Case Information
*2 Before BIRCH, KRAVITCH and CUDAHY , Circuit Judges. [*]
KRAVITCH, Circuit Judge:
In this appeal we must decide whether the appellants, individuals who rented U-Haul equipment for in-town moving, properly stated a claim for resale *3 price maintenance against defendants, U-Haul International, Inc. (“U-Haul”) and certain subsidiaries and officers of U-Haul, under Section 1 of the Sherman Act.
I. Facts
The two appeals before us arise from three cases originally consolidated by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation for pretrial proceedings in the Southern District of Florida. Each case is a class action alleging a federal [1]
antitrust claim for resale price maintenance against U-Haul International, Inc. (“U- Haul”). The Day and Ceh actions name only U-Haul as a defendant. The Boyle action includes additional defendants U-Haul Company of Pennsylvania (“UHCP”), Republic Western Insurance Company (“RWIC”), E. Joseph Shoen (“Shoen”), and John T. Taylor (“Taylor”).
The complaints’ allegations are identical, and read as follows. U-Haul rents its branded trucks, vans, and other moving equipment for both one-way and in- *4 town moving. U-Haul conducts its rental business through a network of about 1,200 company-owned rental centers and about 14,500 independent dealers. The independent dealers are typically gas stations, hardware stores, storage centers and other businesses, not owned by U-Haul, who rent U-Haul moving equipment to the public.
U-Haul fixes flat rates for in-town rentals based on the size of the truck rented. The plaintiffs allege that U-Haul conspired with the other defendants and the independent dealers to fix the prices at which U-Haul moving equipment is rented to the public for in-town rentals. In an effort to establish such a conspiracy, the plaintiffs each made the following allegation in their respective complaints:
The independent dealers who contract with U-Haul to rent its Moving Equipment to the public typically conduct their own businesses, such as gas stations and hardware stores, and provide U-Haul Moving Equipment rentals and Coverage Sales pursuant to agreements with U-Haul and/or its subsidiaries. The dealers are separate and independent businesses that are neither owned nor employed by U- Haul, and such dealers have entrepreneurial independence from U- Haul, despite the fact that some agreements between U-Haul and the independent dealers purport to label the relationship as a form of agency. Notwithstanding such labeling, there is nothing about such relationships that supports such a legal conclusion. The independent dealers who rent U-Haul Moving Equipment to the public do not have the legal power to act for or on behalf of U-Haul or its subsidiaries and do not hold themselves out to the public as agents of U-Haul. Further, in its advertising and marketing efforts conducted for and/or together with the independent dealers, U-Haul does not indicate that such dealers are its agents. In fact, they are not agents of U-Haul and, *5 as indicated above, such businesses compete with U-Haul for the rental business of plaintiffs and members of the Antitrust Class. The various defendants each moved individually to dismiss all the pending actions under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. With their motions, the defendants attached a copy of a standard form dealership contract between U-Haul and its independent dealers, on the basis that the contract was referenced in and central to the complaint. In their responses, the plaintiffs argued that the motions should be converted into motions for summary judgment under Rule 56(f) to enable them to respond properly, and sought to introduce several affidavits. The district court declined to convert the motions.
The district court dismissed the federal antitrust claims in the Day and Ceh actions against U-Haul on November 21, 2003. Plaintiff Ceh filed a timely notice [2]
of appeal from the November 21 judgment. On January 12, 2004, the district court executed a judgment that extended the reasoning and outcome of the November 21 order to the Boyle action. Plaintiffs Boyle and Day filed timely notices of appeal from the January 12 judgment.
II. Standard of Review
We review de novo a district court’s dismissal of a complaint for failure to
state a claim pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), construing the complaint in the
light most favorable to the plaintiff and accepting as true all facts which the
plaintiff alleges. See Hishon v. King & Spalding,
III. Analysis
A. Motions to Convert to Summary Judgment Appellants argue that the trial court should have converted the motions to dismiss into motions for summary judgment so that they might introduce affidavits and engage in discovery. Appellants claim that such evidence was necessary for *7 them to develop a record regarding the fact-intensive issue of whether the purported agency in the case was a sham.
The district court generally must convert a motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment if it considers materials outside the complaint. Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b). The appellants assert that the district court should not have considered the contents of the dealership contract without converting the motions to motions for summary judgment and thereby affording the appellants full discovery.
In Horsley v. Feldt,
B. Motions to Dismiss
Section 1 of the Sherman Act proscribes any “contract, combination . . . or
conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce.” 15 U.S.C. § 1. One type of § 1
violation is resale price maintenance, where a seller requires a buyer to charge a
specific price or price level when that buyer re-sells the goods to another. The
Supreme Court first declared resale price maintenance illegal per se in Dr. Miles
Medical Co. v. John D. Park & Sons Co.,
It is well-settled that “genuine contracts of agency” do not constitute resale
price maintenance because the “owner of an article” is permitted to “fix[] the price
by which his agents transfer the title from him directly to the consumer.” United
States v. General Electric Co.,
Appellants argue that the present case does not present a genuine agency,
but rather a sham agency. The Supreme Court announced in Simpson v. United
Oil Co.,
Whether U-Haul’s relationship with its independent dealers is a genuine
*10
agency is a question of law which depends on the nature of that relationship. See
12 S. Williston, Williston on Contracts § 35:2 (4th ed. 1999). We are not bound
by the legal conclusions in the complaint that the relationship is not an agency or
that the independent dealers do not have “legal power” to act on behalf of U-Haul.
We must look instead at the pleaded facts to determine whether Appellants’ claim
can withstand a motion to dismiss. See Davila v. Delta Air Lines,
In Simpson, the gasoline retailers assumed virtually all the obligations of
ownership of the gasoline in their possession, including the need to insure the
gasoline against losses.
Appellants argue that U-Haul’s behavior here is like the oil company’s behavior in Simpson. We disagree. In the present case, the facts pleaded in the complaint lead us to the conclusion that the relationships between U-Haul and its independent dealers were genuine agencies.
U-Haul agrees in the dealership contract to bear the risk of liability incurred
by its independent dealers’ U-Haul rental operations, and to assume responsibility
for loss due to theft, vandalism, or other damage to U-Haul equipment in their
possession. Appellants make much of the contract’s exclusions for negligence; it
is perfectly reasonable, however, for U-Haul to hold its dealers liable for damage
to equipment in their possession when that damage is due to a dealer’s own
negligence. U-Haul also pays all taxes on the moving equipment. Because U-
Haul continues to bear the costs of ownership of the equipment, it can fairly be
*12
said to retain ownership of that equipment. In renting the equipment, therefore,
the independent dealers are acting as U-Haul’s genuine agents, making U-Haul’s
own property available to the public for rental. Ownership (whether actual or
constructive as in Simpson) never passes to the independent dealer or the renter.
The Supreme Court’s chief concern in Simpson was the coercive power
wielded by the oil company. Id. at 21. The contract in Simpson was coercive in
that termination of the contract would end a gasoline retailer’s business, which
was entirely dependent on a “lease agreement” with United Oil.
*13 The appellants argue that the dealers’ independence actually supports their case that there is no agency relationship. This argument is foreclosed, however, by a decision of this court’s predecessor, Hardwick v. Nu-Way Oil Co., 589 F.2d 806 (5th Cir. 1979). In Hardwick, we held that the plaintiff, a gas station [4]
operator, was an agent of the defendant oil company notwithstanding the fact that the operator was an independent businesswoman with respect to her convenience- store operation. Id. at 811.
Based on the facts contained in the complaint in this case, we conclude that the relationships between U-Haul and its independent dealers were agency relationships. As such, neither U-Haul nor any of its employees or subsidaries can be found liable for a violation of the Sherman Act. The district court’s dismissals of the Sherman Act claims against all the appellees are therefore AFFIRMED.
Notes
[*] Honorable Richard D. Cudahy, United States Circuit Judge for the Seventh Circuit, sitting by designation.
[1] Plaintiffs Day and Boyle commenced the underlying action in this case on July 23, 2002, in the Southern District of Florida, as Day v. U-Haul International, Inc., No. 02-80689-CV (S.D. Fla.) (“Day”). Plaintiff Ceh commenced his action on October 4, 2002, as Ceh v. U-Haul International, Inc., No. 02-CV-01977 (S.D. Cal.) (“Ceh”). The JPML transferred Ceh to the Southern District of Florida by order filed March 5, 2003 for coordinated or consolidated proceedings. The district court then consolidated the cases and ordered that the Day complaint was to serve as the operative complaint for purposes of the multidistrict litigation. Later, on August 18, 2003, plaintiffs Day and Boyle from the Day action filed a second overlapping antitrust action, also in the Southern District of Florida, captioned Boyle v. Shoen, No. 03- 80773-CV (S.D. Fla.) (“Boyle”). The Boyle complaint added additional defendants. The district court consolidated Boyle with the existing multidistrict action. The allegations in the three complaints that are relevant to this appeal, specifically those regarding agency, are identical.
[2] The district court’s November 21 order also dismissed actions brought by three other plaintiffs: Kennedy, Schenk, and Hicks. This court dismissed their appeals for lack of jurisdiction on April 7, 2004.
[3] Appellants argue that the “vastness” of a marketing network is a factor which calls for
“stricter scrutiny” under Simpson. Appellants cite Greene v. General Foods Corp.,
[4] In Bonner v. City of Pritchard,
