did not merely clarify the federal-law fair

representation claim that was the basis for his original complaint. Instead, he added a

second count, this one based on state law, for breach of the state-law duty of fair

representation. Both the original and amended complaints cited the federal statute, 29

U.S.C. § 185, for Mr. Cecil’s federal fair representation claim. But the original and

amended complaints differed in that the amended complaint added a state-law claim and

another basis for jurisdiction over that state claim. The amended complaint also explained

that AFSCME was a labor organization under state law. All of this is to say that in adding

the second count, a count that sounded in a separate body of non-federal law, and that

depended on supplemental (i.e., non-federal question) jurisdiction, Mr. Cecil’s state claim

was not a clarification of the claim in his original complaint. It was an addition. See In re

Vertrue Mktg. & Sales Pracs. Litig., 712 F. Supp. 2d at 722 (“To read the statute as

broadly as plaintiffs suggest would lead to the illogical result in which a plaintiff could

file a complaint in federal court containing only a federal cause of action. In the event the

court disposed of the federal cause of action, the plaintiff could file an untimely

       34
            No one contends that the basis for federal jurisdiction was diversity.

                                               46
complaint in state court containing a state-law cause of action ‘arising’ from the facts

asserted in the federal complaint. This would be so even though the plaintiff asserted no

state[-]law cause of action in the federal complaint.”).

       Mr. Cecil argues that his amended complaint was simply refining his original duty

of fair representation claim by splitting it into a federal claim and a state claim. To be

sure, we generally do not require a complaint to be pled with specificity. Md. Rule 2-

303(b). 35 However, there is no indication that Mr. Cecil’s original federal complaint

included a state claim because he did not cite any state statutes or assert supplemental

jurisdiction. See Rounds, 441 Md. at 661 (finding the plaintiffs did not expressly assert

their state claims in their original federal complaint).

       Therefore, we affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of Mr. Cecil’s claim for breach

of the duty of fair representation due to lack of timeliness.

                                      CONCLUSION

       Mr. Cecil need not have exhausted his administrative remedies before bringing

this action. However, his negligence claim was abrogated. His fair representation claim

was untimely. Thus, we affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of Mr. Cecil’s complaint.

       35
          Maryland Rule 2-303(b) sets forth the requirements for a pleading in a Maryland
circuit court:

            Each averment of a pleading shall be simple, concise, and direct. No
            technical forms of pleadings are required. A pleading shall contain
            only such statements of fact as may be necessary to show the pleader’s
            entitlement to relief or ground of defense. It shall not include
            argument, unnecessary recitals of law, evidence, or documents, or any
            immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous matter.

                                              47
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR BALTIMORE CITY AFFIRMED;
COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.

 48