OPINION
Three former sales representatives of Pendleton Woolen Mills (“Pendleton”) have filed an action against the company charging that the manner of and motivation behind their termination violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), as amended, 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq., the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1 & 2, and unspecified state contract or common law rights. Pendleton moves under Rule 12(c), Fed.R. Civ.P., for judgment on the pleadings as to three of the four causes of action alleged in the complaint. Plaintiff cross-moves under Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., to amend the complaint. As the following analysis will indicate, Pendleton has not established that plaintiffs cannot plead circumstances entitling them to recover on the claims alleged in the complaint, nor has Pendleton proved that those claims are entirely time-barred. Defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, therefore, is granted in part and denied in part without prejudice to its renewal as a motion for summary judgment after the completion of discovery. Plaintiffs’ cross-motion for leave to amend the complaint is granted.
BACKGROUND
For the purposes of this motion, the Court must accept the factual allegations of the complaint as true. In the complaint, plaintiffs allege the following. Pendleton Woolen Mills is an Oregon corporation which manufactures men’s and women’s wearing apparel and various other woolen goods. Pendleton employed James Donahue, William Perez, and Harry Thornton as members of the nationwide sales force it uses to service its retail dealers throughout the United States. Pendleton hired Donahue in 1959, Thornton in 1965, and Perez in 1971. All three plaintiffs claim to have *1427 relied at the time they became Pendleton sales representatives “upon the representation, understanding, and custom and usage in the trade that they would continue to receive commissions at the rate of 5% of sales on the lines and in the territories assigned to them, that Pendleton would not unreasonably interfere with their ability to generate sales, and that they would not be terminated without good cause.” Complaint at 1129.
Within a nine month span from November 1982 to August 1983, and shortly after it implemented a new plan known as “Management by Objective,” id. at 1142, Pendleton terminated Donahue, who was then 52, Perez, who was then 53, and Thornton, who was then 56. Pendleton filled all three vacated positions with younger men. Plaintiffs assert that their unfavorable evaluations merely served as a pretext for their dismissals since Pendleton nonetheless retained other, younger sales representatives who had compiled poorer sales records.
Plaintiffs allege furthermore that Pendleton has resumed an illegal resale price maintenance agreement that had been the subject of an earlier investigation by the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”). Following a 1979 investigation of certain marketing practices carried on by Pendleton, the FTC had furnished Pendleton with a copy of a draft complaint charging violations of the Federal Trade Commission Act (“FTCA”). Shortly thereafter, Pendleton entered into a consent order with the FTC that required the company, among other things, to cease maintaining, fixing, or enforcing resale prices for its products and to refrain from monitoring or sanctioning dealers who did not comply with pricing directives. In re Pendleton Woolen Mills, Inc., 94 F.T.C. Decisions 229 (1979). Plaintiffs allege that despite the consent decree, Pendleton continues to survey resale prices, to coerce retail stores and sales representative to set and maintain retail prices decided by Pendleton, and to refuse Pendleton products to discounters.
Plaintiffs contend that through a system of threats and rewards, Pendleton forced its sales force to “do the dirty work or face reprisals” in implementing this retail price maintenance plan. Plaintiffs directly link their termination to the illegal scheme they describe by contending that “[o]n information and belief, Pendleton terminated the plaintiffs in part ... to make an example of them for those who refuse to actively participate in Pendleton’s continuing violations.” Id. 1151. 1
From the foregoing allegations, plaintiffs assert four causes of action. The first cause of action charges Pendleton with having embarked on a program to terminate its older sales personnel and replace them with younger employees in violation of the ADEA. 2 In the second cause of action, plaintiffs allege that Pendleton violated the antitrust laws in resuming activities that constitute a resale price mainte *1428 nance agreement. In the third count, which plaintiffs characterize as a claim for breach of contract, plaintiffs aver that Pendleton violated the terms and conditions of their employment and breached implied covenants of good faith dealing by terminating them. Plaintiffs maintain in addition that their wrongful terminations tarnished their reputations for reliability, dependability, and good service in their trade as sales representatives, therby destroying the goodwill the plaintiffs had built up over the years with their accounts. As a fourth, tort, cause of action, plaintiffs contend that “Pendleton disseminated false stigmatizing reasons for the actions taken against plaintiffs ... in reckless or grossly negligent disregard for the plaintiffs’ rights, while concealing Pendleton’s intentional violations of law as the underlying motivation of said actions____” Id. ¶ 57.
Pendleton moves under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c) for judgment on the pleadings on several grounds. First, Pendleton asserts that plaintiffs lack standing to assert the antitrust violations alleged in the second cause of action. Second, Pendleton contends that the fourth cause of action fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Finally, Pendleton seeks to dismiss the second, third, and fourth causes of action at least in part as time-barred. Plaintiff cross-moves for leave to amend the complaint to add specific allegations concerning the operation on Pendleton’s supposed resale price maintenance agreement and to include specific instances of derogatory statements made by Pendleton managers about plaintiffs. The Court will address seriatim defendant's objections to the original complaint and then will consider the amendments to the complaint that plaintiffs have proposed.
DISCUSSION
I. Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings
The Court may grant a motion for judgment on the pleadings only if it appears that “the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
A. Antitrust Standing
Pendleton contends that the Supreme Court’s most recent decision on antitrust standing,
Associated General Contractors of California, Inc., v. California State Council of Carpenters,
Plaintiffs’ complaint suggests two different antitrust violations by Pendleton in connection with the distribution system described above. The first, which plaintiffs identify explicitly in the complaint, involves the resale price maintenance scheme allegedly conducted by Pendleton. The second, which is arguably implied by plaintiffs’ allegations, concerns interference by Pendleton in the labor market for clothing salesmen. Each requires a distinct standing analysis.
1. Resale Price Maintenance Agreement
Resale price maintenance schemes operate to prevent price competí
*1429
tion between the various dealers handling a given manufacturer’s products. Generally in implementing such schemes, the manufacturer “suggests” an appropriate resale price and enforces dealer acquiescence in that price through some form of coercive sanction, which might range from delayed shipments to termination.
See
VII P. Areeda & D. Turner,
Antitrust Law
II14381442 (1986) (“VII Areeda & Turner”). Although such schemes directly coerce retailers, who must charge the price suggested by the manufacturer if they wish to continue carrying the product line, consumers ultimately pay the economic cost of such conduct in the higher prices set by the manufacturer. Resale price maintenance schemes are
per se
unlawful.
3
Dr. Miles Medical Co. v. John D. Park & Sons Co.,
In the complaint, plaintiffs allege that Pendleton has resumed the activities first investigated by the FTC in 1979 and that those activities constitute an unlawful resale price maintenance agreement.
4
Plaintiffs further allege that Pendleton uses its sales force to implement the pricing system, to monitor dealer compliance with the system, and to sanction non-coop
*1430
erative dealers. Retailers and consumers affected by this conduct certainly would have standing to challenge such pricing arrangements.
Reiter v. Sonotone,
Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15, permits “[a]ny person who shall be injured in his business or property by reason of anything forbidden in the antitrust laws” to sue in the federal district courts.
6
Despite the apparent sweep of this language, judicial interpretation has elaborated certain requirements a plaintiff must meet to have standing to bring an antitrust action. The Supreme Court most recently addressed questions of antitrust standing in
Blue Shield of Virginia v. McCready,
In
McCready,
The Supreme Court summarized the development of two judicial “limitation[s] on the availability of the § 4 remedy to particular classes of persons and for redress of particular forms of injury.”
McCready, supra,
MeCready
itself involved a plaintiff who belonged to Blue Shield of Virginia, a prepaid health plan to which her employer subscribed. Blue Shield is an association of participating physicians who sponsor and administer the plan. Under the terms of the plan, Blue Shield would reimburse members for psychiatric services, but would limit payments to psychologists to those billed through a supervising physician. Plaintiff sought treatment by a psychologist and submitted a claim for reimbursement. Blue Shield denied the claim. Plaintiff then faced the dilemma, as posed by the Court, of being reimbursed for a service she had not chosen or of paying for the treatment she preferred.
*1431
The Court in
McCready
analyzed the issue of plaintiffs right to sue in light of the applicable limitations on Clayton Act § 4 standing. Writing for the majority, Justice Brennan first found no danger of double recovery.
Turning to the “conceptually more difficult question” of whether plaintiff had sustained injury too remote from the antitrust violation, the Court articulated a comprehensive inquiry to determine proximity.
In applying that elusive concept [of proximate cause] to this statutory action, we look (1) to the physical and economic nexus between the alleged violation and the harm to the plaintiff, and (2), more particularly, to the relationship of the injury alleged with those forms of injury about which Congress was likely to have been concerned in making defendant’s conduct unlawful and in providing a private remedy under § 4.
The Court immediately disposed of defendants’ contention that only psychologists had been proximately injured by the defendants’ purported conduct. That the goal of the conspirators was to prevent penetration of psychologists into that part of the mental health care market defendants sought to preserve did not necessarily render plaintiffs’ injury remote.
Denying reimbursement to subscribers for the cost of treatment was the very means by which it is alleged that Blue Shield sought to achieve its illegal ends. The harm to McCready and her class was clearly forseeable; indeed, it was a necessary step in effecting the ends of the alleged illegal conspiracy. Where the injury alleged is so integral an aspect of the conspiracy alleged, there can be no question but that the loss was precisely “the type of loss that the claimed violations ... would be likely to cause.”
McCready’s injury furthermore satisfied the second requirement for proximity, that the injury reflect Congress’ core concern to protect competition. The Court found that McCready’s injury “was inextricably intertwined with the injury the conspirators sought to inflict on psychologists and the psychotherapy market,” and therefore fell “squarely within the area of Congressional concern.”
In
Associated General, supra,
The Supreme Court in
Associated General
reversed the Ninth Circuit which had found standing on defendants’ alleged intention to injure the unions and the resulting foreseeable harm. The Court again began its analysis under § 4 of the Clayton Act by reviewing the line of cases interpreting its reach, and focused particularly on the evolving concept of proximate cause. Although the Court found that the complaint alleged a causal connection between the antitrust violation and the unions’ injury, as well as an intent to harm the union, it nonetheless found that other factors relevant to the question of antitrust standing dictated dismissal of the complaint in that instance. The five factors that comprised the Court’s analysis included (1) the nature of the alleged injury, (2) the indirectness of the injury, (3) the existence of an identifiable class of persons whose self-interest would normally motivate them to bring the action, (4) the speculative nature of the damage claim, and (5) the potential complexity of accounting for damages resulting from defendants’ behavior in order to avoid the possibility of double recovery.
Under the first prong of its analysis, the Court concluded that the nature of the unions’ injury did not fall squarely within the area of Congressional concern. First, it was not clear to the Court whether the unions’ interests would be served or dis-served by enhanced competition in the market for general contractors, the market alleged to have been restrained.
The attenuated connection between the unions’ asserted injuries, unspecified harm to its business activities, and the alleged antitrust violation did not satisfy the second factor of the Court’s analysis which required that the injury be direct. The unions averred injuries that resulted only indirectly and derivatively from the harm inflicted by the general contractors on certain subcontractors who were themselves
*1433
the object of the alleged coercion.
Those subcontractors subject to Associated’s coercion sustained the more direct harm. They therefore constituted an identifiable group with sufficient interest to prosecute any antitrust violation on their own.
The indirect causal link between Associated’s actions and the unions’ alleged injuries to business activities made any determination of damages highly speculative. The complaint never alleged any concrete harm, as, for example, that the unions had lost any of their aggregate share of the subcontracting market or that Associated had conducted a boycott of union firms.
The fifth factor of the analysis in
Associated General
reflected the Supreme Court’s earlier holding in
Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois,
Both
McCready
and
Associated General
disavowed the “target area” test that had previously been employed in several circuits, including the Second, to determine antitrust standing. Judge Friendly, writing for the panel in the first antitrust standing case to be presented to the Second Circuit after
Associated General,
advised that “courts of this circuit would be better, indeed are compelled, to follow the approaches adumbrated by the Supreme Court in
McCready
and
Associated General
without concern whether the results are consistent with language in earlier Second Circuit cases.”
Crimpers Promotions, Inc. v. Home Box Office, Inc.,
The circuit panel in
Crimpers
held that plaintiffs there had antitrust standing. The case involved the sale of cable television programming. As plaintiff’s complaint described the market, independent television producers create programs which they sell either to the major networks or to the cable pay television companies. Plaintiff, a trade show operator, had sought to arrange a trade show to bring together in one place independent and network television producers with the cable system operators who might ultimately buy and broadcast television programs. The complaint further alleged that defendants Home Box Office (“HBO”) and Showtime Inc. (“Showtime”), two companies that buy and package much of the independent programming, had dissuaded cable operators and producers from appearing at the trade show, had threatened to boycott producers who attended, and had described the show as a fraud to both cable operators and independent producers.
Rather than try to integrate the two antitrust standing tests, Judge Friendly considered Crimpers’ standing under
McCready
and
Associated General
in turn. Under the first
McCready
factor, Judge Friendly concluded that granting plaintiff standing would not permit double recovery. The profits lost on the trade show, the circuit panel held, would not in any manner overlap with the producers’ losses from the
*1434
low prices offered for their products or the excessive cost and tying arrangement imposed on the cable system operators.
Nor, under the second factor discussed in
McCready,
was Crimpers’ injury remote. Because Crimpers had sought “to forge a link in a chain of the sale of programming, to wit, direct contact between program producers and cable television stations,” and because it was alleged that the defendants directly intended to eliminate Crimpers, the circuit court held that “the injury to Crimpers was even more ‘direct’ than to the producers or stations,” who concededly would have had standing.
Moreover, given the directness of the injury, it followed as a matter of course that the injury fell within the ambit of Congressional concern. Defendants had conceded that the alleged activities, insofar as they affected producers or cable system operators were within the ambit of Congressional concern. The circuit court “[saw] no reason why Congress, had it considered the matter, would not have been equally concerned with protecting a company like Crimpers which undertook to create a business that would have mitigated the precise injury ... against which Congress sought to protect.”
Turning to
Associated General,
Judge Friendly concluded that Crimpers satisfied the factors identified there as well. Focusing first on the nature of plaintiff’s injury, Judge Friendly analogized Crimpers’ alleged harm, which supposedly had resulted from defendants’ antitrust conspiracy to prevent direct dealing between cable operators and producers, to the harm McCready had asserted, which stemmed directly from defendants’ attempt to limit entrance into the market for mental health services. The conduct causing injury to both plaintiffs contravened the intent of the Sherman Act to assure customers the benefit of price competition. Plaintiffs’ injuries thereby implicated the central interest of the antitrust laws in protecting the economic freedom of market participants.
Turning to the directness of the injury, the court further found that defendant’s efforts toward limiting face-to-face transactions between producers and cable system operators by disrupting plaintiff’s trade show directly harmed the plaintiff. Crimpers did not allege an attenuated injury such as that asserted by the unions in
Associated General
which derived from the direct harm to unionized contractors and subcontractors. Crimpers, therefore, was in no way “remote” from the market affected by defendants’ conduct.
Next, the circuit panel considered whether there were other groups that might have cause to challenge defendants’ conduct. Despite the existence of at least two classes of potential plaintiffs, the cable system operators and the independent producers, who might also have an incentive to challenge defendants’ actions, the court granted Crimpers standing. The producers and cable system operators, the court surmised, could only speculate as to the damages they might have suffered from the failed trade show and therefore only Crimpers would have standing to allege the injury caused by the trade show boycott.
McCready, Associated General, and Crimpers all point toward finding standing in the instant case. In the first place, the suit presents no prospect of the double recovery that concerned the Supreme Court in Illinois Brick, supra, and which forms the initial inquiry under McCready. Plaintiffs here allege loss of employment and commissions, damage to their professional reputations, and resulting emotional distress. None of those alleged injuries overlap with the economic injuries that would have been suffered by discount houses also victimized by the resale price agreements plaintiffs allege. Similarly, plaintiffs’ purported losses do not duplicate consumer losses resulting from the higher prices that may ultimately have been paid for Pendleton products as a consequence of defendant’s price maintenance scheme.
Plaintiffs’ asserted injuries are not remote. As indicated above, McCready broadened the group of plaintiffs who have antitrust standing beyond those in the target area of the alleged anticompetitive conduct. Plaintiffs need not aver that the injury they suffered reflects the intended anticompetitive effect of the alleged antitrust violation as long as they participated in the portion of the market endangered by the purported breakdown of competition in some relevant fashion sufficient to meet the proximity test.
Under the first part of McCready’s proximity analysis, the complaint here alleges a close “physical and economic nexus” between the antitrust violation claimed—the implementation of the resale price maintenance agreement—and plaintiffs’ injuries—their termination as an example to other sales representatives to cooperate. The complaint describes the central role of Pendleton’s sales force in imposing the averred resale price maintenance agreement on Pendleton retailers. The resale price maintenance agreement that plaintiffs allege required the cooperation, voluntary or otherwise, of the Pendleton sales representatives. It is reasonable to assume that Pendleton could have foreseen reluctance to participate on the part of those of the sales representatives who recognized the program’s illegality. Pendleton faced the choice either of securing cooperation through threats or of terminating recalcitrant representatives.
8
Coercing these plaintiffs and the rest of the sales force into implementing the scheme “was the very means by which it is alleged that [Pendleton] sought to achieve its illegal ends. ... [I]ndeed, it was a necessary step in effectuating the ends of the alleged illegal conspiracy.”
McCready, supra,
McCready, in the second prong of its proximity analysis, further emphasized that the injury inflicted on the plaintiff must be of a type that Congress would have sought to redress. Read together, McCready and Crimpers point out the interdependence of the proximity inquiries. The two cases suggest that when the complaint describes a sufficiently tight nexus under the first prong, as when injuring the plaintiff is the means of perpetrating the ultimate constraint on competition or where injuring the plaintiff prevents plaintiff from alleviating restraints on competition, the conclusion of Congressional concern follows as a matter of course, unless, as in Associated General, Congress has already provided specific redress for the harm al *1436 leged by the plaintiff in another body of law.
Plaintiffs in the instant action do not allege either that they consume appreciable quantities of Pendleton products or that they produce competing merchandise. They nonetheless occupy a position similar to that of McCready and Crimpers. As had defendants in McCready, Pendleton used plaintiffs as the very means of enforcing the alleged scheme to restrain competition. In this important respect, plaintiffs plead a tighter nexus between their harm and Pendleton’s conduct than do either the affected retailers or other manufacturers, two groups who would also have standing. Although plaintiffs here were not working to create an alternative market, as was Crimpers, granting them standing deprives defendant of its easiest method of pursuing its alleged objective of setting retail prices. Because plaintiffs claim to be the very means by which Pendleton imposed the resale price maintenance scheme and because plaintiffs’ terminations are the sort of injury that enforcing the alleged antitrust violation at issue would entail, the Court concludes that the harm is one with which Congress would be concerned.
That plaintiffs also allege wrongful termination claims under the ADEA does not undercut the argument for antitrust standing. The ADEA addresses only one of a myriad of possible wrongful termination claims. Congress has enacted no comprehensive statutory scheme to cover at will employment relations similar in scope to that which governs union relations with employers.
A straightforward analysis using the factors announced in
Associated General, supra,
As alleged, plaintiffs’ injuries stem directly from Pendleton’s purported actions in implementing and enforcing its resale price maintenance scheme as required by the second factor of Associated General. Plaintiffs stood in a direct employer-employee relationship with Pendleton. This relationship contrasts with the sort of derivative relationship, as, for example, that of a supplier to an antitrust victim or that of a product or process licensor to a boycott victim, that courts have held will not support antitrust standing.
The third factor in Associated General looks to the existence of other groups with sufficient motivation to sue. In the posture of this case, the discount stores boycotted by Pendleton and perhaps even certain consumers might have sufficient motivation to bring an antitrust action. Nonetheless, the existence of the independent producers and the cable system operators in Crimpers, two identifiable groups also potentially so motivated, did not prevent the Second Circuit from finding standing as to the plaintiff in that case. Neither discount stores nor consumers would have standing to assert the distinctive claims of damages sought by plaintiffs. In addition, terminated employees such as the plaintiffs here may well have a stronger interest in seeking redress than would retailers who may also have been harmed by defendant’s purported conduct. 9 The Supreme Court’s concern in Associated General about extending standing to ever more remote parties simply is not presented on the allegations before the Court because plaintiffs directly participated in the clothing market involved and, as Pendleton employees, plaintiffs were of necessity intimately involved with at least some of the details of the resale price maintenance scheme.
The fourth factor in
Associated General
concerns whether a plaintiff’s claim would force the court to speculate about damages. Computing plaintiffs’ lost earnings in this action poses fewer difficulties than would estimating the profits Crimpers expected to make from the planned trade
*1437
show, an exercise which the Second Circuit found “should be proveable under the liberal principles long recognized in antitrust cases.”
Crimpers, supra,
Finally, as discussed in a prior portion of this analysis, plaintiffs’ complaint presents no danger of double recovery under the fifth factor of Associated General. All five factors, with the possible exception of the existence of other classes of plaintiffs with motivation to sue which the circuit court in Crimpers held not to be controlling, standing is appropriate.
The Ninth Circuit, the only other circuit that has addressed the question of employee standing to assert an antitrust claim for termination for refusal to participate in illegal antitrust actions subsequent to both
McCready
and
Associated General
reached a similar conclusion.
Ostrofe v. H.S. Crocker Co, Inc.,
Of particular relevance to the standing question posed in the instant case is the Ninth Circuit’s discussion of Ostrofe’s injury and its relation to the antitrust violations he was alleging. The court first considered whether plaintiff had suffered antitrust injury, as defined by the Supreme Court in McCready, and found that he had.
The rationale of Blue Shield favors Ostrofe’s right to sue. The Court’s refusal to limit recovery to those whose injuries resulted from the anti-competitive effect of the violation undercuts conceptual objections to allowing suit by an employee discharged for refusing to effectuate an antitrust violation. The Court’s extension of the right to sue to persons whose injury is a “necessary step” and the “means” employed by the conspirators to achieve their anticompetitive end provides a principled basis for recognizing Ostrofe’s right to sue.
******
As sales manager of one of the label manufacturers, Ostrofe was an essential participant in the scheme to eliminate competition in the marketing of labels by fixing prices and allocating customers. It could not succeed without his active cooperation. When Ostrofe sold labels to customers not allocated to his employer and at prices below those agreed upon, his discharge was a necessary means to achieve the conspirators’ illegal end as well as an integral and inextricable part of the anticompetitive scheme.
Although Ostrofe was not a competitor or consumer in the labels market, the injury he sustained was such an integral part of the scheme to eliminate competition in that market as to constitute “antitrust injury” as that concept is developed in Blue Shield.
This Court sees no principled way to distinguish Ostrofe from plaintiffs in the present case. All stood in the same employer-employee relationship, alleged that they suffered injury as a result of their employer’s alleged attempt to violate the antitrust laws, and furthermore had been the very method by which the employer attempted to manipulate the markets involved.
*1438
Defendants’ attempt to rely on contrary circuit precedent of the Seventh Circuit or on any of the number of district court cases cited in their brief is misplaced. The Seventh Circuit decided the case of
In re Industrial Gas Antitrust Litigation,
2. Direct interference in the service market
An employee who is the target of a boycott of his or her services that is part of a larger conspiracy to restrain or monopolize trade and commerce may challenge the conspiracy as a whole even though the injuries did not result from the restraint on competition that was the principal object of the conspiracy.
Radovich v. National Football League,
As will be elaborated below, plaintiffs’ fourth cause of action sounds in common law tort. Plaintiffs propose to amend their fourth claim to allege specifically that Pendleton made and published defamatory statements with the purpose and intent of “deter[ring] individuals, firms and accounts with whom plaintiffs seek to do business from dealing with plaintiffs.” Proposed Amended Complaint at H 76. Plaintiffs would further allege that Pendleton disseminated the “false stigmatizing reasons” for plaintiffs’ termination to “conceal[] Pendleton’s intentional violations of law as the underlying motivation of said action____” Id. at ¶ 69. Although hardly a model of clarity as an antitrust claim, plaintiffs fourth cause of action in its proposed amended form would also support antitrust standing under the Radovich line of cases alluded to above. Consistent with the Court’s decision, infra, to permit plaintiffs to amend the complaint in conformity with this opinion, plaintiffs will be permitted, although they are by no means required, to amend their antitrust allegations to include an employee boycott claim such as that sustained in Radovich.
B. Plaintiff’s Fourth Cause of Action
Pendleton contends that in its present form plaintiffs’ fourth cause of action states no claim upon which relief may be granted. The crux of plaintiffs’ fourth cause of action, it would appear, is that “Pendleton disseminated false stigmatizing reasons for the actions taken against the plaintiffs ... in reckless or grossly negligent disregard for the plaintiffs rights ... causing great and substantial pain and suffering.” Complaint at ¶ 57. Defendant argues that the fourth claim, as originally pleaded, states no cause of action either in defamation or prima facie tort. In their proposed amended complaint, plaintiffs repeat the allegations of the original and aver in addition that Pendleton maliciously intended to injure plaintiffs in their trade or business. Proposed Amended Complaint at 1172. The proposed amendments refer to specific incidents of defamation plaintiffs contend they uncovered through discovery. Id. 111170-76. These include defamatory statements allegedly made at a sales meeting in Portland, Oregon on January 30, 1985, and to various Pendleton accounts during an October 1984 tour of the northeast by Pendleton managers. Plaintiffs do not allege in the proposed amended complaint that Pendleton’s managers mentioned them by name at the Portland meeting, but they assert that from the circumstances of the statements, those present at the meeting understood defendant’s managers to be referring to plaintiffs. Id. H 71.
1. Defamation
To establish a
prima facie
case of defamation, plaintiff must plead that defendant (1) negligently or willfully uttered a (2)
*1440
defamatory statement (3) of or concerning the plaintiff (4) to a third person (5) which resulted in damage to plaintiffs’ reputation.
See National Nutritional Foods Ass’n v. Whelan,
2. Prima Facie Tort
To state a cause of action for
prima facie
tort, plaintiffs must assert that defendant inflicted intentional harm by an act or series of acts otherwise lawful and that defendants conduct resulted in damages to plaintiffs.
Sadowy v. Sony Corp. of America,
Because the fourth cause of action insufficiently alleges either defamation or
prima facie
tort, the court must grant defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. As noted
infra,
plaintiffs are granted leave to replead. The Court will not here pass on the sufficiency of the allegations of the proposed amended complaint to support an action in either defamation or
prima facie
tort. The Court would, however, note that an action in
prima facie
tort will not lie where the allegations of the complaint contain the elements of a traditional tort.
Belsky v. Lowenthal,
C. Statutes of Limitations
Pendleton argues that even if the Court declines to dismiss the second, third, and fourth causes of action for failure to state a claim, that those claims nonetheless must be dismissed as untimely to the extent they allege acts or violations falling outside the applicable statutes of limitations.
1. Antitrust Claim
Although applying the federal statute of limitations in any given situation may present difficulty, the applicable legal principles are not at all complex. Section 4B of the Clayton Act imposes a four year statute of limitations on antitrust suits brought by private parties. 15 U.S.C. § 15b. An antitrust cause of action accrues and the statute of limitations begins to run when the defendant commits an act that injures the plaintiff.
Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc.,
a. Tolling by Government Proceedings
Section 5(b) of the Clayton Act suspends the running of the statute of limitations during the pendency of a civil or criminal proceeding by the United States as to private actions based in whole or in part on any matter complained of in the government proceeding. 15 U.S.C. § 16(i). The statute specifically provides, however, “[t]hat whenever the running of the statute of limitations in respect of a cause of action arising under section 4 or 4C is suspended hereunder, any action to enforce such cause of action shall be forever barred unless commenced either within the period of suspension or within four years after the cause of action accrued.”
Id.
This clause requires but little interpretation. FTC proceedings under the Sherman and Clayton Acts are given the same tolling effect as those of the Department of Justice.
Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co. v. New Jersey Wood Finishing Co.,
As noted earlier, in 1979, the FTC provided Pendleton with a copy of a draft complaint charging violations of the FTCA. Plaintiffs argue that the pendency of this FTC investigation in 1979 tolled the statute of limitations. In the instant action, the Court need not decide whether the rational advanced by the Supreme Court in
Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co., supra,
*1442
Plaintiffs commenced this action on October 3, 1984. Section 5(b) allowed plaintiffs to bring suit either within one year of the termination of the government proceeding or within four years after the accrual of the cause of action. The prior government suit has no effect with respect to private suits filed more than one year after termination of the government action.
Philco Corp, v. Radio Corp.,
b. Duress as Tolling
Plaintiffs argue in addition that the Court should hold the statute of limitations tolled by “duress to which defendant subjected plaintiffs in furtherance of its illegal scheme to fix retail prices.” Plaintiffs’ Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss and in Support of Plaintiffs’ Cross-Motion to Amend the Complaint at 31. Plaintiffs’ argument, however, overlooks the very narrow role allowed duress for purposes of tolling the statute of limitations in antitrust actions.
By their essence, antitrust violations involve coercion. For this Court to accept plaintiffs’ argument, that the duress inherent in the resale price maintenance scheme they allege effectively tolled the statute of limitations, would preclude the application of any limitation to an ongoing antitrust violation in which plaintiffs could plausibly allege some aspect of coercion in the underlying scheme.
See Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Sales, Inc. v. Avondale Shipyards, Inc.,
Plaintiffs do not allege that Pendleton exerted any coercion on them either before or after their separation to prevent them from filing the instant suit. All three plaintiffs sought permission in an administrative proceeding before the EEOC to file private age discrimination suits. Plaintiff Thornton began his administrative proceeding even before Pendleton had terminated him. Because plaintiffs have not alleged any coercion other than that implicit in the alleged resale price maintenance scheme, the Court cannot accept plaintiffs’ arguments *1443 for tolling the statute on the basis of duress.
c. Fraudulent Concealment
Finally, plaintiffs maintain that the relevant limitations period should be tolled to account for Pendleton’s fraudulent concealment of facts indicating that plaintiffs had an antitrust cause of action. A plaintiff who seeks to invoke the doctrine of fraudulent concealment must plead and prove (1) the wrongful concealment by the defendant of its actions, (2) the failure by the plaintiff to discover the operative facts underlying the action within the limitations period, and (3) the plaintiff’s due diligence to discover the facts.
Berkson v. Del Monte Corp.,
The burden rests squarely on the party pleading fraudulent concealment.
Akron Presform Mold Co. v. McNeil Corp.,
Under the standard set forth above, plaintiffs plainly are not entitled to an equitable tolling of the limitations period on the ground of fraudulent concealment. Neither the complaint nor the proposed amended complaint contains specific allegations of acts by defendant to conceal the antitrust violation that forms the basis of plaintiffs’ antitrust claim. General assertions by counsel that Pendleton supplied blatantly false and fraudulent information to retailers and sales representatives fall far short of meeting the pleading requirement for wrongful concealment. Because the fraudulent concealment standard equates suspicion with knowledge, plaintiffs need not have learned the intimate details of the resale price maintenance agreement for the statute of limitations to begin running. Plaintiffs’ intoning that no one sales representative knew the scope of the alleged price maintenance plan neither indicates plaintiffs’ ignorance of important facts underlying the present action nor establishes the exercise of due diligence in discovering them.
The Court finally notes a degree of tension in the pleadings between the argument for fraudulent concealment and the underlying antitrust cause of action. Plaintiffs contend on the one hand that Pendleton forced their sales representatives to do the dirty work involved in the alleged anticompetitive scheme or face reprisals, and that Pendleton terminated plaintiffs in part to make an example of them and in part because they knew of the 1979 FTC consent decree. On the other hand, plaintiffs argue for purposes of tolling the statute of limitations that they somehow remained oblivious to the import of Pendleton’s actions. Although the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure permit plaintiffs to plead alternative theories of liabili *1444 ty, plaintiffs do not have the luxury of pleading in the alternative within the same cause of action. In short, plaintiffs have established no ground for equitably tolling the statute of limitations on their antitrust claim. As a consequence, plaintiffs must replead their antitrust count consistent with the applicable four-year statute of limitation.
2. Contract Claim
Although neither party has specifically addressed the issue, the Court will assume for purposes of defendant’s motion that New York law applies to the breach of contract allegation that constitutes the plaintiffs’ third cause of action. As noted earlier, plaintiffs seek recovery based on a duty of good faith implied in their employment contract. New York requires a plaintiff to bring an action based upon express or implied contractual obligations, except those covered by Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code, within six years. N.Y. Civ.Prac.Law § 213. Plaintiffs would have the Court toll the statute of limitations on their contract action by reason of Pendleton’s alleged duress, acts of fraudulent concealment, and continuing course of conduct. As with their antitrust cause of action, however, plaintiffs’ arguments in favor of equitably tolling the statute of limitations on their contract claim are unavailing.
a. Duress
The New York courts recognize that duress may toll a statute of limitations when it is part of the cause of action alleged.
Pacchiana v. Pacchiana,
b. Fraudulent Concealment
Plaintiffs’ contention that Pendleton’s fraudulent concealment should toll the limitations period for the contract cause of action fails all three requirements for making out fraudulent concealment as they are discussed above in the context of the antitrust claim. First, plaintiffs do not allege that Pendleton attempted to conceal from them changes in their territories or commission rates. To the extent such alterations may have breached one or more terms of the employment agreements between plaintiffs and Pendleton, the breaches would have become apparent once Pendleton informed plaintiffs of the changes. Second, since Pendleton would have had to inform plaintiffs of the changes in order for them to become effective, plaintiffs cannot allege that they failed to discover the operative facts. Finally, plaintiffs make no affirmative allegations of due diligence.
c. Continuing Violation
Plaintiffs baldly attempt to circumvent the contract statute of limitations by lumping together all the alleged affronts and styling Pendleton’s course of conduct a continuing violation of the employment contracts at issue. The argument amounts to no more than an attempt to string together a series of discrete contract violations. In employment contracts, for statute of limitations purposes, a new cause of action arises with every violation and the statute of limitations runs separately as to each.
Airco Alloys Div., Airco Inc. v. Niagara Mohawk Power Corp.,
3. Tort Claim
Plaintiffs’ fourth cause of action, as originally pleaded, contained no allegations of specific incidents of defamation. Plaintiffs propose to allege in an amended pleading specific statements allegedly made during a meeting of Pendleton managers in Portland, Oregon on January 30,1985 and other statements allegedly made by Pendleton managers during an October 1984 tour of the Northeast. Although defendant does not specifically address these issues, the Court notes that a one year statute of limitations applies to claims for defamation, N.Y.Civ.Prac.Law § 214, whereas a three year-period applies to claims sounding in prima facie tort, N.Y.Civ.Prac.Law § 215. Assuming plaintiffs amend their tort claim along the lines they have proposed, therefore, neither the limitations period for defamation nor that for prima facie tort would pose a bar to the claim as amended.
II. Plaintiffs’ Cross-Motion for Leave to Amend the Complaint
Plaintiffs seek to amend their complaint to include more specific allegations about the operation of the resale price maintenance scheme, the general outline of which they describe in the original complaint. Plaintiffs also seek to add allegations of specific instances when, they contend, various Pendleton employees made defamatory statements about them. Because defendant has answered plaintiffs’ original complaint, plaintiffs can amend only with leave of court. Once a defendant has filed a responsive pleading, granting leave to amend the complaint under Rule 15(a), Fed. R.Civ.P., falls within the discretion of the trial court.
Zenith Radio Corp., supra,
In opposition to plaintiffs’ motion, Pendleton contends first that plaintiffs unduly delayed in amending their complaint in that the information comprising the additional allegations now sought to be added was available to them at the time plaintiffs filed their original pleading. Even assuming that plaintiffs were aware of such information at the time they filed suit, however, their delay alone would not warrant the Court’s denying leave to amend absent some showing of bad faith or prejudice.
State Teachers Retirement Bd. v. Fluor Corp.,
As a second ground for opposing plaintiffs’ motion, Pendleton argues that it will be prejudiced by the proposed amendments in that the additional allegations will impose additional discovery burdens on them, at a point where plaintiffs have already taken thirteen depositions, and that the antitrust claim, as amended, will confuse the jury.
Until now, defendants have provided little or no discovery on the antitrust claims raised in the original complaint. Permitting plaintiffs to add more specific allegations concerning a claim already asserted in the initial complaint will not appreciably increase defendant’s discovery burden. Nor will it prejudice defendant in any other way relevant to deciding plaintiff’s cross-motion to amend.
Cf. Ralli v. Tavern on the Green,
Pendleton’s final ground for objecting to plaintiffs’ cross-motion is that the amendment plaintiffs propose would not cure the standing defect in plaintiffs’ original antitrust claim. Because the Court holds above that plaintiffs adequately pleaded allegations supporting antitrust standing in the original complaint, the Court finds it unnecessary to consider Pendleton’s further contention that the amendments would prove futile.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings is granted in part and denied in part. Plaintiffs’ cross-motion for leave to amend the complaint is granted. Plaintiffs are directed to serve and file an amended complaint consistent with this opinion no later than April 1, 1986. The parties shall complete discovery by August 1,1986 and shall file a pretrial order by August 29, 1986.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. In their Proposed Amended Complaint, which plaintiffs have submitted in connection with their cross-motion for leave to amend the complaint discussed infra, plaintiffs elaborate considerably the operation of this scheme. Pendleton allegedly directly coerced its sales force by threatening to expose the sales representatives to criminal proceedings or jail. Proposed Amended Complaint at ¶ 50. Plaintiffs also allege that Pendleton used various means to sanction its sales force including shifting territory from non-cooperating representatives, subjecting them to disparagement, refusing them permission to carry other lines of clothing, interfering with their accounts, evaluating them harshly, dismissing some, and forcing others into early retirement. Id. at ¶ 60. Pendleton supposedly rewarded cooperative sales representatives with high evaluations, permission to carry other lxlothing lines, and either the opportunity to operate competing stores or outright grants of interests in company retail stores. Id. at 59.
. The Age Discrimination in Employment Act ("ADEA”), as amended, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634, requires as a prerequisite to a suit in federal court that plaintiff first present his claim to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ("EEOC”) for an attempt at informal resolution, 29 U.S.C. § 626(d), and, in states such as New York whose law prohibits age discrimination, also to the administrative agency that can provide relief to the aggrieved individual, 29 U.S.C. § 633(b). Plaintiffs concededly commenced the appropriate actions before both the EEOC and the New York Department of Human Rights.
. Not all discussions between a manufacturer and its distributors about prices amount to unlawful resale price maintenance agreements. Naked suggestions for resale prices unaccompanied by threats or sanctions for non-compliance create no legal problems even though most distributors ultimately comply with the suggestions.
Yeutsch v. Texaco,
Section 1 of the Sherman Act requires that there be a "contract, combination ... or conspiracy” between the manufacturer and other distributors in order to establish a violation. 15 U.S.C. § 1. Independent action is not proscribed. A manufacturer of course generally has a right to deal, or refuse to deal, with whomever it likes, as long as it does so independently. United States v. Colgate & Co.,250 U.S. 300 , 307,39 S.Ct. 465 , 468,63 L.Ed. 992 (1919); cf. United States v. Parke Davis & Co.,362 U.S. 29 ,80 S.Ct. 503 ,4 L.Ed.2d 505 (1960). Under Colgate, the manufacturer can announce its resale prices in advance and refuse to deal with those who fail to comply. And a distributor is free to acquiesce in the manufacturer’s demand in order to avoid termination.
Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Service Corp.,
. The Court reads plaintiffs’ complaint to allege an unlawful resale price maintenance agreement and not, as defendant suggests, a violation of the 1979 consent decree. Accordingly, the Court need not consider the legal effect of the decree nor whether plaintiffs could properly sue Pendleton for violating the conditions of that decree.
. See generally Note, Employee Standing Under Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 81 Mich.L.Rev. 1846 (1983) ("Michigan Note"). Contra Note, Standing of the Terminated Employee Under Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 25 Wm. & Mary L.Rev. 1341 (1983).
. The Act provides further that such persons may sue "in any district court of the United States in the district in which the defendant resides or is found or has an agent, without respect to the amount in controversy____" 15 U.S.C. § 15. Pendleton does not dispute that, assuming plaintiffs have standing to sue under the antitrust laws, it may properly be sued in this district.
. Psychologists had suffered distinct injuries for which they also brought suit, but they could not claim the particular aspect of damage, the out of pocket payment to her psychologist, that McCready asserted. The Virginia Academy of Clinical Psychologists filed a complaint similar to McCready’s against the same defendants which the Virginia district court allowed to proceed.
McCready, supra,
. The absence of specific intent on the part of Pendleton to harm its sales representatives does not determine the standing question. As the Supreme Court held, "[t]he availability of the § 4 remedy to some person who claims its benefit is not a question of the specific intent of the conspirators. Here the remedy cannot reasonably be restricted to those competitors whom the conspirators hoped to eliminate from the market.”
McCready, supra,
. See Michigan Note, supra, at 1864-65.
. Even without the Second Circuit’s suggestion that cases decided prior to
Associated General
and
McCready
provide little useful guidance, the Court would note that the cases argued by Pendleton provide at best only mixed support for its position. The Third Circuit in
Bravman v. Bassett Furniture Industries, Inc.,
Both
McNulty v. Borden Inc.,
The court in
McNulty
further noted that it was "not unmindful of the weighty policy considerations recently put forth by the Ninth Circuit in granting standing to an employee fired for refusing to carry out policies allegedly violative of § 1 of the Sherman Act [in
Ostrofe
7],”
. Without deciding the question, the Court notes that the weight of authority and policy lean toward according FTCA proceedings the same tolling effect as government proceedings under the Clayton and Sherman Acts. Indeed, FTC actions under 15 U.S.C. § 45 may concern conduct that also violates the Sherman or Clayton Acts.
See Rader v. Balflour,
. Accepting plaintiffs’ contentions and further assuming the consent order was filed on July 31, 1979, the date that appears on the order itself, the action could have remained pending only until October 1, 1979. Plaintiffs would have to have brought suit by October 1, 1980 to gain any advantage from the pendency of the FTC proceeding even under this tolling theory. This they failed to do.
. In square contradiction to the express wording of the statute, plaintiffs would have the Court stretch the statute of limitations by tacking together the four years of 15 U.S.C. § 15(b), the time during the pendency of the FTC investigation,
and
the one year following the termination of the proceeding. The Second Circuit, in an opinion by Judge Hand, long ago rejected just such a whimsical reading of the statute.
Herman Schwabe, Inc. v. United Shoe Machinery Corp.,
