Lead Opinion
COLE, C.J., dеlivered the opinion of the court in which BATCHELER, J., joined in all but Part H.B., and MOORE, J., joined in all but Part II.C. BATCHELDER, J. (pp. 587-40), delivered a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting from Part II.B. MOORE, J. (pp. 540-44), delivered a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting from Part II.C.
OPINION
The three named plaintiffs brought a purported class action alleging that the developers of their neighborhoods created agreements that violated both state and federal law by requiring the neighborhoods’ homeowners to pay for basic telecommunications services provided by Crystal Clear Technologies, LLC (“Crystal Clear”), an entity owned and controlled by the developers. The district court dismissed the plaintiffs’ federal claims for failure to state a claim and subsequently denied as futile the plaintiffs’ motion seeking leave to file an amended complaint. We affirm in part and reverse in part the district court’s denial of the plaintiffs’ motion seeking, leave to file an amended complaint.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The plaintiffs are homeowners in three centrally-planned neighborhoods in Thompson’s Station, a small town in Williamson County, Tennessee. The three neighborhoods, Canterbury, Bridgemore, and Tollgate, have hundreds of houses and over a thousand homeowners.
Carbine & Associates, LLC, developed the neighborhoods through affiliated companies, Bridgemore Development Group, LLC, Tollgate Farms, LLC, and Hood Development, LLC. The developers also established and controlled owners’ associations for the neighborhoods. However, the developers have since transferred control of the owners’ associations to third-party еntities not controlled by either the developers or homeowners.
From 2006 to 2007, while under the developers’ control, the owners’ associations each entered into communications services agreements (the “Agreements”) with Crystal Clear. The Agreements grant Crystal Clear the right to provide telecommunications services to the neighborhoods for twenty-five years, with an option for Crystal Clear to unilaterally renew for an additional twenty-five years. In addition, the Agreements authorize Crystal Clear to be the exclusive agent for homeowners in procuring services from any outside providers and grant Crystal Clear the exclusive right to market services within the neighborhoods. Under the Agreements, homeowners must pay the owners’ associations a monthly assessment fee, which the associations then use tо pay Crystal Clear for basic telecommunications services.. Homeowners must pay the fee whether they use Crystal Clear’s services or not. In addition, homeowners must make a onetime payment of $1,500 to Crystal Clear for the cost of constructing the telecommunications infrastructure in the neighborhoods. To facilitate the infrastructure’s construction, Crystal Clear also obtained a non-exclusive franchise agreement with Thompson’s Station that permitted Crystal Clear to use the service easements within the neighborhoods.
Prior to executing the Agreements, Crystal Clear had no experience in the telecommunications-services industry. To provide services to the neighborhoods, Crystal Clear contracts with another provider, DirecTV, and charges a premium to homeowners in addition to the rate negotiated with DirecTV. Further, Crystal Clear does not provide services outside of the neighborhoods at issue in this case.
The plaintiffs brought this suit and subsequently filed their first amended complaint, alleging both state and federal claims. The plaintiffs claimed that the Agreements constituted self-dealing, unjust enrichment, unconscionability, unlawful tying, market allocation, and unlawful exclusivity.
The defendants moved to dismiss, arguing that the first amended complaint failed to assert allegations necessary for the federal claims and that the plaintiffs lack standing to bring claims on behalf of the owners’ associations. The district court dismissed the first amended complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) without addressing the standing argument and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state-law claims.
The plaintiffs then moved under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59 to alter or amend the judgment and under Rule 15 for leave to file a second amended complaint that asserted the same federal claims. The district court denied the plaintiffs’ motion after determining that the second amended complaint would fail to survive a motion to dismiss and was thus futile. The plaintiffs timely appealed from both the district court’s dismissal and its refusal to allow the second amended complaint. However, the plaintiffs agree that the second amended complaint reflects the plaintiffs’ most recent and developed pleading for purposes of this appeal. Accordingly, we consider only whether the district court erred in refusing to allow the second amended complaint under Rule 59 and Rule 15. Furthermore, the рlaintiffs challenge only the district court’s decisions regarding their tying and exclusivity claims. Therefore, we do not address the dismissal of the market allocation claim.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo the denial of a motion seeking to amend a complaint where the denial is based on the determination that the amended complaint is futile because it would fail under a motion to dismiss. Winget v. JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.,
“To survive a motion to dismiss, a plaintiff must allege facts that state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face and that, if accepted as true, are sufficient to raise a right to relief above the speculative level.” Bickerstaff v. Lucarelli,
B. Unlawful Tying Under the Sherman Act
“A tying arrangement is defined as an agreement, by a party to sell one product [a tying product] ... only on the condition that the buyer also purchases a different (or tied) product....” Mich. Division-Monument Builders of N. Am. v. Mich. Cemetery Ass’n,
Under their tying claim, the plaintiffs allege that the developers used their market power over the sale of homes in these neighborhoods to force the homeowners to purchase telecommunications services from Crystal Clear, thereby harming competition for the provision of telecommunications services and violating the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. The district court found that the first amended complaint failed to state a tying claim because it did not define the tying product market in alleging the defendants’ market power in the sale of homes. The second amended complaint' addressed this by defining the tying product market as centrally-planned communities within Thompson’s Station. The district court then determined that the sеcond amended complaint alleges market power in a defined market, but that it. is futile because it fails to allege a substantial impact on the relevant tied market.
On appeal, the plaintiffs contest this, arguing that the second amended complaint pleads a substantial impact on the tied market' by alleging that the defendants harmed competition for the' provision of telecommunications services. The defendants contend that the plaintiffs only pleaded a substantial impact on “telecommunications services in the Neighborhoods” rather than “commerce in the general market within which [telecommunications services] [are] sold.” (Crystal Clear Br. 19-20.)
This court must therefore determine whether the plaintiffs pleaded a substantial impact within the relevant market for telecommunications services'. In doing so, this court is mindful that it’ must “construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff .,. and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff.” See Bickerstaff,
We can reasonably infer, that alleging harm to particular nеighborhoods equates to alleging harm to the general, market that covers those neighborhoods. By alleging that the Agreements forced each household to pay one-time infrastructure fees of at least.$1,50Q and monthly assessment fees for Crystal Clear’s services, the plaintiffs have pleaded an amount of commerce that would be substantial in both the neighborhoods and the telecommunications services..market that covers those neighborhoods in Thompson’s Station, Williamson County, or beyond. See Fortner,
The defendants argue that, even if the plaintiffs sufficiently pleaded substantial harm on the relevant tied market, the district court erred in concluding that thé plaintiffs’ defined market for the tying product (the sale of homes) is proper. The proper definition of a tying product market and whether a defendant has market power within that market are fact-intensive questions best addressed following discovery. Mich. Division-Monument,
C. Exclusivity Under the Federal Telecommunications Act
The Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) has explicit authority to impose regulations specifying exclusive conduct that the Federal Telecommunications Act prohibits. See 47 U.S.C. § 548(c)(1); see also Nat. Cable & Telecomm. Ass’n v. FCC,
The plaintiffs allege that the Agreements violate the Exclusivity Order by making Crystal Clear the exclusive provider of services for the neighborhoods. The district court dismissed this claim, as alleged in the first amended complaint, noting that both the Agreements and the allegations contradicted the plaintiffs’ claim that the Agreements were exclusive contracts.
As evidence of the arrangement’s exclusivity, the plaintiffs submitted with them proposed secоnd amended complaint the Agreements and a letter sent by MBSC, the new owner of the Bridgemore development, stating that Crystal Clear refused “to give up its exclusive easements that enable it to be the only provider in Bridge-more.” (Letter from MBSC, R. 99-7, Pa-gelD 1626.) The district court concluded that the second amended complaint reiterated the allegations from the previous complaint and would therefore fail under a motion to dismiss. In addition, the district court found that the second amended complaint and the plain text of the Agreements contradicted the letter submitted by the plaintiffs.
“The law is clear that [courts] may consider [a document] which was attached to the [c]omplaint ... in determining whether dismissal is proper.” Williams v. CitiMortgage, Inc.,
The plaintiffs allege that the Agreements make Crystal Clear the exclusive provider by creating unlawful and unreasonable barriers to entry, such as requiring homeowners to pay for services regardless of usage, referencing Crystal Clear’s easements, and by granting Crystal Clear the exclusive right to negotiate with providers about access to deliver services to the neighborhoods. According to the plaintiffs, the cumulative effect of the barriers makes it both economically and practically unfeasible for any other provider to offer its services. The plaintiffs point to both the Agreements’ terms, which state that Crystal Clear will operate on an exclusivе basis, and the MBSC letter, which describes Crystal Clear’s easements as exclusive and barring other providers.
As the district court noted, there are several contradictions amongst the plaintiffs’ allegations and the Agreements’ terms. The plaintiffs allege both that the Agreements make Crystal Clear the exclusive provider and that Crystal Clear is not truly a provider, contracting with DirecTV to be the actual provider. The plaintiffs note the Agreements’ terms describing the arrangement as “exclusive,” but the Agreements’ terms mandate that homeowners must have access to other providers. The plaintiffs’ allege both that Crystal Clear’s easements are “exclusive” and that they are part of a non-exclusive franchise agreement. We conclude that these contradictions foreclose the plaintiffs’ exclusivity claim.
The plaintiffs claim more than explicit exclusivity; they also claim that the structure and cumulative effect of the arrangement creates an exclusive provider relationship. But such allegations are insufficient to state an exclusivity claim. The prohibition imposed by the Exclusivity Order is limited by its terms to “building exclusivity clauses.” Exclusivity Order, 22 F.C.C. Red. at 20236 n.2. Such clauses “appear in contracts between [multichannel video programming distributors (“MVPDs”) ] and [multiple dwelling unit (“MDU”) ] owners or other real estate developments” and “prohibit any other MVPD from any access whatsoever to the premises of the MDU building or real estate development.” Id. Assuming Crystal Clear is an MVPD, the plaintiffs do not allege facts sufficient to show that the Agreements prohibit any other MVPD from “any access whatsoever” to the neighborhoods. Indeed, thе Agreements specifically mandate that alternative providers be given access to the neighborhoods.
The plaintiffs rely on a Fourth Circuit decision holding a defendant liable for violating the Exclusivity Order, but that decision is inapposite. Lansdowne on the Potomac Homeowners Ass’n, Inc. v. OpenBand at Lansdowne, LLC,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s denial of the plaintiffs’ motion seeking leave to file the second amended complaint on plaintiffs’ tying claim; we affirm the district court’s denial of the plaintiffs’ motion seeking leave to file the second amended complaint on plaintiffs’ exclusivity claim; and we remand this action to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I concur with the majority’s opinion regarding Plaintiffs’ exclusivity claim. Plaintiffs have failed to allege that the communications services agreements (the “Agreements”) grant Crystal Clear an improper “exclusive right to provide” telecommunication services to the developments. However, in my view, despite multiple opportunities to do so, Plaintiffs have failed to articulate a suitable market in which the purported antitrust violation took place. Therefore, with respect to Plaintiffs’ antitrust tying claim, I respectfully dissent from Part II.B of the majority’s opinion and would hold that Plaintiffs' have failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
I would find that Plaintiffs have failed to state an antitrust tying claim because they do not allege that the purported tying arrangement “affects a substantial volume of commerce in the tied market.” Mich. Div.-Monument Builders of N. Am. v. Mich. Cemetery Ass’n,
“[T]he Neighborhood” is not a relevant geographic market. As the district court explained, the relevant geographic market cannot be the area in which Crystal Clear allegedly has exclusive control; it is self-evident that the purported tying arrangement would have a substantial effect in the location where all purchasers оf both the tying and tied product reside, i.e. the neighborhoods. This is a facile “pleading maneuver[]” that artificially narrows the broader economic and geographic market for telecommunication services to create a “fictitious market” in which any sales by Crystal Clear would cause a substantial effect. Apani Sw., Inc. v. Coca-Cola Enters., Inc.,
Many cases illustrate this rule. For example, in Monument Builders,
In support of its holding, the Mormment Builders court relied on Apani Southwest,
Finally, in the more recent case of Wampler v. Southwest Bell Telephone Co.,
Similarly, “the Neighborhood” is not a relevant geographic market for the tied product (telecommunication services) at issue here. Plaintiffs do not allege that “the Neighborhood” has any relationship to the commercial realities of the telecommunication-services industry or is economically significant in the telecommunication-services market. Plaintiffs, therefore, have failed to allege a relevant geographic market for the sale of telecommunication services, and their allegations are insufficient to make out a tying claim.
For the foregoing reasons, I concur in part and dissent in part.
Notes
. As an initial matter, the antitrust and exclusivity claims come to us, in part, as an appeal of a post-judgment motion to amend. “When a party seeks to amend a complaint after an adverse judgment, it thus must shoulder a heavier , burden. Instead of .meeting only the modest requirements of Rule 15, the claimant must meet the requirements for reopening a case established by Rules 59 or 60." Leisure Caviar, LLC v. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Serv.,
. The Tenth Circuit recently rejected a similar argument as "an outdated view of the law," while reviewing a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(b) motion in In re: Cox Enterprises, Inc.,
Concurrence Opinion
CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Because I believe that the plaintiffs have sufficiently pleaded an exclusivity claim, I would reverse the district court’s denial of the plaintiffs’ motion seeking leave to file the second amended complaint on this claim as well as on the plaintiffs’ tying claim. Therefore, I respectfully dissent from Part II.C of the majority’s opinion.
I.
In its 2007 “Exclusivity Order” the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) found that “the greatest harm that exclusivity clauses cause residents of MDUs [multiple dwelling units] is that they deny those residents another choice of MVPD [multichannel video programming distributor] service and thus deny them the benefits of increased competition.” In the Matter of Exclusive Service Contracts for Provision of Video Services in Multiple Dwelling Units and Other Real Estate Developments, 22 FCC Red. 20235, 20244 (2007) (codified at 47 C.F.R. § 76.2000) (hereinafter “Exclusivity Order”). The FCC found that cable operators protected by exclusivity clauses faced no pressure to hold down their prices, to provide desired programming, or to offer low-cost bundles of video, voice, and Internet access services. Id. at 20244-45. Furthermore, the FCC found that exclusivity clauses had the potential to act as deterrents to competitors seeking to enter the marketplace. Id. at 20245. The FCC concluded that these clauses are proscribed by 47 U.S.C. § 548 because “[t]hat Section prоhibits unfair methods of competition that have the purpose or effect of hindering significantly or preventing MPVDs from providing ‘satellite cable’ and/or ‘satellite broadcast’ programming to subscribers and consumers.” Id. at 20236. The FCC, therefore, prohibited cable operators or MVPDs from “enforce[ing] or execut[ing] any provision in a contract that grants it the exclusive right to provide any video programming service (alone or in combination with other services) to a MDU.” Id. at 20251 (emphasis added). The situation in this case presents exactly the problems the FCC sought to prevent in its Exclusivity Order.
II.
The plaintiffs argue that their factual allegations show that the cumulative effect of the Communications Service Agreements’ (“CSAs”) provisions is to create a de facto exclusivity arrangement in violation of the Exсlusivity Order. Appellant Reply Br. at 7. The majority rejects the plaintiffs’ premise that the Exclusivity Order can be violated by a de facto contractual arrangement, and instead reads the prohibition as applying only to specific clauses that explicitly create exclusivity standing alone. This interpretation of the regulation ignores the purpose of the Exclusivity Order and the principles of Tennessee contract law that govern our interpretation of the CSAs.
The CSAs are interpreted pursuant to Tennessee law. Cf. Ferro Corp. v. Garrison Indus., Inc.,
The CSAs both contain an explicit exclusivity clause. R. 99-3 (Tollgate CSA at 1) (Page ID #1492) (“Association has chosen Crystal Clear Technologies to operate and maintain the System, and to provide Basic Services (as further defined below) to each home and multi-family dwelling unit in Tollgate Village (‘Home’) on an exclusive basis consistent with the terms of this Agreement and applicable law.” (emphasis added)); R. 99-4 (Bridgemore CSA at 1) (Page ID #1527) (“Association has chosen Crystal Clear Technologies, LLC to operate and maintain the System, and to provide Basic Services (as further defined below) to each home and multifamily dwelling unit in Bridgemore Village (‘Home’) on an exclusive basis consistent with the terms of this Agreement and applicable law.” (emphasis added)). The defendants argue that these exclusivity clauses are “one-off phrase[s]” and the remaining provisions “mandate a non-exclusive arrangement and homeowner access to other providers.” Corrected Br. of Ap-pellees Crystal Clear Techs., LLC and Carbine & Assocs., LLC, adopted by Ap-pellees Tollgate Farms, LLC and Bridge-more Dev. Grp., LLC at 14 n.6. The defendants are correct that the exclusivity clauses must be interpreted in light of the other contract provisions, D&E Constr. Co.,
First, the GSAs refer to easements that Crystal Clear Technologies obtained in each MDU. R. 99-3 (Tollgate CSA at 1) (Page ID #1492); R. 99-4 (Bridgemore CSA at 7) (Page ID #1527). The plaintiffs allege that these easements are exclusive and prevent any alternative provider from distributing services in the MDUs. R. 99-1 (Proposed Second Amended Complaint at 27) (Page ID #1467). To support this factual allegation, the plaintiffs have proffered a letter from the current owners of the Bridgemore development discussing the exclusive easements; R. 99-7 (Gluck Letter at 3) (Page ID #1626). Under Tennessee law, documents referred to in a written contract “may be properly considered in the construction of the contract.” Lasco Inc. v. Inman Constr. Corp.,
Second, other contractual provisions limit the ability of homeowners to communicate directly with alternate service providers, and vice-versa, ancl instead require communications to be funneled through Crystal Clear Technologies.
When viewing the CSAs as a whole, it is clear that “the purpose and effect of the agreement is to bar competing cable video providers from delivering service to the development by preventing them from ever building the infrastructure necessary to reach [the MDUs] in the first place.” Lansdowne on the Potomac Homeowners Ass’n v. OpenBand at Lansdowne, LLC,
III.
Defendants Tollgate Village Association Inc. and Bridgemore Village Owners’ Association Inc.—the respective homeowners’ associations of the MDUs—argue that the plaintiffs lack standing to assert a derivative claim against them. Br. of Tollgate Vill. Ass’n Inc. & Bridgemore Vill. Owners’ Ass’n Inc. at 29. The majority did not need to reach this argument. I do, and conclude that the plaintiffs are bringing a direct claim—not a derivative claim—and therefore this argument is inapposite.
Under Tennessee law, the difference between a direct and a derivative claim is premised on “the nature of the wrong and to whom the relief should go.” Keller v. Estate of McRedmond,
Here, the plaintiffs are asserting a direct action. They allege that they have directly suffered injuries, as opposed to the homeowners’ associations. See, e.g., R. 99-1 (Proposed Second Amended Complaint at 14) (Page ID #1454). Any recovery that the plaintiffs would win would inure to their benefit and not to the benefit of the homeowners’ associations. Consequently, this is a direct claim under Tennessee law, and the argument of the homeowners’ associations about the plaintiffs’ lack of standing to assert a derivative claim is misplaced.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent from Part II.C of the majority’s opinion, and I would reverse the district court’s denial of the plaintiffs’ motion seeking leave to file the second amended complaint on the plaintiffs’ exclusivity claim as well as on the plaintiffs’ tying claim.
.The majority, relies on a footnote in the Exclusivity Order to construe narrowly the prohibition on exclusivity clauses, It is true that the Exclusivity Order is limited to "building exclusivity clauses." Exclusivity Order at 20236 n.2. The FCC has defined building exclusivity clauses as clauses that "prohibit any other MVPD from any access whatsoever to the premises of the MDU building or real estate development.” Id. Here, the provisions in the CSAs create this outcome de facto and therefore must fall within the parameters of the Exclusivity Order, In other words, the FCC has defined building exclusivity сlauses as clauses creating outcome X. The clauses, here also produce outcome X, Therefore, these clauses must be subject to the Exclusivity Order because the underlying purpose of 47 U.S.C. § 548 and the Exclusivity Order would be eviscerated if parties could avoid the prohibition on exclusivity clauses by creating an exclusivity arrangement via the interaction of multiple contractual clauses as opposed to one clause Standing on its own.
. This is different from the exclusive marketing arrangements created by the CSAs, R, 99-3 (Tollgate CSA at 6) (Page ID #1497); R. 99-4 (Bridgemore CSA at 6) (Page ID #1532); which are permitted by the FCC.. In the Matter of Exclusive Service Contracts for Provision of Video Services in Multiple Dwelling Units and Other Real Estate Developments: Second Report and Order, 25 FCC Red. 2460, 2471-73 (2010) (hereinafter “Bulk Billing and Exclusive Marketing Arrangements Order").
. The plaintiffs also'point to the provision in each CSA that requires them to pay Crystal Clear Technologies regardless of whether they actually use the company’s services. Appellants Br. at 8; R, 99-3 (Tollgate CSA at 10) (Page ID #1501); R. 99-4 (Bridgemore CSA at 10) (Page ID #1536). The FCC allows such mandatory fees as part of acceptable bulk billing arrangements. Bulk Billing and Exclusive Marketing Arrangements Order at 2465, Thus, this provision on its own does not support the plaintiffs’ argument. The existence of a bulk billing arrangement, however, does not immunize the CSAs from the Exclusivity Order. Bulk billing arrangements must comply with the prohibitions articulated in the Exclusivity Order. Id. at 2465 & n.15. The FCC distinguished acceptable bulk billing arrangements from prohibited exclusivity clauses because acceptable bulk billing arrangements do not prevent alternative providers from providing services to homeowners nor do they stop homeowners from purchasing services from other providers. Id. at 2468.
