In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 19-3226
LATRICE SAXON,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
SOUTHWEST AIRLINES CO.,
Defendant-Appellee.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
No. 19-cv-0403 — Robert M. Dow, Jr., Judge.
____________________
ARGUED MARCH 3, 2021 — DECIDED MARCH 31, 2021
____________________
Before MANION, WOOD, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges.
ST. EVE, Circuit Judge. The Federal Arbitration Act has,
since 1925, established a federal policy favoring arbitration.
But every policy has its limits. One of the limits Congress
placed on the Arbitration Act is an exemption for “contracts
of employment of seamen, railroad employees, or any other
class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce.”
9 U.S.C. § 1. The Supreme Court and the ejusdem generis canon
of statutory construction tell us that the last category refers
2 No. 19-3226
not to all contracts of employment, but only those belonging
to “transportation workers.” Beyond the two examples the
statute provides—seamen and railroad employees—deciding
who qualifies as a transportation worker is not always an easy
task.
Latrice Saxon is a ramp supervisor who manages and as-
sists workers loading and unloading airplane cargo for South-
west Airlines Company. After she brought a lawsuit against
her employer, Southwest invoked the Arbitration Act. Saxon
asserted that she was an exempt transportation worker, but
the district court found her work too removed from interstate
commerce and dismissed the case.
We reverse. The act of loading cargo onto a vehicle to be
transported interstate is itself commerce, as that term was un-
derstood at the time of the Arbitration Act’s enactment in
1925. Airplane cargo loaders, as a class, are engaged in that
commerce, in much the way that seamen and railroad em-
ployees were, and Saxon and the ramp supervisors are mem-
bers of that class. It therefore follows that they are transporta-
tion workers whose contracts of employment are exempted
from the Arbitration Act.
I
As a ramp supervisor at Chicago Midway International
Airport, Saxon supervises, trains, and assists a team of ramp
agents—Southwest employees who physically load and un-
load planes with passenger and commercial cargo. Ostensibly
her job is meant to be purely supervisory, but Saxon’s uncon-
troverted declaration asserts that she and the other ramp su-
pervisors at Midway frequently fill in as ramp agents when
they are short on workers. Though the ramp agents are
No. 19-3226 3
covered by a collective bargaining agreement, supervisors
like Saxon are excluded. She, like other excluded Southwest
employees, agreed annually as part of her contract of employ-
ment—not separately—to arbitrate wage disputes.
Believing that Southwest failed to pay ramp supervisors
for overtime work, Saxon nevertheless filed a putative collec-
tive action against Southwest under the Fair Labor Standards
Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 201–219. Southwest moved to stay the suit
pending arbitration, see 9 U.S.C. § 3, or to dismiss it for im-
proper venue in light of Saxon’s arbitration agreement, Fed.
R. Civ. P. 12(b)(3); Contʹl Cas. Co. v. Am. Nat. Ins. Co., 417 F.3d
727, 733 (7th Cir. 2005). Saxon responded that the Arbitration
Act did not apply because she was a member of a “class of
workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce,” and
therefore exempted by § 1 of the Arbitration Act.
In Circuit City Stores v. Adams, 532 U.S. 105, 119 (2001), the
Supreme Court held that the exemption in § 1 applies only to
“transportation workers.” Relying on Lenz v. Yellow Transpor-
tation, Inc., 431 F.3d 348, 352 (8th Cir. 2005), Saxon maintained
that she was a transportation worker because Southwest was
a transportation company, and she was responsible for load-
ing and unloading goods for transportation. Southwest re-
plied that Saxon fell outside the exemption because she did
not personally move goods across state lines or manage those
who do.
The district court agreed with Southwest. Surveying the
limited caselaw, the court determined that the “linchpin” of
the transportation-worker definition was “actual transporta-
tion, not merely handling goods …. at one end or the other”
of a network. In support, it highlighted the exclusion for sea-
men—a term which it understood not to cover the
4 No. 19-3226
longshoreman who loaded and unloaded ships—and ex-
tended that logic to warehousemen, stevedores, porters, and
to Saxon’s analogous role as a ramp supervisor. Saxon ap-
pealed.
II
We recently considered the framework of the Arbitration
Act and the § 1 exemption in Wallace v. Grubhub Holdings, Inc.,
970 F.3d 798 (7th Cir. 2020). Congress passed the Act in 1925
in response to the general “hostility of American courts to the
enforcement of arbitration agreements” and “sought to re-
place that ‘widespread judicial hostility’ with a ‘liberal federal
policy favoring arbitration.’” Id. at 799–800 (citing AT&T Mo-
bility LLC v. Concepcion, 563 U.S. 333, 339 (2011)). Section 1 of
the Act represents an outer limit on Congress’s favor toward
arbitration. See New Prime Inc. v. Oliveira, 139 S. Ct. 532, 543
(2019). It provides that “nothing” in the Act shall apply to
“contracts of employment” for “seamen,” “railroad employ-
ees,” and a third, residual category, “any other class of work-
ers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce.” 9 U.S.C. § 1;
Wallace, 970 F.3d at 799.
The parties do not dispute that Saxon’s arbitration agree-
ment is a contract of employment but only whether Saxon is
one of the workers exempted. Like the plaintiff in Wallace,
Saxon does not claim to be a seaman or railroad employee and
argues only that she fits in the residual category.
To understand the scope of that category, we explained in
Wallace, “our inquiry ‘begins with the text.’” 970 F.3d at 800
(citing Ross v. Blake, 136 S. Ct. 1850, 1856 (2016)). We interpret
the words of that text based on their “ordinary … meaning …
at the time Congress enacted the statute.” New Prime, 139 S.
No. 19-3226 5
Ct. at 539 (quoting Wis. Cent. Ltd v. United States, 138 S. Ct.
2067, 2074 (2018)).
The first textual clue is the phrase “class of workers,”
which obligates us to focus on the broader occupation, not the
individual worker. Wallace, 970 F.3d at 800. We therefore ask
not whether Saxon is engaged in commerce, but whether a
given class of workers is engaged in commerce and whether
Saxon is a member of that class. Id. at 802.
The second clue is the two enumerated categories of sea-
men and railroad employees, which provide a gloss on what
it means for a class of workers to be “engaged in commerce.”
Id. at 801. Standing alone, the phrase “engaged in commerce”
is a term of art with a narrower scope than similar formula-
tions like “involving commerce” or “affecting commerce,”
though its precise breadth often depends on “statutory con-
text.” Circuit City, 532 U.S. at 115–18. Under the ejusdem gene-
ris canon of construction, general words are interpreted to re-
flect the “common characteristics” of the enumerated catego-
ries that precede them. Ctr. Video Indus. Co. v. Roadway Package
Sys., Inc., 90 F.3d 185, 187–88 (7th Cir. 1996); see Antonin Scalia
& Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal
Texts 199 (2012). In Circuit City, the Supreme Court used this
canon to reject the argument that § 1 exempted all employ-
ment contracts. 542 U.S. at 114–15. Instead, the court limited
the scope of the residual category to “transportation work-
ers,” id. at 119, those who are “akin to ‘seamen’ and ‘railroad
employees,’” Wallace, 970 F.3d at 801. To be engaged in com-
merce for purposes of § 1, then, is to “perform[] work analo-
gous to that of seamen and railroad employees, whose occu-
pations are centered on the transport of goods in interstate
and foreign commerce.” Id. at 802.
6 No. 19-3226
III
Saxon argues on appeal that ramp supervisors, and cargo
loaders more broadly, are transportation workers within the
original meaning of § 1 at the time it was enacted in 1925. Al-
most a century ago, she insists, those who loaded cargo for
interstate transport were recognized to be engaged in com-
merce. She also draws parallels between her job loading cargo
as a ramp supervisor and the 1925 definitions of seamen and
railroad employees, which in her view covered boat and train
cargo loaders.
A
Southwest first raises a threshold objection to Saxon’s ar-
gument: she never made it in the district court. She urged the
district court only to follow the Eighth Circuit’s Lenz decision,
which did not emphasize the text of § 1, its original meaning
in 1925, or the scope of the two enumerated categories. South-
west contends that Saxon therefore forfeited or waived her ar-
guments, though Saxon insists she generally raised the rele-
vant issues in the district court.
We need not resolve this dispute. Even if Saxon had
waived her arguments by failing to present them in the dis-
trict court, we would still consider them now. We may, in our
discretion, forgive waiver or forfeiture in a case that presents
a pure question of statutory interpretation that the parties
have fully briefed on appeal. E.g., Hively v. Ivy Tech Cmty. Coll.
of Ind., 853 F.3d 339, 351 (7th Cir. 2017) (en banc); Amcast In-
dus. Corp. v. Detrex Corp., 2 F.3d 746, 749–50 (7th Cir. 1993). We
exercise such discretion sparingly, see In re Sw. Airlines
Voucher Litig., 799 F.3d 701, 714 (7th Cir. 2015), but we would
elect to do so here. Saxon presents us with an important and
No. 19-3226 7
recurring question of statutory interpretation, and the district
court itself correctly noted the lack of guiding authority. We
think it better to add what clarity we can than to defer our
consideration of these significant issues to a later date.
B
On appeal, the parties agree that Southwest’s business of
flying passengers and their baggage (and, to a lesser extent,
freight cargo) is in interstate or foreign commerce within the
meaning of § 1. Southwest disputed this point in the district
court and argued that to be in commerce meant only transport
of goods—not primarily people and their effects—but it aban-
doned that theory on appeal. We have no reason to dispute its
concession and accept that the movement of goods accompa-
nying people, just as much as the movement of goods alone,
is in interstate commerce. See Singh v. Uber Techs. Inc., 939 F.3d
210, 226 (3d Cir. 2019).
That Southwest is engaged in commerce does not resolve
this case. Saxon contends otherwise in her broadest argument,
suggesting that the proper class of workers parallel to seamen
and railroad employees is “airline employees.” She defines
that group simply enough: those employed by an airline, a
class of which she is obviously a part.
Although this view draws a bright and clear line, it is in-
consistent with the text of the residual exemption. The phrase
“any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate
commerce” asks that the class of workers, not their employer,
be engaged in commerce. This feature cuts both ways. On the
one hand, a transportation worker need not work for a trans-
portation company. Intʹl Bhd. of Teamsters Local Union No. 50
v. Kienstra Precast, LLC, 702 F.3d 954, 957 (7th Cir. 2012). But
8 No. 19-3226
on the other hand, a person does not become a transportation
worker just by working for a transportation company. See
Lenz, 431 F.3d at 351; Perez v. Globe Airport Sec. Servs., Inc.,
253 F.3d 1280, 1284 (11th Cir. 2001), vacated 294 F.3d 1275
(11th Cir. 2002) (joint stipulation to dismiss); Cole v. Burns Intʹl
Sec. Servs., 105 F.3d 1465, 1469, 1472 (D.C. Cir. 1997). The em-
ployer’s business might well inform the “ultimate inquiry”
whether its employees are engaged in commerce, Rittmann v.
Amazon.com, Inc., 971 F.3d 904, 917 (9th Cir. 2020); Waithaka
v. Amazon.com, Inc., 966 F.3d 10, 22–23 (1st Cir. 2020), but the
employer is not itself the inquiry. Ramp supervisors are not
transportation workers just because they work for Southwest.
Instead, to be exempted under the residual clause of § 1,
the ramp supervisors must themselves be engaged in inter-
state or foreign commerce. To resolve that question we ask
“whether the interstate movement of goods is a central part
of the class members’ job description,” meaning that the
workers are actively occupied in “the enterprise of moving
goods across interstate lines.” Wallace, 970 F.3d at 801–02. This
line is not as easy to draw.
Wherever the line may be, though, ramp supervisors fall
on the transportation-worker side of it. A central part of their
job is the loading and unloading of cargo for planes on inter-
state and international flights. Although this is officially the
role of the ramp agents, not the supervisors, Saxon estimates
that she and her peers each cover three full ramp-agent shifts
per week. Southwest offered no evidence to contradict this es-
timate. We need not consider, then, whether supervision of
cargo loading alone would suffice. Ramp supervisors and
ramp agents alike spend a significant amount of their time en-
gaged in physically loading baggage and cargo onto planes
No. 19-3226 9
destined for, or returning from, other states and countries,
and that cargo-loading work is interstate or foreign com-
merce.
Southwest argues, and the district court concluded, that
loading and unloading cargo is not enough to make a worker
engaged in commerce because that phrase refers only to “ac-
tual transportation.” The premise is correct. “[T]ransportation
workers are those who are ‘actually engaged in the movement
of goods in interstate commerce.’” Id. at 801 (citing Kienstra
Precast, 702 F.3d at 956). We differ, however, in the conclusion.
Actual transportation is not limited to the precise moment ei-
ther goods or the people accompanying them cross state lines.
Loading and unloading cargo onto a vehicle so that it may be
moved interstate, too, is actual transportation, and those who
performed that work were recognized in 1925 to be engaged
in commerce. Indeed, one year earlier, the Supreme Court
held it was “too plain to require discussion that the loading or
unloading of an interstate shipment by the employees of a car-
rier is so closely related to interstate transportation as to be
practically a part of it” and thus a person injured while un-
loading cargo from a train was employed in commerce. Balt.
& Ohio Sw. R.R. v. Burtch, 263 U.S. 540, 544 (1924).
The same logic extended to stevedores and longshoremen,
the dockworkers who loaded and unloaded ships at port. The
Supreme Court in 1928 deemed “[t]he unloading of a ship” to
have “direct relation to commerce and navigation,” such that
a stevedore was within federal maritime jurisdiction. N. Coal
& Dock Co. v. Strand, 278 U.S. 142, 144 (1928). A decade later
the Court reiterated this point in stronger terms: “No one
would deny that the crew would be engaged in interstate or
foreign commerce if busied in loading or unloading an
10 No. 19-3226
interstate or foreign vessel.” Puget Sound Stevedoring Co. v.
State Tax Commʹn, 302 U.S. 90, 92 (1937) (emphasis added).
The Court recognized that the work the crew was engaged
in—loading and unloading a vessel—was itself interstate or
foreign commerce. Id. at 94; see also Joseph v. Carter & Weekes
Stevedoring Co., 330 U.S. 422, 427 (1947) (“The transportation
in commerce, at the least, begins with loading and ends with
unloading.”). A cargo loader may not herself cross the state
border, but without her work, neither would the goods in her
care. She is an essential part of the enterprise of transporting
goods between states and countries.
Southwest points out that the Supreme Court overruled
these stevedoring cases in Department of Revenue v. Association
of Washington Stevedoring Companies, 435 U.S. 734 (1978). The
Court did not, however, abrogate its holdings that stevedores
were engaged in commerce, let alone imply the cases were
wrong when decided. Originally, because stevedoring was
commerce, the Court held it was per se unconstitutional for
states to tax that work. Puget Sound, 302 U.S. at 94. Forty years
later the Court eliminated this per se prohibition of taxation.
Ass’n of Wash. Stevedoring Cos., 435 U.S. at 748–50. It reaf-
firmed, however, that stevedoring was commerce, and, the
court presumed, commerce in the sense of “movement” and
“transport,” as distinct from “commerce that does not move
goods.” Id. at 748.
We are thus left with the firm conviction that cargo loaders
generally are a class of workers engaged in the actual trans-
portation of goods. Ramp supervisors who also load and un-
load cargo in the manner Saxon attests, in turn, are airplane
cargo loaders and members of that class, and thus engaged in
commerce for purposes of § 1.
No. 19-3226 11
C
A comparison to the enumerated categories of seamen and
railroad employees in § 1 further supports our conclusion that
a ramp supervisor falls within the residual clause and is a
transportation worker like them.
1
Regarding seamen, we again agree with the district court
and Southwest’s premise, but not their conclusion. The term
“seaman” is a term of art that excludes the stevedores, long-
shoremen, and land-based dockworkers to whom we just
compared ramp supervisors. See McDermott Intʹl, Inc. v. Wilan-
der, 498 U.S. 337, 342, 348 (1991). The distinction is quite literal
thanks to a quirk from 1927: “seaman” is statutorily defined
by its exclusion from the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Work-
ers’ Compensation Act, Pub. L. No. 69-803, 44 Stat. 1424 (1927)
(codified as amended at 33 U.S.C. §§ 901–950). See Chandris,
Inc. v. Latsis, 515 U.S. 347, 355–56, 358–59 (1995).
Saxon argues that seamen meant something different two
years earlier, in 1925, and then included dockworkers. This is
partially correct. International Stevedoring Co. v. Haverty, 272
U.S. 50, 52 (1926), did hold that a stevedore was a seaman for
purposes of the Jones Act, Pub. L. No. 66-261 § 31, 41 Stat. 988,
1006 (1920) (codified as amended at 46 U.S.C. §§ 30101–
30106), which provides a claim in negligence for injured sea-
men. The Compensation Act abrogated that holding, but even
at the time Haverty’s reasoning applied only to the Jones Act.
The Court acknowledged that “for most purposes, as the
word is commonly used, stevedores are not ‘seamen.’”
Haverty, 272 U.S. at 52. Because stevedores and seamen per-
formed similar tasks, the Court inferred that Congress wanted
12 No. 19-3226
them to receive the same protections, regardless of job title.
Id.; see also Uravic v. F. Jarka Co., 282 U.S. 234, 239 (1931) (ex-
plaining that Haverty did not “say or mean that stevedores are
to be regarded as seamen” only that they are “given the rights
of seamen”). There was and remains a “fundamental distinc-
tion” between seamen and land-based workers. See Chandris,
515 U.S. at 358.
A distinction, even a fundamental one, does not neces-
sarily mean a difference. Saxon does not purport to be a sea-
man but to perform work sufficiently analogous to seamen to
infer she is engaged in commerce like them. Southwest gives
us no reason to believe the distinction between seamen and
longshoremen rests on their relation to commerce. Instead, it
is typically justified by the unique hazards that seamen face
on the open seas. See Chandris, 515 U.S. at 354–55. So Haverty’s
extension of the seaman’s protections to stevedores was ques-
tionable, but its broader point remains valid. Seamen, steve-
dores, and longshoremen performed similar—even if not
identical—work. Other cases contemporary to the Arbitration
Act also carried this theme and recognized that the crew of
the ship had historically performed the specialized work of
the stevedore and longshoreman. See Puget Sound, 302 U.S. at
92; Atlantic Transp. Co. of W. Va. v. Imbrovek, 234 U.S. 52, 62
(1914). Given this similarity in their work we see no reason to
infer that Congress’s express inclusion of seamen in § 1 leads
to an implied exclusion of longshoremen or other cargo load-
ers like them. They are all workers engaged in interstate or
foreign commerce, even if they are not the same class.
Southwest urges us to follow the Fifth Circuit, which, in
Eastus v. ISS Facility Services, Inc., 960 F.3d 207 (5th Cir. 2020),
noted the parties’ agreement that longshoremen were not an
No. 19-3226 13
exempted class of workers. Id. at 211–12. The appellant, Heidi
Eastus, supervised and assisted airport ticketing and gate
agents who placed passengers’ baggage on conveyor belts to
be screened and loaded. Id. at 208. Because her work could “at
most be construed as loading and unloading airplanes,” she
resembled more a longshoreman than a seaman, so the court
held she was also not exempt. Id. at 212.
Saxon does not make the same concession as in Eastus, and
without that starting point, we do not think its logic directly
applies here. Eastus addressed little of the history that we
have covered. Instead, its analysis rested on a decision inter-
preting the term “seaman” under § 1 and expressly disclaim-
ing reliance on the residual clause. See Brown v. Nabors Off-
shore Corp., 339 F.3d 391, 394 (5th Cir. 2003). Longshoremen
may not belong to the enumerated class of seamen, but it can-
not follow that one is not a transportation worker just because
she is not a seaman. The residual clause must have some con-
tent beyond just the enumerated categories, lest we read it out
of the statute entirely. Excluding all cargo loaders also con-
flicts with the Third Circuit’s established interpretation of § 1
through railroad law, as we explore further below. We ex-
press no opinion on whether Eastus herself was a transporta-
tion worker—she did not personally load and unload cargo,
and so was at least one step removed from either longshore-
men or ramp supervisors like Saxon.
2
Even if a gap existed in the analogy between seamen and
cargo loaders, we still must compare ramp supervisors to the
other enumerated category, railroad employees. One compli-
cating matter is that, unlike seaman, “railroad employee” is
not a term of art with any settled meaning. The Supreme
14 No. 19-3226
Court has noted only that the term “may have swept more
broadly at the time of the Actʹs passage than might seem ob-
vious today.” New Prime, 139 S. Ct. at 543.
In the absence of other guidance, Saxon proposes the term
should be understood by its plain meaning—those employed
by a railroad, obviously including porters and other train
cargo loaders. She also supports a broad construction by
pointing to the Transportation Act of 1920, tit. III, Pub. L. No.
66-152, 41 Stat. 456, 469 (repealed 1926), which established a
Railroad Labor Board to resolve disputes between railroads
and their employees, including train cargo loaders but also
clerks and janitors only tangentially related to transportation.
E.g., Bhd. of Ry. & S.S. Clerks v. Erie R.R., Decision No. 1210, 3
R.L.B. 667, 667 (1922); see also Ry. Emps.ʹ Dept. v. Ind. Harbor
Belt R.R., Decision No. 982, 3 R.L.B. 332, 337 (1922) (defining
“employee” broadly to mean “those engaged in the custom-
ary work directly contributory to the operation of the rail-
roads”). These possibilities, however, too closely resemble the
employer-based reasoning that we have already said is in-
compatible with the residual clause, and so have limited util-
ity in interpreting that clause, whatever merit they may have
for the enumerated category of railroad employees.
We need not rest on these broad definitions, though, be-
cause cargo loaders fit within a narrower class of railroad em-
ployees defined by their relation to commerce. The Federal
Employers’ Liability Act (FELA), Pub. L. No. 60-100, § 2, 35
Stat. 65 (1908) (codified as amended at 45 U.S.C. §§ 51–60), al-
lowed railroad workers injured while “employed … in …
commerce” to sue the railroad for negligence. Considering the
substantial overlap between this formulation and § 1 of the
Arbitration Act, the Third Circuit—applying the same ejusdem
No. 19-3226 15
generis reasoning that the Supreme Court later adopted in Cir-
cuit City—first relied on FELA caselaw to inform its interpre-
tation of § 1 decades ago. See Tenney Engʹg, Inc. v. United Elec.
Radio & Mach. Workers of Am., Local 437, 207 F.2d 450, 452–53
(3d Cir. 1953) (en banc).
The FELA cases identify at least two general categories of
workers employed in interstate commerce, beyond the obvi-
ous worker who physically crosses state lines. The first cate-
gory included those who worked on an intrastate leg of an
interstate journey. See, e.g., Phila. & Reading Ry. v. Hancock, 253
U.S. 284, 285–86 (1920). The First and Ninth Circuits recently
relied on this line of cases to conclude that so-called “last
mile” delivery drivers fit within the § 1 exemption. See
Rittmann, 971 F.3d at 912; Waithaka, 966 F.3d at 20–21. Ramp
supervisors and cargo loaders do not resemble this category,
so we have no need to decide whether we agree with that po-
sition today.
Cargo loaders fit cleanly into the second category—those
whose work was “so closely related to [interstate transporta-
tion] as to be practically a part of it.” Shanks v. Del., Lackawanna
& W.R.R., 239 U.S. 556, 558 (1916). As we have already noted,
the Court held in 1924 that it was “too plain to require discus-
sion that the loading or unloading of an interstate shipment”
sufficed for a worker to fit within this category. Burtch, 263
U.S. at 544. Although the First Circuit has expressly reserved
the question, Waithaka, 966 F.3d at 20 n.9, 22 n.10, the Third
Circuit has consistently held that workers are exempt under
§ 1 if they are so closely related to transportation as to be part
of it. See Singh, 939 F.3d at 226; Palcko v. Airborne Express, Inc.,
372 F.3d 588, 593 (3d Cir. 2004); Tenney Eng’g, 207 F.2d at 453.
16 No. 19-3226
Southwest does not dispute that train cargo loaders were
“employed in commerce” for FELA purposes in 1925. It pro-
tests only that we should not rely on FELA to interpret the
Arbitration Act. FELA is construed liberally to effect a reme-
dial purpose, it insists, but the Arbitration Act has no reme-
dial purpose. Its purpose is to favor arbitration. Otherwise,
Southwest fears a slippery slope—excluding ramp supervi-
sors could eventually lead to excluding ticket and gate agents,
security guards, taxi drivers, and airport vendors all on the
ground that each supports the work of the airline.
We find neither of these objections compelling. Southwest
has given us no reason to believe that FELA’s remedial pur-
pose influenced the extension of its protections to cargo load-
ers. See Rittmann, 971 F.3d at 912 n.2 (same for workers on in-
trastate portions of interstate journeys); Waithaka, 966 F.3d
at 22 (same). The Supreme Court in Burtch did not just say
cargo loaders were employed in commerce but that it was
“too plain to require discussion” that they “fully satisfy” that
test. 263 U.S. at 544. To exclude all cargo loaders, then, we
would have to abandon any comparison to FELA whatso-
ever—without an alternative, narrower proposal from South-
west by which to compare unenumerated workers to railroad
employees—and put ourselves in conflict with the Third Cir-
cuit’s approach and in tension with the First and Ninth Cir-
cuits’ interpretation of § 1. Cargo loaders are a relatively easy
question under FELA, so we do not see a need, in this case, to
go as far as the Ninth Circuit and hold that FELA’s remedial
purpose affected only its definition of negligence. Rittman, 971
F.3d at 912 n.2. Nor do we foreclose the possibility that some
workers who were “employed in commerce” for FELA pur-
poses in 1925 are not “engaged in commerce” for purposes of
No. 19-3226 17
the Arbitration Act. If those workers exist, they were not cargo
loaders.
For similar reasons, we do not see this as the start of a slip-
pery slope. For one, much of Southwest’s fear rests on FELA
decisions after 1939, when Congress loosened the “employed
in commerce” test. See S. Pac. Co. v. Gileo, 351 U.S. 493, 498–99
(1956). Later decisions thus shed little light on what it meant
to be engaged in commerce in 1925. In any event, Southwest
does not suggest transportation workers are limited to those
who physically cross state lines and we do not think such a
limitation could be supported. The loading of goods into a ve-
hicle traveling to another state or country is the step that both
immediately and necessarily precedes the moment the vehicle
and goods cross the border. To say that this closely related
work is interstate transportation does not necessarily mean
that the work of a ticketing or gate agents (like in Eastus) or
others even further removed from that moment qualify too.
We say this not to prejudge future cases, but only to reiterate
that a transportation worker “must be connected not simply
to the goods, but to the act of moving those goods across state
or national borders.” Wallace, 970 F.3d at 802. Whether the
goods have been or ultimately will go to another state or
country is not important except to the extent the class of work-
ers directly progresses them on that journey. Airplane cargo
loaders like Saxon are essential to that progress in a way dis-
tinct even from other airline employees.
3
The foregoing analysis rests on the premise that the com-
mon characteristics of seamen and railroad employees, for
ejusdem generis purposes, is their relationship with interstate
or foreign commerce. Southwest offers a different view. It
18 No. 19-3226
asserts that the link between seamen and railroad employees
is that both were subject to alternative dispute-resolution
schemes in 1925. The purpose of the § 1 exemption in the Ar-
bitration Act, it contends, was to avoid conflict with such
schemes, including the Railway Labor Act. See Circuit City,
552 U.S. at 120–21 (calling this purpose a “permissible infer-
ence”). Because Saxon, as a supervisor, is not covered by the
Railway Labor Act (and certainly would not have been in
1925, a year before it existed and a decade before it extended
to airline workers), Southwest contends that she cannot be ex-
empt from the Arbitration Act.
The critical flaw with this argument is that the text of § 1
does not tie exemption to any other law. The text directs us to
ask whether the class of workers is engaged in commerce.
Even if Southwest correctly identifies the purpose of § 1,
“[p]urpose cannot override text.” Waithaka, 966 F.3d at 25 (cit-
ing New Prime, 139 S. Ct. at 543). If Congress intended to ex-
empt only workers covered by dispute-resolution schemes in
1925, it could have enumerated them and skipped the resid-
ual exemption entirely. See id.
The consequences of excluding Saxon despite the absence
of some other federal arbitration scheme are not nearly as dire
as Southwest predicts. It insists that our holding will create a
subset of workers “completely unable to agree to arbitration.”
But Saxon could still face arbitration under state law or
through an agreement outside of her contract of employment.
All we decide today is that the Federal Arbitration Act’s pol-
icy favoring arbitration does not extend to Saxon’s contract of
employment under the plain text of § 1. The exemption in 9
U.S.C. § 1 reflects a limit Congress placed on its otherwise lib-
eral favor toward arbitration, and we are obligated to respect
No. 19-3226 19
that limit before enforcing the Arbitration Act. New Prime, 139
S. Ct. at 543.
IV
Because we conclude that airplane cargo loaders are a
class of workers engaged in commerce and Saxon is a member
of that class, it follows that she is a transportation worker
whose contract of employment is exempt from the Federal Ar-
bitration Act. We therefore reverse the district court’s judg-
ment compelling arbitration and remand for further proceed-
ings.