OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS TO DISMISS (Docs. 23, 24, 25)
This matter came before the court on May 6, 2010 for oral argument on the motions to dismiss filed by Defendants, Dairy Farmers of America, Inc. (“DFA”), Dairy Marketing Services, LLC (“DMS”), Dean Foods Company (“Dean”), and HP Hood LLC (“Hood”) (collectively, “Defendants”). Defendants seek dismissal of the Amended Complaint filed by Plaintiffs, Alice H. Allen and Laurance E. Allen, d/b/a Al-lens Farm, Garret Sitts and Ralph Sitts (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) on the following-grounds: (1) failure to state a claim; (2) Capper-Volstead Act immunity; (3) failure to satisfy Iqbal/Twombly’s pleading and plausibility standards; and (4) statute of limitations.
I. Factual and Procedural Background.
Plaintiffs seek permission for their lawsuit to proceed as a class action. Their sixty-seven page, seven-count Amended Complaint 1 contains 212 paragraphs, many of which contain subparts. It asserts the following claims:
Count I: Sherman Act § 2 violation (Conspiracy to Monopolize and Monopsonize) (against all Defendants);
Count II: Sherman Act § 2 violation (Attempt to Monopolize) (against DFA and DMS);
Count III: Sherman Act § 2 violation (Attempt to Monopsonize) (against Dean and, in the alternative, against Dean, Hood, and DFA);
Count IV: Sherman Act § 2 violation (Unlawful Monopolization) (against DFA);
Count V: Sherman Act § 2 violation (Unlawful Monopsony) (against Dean and, in the alternative, against Dean, Hood, and DFA);
Count VI: Sherman Act § 1 price-fixing violation (against DFA and DMS); and
Count VII: Sherman Act § 1 conspiracy violation (against all Defendants).
All Defendants have filed timely motions to dismiss. The following factual allegations set forth in the Amended Complaint provide a context for analyzing those motions.
The Allens operate a dairy farm in Wells River, Vermont and the Sitts brothers operate a dairy farm in Franklin, New York. The Sitts brothers’ farm was a member of DFA from 1998-2007. During the class period (Oct. 9, 2005-Oct. 8, 2009), both groups of Plaintiffs sold, through DMS, raw fluid Grade A milk to bottling plants.
DFA, a not-for-profit corporation, is the largest dairy cooperative in the United States. As a vertically-integrated cooperative with 1,900 members in the Northeast, DFA engages in milk production and markets, hauls, processes, bottles, and distributes milk. DMS is a limited liability company created by DFA and Dairylea Cooperative, Inc. (“Dairylea”). Acting as DFA’s marketing agent, DMS markets ap~
Plaintiffs’ antitrust claims arise out of DFA’s alleged unlawful creation of monopsony and monopoly power in the milk distribution system by tying up access to milk bottling plants in the Northeastern United States through unlawful exclusive supply agreements and then using that monopsony power to force independent farmers to join DFA or to market their raw milk through its marketing affiliate, DMS. DFA allegedly utilized its and DMS’s market power “to reduce fluid raw milk prices paid to its members and other class members relative to what would have prevailed in a competitive market. These lowered fluid raw milk prices allegedly increased profits for Defendants Dean and Hood with whom DFA allegedly conspired and contracted to establish and maintain its market power.” (Doc. 16 ¶2.) Plaintiffs allege that through “carefully planned and collaborative steps,” the monopolization/monopsonization conspiracy has “eliminated competition by and between Defendants” and “fixed at artificially low levels” the fluid raw milk prices that farmers would otherwise receive in a competitive market. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 39-40.)
The Amended Complaint alleges that the relevant geographic market is the Northeast United States, consisting of Federal Milk Market Order 1 (“FMMO 1”), “cover[ing] areas in Delaware, [the] District of Columbia, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Virginia.” (Doc. 16 ¶ 35.) It alleges that the relevant product market “consists of the market for the sales or marketing of fluid Grade A milk to, or purchase of fluid Grade A milk by, bottling plants.” (Doc. 16 ¶ 36.)
II. Conclusions of Law and Analysis.
A. Standard of Review.
When assessing a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), the court takes the complaint’s “factual allegations to be true and draw[s] all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs favor.”
Harris v. Mills,
“[O]nly a complaint that states a plausible claim for relief survives a motion to dismiss. Determining whether a complaint states a plausible claim for relief will ... be a context-specific task that requires the reviewing court to draw on its judicial experience and common sense.”
Iqbal,
In their Amended Complaint, Plaintiffs allege four claims against Hood. In Count I, they allege that Hood, as part of a conspiracy with all other defendants, violated Section 2 of the Sherman Act by monopolizing the relevant market. In Count III, Plaintiffs assert claims against Dean, and allege an attempt to monopsonize in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act. They allege, “[i]n the alternative” that “Defendants Dean, Hood and DFA collectively have attempted to and continue to attempt to obtain market power in the market for the purchase of fluid Grade A milk by fluid Grade A bottling plants in the Northeast market.” (Doc. 16 ¶ 171.) In Count V, Plaintiffs charge Dean with unlawful monopsony in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act. They allege, “[i]n the alternative,” that Dean, Hood and DFA collectively have “abused their monopsony power to maintain and enhance their market dominance.... ” (Doc. 16 ¶ 189.) In Count VII, Plaintiffs allege a Sherman Act Section 1 conspiracy claim against all Defendants. Accordingly, all of Plaintiffs’ claims against Hood depend upon evidence that Hood has agreed to participate in a conspiracy.
Hood seeks dismissal of Plaintiffs’ claims because the Amended Complaint lacks the requisite specificity in that it fails to answer the “basic questions” of “who, did what, to whom (or with whom), where, and when?” (Doe. 23-1 at 11) (quoting
Kendall v. Visa U.S.A., Inc.,
To state a claim under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, a plaintiff must allege: “(1) concerted action, (2) by two or more persons that (3) unreasonably restrains trade.”
In re Nine West Shoes Antitrust Litig.,
In order to survive a motion to dismiss, “it is not enough to make allegations of an antitrust conspiracy that are consistent with an unlawful agreement; to be viable, a complaint must contain ‘enough factual matter (taken as true) to suggest that an agreement [to engage in anticompetitive conduct] was made.’ ”
In re Elevator Antitrust Litig.,
“[T]erms like ‘conspiracy’ or even ‘agreement,’ are border-line: they might well be sufficient in conjunction with a more specific allegation — for example, identifying a written agreement or even a basis for inferring a tacit agreement, ... but a court is not required to acceptsuch terms as a sufficient basis for a complaint.” [Twombly, 550 U.S. at 557 ,127 S.Ct. 1955 ] (quoting DM Research, Inc. v. College of Am. Pathologists,170 F.3d 53 , 56 (1st Cir.1999)). The Court also suggested that to allege an agreement between antitrust co-conspirators, the complaint must allege facts such as a “specific time, place, or person involved in the alleged conspiracies” to give a defendant seeking to respond to allegations of a conspiracy an idea of where to begin. Id. at 1970 n. 10. A bare allegation of a conspiracy is almost impossible to defend against, particularly where the defendants are large institutions with hundreds of employees entering into contracts and agreements daily.
Kendall,
As the United States Supreme Court observed in
Twombly,
“a district court must retain the power to insist upon some specificity in pleading before allowing a potentially massive factual controversy to proceed.”
Twombly,
Here, the alleged facts regarding Hood’s agreement to enter into a conspiracy consist of: (1) an allegation that DFA has acquired a 15% interest in Hood and that Hood has designated DMS as one of its major suppliers; (2) an allegation that, with no evidence of an agreement between them, Dean and Hood comprise 90% of the market for bottling fluid Grade A milk in the relevant geographic market, and are both members of DMS; (3) an allegation that DFA and DMS “exercise control over all of the milk supplied to Hood, either by
Perhaps in recognition of the deficiencies of the Amended Complaint, in opposing dismissal of their claims against Hood, Plaintiffs’ arguments range far afield of the more generalized allegations of their pleading.
See
Doe. 42 at 62 (outlining facts alleged against Hood, several of which do not appear in the Amended Complaint). A complaint that fails to state a claim because of the insufficiency of its allegations cannot be “cured” in this manner.
See Chauvet v. Local 1199, Drug, Hosp. & Health Care Employees Union, RWDSU, AFL-CIO,
In the alternative, Plaintiffs urge the court to examine the Amended Complaint as a whole and to attribute to Hood the acts of its alleged co-conspirators.
See
Doc. 42 at 63 (“In addition, because Hood has conspired with its partial owner and contracting partner, DFA, it can plainly be held responsible for Defendants’ unlawful acts.”). The problem with this approach is that it remains true that the Amended Complaint contains no “direct or circumstantial evidence that reasonably tends to prove that [Hood] had a conscious commitment to a common scheme designed to achieve an unlawful objective.”
AD/SAT,
In summary, Plaintiffs’ allegations against Hood do not allege any
facts
regarding Hood’s alleged agreement to conspire. Accordingly, the Amended Complaint, even when viewed in the light most favorable to the Plaintiffs, remains wholly conclusory and fails to state antitrust conspiracy claims against Hood.
See Port Dock & Stone Corp. v. Oldcastle Northeast, Inc.,
C. Whether Plaintiffs Have Alleged a Relevant Product and Geographic Market.
Dean seeks dismissal of the Amended Complaint on the grounds that Plaintiffs have failed to adequately plead a relevant product and geographic market. Hood asserts that it agrees with Dean’s conclusion that Plaintiffs’ “market definition is too narrow.” (Doc. 52 at 8 n. 4) DFA and DMS do not, at this time, join in Dean’s motion.
“Evaluating market power begins with defining the relevant market.”
Geneva Pharms. Tech. Corp. v. Barr Labs., Inc.,
1. Product Market.
To determine the relevant product market, “no more definite rule can be declared than that the commodities reasonably interchangeable by consumers for the same purposes make up that ‘part of the trade or commerce,’ monopolization of which may be illegal.”
United States v. E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.,
The Second Circuit has held:
The relevant market is defined as all products reasonably interchangeable by consumers for the same purposes, because the ability of consumers to switch to a substitute restrains a firm’s ability to raise prices above the competitive level. Reasonable interchangeability sketches the boundaries of a market, but there may also be cognizable submarkets which themselves constitute the appropriate market for antitrust analysis. Defining a submarket requires a fact-intensive inquiry that includes consideration of such practical indicia as industry or public recognition of the submarket as a separate economic entity, the product’s peculiar characteristics and uses, unique production facilities, distinct customers, distinct prices, sensitivity to price changes, and specialized vendors. The term submarket is somewhat of a misnomer, since the submarket analysis simply clarifies whether two products are in fact reasonable substitutes and are therefore part of the same market. The emphasis always is on the actual dynamics of the market rather than rote application of any formula.
Geneva Pharms.,
The Amended Complaint alleges that fluid raw Grade A milk for bottling is the relevant product market. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 36-38, 43-51.) It alleges that this product is not reasonably interchangeable with milk for other uses because milk for non-bottling purposes does not enable producers to “touch base”
3
and therefore become eligible to receive the FMMO minimum blend price and over-order premiums. (Doc. 16 ¶ 37.) In other words, Plaintiffs define the market not only by the product it uses, but by the price it fetches, for which they allege there is no reasonable substitute. Industry preferences are relevant in defining a relevant product market as the court “assume[s] that the economic actors usually have accurate perceptions of economic realities.”
Todd v. Exxon Corp.,
The Amended Complaint addresses some of the factors — price, product qualities, and preferences of market partici
In seeking dismissal, Dean argues that it is undisputed that Grade A milk is purchased by Class II, III, and IV plants, which also offer a blend price. In addition, Grade A milk may be used for cheese, ice cream, sour cream, butter, powdered milk, etc. Its use is thus not confined to Class I bottling plants for fluid drinking milk.
See Queen City Pizza, Inc. v. Domino’s Pizza, Inc.
In the end, we are most persuaded by the handful of cases that have held that an antitrust plaintiff may not narrow a relevant product market to a select group of customers without identifying a difference in
the product
supplied to that group of customers.
See, e.g., T. Harris Young & Assoc., Inc. v. Marquette Elec., Inc.,
The
Smith
Court further observed, however, that “pretrial dismissal of an antitrust complaint on the ground urged by the defendant is uncommon, determination of the relevant product market often being a factual inquiry.”
Id.
In
Smith,
the dismissal occurred only after discovery, a ruling on a motion for summary judgment, and the filing of an amended complaint followed by a motion to dismiss. Similarly, in each of the cases cited by the
Smith
court as supporting dismissal of the complaints based on product markets defined by customer traits, only one involved a pre-discovery dismissal based upon the complaint’s failure to allege facts regarding substitute products.
See Re-Alco Indus., Inc.,
On balance, although the court is concerned that Plaintiffs have artificially narrowed the relevant product market to Grade A fluid raw milk for
bottling,
before the court may make this determination it must examine industry recognition of the market, the commercial realities of, among other things, production, transportation, accessibility of plants, pricing, and consumer preferences, as well as “the actual dynamics of the market.”
Geneva Pharms.,
2. Geographic Market.
In their Amended Complaint, Plaintiffs allege that the Northeast, which Plaintiffs claim is the same as FMMO 1, is the relevant geographic market. (Doc. 16 ¶ 35.) Plaintiffs allege that selling Grade A raw milk outside the Northeast is not a viable substitute because fluid Grade A raw milk is highly perishable. (Doc. 16
The criteria to be used in determining the appropriate geographic market are essentially similar to those used to determine the relevant product market. Moreover, just as a product submarket may have ... significance as the proper line of commerce, so may a geographic submarket be considered the appropriate section of the country. Congress prescribed a pragmatic, factual approach to the definition of the relevant market and not a formal, legalistic one. The geographic market selected must, therefore, both correspond to the commercial realities of the industry and be economically significant.
Brown Shoe Co.,
In seeking dismissal, Dean objects to the use of Federal Milk Marketing Orders, which it characterizes as “creatures of federal regulation,” to define a geographic market for antitrust purposes. (Doc. 25 at 25.) It asks the court to consider U.S. Department of Agriculture (“USDA”) reports and USDA maps in evaluating whether the geographic boundaries Plaintiffs rely on are related to competition and whether they are sufficiently precise. Dean further contends that perishability of the product does not support the alleged geographic market because FMMO 1 excludes Maine and includes areas in Virginia and Maryland. Dean contends that no discovery or factual inquiry need precede dismissal. However, the cases upon which Dean relies generally do not support this approach.
For example, in
United States v. Country Lake Foods, Inc.,
Although the court is not convinced that FMMO 1 is “the area of effective competition,”
Tampa Electric Co. v. Nashville Coal Co.,
D. Whether Plaintiffs Have Sufficiently Alleged Dean’s Market Power.
Dean seeks dismissal of Counts III (Attempt to Monopsonize) and V (Unlawful Monopsony) of the Amended Complaint on the further ground that Plaintiffs allegedly “have failed to supply any factual predicate for their conclusory allegations that Dean had the requisite market power to support their claims.” (Doc. 25 at 27.)
5
Dean characterizes Plaintiffs’ claims regarding its market share as similarly conclusory and contends that they do not withstand
Iqbal/Twombly
scrutiny. In particular, Dean points out that while Plaintiffs purport to calculate its market share in New England, Plaintiffs also allege a relevant market of FMMO 1, which is not commensurate with New England. Moreover, Dean asserts that publicly available documents
6
reveal that it
Plaintiffs, in turn, rely on In re Southeastern Milk’s conclusion that Dean’s monopoly power was adequately pled in that case. In the absence of a side-by-side comparison of the two complaints, this argument is unavailing. More persuasive is Plaintiffs’ citations of allegations in the Amended Complaint that Dean “controls approximately 70 percent of the Northeast market for bottling fluid Grade A milk,” “dominate[s] the market for bottling fluid Grade A milk in the Northeast,” and “is the largest fluid Grade A milk bottler in the Northeast and in the United States.” (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 5, 21, 93.) Although these allegations are themselves conclusory, the Amended Complaint alleges other facts indicative of Dean’s market power, including the ways in which Dean has allegedly unlawfully used or attempted to unlawfully use its market power to exert an adverse impact on proposed class members and competition. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 75-86, 92, 95-101,123,127.)
Dismissals for insufficient pleading of market power are rare pre-discovery and are generally reserved for complaints bereft of factual allegations or which contain market share or market power allegations that are purely conclusory.
See, e.g., Crosswood Magazine, Inc.,
Similarly, although there is precedent for rejecting a certain market share as presumptively inadequate, “[t]he trend of guidance from the Supreme Court and the practice of most courts endeavoring to follow that guidance has been to give only weight and not conclusiveness to market share evidence.”
Tops Markets, Inc. v. Quality Markets, Inc.,
Certainly there is no authority for dismissing a complaint at the pleading stage based upon Dean’s approach of simply adding up the bottling plants in the relevant geographic market, determining what percentage of the number of plants are owned by Dean, and dismissing the case if that number is less than 30%.
Cf. Commercial Data Servers, Inc. v. IBM Corp.,
Application of the foregoing standards to the Amended Complaint reveals that, under
Iqbal/Twombly,
it adequately pleads Dean’s market share in the alleged relevant market. The actual determination of both Dean’s market share and market power must await a “full consideration of the relationship between market share and other relevant market characteristics.”
Tops Markets, Inc.,
E. Whether Monopolization Claims Against DFA-DMS Must be Dismissed.
DFA and DMS seek dismissal of Count II (Attempt to Monopolize)
7
and Count IV (Unlawful Monopolization)
8
of the Amended Complaint for failure to state a claim. They assert that Counts II and IV contain no factual allegations that DFA possesses monopoly power, or that there is a dangerous probability that it will acquire monopoly power. Defendants are correct that “ ‘[a] threshold showing for a successful attempted monopolization claim is sufficient market share by the defendant’ because a defendant’s market share is ‘the primary indicator of the existence of a dangerous probability of success.’ ”
AD/ SAT,
DFA and DMS ask the court to dismiss the Amended Complaint without any discovery based upon their further contention that DFA’s 1,900 members in the Northeast represent “a market share of approximately 17%. ” (Doc. 24-1 at 20) (emphasis in the original).
Finally, DFA challenges what it characterizes as Plaintiffs’ “shared monopoly” theory, noting that the Second Circuit has rejected Sherman Act Section 2 claims on this basis.
See H.L. Hayden Co. of N.Y., Inc.,
In their Opposition, Plaintiffs argue that DFA’s market share must be considered in conjunction with the market share of DMS, as the two act as one. In so arguing, they disavow any reliance on a shared monopoly theory. They allege, instead, that their theory is one of agency and that they seek to hold DFA responsible for its own antitrust violations, as well as for those of its alleged agent, DMS.
A claim of agency requires facts establishing: “(1) the manifestation by the principal that the agent shall act for him; (2) the agent’s acceptance of the undertaking;
and
(3) the understanding of the parties that the principal is to be in control of the undertaking.”
Cleveland v. Caplaw Enters.,
In its reply, DFA and DMS accuse Plaintiffs of attempting to re-write the Amended Complaint through their Opposition. They further challenge the sufficiency of the Amended Complaint’s agency allegations, and it is true that the terms “agency” and “principal-agent” are not contained within that pleading. However, “[t]he existence of an agency relationship need only be pled in compliance with Fed. R.Civ.P. 8.”
CompuDyne Corp. v. Shane,
The Amended Complaint clearly satisfies Rule 8’s standards. It alleges that DFA, as principal, acted in concert with DMS, as agent, in an attempt to monopolize and to monopolize in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act. Specifically, the Amended Complaint alleges that DMS is subject to DFA’s direction and control;
9
Because the Amended Complaint sufficiently alleges claims of attempted monopolization and monopolization based upon an agency theory, DFA’s motion to dismiss Counts II and IV of the Amended Complaint for failure to state a claim is hereby DENIED.
F. Whether Plaintiffs’ Price-Fixing Claims Fail to State a Claim.
Defendants DFA and DMS seek dismissal of Count VI of the Amended Complaint which alleges price-fixing against them in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act. 14 Plaintiffs’ price-fixing claims contain two distinct components. First, Plaintiffs allege that DFA fixed prices through DMS (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 123-25), and second, Plaintiffs allege that DFA and DMS fixed prices through GNEMMA. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 126-129.) DFA and DMS contend that both theories fail as a matter of law because Plaintiffs have alleged that DFA and DMS are a single entity, because the Capper-Volstead Act provides them with statutory immunity, and because Plaintiffs’ price-fixing allegations do not survive Iqbal/Twombly scrutiny as they fail to make economic sense.
1. DFA-DMS Price-Fixing.
DFA’s and DMS’s first challenge to Plaintiffs’ price-fixing claims is that “[t]he relationship between DFA and DMS, as alleged, is fatal to Plaintiffs’ claim that DFA and DMS have, in any sense forbidden by the antitrust laws, ‘fixed prices.’ ” (Doc. 24-1 at 23.) They cite
Texaco Inc. v. Dagher,
Pursuant to Section 1 of the Sherman Act, more than one actor is required
Although whether two entities have acted as one is generally a question of fact,
Madison Square Garden L.P. v. Nat’l Hockey League,
Because the Amended Complaint alleges that DFA-DMS, acting as a single entity, conspired with itself to fix prices, it fails to state a DFA-DMS price-fixing claim as a matter of law.
See Copperweld,
2. GNEMMA Price-Fixing.
DFA’s and DMS’s argument in favor of dismissal of Plaintiffs’ GNEMMA price-fixing claim on the basis of Capper-Yolstead immunity is considerably less persuasive. According to the Amended Complaint, GNEMMA is an over-order pricing agency comprised of DFA, four cooperatives that market their milk
In response, DFA and DMS argue that the Capper-Volstead Act immunizes the GNEMMA price-fixing alleged by Plaintiffs and that it is Plaintiffs’ burden to demonstrate otherwise. DFA and DMS cite no authority for this allocation of the burden of proof. As price-fixing is otherwise a per se violation under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, and as a cooperative is generally in the best position to establish whether its members are farmer-producers, the court finds more rational the approach taken by those courts that interpret Capper-Volstead immunity as an af-
firmative defense to be established by a defendant seeking its protection. 17 The court thus examines whether DFA and DMS have conclusively demonstrated that Capper-Volstead immunity requires dismissal of Plaintiffs’ GNEMMA price-fixing claims.
“The Capper-Volstead Act removed from the proscription of the antitrust laws cooperatives formed by certain agricultural producers that otherwise would be directly competing with each other in efforts to bring their goods to market.”
Nat’l Broiler Mktg. Ass’n v. United States,
Here, Plaintiffs have pled their way around Capper-Volstead immunity sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss. They allege that DFA does not qualify as a Capper-Volstead entity (Doc. 16 ¶ 198), and that the members of GNEMMA have not acted for their dairy farmer members’ benefit but rather have “agreed to fix, reduce, stabilize or maintain at artificially depressed values the over-order premiums paid to dairy farmers in the Northeast.” (Doc. 16 ¶ 196.) They have alleged conduct through GNEMMA, in addition to price-fixing, that is clearly outside CapperVolstead’s safe harbor, including that DFA used GNEMMA to suppress competition and to pressure entities outside DMS to join that organization. (Doc. 16 ¶ 129.) At this juncture, the court cannot find, as a matter of law, that the Capper-Volstead Act bars Plaintiffs’ GNEMMA price-fixing claim.
DFA’s and DMS’s
Iqbal/Twombly
challenge to Plaintiffs’ GNEMMA price-fixing claim fares no better. They ask the court to dismiss the Amended Complaint, pre-discovery, because it does not make economic sense that Agri-Mark in particular, which they characterize as “no friend to DFA” would engage in a price-fixing scheme with DFA and DMS. (Doc. 24-1 at 29 n. 7.) Price-fixing agreements between parties with opposing interests often make economic sense because each party to the agreement gains through the suppression or control of competition on price. In this case, Plaintiffs contend that GNEMMA’s members benefit from price-fixing in order to have an opportunity to sell their milk to bottling plants in the relevant geographic market. Access to bottling plants is thus allegedly the incentive for Agri-Mark to price-fix and engage in anticompetitive conduct with DFA and DMS. This, in turn, “allow[s] DFA and DMS to avoid competition from the few remaining dairy cooperatives in the Northeast [such as Agri-Mark] that they d[o] not control.” (Doc. 16 ¶ 7.) Although Plaintiffs do not need to plead each GNEMMA member’s motive to engage in the alleged price-fixing and anti-competitive conduct, the Amended Complaint sets forth in sufficient detail how and why the alleged price-fixing conspiracy operates and how and why it benefits the alleged conspirators. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 123-32.) This conclusion is underscored by the courts’ recognition that, pre-discovery, antitrust allegations often lack a plethora of detail because “relevant information regarding the conduct of particular defendants is ‘largely in the hands of the alleged conspirators.’ ”
In re Nine West Shoes Antitrust Litig.,
Applying the
Iqbal/Twombly
standard to the Amended Complaint, the court determines that it contains sufficient plausible factual allegations regarding a price-fixing conspiracy through GNEMMA to withstand pre-discovery dismissal. Accordingly, DFA’s and DMS’s motion to dismiss Count VI is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. Plaintiffs’ claims di
G. Whether Counts I-V & VII Must be Dismissed as Time Barred.
Defendants challenge all but Count VI of the Amended Complaint, which alleges price-fixing, as barred by the applicable statute of limitations. Defendants assert that Counts I-V and VII allege claims that are dependent upon acts that took place more than four years before the filing of Plaintiffs’ initial Complaint. They also assert that Plaintiffs have not adequately pled fraudulent concealment and cannot establish a continuing violation.
“The basic rule is that damages are recoverable under the federal antitrust acts only if the suit therefor is ‘commenced within four years after the cause of action accrued,’ 15 U.S.C. § 15b, plus any additional number of years during which the statute of limitations was tolled.”
Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc.,
In analyzing the statute of limitations issues raised by Defendants, the court first briefly addresses Plaintiffs’ claim of fraudulent concealment.
1. Fraudulent Concealment.
As Plaintiffs correctly assert, “a defendant’s fraudulent concealment may toll the statute of limitations.” (Doc. 42 at 22, citing
New York v. Hendrickson Bros., Inc.,
(1) that the defendant concealed from him the existence of his cause of action,
(2) that he remained in ignorance of that cause of action until some point within four years of the commencement of his action, and (3) that his continuing ignorance was not attributable to lack of diligence on his part.
Id.
Courts have described the burden of establishing fraudulent concealment as a “heavy one.”
In re Beef Indus. Antitrust Litig.,
Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) requires that, “[i]n alleging fraud ... a party must state with particularity the circumstances constituting fraud....” Plaintiffs conceded at oral argument that the Amended Complaint does not plead fraudulent concealment with particularity: “I think in general it’s probably fair to say that the Second Circuit requires particularized allegations for a fraudulent concealment argument. And the allegations in paragraphs 143 and 144 18 aren’t particularized; they don’t get you there.” (Doc. 76, Transcript of Oral Argument at 89, Allen v. Dairy Farmers of America, Case No. 5:09-cv-230.) Even a cursory review of the Amended Complaint reveals that this concession is warranted.
Not only are Plaintiffs’ allegations of fraudulent concealment not particularized, they do not contain the essential elements of a fraudulent concealment claim. In
As currently pled, the Amended Complaint fails to set forth a fraudulent concealment claim that would toll the applicable statute of limitations.
2. Continuing Violation.
It is beyond dispute that many of the acts that Plaintiffs allege caused them injury took place more than four years prior to the filing of Plaintiffs’ initial Complaint. In the absence of a continuing violation, these acts cannot form the basis of Plaintiffs’ antitrust claims.
See Vitale v. Marlborough Gallery,
For example, Plaintiffs rely in part on 1997-1998 purchases of New England bottling plants by “Suiza, the precursor to Dean,” Suiza’s control over 70% of the fluid milk processing in New England in 2000, and Suiza’s alleged “full-supply agreement” with DFA and the subsequent closure of bottling plants by Suiza. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 75-77.) All allegations relating to Suiza predate the Suiza-Dean merger in 2001 and are thus outside the limitations period, as is the 2001 Dean-Suiza merger itself.
Plaintiffs further rely on the 2000 closure of the Stop & Shop bottling plant in Readville, Massachusetts, National Dairy Holding’s (“NDH”) 2001 acquisition of eleven milk bottling plants from Dean and Suiza, NDH’s alleged full-supply agreement with DFA, and Dean’s 2003 alleged announcement to independent dairy farmers and cooperatives that they must market their milk through DMS in order to continue to supply Dean. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 9, 79-88, 91-92, 96-97, 103.) Each of these claims appears to allege an injury initially suffered outside the limitations period.
Similarly, Defendants challenge the 1999 formation of DMS (Doc. 16 ¶ 9), the alleged forcing of the Saint Albans Cooperative Creamery to join DMS in 2003 (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 9-10,101-103), the 2003-2004 alleged stock and CEO exchange between NDH and Hood (Doc. 161 ¶¶ 9-10, 107), and DFA’s 2003 alleged agreement not to compete with Agri-Mark. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 9, 113.) Again, all events and alleged concomitant initial injuries took place outside the limitations period.
With regard to their first argument, Plaintiffs rely to a great extent on horizontal price-fixing cases. They ask this court to find that every time Defendants purchased fluid raw milk at allegedly artificially depressed prices, a new antitrust injury occurred, restarting the statute of limitations period. Plaintiffs contend: “Numerous courts have held that in price-fixing cases, ‘each time a customer purchases [a] product at the artificially inflated price, an antitrust violation occurs and a cause of action accrues.’ ” (Doc. 42 at 23-24, quoting
Morton’s Mkt., Inc. v. Gustafson’s Dairy, Inc.,
Berkey Photo, Inc. v. Eastman Kodak Co.,
It should not be inferred that this ruling grants antitrust plaintiffs a license to embark on a search for Ichthyosauria that is, on a time-warped fishing expedition. A trial court in its discretion may always set a reasonable cutoff date, evidence before which point is to be considered too remote to have sufficient probative value to justify burdening the record with it. Moreover, the trial court might not be without flexibility to limit the proof where delay in bringing suitmay have caused injustice to the defendants.
Id. (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). The court concluded by noting that “[i]t may, of course, be difficult for a purchaser to demonstrate that conduct occurring many years before the commencement of suit contributed to an overcharge that it paid within the limitations period. That however, is no reason for denying it the opportunity to do so.” Id. at 298. No reasonable reading of Berkey Photo would allow it to stand for the proposition that, at the pleading stage, an allegation of an anti-competitive, artificially depressed price paid to the producers of a product within the limitations period automatically brings within the limitations period any pre-limitations conduct that contributed to a purchaser’s ability to extract that low price. While Berkey Photo demonstrates that pre-limitations conduct may, in some circumstances, be allowed as evidence, it does not cure any deficiencies in the Amended Complaint. Accordingly, the mere fact that Plaintiffs have alleged a price-fixing claim within the limitations period does not resolve the statute of limitations question.
[38] The second prong of Plaintiffs’ argument is that Counts I-V and VII are not time barred because of the continuing violation theory. As Plaintiffs note, “ ‘[i]n the context of a continuing conspiracy to violate the antitrust laws, ... the statute of limitations runs from the commission of the act’ that injures the plaintiff.” (Doc. 42 at 22) (quoting
Zenith,
“[T]o restart the statute of limitations plaintiff must allege an overt act which (1) is a ‘new and independent act that is not merely a reaffirmation of a previous act’; and (2) ‘inflict[s] new and accumulating injury on the plaintiff.’ ”
Vitale,
First, Plaintiffs allege that since 2001, Dean and DFA have annually renewed full-supply agreements which, in turn, must be renewed for twenty successive years in order for Dean to avoid paying a financial penalty. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 10, 83, 147(c).) In making this argument, Plaintiffs seek to characterize each annual renewal of the existing agreement as a new violation. The weight of authority rejects this approach, holding that renewal of an existing agreement falls squarely within the “reaffirmation” exception to the continuing violation doctrine.
See Madison Square Garden,
Second, Plaintiffs allege that DFA and DMS created GNEMMA in 2006. Plaintiffs allege that “GNEMMA’s purpose was to provide a means for DFA and DMS to fix the prices that were paid to dairy farmers for the sale of fluid Grade A milk throughout the Northeast.” (Doc. 16 ¶ 9.) The creation of GNEMMA and the injuries it allegedly inflicted upon Plaintiffs took place within the limitations period and thus may be considered an overt act.
Third, Plaintiffs allege that Dean required Northeast dairy farmers to pay “competitive credits” at various unspecified points through the limitations period. Plaintiffs do not, however, allege that they were required to do so, nor do they allege when payment of these competitive credits was required. In order to restart the limitations period, a plaintiff must allege, within the limitations period, a “new and accumulating injury” on the plaintiff.
Midwestern Machinery,
Fourth, Plaintiffs allege that through 2006, DFA made excessive and advance payments for the purchase of milk to DFA director Lewis Gardner. It is not clear how this alleged act injured Plaintiffs.
See Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, Inc.,
Fifth, Plaintiffs allege that beginning in October of 2007, DFA forced its members to share in the significant losses of its joint venture with NDH, even though profits were not shared with farmer-members. Plaintiffs neither allege that they were
Sixth, Plaintiffs allege that since 2006, DFA and DMS have used threats and retaliation to force dairy farmers and haulers to join DFA and to supply milk DMS to bottling facilities controlled by Dean and Hood. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 119-122.) For example, Plaintiffs allege that in 2009, a DMS official threatened to impose multiple health code violations on farmers when they attempted to end their relationship with DMS. Similarly, they allege that in 2009, DMS threatened that it would instruct haulers not to transport farmers’ milk if they discontinued supplying milk through DMS and also threatened to void all contracts with haulers that disobeyed that instruction. Finally, Plaintiffs allege that DFA and DMS punished dairy farmers who attempted to quit DFA and supply milk to independent bottlers (instead of Dean or Hood), by threatening to halt all DFA sales to independent bottlers that agreed to accept the former DFA-member’s milk. Although there is no evidence that any of the named Plaintiffs were subjected to the alleged threats or retaliation, Plaintiffs assert that these coercive acts perpetuated the monopoly and monopsony, disciplined those that sought to challenge it, cowed those who might venture a similar challenge, and produced the allegedly artificially depressed fluid raw milk prices that Plaintiffs received and which allegedly caused them injury. Because Plaintiffs have alleged sufficient facts to place them in the “target area” of Defendants’ allegedly anticompetitive conduct, they have alleged overt acts within the limitations period.
See In re Beef Indus. Antitrust Litig.,
Finally, Plaintiffs allege that Hood limited the amount of fluid raw milk it acquired from Agri-Mark in order to eliminate competition between Agri-Mark and DFA and strengthen DFA’s monopoly over the supply. The Amended Complaint alleges no time period for this act, however, it claims the allegedly anticompetitive agreement was entered into in 2003. (Doc. 16 ¶¶ 9, 113.) In the absence of some evidence that this act occurred within the limitations period, the court cannot consider it an overt act for purposes of a continuing violation analysis.
In sum, Plaintiffs have alleged price-fixing claims, which include the formation of GNEMMA, and threats, retaliation and punishment of dairy farmers, as overt acts
Defendants’ challenges to Plaintiffs’ overt acts do not mandate a different approach and have their own deficiencies. In essence, Defendants ask the court to ignore Count VI in its statute of limitations continuing violation analysis because: (a) they have not challenged it on statute of limitations grounds; and (b) the alleged price-fixing claims do not involve all of the Defendants and are independent of Plaintiffs’ other claims. Defendants’ approach misses the mark for several reasons.
First, the fact that a party has not challenged a claim on statute of limitations grounds does not thereby exclude it from a statute of limitations analysis where an overarching conspiracy encompassing the claim is alleged.
See
Callmann, § 4.23 (“In considering the evidence, the court must assess the conspiracy in its entirety; none of its parts, including even the unobjectionable elements, should be weeded out and separately explored; conspiracy can properly be inferred only from the whole ‘panorama’ of all the acts and circumstances.”);
see also Del. & Hudson Ry. Co. v. Consol. Rail Corp.,
Second, Counts I-V and VII incorporate Plaintiffs’ GNEMMA price-fixing allegations by reference.
See
Doc. 16 ¶¶ 144, 154, 164, 175, 183, 204. “Incorporation by reference is proper pleading.”
Fla. Dep’t Ins. v. Debenture Guar.,
Finally, at the motion to dismiss stage, the court must “draw all reasonable
Plaintiffs have alleged overt anticompetitive acts within the limitations period with regard to each count of the Amended Complaint and Defendants have failed to sustain their burden to prove otherwise. Defendants’ motions to dismiss on statute of limitations grounds are therefore hereby DENIED.
III. Conclusion.
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ motions to dismiss are hereby GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. All claims against Defendant Hood are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE, as are all claims alleging a price-fixing conspiracy between DFA-DMS.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. On October 8, 2009, Plaintiffs filed their initial Class Action Complaint. On January 21, 2010, before any of the Defendants had answered, Plaintiffs filed their Amended Class Action Complaint.
. Plaintiffs’ reliance on
Starr v. Sony BMG Music Entm't,
Defendants next argue that Twombly requires that a plaintiff identify the specific time, place, or person related to each conspiracy allegation. This is also incorrect. The Twombly court noted, in dicta, that had the claim of agreement in that case not rested on the parallel [price fixing] conduct described in the complaint, "we doubt that the ... references to an agreement among the [Baby Bells] would have given the notice required by Rule 8 ... [because] the pleadings mentioned no specific time, place, or person involved in the alleged conspiracies." 550 [U.S.] at 565 n. 10[,127 S.Ct. 1955 ]. In this case, as in Twombly, the claim of agreement rests on the parallel conduct described in the complaint. Therefore, plaintiffs were not required to mention a specific time, place or person involved in each conspiracy allegation.
Id. (emphasis supplied).
. Plaintiffs allege that the delivery of the minimum quantity of fluid Grade A milk to bottling plants is referred to as “touching base.” (Doc. 16 ¶ 47.)
. In
Tampa Electric Co. v. Nashville Coal Co.,
. "The core element of a monopolization claim is market power, which is defined as ‘the ability to raise price by restricting output.' "
PepsiCo, Inc.,
.
Dean requests the court to take judicial notice of numerous documents attached to its motion to dismiss and to thereafter use those documents to calculate Dean's market share. Although the existence of the documents may be the proper subject of judicial notice, their contents, which Dean seeks to offer for their truth (without demonstrating the contents are not subject to reasonable dispute) are not.
. In order to properly plead a claim of attempted monopolization, a plaintiff must allege sufficient facts to establish: (1) the defendant's intent to monopolize the relevant market; (2) the defendant's anticompetitive conduct was designed to carry out that intent; and (3) a "dangerous probability” of success.
Twin Labs., Inc.
v.
Weider Health & Fitness,
. To properly plead a claim of monopolization, a plaintiff must allege sufficient facts to show that: (1) the defendant possesses monopoly power in the relevant market; and (2) the defendant willfully acquired or maintained this monopoly power by anticompetitive conduct rather than by way "of a superior product, business acumen, or historic accident.”
Grinnell Corp.,
. See, e.g., Doc. 16 ¶ 70: “DFA owns 50 percent of DMS and controls DMS’s operations.”
. See, e.g., Doc. 16 ¶ 68: “DFA greatly strengthened its position in the Northeast in 1999 by forming DMS, a marketing agency, with Dairylea Cooperative, Inc. ("Dairylea”), the largest dairy cooperative in the Northeast.”
. See, e.g., Doc. 16 ¶71: "[B]y designating DMS as the exclusive marketer for Dairylea, all of Dairylea’s 2,300 member farmers were brought under DFA’s control.”; Doc. 16 ¶ 71: ”[T]he creation of DMS provided a mechanism for DFA to bring independent dairy farmers and cooperatives under its control.”; Doc. 16 ¶ 74: "DFA and DMS use DMS’s control over a significant majority of balancing plants to force independent dairy farmers and independent dairy cooperatives to join DFA and/or market their milk through DMS.”
. See, e.g., Doc. 16 ¶ 20: "DFA and DMS have punished farmers who attempted to terminate their relationships with DFA or DMS, thereby often forcing them to renew their membership with DFA or contract with DMS.”; Doc. 16 ¶ 121: "DFA and DMS have punished haulers who contracted to transport the milk of former DFA members or former DMS clients.”; Doc. 16 ¶ 122: "DFA and DMS have punished independent processors who attempted to purchase milk from existing or former DFA members and DMS clients.”
. See, e.g., Doc. 16 ¶¶ 113, 124.
. "Under the Sherman Act a combination formed for the purpose and with the effect of raising, depressing, fixing, pegging, or stabilizing the price of a commodity in interstate or foreign commerce is illegal per se.”
United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., Inc.,
. Plaintiffs gain nothing by arguing that DFA and DMS dispute this characterization.
. The court declines Plaintiffs' invitation to find their conclusory allegations that DFA, DMS, and
their co-conspirators
unlawfully fixed prices sufficient to allege a price-fixing conspiracy involving other defendants. In Count VI, neither Dean nor Hood is even mentioned and the count, itself, states that it is
“Against DFA and DMS.”
(Doc. 16 at 61.) Stray statements alleging price-fixing between "co-conspirators'' are not only conclusory, but also fail to place those alleged co-conspirators on notice that a claim has been asserted against them. Even prior to
Iqbal/Twombly’s
"heightened pleading standard,”
Turkmen v. Ashcroft,
.
See Alexander,
. Plaintiffs’ counsel misspoke when referring to the pertinent paragraphs of the Amended Complaint alleging fraudulent concealment. The correct paragraphs are 142 and 143.
. Plaintiffs identify the overt acts in eleven "bullet points,” some of which are either redundant or different parts of the same claim. See Doc. 42 at 26-27.
. The Amended Complaint asserts that the Sitts farm was a member of DFA from 1998 to 2007. (Doc. 16 ¶ 20.) It does not further assert that the Sitts farm was required to bear the 2007 losses in question.
.
See Morton's Market, Inc.,
