Cоntinental T.V., Inc. (Continental) appeals from a summary judgment in favor of G.T.E. Sylvania Incorporated (Sylvania) and John P. Maguire & Co. (Maguire). Continental challenges Sylvania’s requirement that its dealers sell Sylvania products only from approved locations. The district court found, as a matter of law, that the restriction was not unreasonable. We affirm.
I
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This appeal involves the legality of a vertical restriction imposed by Sylvania, a manufacturer of television sets, on its retailers. The restriction requires Sylvania retailers to sell Sylvania products from authorized locations only. Sylvania imposed such a location restriction on Continental, a retailer.
Continental was the only approved dealer for Sylvania televisions in San Francisco until Sylvania, dissatisfied with sales in the area, authorized a second dealer for а location within a mile of one of Continental’s San Francisco stores. Shortly thereafter Continental attempted to market Sylvania televisions from an outlet in Sacramento, California. Sylvania had authorized another retailer, Handy Andy, to sell its televisions from a Sacramento location, but refused to allow Continental to do so. Relations between Continental and Sylvania deteriorated generally, and Continental’s credit line from Maguire, the company that provided financing to dealers for Sylvania products, was reduced drastically. Continental withheld payments owed Maguire, and shortly afterwards Sylvania terminated Continental’s dealership.
II
PROCEDURAL HISTORY 1
On October 12,1965, Maguire sued Continental for the amounts owed it. Continental cross-claimed against Maguire and joined Sylvania as a defendant, suing both for damages caused by their alleged violations of section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 (1976), and on other counts not relevant to this appeal. The trial to a jury lasted several weeks. Continental was allowed to present whatever evidence it chose in support of its section 1 claim. At the conclusion of the trial, the court, relying on
United States v. Arnold Schwinn & Co.,
Sylvania, on appeal to this court, challenged the
per se
theory on which the case was submitted to the jury. We reversed, holding that the location restriction was factually distinguishable from the restrictions involved in
Schwinn,
making instruction on a
per se
theory incorrect.
GTE Sylvania, Inc. v. Continental T.V., Inc.,
The Supreme Court remanded the case to the trial court for further proceedings on the issue of whether, applying a rule-of-reason analysis, Sylvania’s location clause violated section 1 of the Sherman Act. Sylvania moved for summary judgment in the district court, contending that the undisputed facts in the entire trial record proved its policies were reasonаble as a matter of law. The district court agreed and granted Sylvania’s motion.
Continental T.V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania, Inc.,
Ill
SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Continental appeals, arguing that summary judgment was inappropriate in this case. It argues that neither the Supreme Court nor this court found that Sylvania was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, but, to the contrary, found that Sylvania’s “location practice” should be tested for legality under a rule-of-reason analysis. With this we agree. Howevеr, it does not follow necessarily that there must be a new trial. Although reasonableness is a question of fact,
Betaseed, Inc. v. U & I Inc.,
We аvoid many of Continental’s contentions that the facts are in dispute and that the district court inappropriately relied on stylized summaries from the appellate decisions, by relying entirely on Continental’s version of disputed facts (except facts found by the jury from which no appeal was taken). We dismiss Continental’s argument that it could and should be allowed to adduce on retrial additional evidence to supрort its claim under a rule-of-reason analysis that was not introduced at the first trial because of the theory under which the case was tried. Continental was not limited by the trial court as to the evidence it adduced and, on remand, failed to make any showing of additional evidence it could present when confronted with Sylvania’s summary judgment motion.
We proceed then to an analysis of whether the facts support а judgment for Sylvania as a matter of law. As an initial proposition we note that Continental, as plaintiff, bears the burden of proving that Sylvania’s location clause was an unreasonable restraint on trade. Continental is wrong in its assertion that once it had proved the existence of a vertical restraint on trade — the location restriction in Sylvania’s dealer contracts — the burden shifted to Sylvania to provе the restriction reasonable. The burden was Continental’s to prove it unreasonable as part of its case-in-chief.
Cowley v. Braden Industries, Inc.,
IV
RULE-OF-REASON ANALYSIS
The Supreme Court’s opinion in
Sylvania
directs that Sylvania’s vertical restraint be tested under the rule of reason. The traditional formulation of the rule was long ago set forth in
Chicago Board of Trade v. United States,
The true test of legality is whether the restraint imposed is such as merely regulates and perhaps thereby promotes competition or whether it is such as may suрpress or even destroy competition. To determine that question the court must ordinarily consider the facts peculiar to the business to which the restraint is applied; its condition before and after the restraint was imposed; the nature of the restraint and its effect, actual or probable. The history of the restraint, the evil believed to exist, the reason for adopting the particular remedy, the purpose or end sought to be attained, are all relevant facts. This is not because a good intention will save an otherwise objectionable regulation or the reverse; but because knowledge of intent may help the court to interpret facts and to predict consequences.
The Supreme Court’s opinion in
Sylvania
does nothing to alter this traditional analysis.
First Beverages, Inc.
v.
Royal Crown Cola Co.,
The Court recognized that vertical restraints can promote competition and may be reasonable.
Sylvania,
A. Efiect on Intrabrand Competition
Sylvania’s location clause, to the extent that it prevented Continental from establishing a retail outlet in Sacramento, would tend to harm intrabrand competition. As a result of the location clause, and the alleged conspiracy between Sylvania and Handy Andy, 8 Handy Andy was the dominant outlet for Sylvania’s goods in Sаcramento. However, Sylvania could authorize another major dealer in the Sacramento area at any time. We are not confronted, therefore, with an airtight territorial restriction. 9
Nor are we confronted with a situation where the restraint was adopted to protect a dealer from competition from price-cutters.
See Eiberger v. Sony Corp.,
*1138 jury found against Continental on its price-fixing claim.
Although Sylvania’s restraint harmed intrabrand competition to some extent, the restraint was neither overly restrictive 11 nor adopted to prevent price-discounting.
B. Effect on Interbrand Competition
1. Alleged negative effect
Continental alleges that Sylvania’s restraint also adversely affected interbrand competition. Continental contends that it was unable to enter the Sacramento market unless it could sell Sylvania’s products. Thus other television manufacturers whose products Continental also sold were denied a retail outlet in Sacramento.
Sylvania’s location clause, however, did not prohibit Continental from selling another manufacturer’s television sets in Sacramento. Continental could operate a store in Sacramento and compete with Handy Andy for retail sales in Sacramento by selling non-Sylvania products. No rule of antitrust law requires a manufacturer to permit a dealer to sell the manufacturer’s product in a specific market simply because the dealer also handles competing manufacturers’ products. 12 We find Continental’s contentions in this regard without merit.
2. Likely Beneficial Effect
To determine whether a vertical nonprice restraint benefits interbrand competition, courts must rely on inferences drawn from the assumed economic impact of a particular restraint given the market structure of the industry and the circumstances under which the restraint was adopted.
See generally
Pitofsky,
The Sylvania Case: Antitrust Analysis of Non-Price Vertical Restrictions,
78 Colum. L. Rev. 1, 33 (1978). If after сonsideration of these factors the court concludes that a manufacturer’s vertical restraint is likely to promote interbrand competition, it will generally consider the restraint reasonable.
See, e.g., United States v. Arnold Schwinn Co.,
The Supreme Court has applied this market-structure approach in its consideration of a vertical restraint in a
non-sale
transaction under a rule-of-reason analysis.
See Schwinn,
The Fifth Circuit recently applied a market-structure analysis to location restrictions imposed by a manufacturer on its dealers, concluding that the vertical restraints challenged by the plaintiff in that case were likely to improve competition.
Red Diamond Supply, Inc.
v.
Liquid Carbonic Corp.,
Applying a similar analysis to the instant case, we consider the television manufacturing industry at the time Sylvania adopted the location clause in question and at the time Sylvania enforced the restraint to prevent Cоntinental from entering the Sacramento market to sell Sylvania television sets. 15 In both 1962 and 1965 there were other viable television manufacturers available to sell to any retailers, who wished to enter the Sacramento market, and their products were interchangeable with Sylvania’s.
The precise restraints imposed by Sylvania and other manufacturers in the industry are also relevant to a determination of the еffect Sylvania’s location clause had on interbrand competition.
Red Diamond,
V
CONCLUSION
The district court concluded as a matter of law that Sylvania’s location clause was *1140 not an unreasonable restraint on trade. We agree. In fact, Sylvania’s restraint appears reasonable. The restraint was likely to promote interbrand competition given the market structure in the television manufacturing industry; the use of a location clause was one оf the less restrictive methods Sylvania might have used; and the restraint was not adopted for the purpose of protecting its dealers from price-cutters. We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. A more complete history of this lengthy litigation may be found in three earlier decisions in this case. See
Continental T. V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania, Inc.,
. In
Schwinn,
the Court considered a vertical restriction that applied to both sale and non-sale,
i.e.,
consignment transactions.
. The jury found for the defendant on Continental’s claim that Sylvania had conspired to restrain trade through a combination of location restrictions and price-fixing. The jury also found for Sylvania on Continental’s state law claims.
. The сourt explicitly distinguished between vertical price restrictions and vertical nonprice restrictions, indicating that a
per se
rule would continue to apply to the former.
. There must be no genuine disputes as to material facts and, on the undisputed facts, the movant must be entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c);
SEC v. Seaboard Corp.,
Although the Supreme Court has indicated that summary judgment should be used sparingly in complex antitrust litigation,
Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.,
We note also that summary judgment has been granted in this circuit on a rеcord much more' sparse than this one in a
post-Sylvania
case involving a claim of antitrust violation based on a location clause.
Golden Gate Acceptance Corp. v. General Motors Corp.,
. We disregard Continental’s contentions that it should be allowed to retry the case under a per se theory arguably applicable to resale price maintenance claims and horizontal allocation or boycott claims. As to the former, the special jury verdict on this claim, decided against Continental, was not appealed. As to the latter, Continental made no such allegations in its original case. It cannot do so now.
. The Supreme Court explained that vertical restraints can be used by an established manufacturer “to induce retailers to engage in promotional activities or to provide service and repair facilities necessary to the efficient marketing of its product.”
Sylvania,
. For purposes of its summary judgment motion, Sylvania conceded that there was a conspiracy between it and Handy Andy at the time Continental requested permission to enter the Sacramento market.
. An airtight restriction would exist if the location clause preventing Sylvania dealers from selling Sylvania goods from other than authorized locations were coupled with an exclusive franchise arrangement whereby Sylvania promised Handy Andy not to аuthorize any other dealer to sell in the Sacramento area. Or, indeed, other proscriptions would have been even more restrictive, such as limiting the competing products the Sylvania dealer could sell or limiting customers to residents of the territory. See Zelek, Stern, and Dunfree, A Rule of Reason Decision Model After Sylvania, 68 Calif. L. Rev. 13, 34 (1980). Whether an airtight territorial restriction would be treated differently than a non-airtight restriction, is a question we need not decide. See generally Pitofsky, The Sylvania Case: Antitrust Analysis of Non-Price Vertical Restrictions, 78 Colum. L. Rev. 1, 34 (1978) (arguing that a per se rule should be appliеd to airtight territorial restrictions).
. Both
Eiberger
and
Cernuto
involved the termination of distributorships by product manufacturers. Although vertical in form, these restraints were held unlawful primarily because they constituted a means for enforcing an essentially horizontal system of price- control among distributors. The
Cernuto
court expressly grounded its imposition of antitrust liability on an observation that “although we are confronted here with an apparently verticаl conspiracy, the principal impact of that conspiracy ... is horizontal rather than vertical in nature.”
No similar elements of hоrizontal price-fixing appear in the present case, which we instead analyze under the more lenient test applied to purely vertical territorial restraints.
. We do not require that a restriction be the least restrictive alternative available in order to be reasonable. Such a rule would place an unreasonable and impractical burden on a manufacturer desiring to impose sоme vertical restraint in order to promote its position vis a vis its competitors. The restraint adopted by Sylvania in this case, as noted by the Supreme Court, was “neither the least nor the most restrictive provision that it could have used.”
Sylvania,
. Although not dispositive, the exclusive dealership precedents,
see Sylvania,
. In reaching its conclusion the Court considered the following:
(1) that othеr competitive bicycles are available to distributors and retailers in the marketplace, and there is no showing that they are not in all respects reasonably interchangeable as articles of competitive commerce with the Schwinn product; (2) that Schwinn distributors and retailers handle other brands of bicycles as well as Schwinn’s; (3) in the present posture of the case we cannot rule that the vertical restraints are unreasonable because of their intermixture with price fixing; and (4) we *1139 cannot disagree with the findings of the trial court that competition made necessary the challenged program; that it was justified by, and went no further than required by, competitive pressures; and that its net effect is to preserve and not to damage competition in the bicycle market. Schwinn,338 U.S. at 381-82 ,87 S.Ct. at 1866-1867 (footnote omitted).
. Although the court was reviewing a trial court’s decision to award judgment notwithstanding the verdict on a
state
antitrust claim, the court applied federal antitrust principles.
Red Diamond Supply, Inc.,
. Sylvania adopted a new marketing policy in 1962, which included use of the location clause arrangement. Continental attempted to enter the Sacramento market and was terminated by Sylvania in 1965. There is nothing in the record indicating that the structure of the television manufacturing industry, as opposеd to the demand for television sets, changed between 1962 and 1965.
. We do not wish to suggest that the purpose of a manufacturer in adopting a vertical restraint is dispositive.
Cf. Borger v. Yamaha International Corp.,
