Case Information
*1 Before COX and CARNES, Circuit Judges, and FAY, Senior Circuit Judge.
PER CURIAM:
Bankers Insurance Company sued the Florida Residential Property and Casualty Joint Underwriting Association (the Association) and several of its officers and counsel, alleging a conspiracy to restrain trade in violation of federal and Florida antitrust law. The district court granted the Association judgment on the pleadings. Bankers appeals, and we affirm.
I. Background
Florida's legislature reacted to Florida's post-Hurricane Andrew insurance crisis by creating an involuntary association of all Florida residential-property insurers. Fla. Stat. § 627.351(6)(a). This association, the Florida Residential Property and Casualty Joint Underwriting Association, is directed to write policies for citizens who are unable to obtain property and casualty insurance on the "voluntary" insurance market. Id. The insurers required to participate in the Association make up the Association's losses pro rata, according to each insurer's market share. See id. § 627.351(6)(b)(3).
The Association is authorized to contract for the servicing of policies it has written. Fla. Stat. § 627.351(6)(c). Bankers, a Florida insurer, provided a substantial part of these services from the Association's inception in 1993. In 1995, the Association announced competitive bidding for servicing contracts. The Association ultimately accepted three of the ten bids; Bankers was one of the disappointed bidders. Bankers alleges that the rejection of its bid was unjustifiable because the Association revised bid standards in mid-review and because the Association disregarded the preferences of the independent insurance agents who sell the Association's policies.
After Bankers' bid was refused, Bankers pursued its administrative remedies. When those failed, it sued the Association and the committee that controlled the bidding process for violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act and Florida Antitrust Act of 1980, Fla. Stat. § 542.15 et seq. Bankers makes no monopoly- or monopsony-related claims under § 2 of the Sherman Antitrust Act; it claims only that the Association and the four individual defendants conspired to restrain trade in violation of § 1 of that Act.
The district court granted the defendants judgment on the pleadings. It reasoned that the
Association was protected by the
Parker
doctrine,
see Parker v. Brown,
[1]
which excludes from the
Sherman Act's scope anticompetitive conduct by a state as sovereign, or by state political
subdivisions under certain circumstances. Alternatively, the district court ruled that the Association
and its agents could not conspire to restrain trade as a matter of law under the doctrine of
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Co.
[2]
because they lack the requisite diversity of interests.
Bankers appeals. It contends that the district court erred in treating the Association as a political
*3
subdivision of the state and in viewing the Association as a single entity incapable of conspiring
with itself.
[3]
We review the district court's grant of judgment on the pleadings de novo.
See Slagle
v. ITT Hartford,
II. Discussion
Judgment on the pleadings is appropriate when material facts are not in dispute and
judgment can be rendered by looking at the substance of the pleadings and any judicially noticed
facts.
See id.; Hebert Abstract Co. v. Touchstone Properties, Ltd.,
A. Ability to Conspire
Purely unilateral action does not violate § 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act; therefore, agents
and employees of a single entity cannot conspire to restrain trade, as a matter of law.
See Tiftarea
Shopper, Inc. v. Georgia Shopper, Inc.,
The question for the Association itself is more difficult. As Bankers argues, associations differ from corporations or other unitary entities enough that they may sometimes fall outside this intraenterprise conspiracy rule. See Chicago Prof'l Sports, Ltd. v. National Basketball Ass'n, 95 F.3d 593, 598-99 (7th Cir.1996). We decline to reach this issue, however, because in any event the Association is entitled to state action immunity, as discussed below.
B. State Action Immunity
Out of federal deference to state sovereignty, states are immune from federal antitrust law
for their actions as sovereign.
Parker v. Brown,
No simply stated rule draws the line between the two categories. Cases before the Supreme
Court have concerned only municipalities, the paradigm of a political subdivision.
See City of
Columbia v. Omni Outdoor Advertising,
Each of these cases has focused on the government-like attributes of the defendant entity.
Factors favoring political-subdivision treatment include open records,
[4]
tax exemption,
[5]
exercise of
governmental functions,
[6]
lack of possibility of private profit,
[7]
and the composition of the entity's
decisionmaking structure. Phillip E. Areeda & Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law ¶ 212.7, at
208-10 (1997 Supp.). The presence or absence of attributes such as these tells us whether the nexus
between the State and the entity is sufficiently strong that there is little real danger that the entity
is involved in a
private
anticompetitive arrangement.
See Crosby,
The Association is not short on public-entity trappings that suggest it is entitled to political-subdivision status. [8] The Association is subject to Florida's "sunshine laws." See Fla. Stat. *7 § 627.351(6)(n). It is exempt from corporate tax. See id. § 627.351(6)(j). It is authorized to issue tax-free bonds. See id. § 627.351(6)(c)(3). Upon its dissolution, its assets become property of the state. See id. § 627.351(6)(k). The Association operates under a detailed plan that must be approved by the Department of Insurance. See id. § 627.351(6)(a), (c). A board of governors supervises the Association's operations; the 13-member board includes five consumer representatives, the insurance consumer advocate, and two representatives of the insurance industry appointed by the state insurance commissioner. Only five of the members are appointed by the insurance industry, and even those serve at the insurance commissioner's pleasure. See id. § 627.351(c)(4).
On the other hand, the Association has one attribute that at first blush would seem to weigh
on the private side of the public/private scale: it is at bottom an association of private, competing
insurers. Two facts, however, suggest that this attribute matters little here. First, the Association
was not created to compete in or regulate an existing market; rather, it invented a market where—by
definition—none existed before. Fla. Stat. § 627.351(6)(a) (creating Association to serve
"applicants who are in good faith entitled, but are unable, to procure insurance through the voluntary
market"). The members of the Association are not, therefore, competing in the market the
Association serves. This impossibility of competition is an indicator that the Association represents
public interests, rather than competing private interests.
Cf. Hass,
All things considered, the Association is entitled to be treated as a political subdivision for antitrust purposes. It thus merits state-action immunity if its allegedly anticompetitive actions were pursuant to a clearly articulated state policy. The Association's actions pass this test. Bankers' complaint appears to assert that the Association and its agents engaged in two kinds of improper conduct during the bid-review process: first, the Association in several respects altered its selection criteria during the bidding process; and second, the Association disregarded the preferences of independent agents who sell Association policies. These actions were for the purpose, Bankers alleges, of knocking Bankers out of the running and thereby reducing competition for servicing contracts.
A state anticompetitive action is pursuant to a clearly articulated policy when the action is
both
authorized by statute
and
its anticompetitive effect is an intended (meaning foreseeable) result
of this authorization.
See Crosby,
The plan of operation of the association [m]ay provide for one or more designated insurers, able and willing to provide policy and claims service, to act on behalf of the association to provide such service. Each licensed agent shall be entitled to indicate the order of preference regarding who will service the business placed by the agent. The association shall adhere to each agent's preferences unless after consideration of other factors in assigning agents, including, but not limited to, servicing capacity and fee arrangements, the association has reason to believe it is in the best interests of the association to make a different assignment.
Fla. Stat. § 627.351(6)(c)(1).
The second prong is also satisfied. The legislature's selection of the modal "may," rather
than "shall," "will," or "must," shows that
all
of the first sentence of the section authorizing servicing
contracts is permissive, not mandatory. The Association is therefore freely permitted to "provide
*9
for" policy service as it sees fit —or not to contract at all. It is foreseeable that conferring such
unfettered discretion on the Association to select policy servicing services could result in potentially
anticompetitive adjustment and revision of standards and selection criteria.
Cf. Hass,
Because the Association is a political subdivision of the State of Florida and it acted pursuant to a clearly articulated legislative policy permitting it to select its contracting parties as it saw fit, the district court properly granted the Association judgment on the pleadings.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the district court's judgment is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
[1]
[2]
[3] Bankers also asserts that the district court erred in not permitting Bankers to amend its complaint to add more conspirators. Bankers never sought to amend its complaint during the months between the motion for judgment on the pleadings and the district court's order, or at any time after that order. The district court did not abuse its discretion in not sua sponte inviting Bankers to amend.
[4]
Commuter Transp. Sys., Inc.,
[5]
See Crosby,
[6]
See Crosby,
[7]
See Fuchs,
[8] Bankers argues that the Florida Supreme Court advisory opinion,
In re Advisory Opinion to
the Governor—State Revenue Cap,
