Thе Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority (“CRRA”) was created by the Connecticut General Assembly in 1973. Since then, “CRRA has developed and maintained a vast system of solid waste management projects, under a Solid Waste Management Plan, which include[s] waste-to-energy plants_” Amended Complaint ¶ 7. The Solid Waste Management Plan, which was promulgated by Connecticut’s Department of Environmental Protection (“DEP”) pursuant to express legislative directive, Conn.Gen. Stat § 22a-211, “abandoned landfilling in favor of transporting waste via transfer stations or directly to trash-to-energy plants for ultimate disposal.” Amended Complaint ¶ 7.
CRRA owns four of the six trash-to-energy plants currently operating in Connecticut. These four plants, which were constructed by CRRA with the proceeds of bonds issued by CRRA, are in Hartford, Preston, Walling-ford, and Bridgeport, and serve over two-thirds of the cities and towns in Connecticut pursuant to long-term contracts by which these cities and towns committed themselves to dispose of their waste.
The opening of Connecticut’s sixth waste-to-energy facility in Lisbon by defendant, Wheelabrator Environmental Systems (and related defendants), provides the backdrop for this lawsuit. See generally Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority v. Commissioner of Environmental Protection,
The challenge was ultimately resolved by the settlement agreement at the center of this case. CRRA agreed to withdraw its objection to the Lisbon facility permit in consideration for an agreement that addressed, inter alia, a problem caused by certain waste haulers including plaintiffs, Automated Salvage Transport, Inc. (and related plaintiffs). These waste haulers essentially interfered with the performance of long-term contracts that CRRA negotiated with Connecticut municipalities to commit the municipal solid waste to CRRA facilities for disposal at fixed long-term rates. Instead of delivering this waste to CRRA, plaintiffs hauled it to privately operated waste-to-energy plants with more favorable spot market rates. The settlement agreement requires both CRRA and the Wheelab-rator defendants to respect one another’s municipal contracts by rejecting deliveries of any waste committed to one another. In addition, if a hauler delivers waste committed to CRRA three times within a three-month period to the Wheelabrator defendants, the Wheelabrator defendants must refuse all deliveries of waste from that hauler for the next three months.
The settlement agreement is the subject of a Sherman Act and Commerce Clause complaint. Plaintiffs allege that the sеttlement agreement is a per se antitrust violation because it is “an unlawful contract, combination and conspiracy” to maintain an alleged CRRA monopoly over Connecticut waste disposal, Amended Complaint ¶¶ 11, 13(e), and that it violates the Commerce Clause because it “unreasonably restraints] free trade and interstate commerce.” Amended Complaint ¶ 13(h). Since the defendants have asserted the state action immunity defense to the
Background
In 1973, after decades of reliance on landfills, the Connecticut legislature recognized that the State’s “prevailing solid waste disposal practices ... resulted] in unnecessary environmental damage, waste [d] valuable land and other resources, and constitute^] a continuing hazard to the health and welfare of the people of the state.” Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-258. Worse yet, floor debates in the Connecticut General Assembly revealed that roughly ninety percent of these landfills were actually illegal. 16 (S — 97) Senate Proceedings, Pt. 8, 1973 Sess., p. 3753 (remarks of Sen. Costello).
The DEP unveiled the contours of its state-wide waste disposal plan in 1973, proposing “an antithesis to the burn and bury philosophy which ha[d] caused such a problem” for Connecticut. 16 (H-143) H.R. Proceedings, Pt. 8, 1973 Sess., p. 6665 (remarks of Rep. Harlow).
Even as the DEP was working out the plan’s final details, the Connecticut General Assembly, deeming the plan’s general strategy both sound and inevitable, passed implementing legislation during its 1973 session, rather than delay the solid waste crisis another year. See id. at 6659, 6667-78. This legislation created the Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority (“CRRA”) as a “necessary state structure, which can take initiative and appropriate action to provide the necessary systems, facilities, technology and services for solid waste management and resources recovery.” Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-258.
The Connecticut General Assembly rejected the landfill system in favor of an “appropriate governmental structure, processes and support ... so that effective state systems and facilities for solid waste management and large-scale resources recovery [could] be developed,” Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-259(3), and so that “solid waste disposal services [could] be provided for municipal and regional authorities and private persons in the state, at reasonable cost, by state systems and facilities ... in accordance with the statewide solid waste management plan.” Conn.Gen. Stat. § 22a-259(6).
The Connecticut General Assembly hoped that, by creating this state-wide authority to implement the DEP plan, Connecticut would benefit from an economy of scale, allowing more efficient and affordable development of necessary systems and technologies. See
A. CRRA’s Self-Sustained Operation
CRRA was to fund itself by issuing $250 million in self-liquidating bonds. Sen. Tr. at 3751 (remarks of Sen. DeNardis). It was critical to the General Assembly that CRRA would repay these bonds through sales of its waste disposal services and recovered energy. See, e.g., H. Rep. Tr. at 6687 (remarks of Rep. Dice) (“I’m not ... in favor of the state under-writing or ever subsequently having to pay from the state’s funds as a whole to subsidize these matters from the towns. This is supposed to be a self-liquidating program.”). See also Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-262(2) (directing CRRA to generate “revenues sufficient to provide for the support of the authority and its operations on a self-sustaining basis”).
While the legislation creating CRRA did not preclude cities and towns from choosing alternatives to the CRRA-operated facilities, it was clear that once the CRRA facilities became operational the DEP would at last be free to enforce clean air and landfill regulations. See Sen. Tr. at 3761-62 (remarks of Sen. Costello). This enforcement would eliminate most, if not all, of CRRA’s competition from landfills. Indeed, the bill creating CRRA was passed over objections that CRRA would simply condemn all of its private competitors. See id.; H. Rep. Tr. at 6686 (remarks of Rep. Camp); H. Rep. Tr. at 6698 (remarks of Rep. Varis); H. Rep. Tr. at 6699 (remarks of Rep. Pearson).
The Connecticut General Assembly further protected CRRA’s financial stability by restricting the development of new waste-to-energy plants that would compete with CRRA for the supply of waste. See Conn. Gen.Stat. §§ 22a-208d(a), 22a-208d(c)(l)(I) (fоrbidding construction or expansion of disposal facilities that would create an excess capacity for municipal solid waste).
B. The Diverted Waste Problem
Since its creation, CRRA has developed four of Connecticut’s six resource recovery facilities, eleven transfer stations, and five landfills, enabling it to serve more than one hundred municipalities who have entered into long-term contracts committing their solid waste to its facilities. Connecticut General Assembly Legislative Program Review & Investigations Committee, “Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority: Solid Waste Management Fees” (December 1993) (“Legislative Report”), at i, 1, 11,
In the years preceding the events leading to the complaint, CRRA was faced with a dwindling supply of contracted waste delivered to its facilities, caused by such unforeseen factors as economic recession and mandatory recycling programs enacted in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Id. at ii, 6-7, 32-34, 39. The shortage of contracted waste inсreased the demand and competition for
Rather than pay the higher fees required by the towns’ long-term contracts, some waste haulers simply delivered the towns’ waste to whichever waste management facility was cheapest in the spot market. See id. at 15-17, 34, 39. This practice exacerbated the shortages in committed waste delivery. Id. at ii, 17, 34, 39. This case arose from CRRA’s effort to ensure that it received the waste to which it was contractually entitled without interference from waste haulers.
C. The Settlement Agreement
Despite the overcapacity of waste-to-energy plants in Connecticut, the DEP issued a permit to the Wheelabrator defendants to open a sixth waste-to-energy plant in Lisbon. CRRA challenged the need for the new plant by intervening in the proceedings before the DEP, where it argued that the new facility would result in the “substantial excess capacity” forbidden by Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-208d. While the DEP ultimately decided to grant the permit for the Lisbon plant, it was not disputed that this facility would add to the then existing overcapacity in Connecticut. See Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority v. Commissioner of Department of Environmental Prоtection,
CRRA then commenced litigation seeking to overturn the DEP’s decision and enjoin the plant’s operational permitting. See Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority v. Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Protection,
At this point, CRRA and Wheelabrator entered into the July 19, 1995 settlement agreement at issue in this case. Article VI of the settlement agreement reads, in pertinent part:
A. Deliveries of Waste Committed to Other Projects. [Wheelabrator] shall not accept and shall in fact reject deliveries of any waste known by [Wheelabrator] to be committed to any of the AUTHORITY’S Projects by written agreement (hereinafter the “Committed Waste”) at any of the*66 following [Wheelabrator] or [Wheelabrator-affiliated] facilities: Lisbon, Connecticut, Bridgeport, Connecticut, Peekskill, New York, Millbury, Massachusetts, and North Andover, Massachusetts.... This obligation shall extend to any deliveries of such Committed Waste by private haulers where the AUTHORITY or SCRRA have contracts with municipalities requiring the delivery of all waste within those municipalities ....
The AUTHORITY shall not accept and shall in fact reject deliveries of any waste known to the AUTHORITY to be committed to projects operated by [the Wheelab-rator defendants] by written agreement with any Connecticut municipality.... This obligation shall extend to any deliveries of such ... waste by private haulers where [the Wheelabrator defendants] have contracts with municipalities requiring the delivery of all waste within those municipalities ...
B. Notification to Reject Waste. If the AUTHORITY notifies ... [Wheelabrator] at any time that it reasonably believes ... that an identified hauler or one or more of its Affiliates is delivering Committed Waste to any [Wheelabrator] facility, then [Wheelabrator] shall refuse to accept such delivery of waste from such hauler or its Affiliate.... If on three occasions in any three-month period the AUTHORITY so identifies a hauler or its Affiliates delivering Committed Waste to any [Wheelabrator] Facility, and the identified deliveries are not so certified by an independent person, or if on three occasions in any three-month period, the AUTHORITY provides reasonable evidence that waste from a transfer station that has accepted Committed Waste has been delivered to a [Wheelabrator] Facility, then [Wheelabrator] shall refuse to accept any and all deliveries from such hauler and its Affiliates or from such transfer station, as the case may be, for a period of no less than three months.5
Thus, the settlement agreement requires both CRRA and the Wheelabrator defendants to respect one another’s municipal contracts by rejecting deliveries of any waste committed to one another. In addition, if a hauler delivers waste to Wheelabrator facilities three times within a three-month period when that waste is committed to CRRA, the Wheelabrator defendants must refuse all deliveries of waste from that hauler for the next three months. Put simply, the settlement agreement bars both parties from accepting diverted waste, and requires the Wheelabrator defendants to shun haulers for three months if they divert committed waste.
In exchange for the agreement, CRRA took steps to withdraw its legal action against the permitting of the Lisbon facility, and agreed that it would take no action to reenter or re-institute the same or similar proceedings in the future. See Settlement Agreement, Art. VII; Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority v. Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Protection,
On May 3, 1996, plaintiffs, ten affiliated waste hauling companies, were notified that they were being “locked out” of the Wheelab-rator defendants’ facilities pursuant to the settlement agreement, for attempting three times within a three-month period to deliver waste to Wheelabrator facilities when that waste had been committed to CRRA. On May 6, 1996, roughly ten months after the settlement agreement was signed, plaintiffs
Discussion
We review the grant of a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) de novo, and must construe in plaintiffs’ favor factual allegations in the complaint. Allen v. West-Point-Pepperell, Inc.,
A. The Antitrust Cause of Action
Plaintiffs claim that CRRA “developed and maintained a vast system of [waste-to-energy] solid waste management рrojects, under a Solid Waste Management Plan” that “virtually eliminated” landfilling in favor of waste-to-energy disposal. Amended Complaint ¶ 7. This has allegedly given CRRA a “virtual monopoly over waste incineration and disposal in the State of Connecticut.” Id. ¶ 10. Plaintiffs further allege that CRRA and the Wheelabrator defendants then engaged in a “per se Sherman Act violation,” by conspiring to maintain the CRRA monopoly via a “total lock-out,” or boycott, of the plaintiffs’ business “to enforce flow-control contracts between municipalities and CRRA against private haulers ... [who] were not parties to or bound by those contracts.” Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 10, 17; Amended Complaint ¶ 15.
CRRA’s “virtual monopoly” over waste disposal is the result of the Connecticut General Assembly’s decision, discussed above, to phase out landfills in favor of more environmentally friendly waste-to-energy disposal. Connecticut’s Solid Waste Management Plan, which promoted this monopoly, was promulgated not by CRRA, but by Connecticut’s Department of Environmental Protection. Indeed, federal law tightened the grip of this “virtual monopoly,” by further requiring Connecticut to abandon its landfill system. See 40 C.F.R. pt. 258 (1998) (detailing stricter environmental standards for landfills); Legislative Report at 7 (“One RCRA provision that is having a significant impact on waste management methods in Connecticut and other states requires that landfills meet stricter environmental protection standards or close by October 1, 1993.... A number of landfills, particularly those owned by municipalities, are planning to close rather than institute costly improvements and operating procedures required by RCRA.”).
Plaintiffs acknowledge that the source of the monopoly CRRA allegedly enjoys is the Solid Waste Disposal Plan adopted by the DEP pursuant to a legislative directive. Specifically, paragraph seven of the Amended Complaint alleges that
CRRA has developed and maintained a vast system of solid waste management projects, under a Solid Waste Management Plan, which include waste-to-energy plants and transfer stations. This Plan has abandoned landfilling in favor of transporting waste ... to trash-to-energy plants for ultimate disposal. By doing so,*68 this Plan has virtually eliminated every available solid waste disposal site in the State of Connecticut in favor of trash-to-energy plaints [sic].
Indeed, the basis of the complaint is not the alleged monopoly, but the settlement agreement to boycott committed waste. See id. ¶11.
While plaintiffs allege that this agreement “further tightened the grip” of this monopoly, Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint ¶ 10, it does this, according to plaintiffs’ own characterization, merely to ensure that CRRA receives the benefit of the municipal waste disposal contracts that CRRA had lawfully acquired. Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 17 (arguing that CRRA entered into the agreement with the Wheelabrator defendants “to enforce flow-control contracts between municipalities and CRRA”).
The defendants’ motion to dismiss the antitrust cause of action relied solely on the state action immunity defense and did not challenge the complaint on the ground that it was otherwise insufficient to allege a violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. Under these circumstances, we too assume the sufficiency of the antitrust cause of action, and follow the practice of deciding the state action immunity defense ahead of the substantive antitrust issue. See 1 P. Areeda & H. Hovenkamp, ANTITRUST LAW ¶ 224, at 407 (1997).
1. The State Action Immunity Defense
In Parker v. Brown,
The Supreme Court rejected the claim that the municipal defendants were state actors whose anticompetitive conduct was exempt from the Sherman Act, although they did enjoy what may loosely be described as a qualified exemption. Specifically, as Justice Brennan observed, “the Parker doctrine exempts only anticompetitive conduct engaged in as an act of government by the State as sovereign, or, by its subdivisions, pursuant to state policy to displace competition with regulation or monopoly public service.” City of Lafayette,
In explaining why municipalities operating a public utility enjoyed immunity only if they acted рursuant to such state policies, Justice Brennan observed that the state action doctrine proceeded from the premise that given our “dual system of government in which, under the Constitution, the states are sovereign, save only as Congress may constitutionally subtract from their authority, an unexpressed purpose to nullify a state’s control over its officers and agents is not lightly to be attributed to Congress.” Id. at 421,
Moreover, it could not be assumed that actions taken by municipalities “with substantially less than statewide jurisdiction” necessarily reflected state policy. Id. at 414,
These concerns required that municipalities satisfy a more stringent test in order to invoke Parker immunity for their anticom-petitive behavior. Id. at 415,
Subsequent cases would refer to City of Lafayette as requiring a “clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed policy” to displace competition. See, e.g., New Motor Vehicle Bd. v. Orrin W. Fox Co.,
More significantly, however it is labeled, the City of Lafayette test does not apply to anticompetitive actions undertaken by a State rather than a municipality. On the contrary, it is clear that, if the State of Louisiana, rather than two of its municipalities, had operated thе electric utility systems, it would have enjoyed an unqualified exemption from the antitrust laws. See Cine 42nd Street,
2. CRRA’s Status for Parker Immunity Purposes
CRRA is “a body politic and corporate, constituting a public instrumentality and political subdivision of the state of Connecticut established and created for the performance of an essential public and governmental function.” Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-261(a). The
Unlike the Cities of Lafayette and Plaque-mine, which had “substantially less than statewide jurisdiction,” City of Lafayette,
These statutes evidence a legislative intent to commit the difficult regional problems of solid waste disposal to regional and statewide solution. The legislature could reasonably have determined that only a decision-making body with a mandate to consider the needs of more than one community could adequately balance the competing concerns of various localities within the state. Local zoning regulations ... which operate to exclude the facilities that the CRRA has found necessary, and the DEP has found environmentally acceptable, frustrate the explicit purposes of the state statutes and are therefore preempted.
Shelton v. Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Protection,
CRRA is not only a statewide entity that “undertakes state functions,” it is “politically accountable to the State, and by extension, to the electorate.” Hess v. Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corp.,
The critical inquiry, then, should be whether and to what extent the elected state government exercises oversight over the entity. If the lines of oversight are clear and substantial — for example, if the State appoints and removes an entity’s governing personnel and retains veto or approval power over an entity’s undertakings — then the entity should be deemed an arm of the State for Eleventh Amendment purposes.
Id. See also 1 P. Areeda & H. Hovenkamp, ANTITRUST LAW ¶224, at 411 (1997) (“Presumptively, we would reserve the ‘state itself designation only for government agencies that are both statewide in their jurisdiction and have no particular susceptibility to capture by a particular business group.”) (emphasis in original).
The issue in Hess was whether a bi-state agency was an arm of the State for Eleventh Amendment purposes. The Supreme Court, dividing fivе to four, held that the decisive factor in determining the agency’s status should be the impact of any adverse judgment on the State’s treasury, rather than the control exercised by the elected state government. Justice O’Connor’s discussion of the latter issue is helpful here, because the degree of control exercised by the State is a critical factor in determining whether the conduct of a state agency is that of “the State itself’ for the purposes of the Parker doctrine. Cine 42nd Street,
Here, CRRA’s 13-member board of directors now includes the Commissioners of Transportation and Economic Development, the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management, four gubernatorial appointees, and six legislative appointees (who may themselves be members of the general assembly). Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-261(b). Two of the gubernatorial appointees must be first selectmen, mayors, or managers from Connecticut municipalities, and the other two must be “public members.” Conn.Gen.Stat.
More significantly, CRRA is not simply a statewide agency making policy on its own. Rather, it is a “creature of the General Assembly” of Connecticut, and “the mechanism of carrying out the concept of a state-wide plan of dealing with solid waste.” H. Rep. Tr. at 6673 (comments of Rep. Ratchford); Sen. Tr. at 3754 (remarks of Sen. Costello). The Solid Waste Management Plan— CRRA’s basic charter — is рromulgated by the Commissioner of Environmental Protection, who must also approve CRRA’s annual plan of operations. Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-264. Indeed, the Commissioner was actually a member of CRRA’s board until 1989, when the General Assembly recognized that, because “the role of CRRA change[d] from developer to operator, the Department’s regulatory role ha[d] become more significant and must be perceived to be fully independent.” See Conn. Joint Standing Committee Hearings, Environment, 1989 Sess., p. 2680 (testimony of Leslie Carothers, Commissioner of Environmental Protection).
In contrast to Cine 42nd Street, where we held that New York’s Urban Development Corporation (“UDC”) “cannot claim that it is the state,” because it had “nearly absolute operational autonomy,” and because a “high level of participation by the state [was] missing,” Cine 42nd Street,
Under these circumstances, there is a basis for suggesting that its acts should be considered acts of the State of Connecticut, and that the settlement agreement should be exempt from the antitrust laws, without a further finding that the settlement agreement was contemplated by the Connecticut General Assembly “from the authority given [CRRA] to operate in a particular area.” City of Lafayette,
3. Authorization of the Settlement Agreement
The “anticompetitive conduct” alleged here is an agreement that ensures that CRRA will receive the waste that is committed to it pursuant to long-term contracts with the municipalities it services. CRRA was authorized to enter into these long-term contracts, and they are vital to carrying out CRRA’s mandate to conduct its resource recovery operations in a manner “sufficient to provide for the support of the authority and its operations on a self-sustaining basis.” Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-262(2). While the Connecticut General Assembly may not have had the precise terms of this settlement agreement in mind, it is not precluded by the
We believe that the Iowa legislature did indeed contemplate these restrictions on competition. Chapter 28F expressly authorizes municipalities to finance collective projects by issuing revenue bonds. When ascertaining what was in the minds of the legislators, we cannot ignore the realities of the municipal bond market in the mid 1970’s. The legislature surely realized the importance of assuring a source of repayment in order to make the bonds marketable. Common sense and experience suggest that the Iowa legislature must have intended Metro to have the latitude necessary to impose restrictions on competition if Metro believed such restrictions necessary to promote the sale of the bonds. The bond experts had convinced Metro that the restrictions were essential for marketing the bonds. In short, even though the legislation does not speak to the precise question whether restraints of trade could be employed to guarantee the financial vitality of Metro, the comprehensive legislative scheme favoring the development of solid waste facilities demonstrates that the legislature intended the localities to have broad authority to act in furtherance of the legislative mandate. Thus, we believe that the restraint on competition was a “necessary or reasonable consequence” of engaging in the authorized аctivity of constructing a waste disposal facility with funds raised by revenue bonds.
Central Iowa Refuse Systems, Inc. v. Des Moines Metropolitan Solid Waste Agency,
The Central Iowa analysis is equally applicable here, and is consistent with our own holding in Cine 42nd Street,
There is ample evidence, which we have already detailed, that the State of Connecticut intended to replace failing (and illegal) landfills with a state-mandated system coordinated by CRRA. At the very least, the General Assembly contemplated CRRA’s potential to displace competition when it passed the implementing legislation over objections that CRRA would simply condemn all of its private competitors. More significantly, the General Assembly’s willingness to supplant competition is explicit in its subsequent decision to forbid the construction or expansion of disposal facilities that would create an excess capacity, or demand, for municipal solid waste. Specifically, Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-208d(a) requires that “the Commissioner of Environmental Protection shall not issue a permit under section 22a-208a to construct or expand a resources recovery facility ... unless said commissioner makes a written determination that such facility ... is necessary to meet the solid waste disposal needs of the state and will not result in substantial excess capacity of resources recovery facilities.” Section 208d(c)(l)(I) similarly requires “[a] demonstration that the throughput capacity of the proposed facility, when combined with the throughput capacity of all other resources recovery facilities ..., shall not exceed the total throughput capacity of resources recovery facilities ... needed to process waste generated in the state.”
One of the purposes, although not the only purpose, of the certificate of need requirement was concern over the consequences of overbuilding. As Representative Mushinsky, the Chairman of the Environmental Committee, explained in defending the original certification of need legislation that was enacted in 1987:
[Ojver-building of Resource Recovery Plants[,] which are very expensive to back financially, may cause some plants to be under capacity, and that would cause them to fail financially. It is in the State’s best interest not to have any of these plants fail, so we don’t wind up being the ... payer of debt of last resort. It is up to the*73 State to build wisely and not overdo it, so that all these plants make it financially.
30 (H-463) H.R. Proceedings, Pt. 14, 1987 Sess., p. 5094; see also id. at 5084 (explaining that proposed plant would be denied a certificate of need if it would create overcapacity that would result in “stealing waste from other plants, which then put those plants under capacity”); 30 (H-472) H.R. Proceedings, Pt. 23, 1987 Sess., p. 8381 (explaining that related language in former Conn.Gen. Stat. § 22a-208a was intended to accomplish similar purpose, and to permit plants to serve only Connecticut’s needs).
Moreover, in the vеry case that gave rise to the settlement agreement, Justice David M. Shea, a retired Justice of the Supreme Court of Connecticut, relied on § 22a-208a in holding that CRRA had standing to challenge the DEP decision to permit the Lisbon facility:
One of the purposes the legislators probably had in mind in directing the commissioner to consider the capacity of existing [solid waste resources recovery] facilities when making a determination of need was the financial impact of a new competitor for municipal waste, because the state has a significant interest in maintaining the financial viability of these [solid waste resources recovery] facilities operated by CRRA....
Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority v. Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Protection,
Rather than stifling competition by denying a permit to open the Lisbon facility, however, the settlement agreement merely conditions the opening on Wheelabrator’s agreement not to compete for CRRA’s contractually committed waste supply. Of course, as plaintiffs argue, the Commissioner of Environmental Protection did not condition the Lisbon permit on Wheelabrator’s agreement not to compete for waste contractually committed to CRRA. Nevertheless, CRRA had independent standing to sue to enforce § 22a-208d, and the settlement agreement gave relief that, if otherwise im-permissibly anticompetitive, was simply of a lesser magnitude than that explicitly contemplated by the General Assembly.
In the face of this compelling case for the application of the Parker doctrine, plaintiffs rely on language in Federal Trade Comm’n v. Ticor Title Ins. Co.,
Our decision should be read in light of the gravity of the antitrust offense, the involvement of private actors throughout, and the clear absence of state supervision. We do not imply that some particular form of state or local regulation is required to achieve ends other than the establishment of uniform prices.
Id.
Ticor has no relevance here: the present case does not involve price fixing. Nor is the close supervision test applied in Ticor applicable to state agency conduct. Cine 42nd Street,
Accordingly, the settlement agreement into which CRRA entered with Wheelabrator does not subject it to liability under the Sherman Act. Moreover, our conclusion that CRRA can avail itself of the Parker doctrine also compels the conclusion that the Wheel-abrator defendants are shielded from antitrust liability. Subjecting them to antitrust liability would effectively block CRRA’s efforts to carry out its mandate through contracts with private parties. See Cine 42nd Street,
B. The Commerce Clause Cause of Action
The Commerce Clause provides that “Congress shall have the Power ... to regulate Commerce with foreign nations and among the several States.” U.S. Const. Art. I, § 8, cl. 3. A “dormant” or “negative” aspect of this grant of power is that a State’s power to impinge on interstate commerce is limited. Hughes v. Oklahoma,
The Supreme Court has held that the first step in analyzing any law subject to judicial scrutiny under the dormant Commerce Clause is to determine whether it “regulates evenhandedly with only ‘incidental’ effects on interstate commerce, or discriminates against interstate commerce.” Hughes,
“We have explained that the ‘incidental burdens’ to which Pike refers ‘are the burdens on interstate commerce that exceed the burdens on intrastate commerce.’ ” Gary D. Peake Excavating Inc. v. Town Bd. of Town of Hancock,
Plaintiffs’ Commerce Clause cause of action fails for several reasons. Plaintiffs’ claim appears to be a vaguely pleaded effort to invoke the Supreme Court’s holding in C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown,
This case is not Carbone. The settlement agreement does not prevent out-of-state waste processors from operating in Connecticut or from accepting waste generated there. Nor is the complaint about the differential treatment of in-state and out-of-state waste haulers. Plaintiffs concede here that the agreement does not facially discriminate against interstate commerce. Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 35. While they argue that the settlement agreement has the practical effect of doing so, this argument cannot survive careful scrutiny. The status quo ante, which plaintiffs seek to have restored by enjoining enforcement of the settlement agreement, was one in which waste produced in Connecticut was processed in Connecticut. The local waste would remain in-state because the overcapacity in Connecticut created such a competitive spot market that it actually attracted significant waste from out-of-state producers, Legislative Report at 17 (“[A]bout one half ... of the 651,000 tons of spot waste delivered to CRRA facilities in FY 93 came from generators located outside of Connecticut.”), and because waste-to-energy plants located in Connecticut are inherently more attractive for Connecticut waste haulers, who do not have to incur additional transportation costs and delay. See Reply Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 21 n. 10.
Under these circumstances, it is not surprising that the specific damage plaintiffs allege they suffered as a result of the settlement agreement is that they “hav[e] been
Plaintiffs do not allege that, but for the settlement agreement, they would haul waste to processors out-of-state. On the contrary, they expressly disclaim any desire to do so. Reply Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 21 n. 10 (“Article VI [of the settlement agreement] presents plaintiffs with an anticompetitive ultimatum: deliver as CRRA chooses in Connecticut, or incur increased travel costs transporting waste out of state.”). Indeed, the equitable relief plaintiffs seek is simply the freedom to deliver waste as they choose inside Connecticut, rather than the freedom to push it into the stream of interstate commerce.
Thus, the practical effect of the settlement agreement, as plaintiffs’ complaint and arguments here сonfirm, is to control the intrastate flow of a particular segment of waste generated in Connecticut between CRRA and the Wheelabrator defendants (who are incorporated in Delaware and have their principal place of business in New Hampshire). This particular segment of waste is committed to them by contracts for which out-of-state processors could have bid. Like the automobile hulks in Hughes v. Alexandria Scrap Corp,
We do not suggest that the settlement agreement may not have some effect on interstate commerce. Specifically, the Wheel-abrator defendants not only agreed to refuse committed waste at their Connecticut facilities, but also agreed to refuse committed waste at their inconveniently located waste-to-energy plants in Peekskill, New York (on the Hudson River), Millbury, Massachusetts (near Worcester), and Andover, Massachusetts (near New Hampshire). The Wheelab-rator defendants also agreed to turn away for a three-month period all waste delivered, whether it is committed or not, by haulers who attempted to deliver committed waste three times in the preceding three months.
The provision requiring the three-month exclusion of uncommitted waste at Wheelab-rator’s three out-of-state facilities does not appear to be of any practical consequence, because the settlement agreement does not restrict plaintiffs from depositing this waste at the spot market rate in four of the six waste-to-energy plants inside Connecticut. Under the circumstances, it would be counter to plaintiffs’ expressed economic interest to incur the additional expense of hauling uncommitted waste to distant locations outside of Connecticut.
Nevertheless, there is one scenario in which Wheelabrator’s agreement to turn committed waste away from its three out-of-state facilities would affect interstate commerce. If Wheelabrator only turned plaintiffs away from its Connecticut facilities, it is possible that plaintiffs could profitably dispose of the committed Connecticut waste at Wheelabrator’s out-of-state facilities, albeit at a smaller profit. The claim that this constitutes an “incidental” burden on interstate commerce sufficient to invoke the Pike balancing standard, however, ignores the reason why plaintiffs would have any reason to haul committed waste outside of Connecticut for processing.
Plaintiffs remain free to deposit committed waste at CRRA and Wheelabrator waste-to-energy facilities in Connecticut by paying the contractually arranged tipping fees. Indeed, even during the three-month “penalty period” during which Wheelabrator is obligated to turn away even waste contractually committed to itself, plaintiffs concede that four of the six trash-to-energy facilities in Connecticut remain available to them, although they would be forced to “pay CRRA’s above-market prices for all its waste for that time, or сlose their doors.” Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 7 (emphasis in original). The need, if any, to haul waste outside of Connecticut derives from plaintiffs’ desire to obtain cheaper tipping fees than those available in
The settlement agreement may very well affect commerce if it forces plaintiffs to haul committed waste from Connecticut to out-of-state processors. Nevertheless, because it cannot be said that “the flow of interstate commerce will be reduced, and thereby burdened,” USA Recycling,
Moreover, even if the settlement agreement did have an “incidental effect” on interstate commerce, it is doubtful that plaintiffs could show that the burden on interstate commerce “is clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits.” Pike,
On the other side of the scale, plaintiffs have not alleged or suggested facts that establish that any incidental effect that the settlement agreement may have on interstate commerce is excessive in relation to the benefit achieved. Instead, their only argument with respect to the Pike standard is that the settlement agreement is unreasonable because plaintiffs are not parties to the municipal contracts that CRRA seeks to keep free from plaintiffs’ interference. Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 40-41. This argument confuses the burden of the settlement agreement on plaintiffs with a burden on interstate commerce. Cf. Exxon Corp. v. Governor of Maryland,
Nor is the settlement agreement invalid per se “because it has the practical effect of regulating commerce occurring wholly outside” the borders of the State of Connecticut. Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 36. The Commerce Clause “precludes the application of a state statute to commerce that takes place wholly outside of the State’s borders, whether or not the commerce has effects within the State.” Edgar v. MITE Corp., 431 U.S. 624, 642-43,
The limits on a State’s power to enact substantive legislation are similar to the limits on the jurisdiction of state courts. In either case, “any attempt ‘directly’ to assert extraterritorial jurisdiction over persons or property would offend sister*78 States and exceed the inherent limits of the State’s power.”
Id. at 643,
This case does not involve a direct assertion of the legislative power of the State of Connecticut to regulate conduct outside of its borders. Instead, it involves an agreement by Wheelabrator to refuse plaintiffs’ delivery of waste at its New York and Massachusetts facilities. While the agreement affects the conduct of the Wheelabrator defendants outside of Connecticut, it is the antithesis of “direct” regulation of the kind that is per se invalid. Indeed, the analogy the Supreme Court drew in Edgar to the territorial limits on the jurisdiction' of state courts is equally apposite here.
Although the State of Connecticut is without power to directly legislate restrictions on Wheelabrator’s freedom to conduct business in New York and Massachusetts, the Commerce Clause does not act as an inflexible bar against Wheelabrator’s agreement to place certain restrictions on its activities there. Of course, the fact that Wheelabrator and CRRA have entered into an agreement does not necessarily insulate it from scrutiny under the Commerce Clause. See South-Central Timber Development, Inc. v. Wunnicke,
2. Status of CRRA as a Market Participant
This brings us to the complete defense CRRA asserts against plaintiffs’ Commerce Clause claim. Specifically, CRRA argues that because the settlement agreement was negotiated by two market participants, any undue burden the agreement imposes on interstate commerce does not implicate the Commerce Clause. Under the market participant doctrine, which distinguishes between the direct exercise of a State’s sovereign powers and a State’s actions in the more general capacity of a market participant, only the former actions are subject to the limitations of the dormant Commerce Clause. New Energy Co. of Indiana v. Limbach,
The long-term waste disposal contracts that CRRA has negotiated with Connecticut municipalities as a vendor of waste disposal services are clearly market participation. See USA Recycling,
Moreover, the Commissioner of Environmental Protection, who had the power to decline to permit the Lisbon facility, did not condition his permit decision on Wheelabrator’s consent to the terms of the settlement agreement. Rather, the settlement agreement arose out of a judicial proceeding in which CRRA was authorized to participate in order to ensure that the judgment of the Commissioner was exercised in a manner consistent with Conn.Gen.Stat. § 2_2a-208d(a). See Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority v. Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Protection,
Instead, plaintiffs’ only challenge to the market participant defense is that the settlement agreement affects conduct in “the
This consideration aside, South-Central Timber Development, Inc. v. Wunnicke,
In contrast, here “the article of commerce is not so much the solid waste itself, but rather the service of processing and disposing of it.” Carbone,
Only if the actions of a State, “whether by statute, regulation, or contract,” have a “substantial regulatory effect outside of th[e] particular market” in which the State is a participant, do they offend the dormant Commerce Clause. South-Central Timber,
C. The Alleged Inconsistency Between the Antitrust and Commerce Clause Defenses
Plaintiffs’ final argument is that CRRA cannot claim both the market participant exception from the Cоmmerce Clause and state action immunity from the antitrust laws. Such a dual exception, plaintiffs argue, “would unfairly permit CRRA to compete as a private party without being subject to antitrust liability like private parties.” Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 46. In SSC Corp.,
We see no reason to question the soundness of our holding in SSC Corp., nor do we perceive “a potential conflict” between the Parker and market participant doctrines that would automatically render a market participant a regulator of interstate commerce, even though it lacked any regulatory power, if it invoked the Parker exemption from antitrust scrutiny. The unfairness plaintiff perceives derives from giving undue weight to one of the policies underlying the market participant doctrine. In Reeves v. Stake,
Were evenhandedness the only rationale supporting the market participant doctrine, plaintiffs’ argument might have some merit. The Reeves Court, however, identified several policy considerations underlying the market participant doctrine that largely mirror those underlying the Parker immunity doctrine. The most important of these rationales is that of “state sovereignty, [and] the role of each State ‘as guardian and trustee for its people.’ ” Reeves,
Thus, like the Parker doctrine, the market participant doctrine reflects at its core a respect for state sovereignty. See Parker,
When Congress has not exerted its power under the Commerce Clause, and state regulation of matters of local concern is so related to interstate commerce that it also operates as a regulation of that commerce, the reconciliation of the power thus granted with that reserved to the state is to be attained by the accommodation of the competing demands of the state and national interests involved.
Id. at 362,
This accommodation would be undermined by a rule that would automatically prevent its beneficiaries from availing themselves of the
More significantly, it is difficult to reconcile such an exception to the Parker doctrine with City of Lafayette, in which eight Justices favored at least a qualified exemption from the antitrust laws for a municipal market participant. Indeed, in Paragould Cablevision v. City of Paragould,
Conclusion
Over a quarter of a century ago, Connecticut developed a scheme for disposing of trash in a way that the private market was then unwilling or unable to undertake. Because we see no merit-to plaintiffs’ Sherman Act and Commerce Clause challenges to the exceedingly limited steps taken by CRRA to preserve its lawfully acquired contracts from interference, we affirm the order of the district court dismissing the complaint.
Notes
. The Hartford. Preston, and Wallingford plants are "owned, operated and/or controlled” in conjunction with either Ogden Systems, Inc., or American Refuel, Amended Complaint ¶ 9, neither of whom is a party to this case. The Bridgeport plant is allegedly “operated and/or controlled in conjunction with the Wheelabrator defendants.” Id.
. The transcript of this Connecticut Senate floor debate (hereinafter "Sen. Tr.”) was included in the Joint Appendix.
. The transcript of this Connecticut House of Representatives floor debate (hereinafter "H. Rep. Tr.”) was included in the Joint Appendix.
. The Legislative Report was attached by the Wheelabrator defendants to the memorandum in support of their motion to dismiss. They argued, without apparent contradiction by plaintiffs, that it "may be considered by the Court without converting this motion into one for summary judgment.” Mem. at 7 n. 2. The Legislative Report was also included in the Joint Appendix. We decline to consider it in determining whether the district court properly dismissed the complaint. Rather, we refer to it here solely to provide a background for this controversy that is not inconsistent with the facts alleged in the amended complaint.
. The "SCRRA” to which the settlement agreement refers is the Southeastern Connecticut Regional Resources Recovery Authority, a regional resources recovery facility comprised of the towns of East Lyme, Griswold, Groton, Ledyard, Montville’, New London, North Stonington, Norwich, Sprague. Stonington, and Waterford.
. Contrary to plaintiffs’ arguments, see Brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 13-14, the Supreme Court reaffirmed this standard in Town of Hallie v. City of Eau Claire, 471 U.S. 34, 44,
. Only Chief Justice Burger would have required municipalities engaged in proprietary activities to show more than the state authorization required by the City of Lafayette plurality. See City of Lafayette,
. CRRA was given this freedom in 1984 when the General Assembly amended Conn.Gen.Stat. § 22a-261(a) to provide that CRRA "shall not be construed to be a department, institution or agency of the state.” The purpose of this language was to codify case law holding that CRRA was not a state agency subject to Connecticut's Uniform Administrative Procedure Act. See Shelton,
. The Lisbon facility itself may have been an issue at the time the certificate of need requirement was first enacted. Richard Adams, who testified against the legislation on behalf of Regional Disposal Systems, Inc., defended the Lisbon proposal against what he perceived as a possible concern that it would process out-of-state waste. Conn. Joint Standing Committee Hearings, Environment, Pt. 2, 1987 Sess., p. 497. Mr. Adams also argued that excess capacity "wouldn’t necessarily be a bad idea,” because it "might generate some actual competition for tipping fees in Connecticut, reducing the cost to the communities and the industries that are looking to dispose of solid waste.” Id. at 498.
. The complaint does not make clear why plaintiffs cannot use out-of-state facilities and transfer stations other than the three Wheelabrator waste-to-energy plants. See Sal Tinnerello & Sons, Inc. v. Town of Stonington,
