ORDER
This matter comes before the Court on defendants’ motion for summary judgment on all Counts. The underlying lawsuit raises antitrust and other challenges to a July 1985 contract between Cherokee Memorial Hospital (“CMH”) and Dr. Mijanovich (the “Mijanovich Contract”) whereby Dr. Mijanovich became the exclusive pathology provider at CMH. The inception of the Mijanovich Contract brought to an end the plaintiffs’ longstanding position as the sole pathology providers at CMH. Plaintiffs contend that in entering into and in implementing the Mijanovich Contract defendants have: engaged in a combination and conspiracy to unreasonably restrain trade,
I. FINDINGS OF FACT
1. Plaintiffs, Rudolph R. Steuer, Jr., M.D. (“Dr. Steuer”) and Harry S. Latham, M.D. (“Dr. Latham”), are physicians engaged in the practice of pathology through a professional association called Drs. Steuer and Latham, P.A. (the “PA”) (collectively referred to as “plaintiffs”). Amended Complaint 115.
2. National Medical Enterprises, Inc. (“NME”) is a national health care corporation engaged in the hospital business through its subsidiary, N.M.E. Hospitals, Inc. (“NME Hospitals”) (collectively referred to as “defendants”).
3. CMH is a 162 bed acute care hospital located in Gaffney, South Carolina. Tidikis Dep. Tr. at 47. 1
4. The Hospital building and grounds are owned by Cherokee County (“County”), a political subdivision of the State of South Carolina.
5. On January 3, 1984 the County and defendants entered into a General Agreement (“General Agreement”), (H-443 thru -459), whereby defendants agreed, inter alia, to construct and operate a new hospital in Gaffney to replace CMH, to lease, manage and operate CMH until such time as the new hospital was constructed, and to purchase the working capital, assets and personal properties used in connection with operating CMH.
6. Paragraph 7 of the General Agreement provided, inter alia, for the establishment of a Local Governing Board to be appointed by defendants, and for defendants to “regularly consult such board for advice with respect to any of the various policy issues and matters which both affect the community, and concern the operation of [CMH] and the new hospital and the services to be rendered by [defendants] thereunder____ However, [defendants] will have final authority and responsibility for all decisions relating to the management and operation of CMH and the new hospital.”
7. After the General Agreement was executed, defendants assumed from the County full operational and managerial responsibility for CMH. Moran Dep. Tr. at 50; Medley Dep. Tr. at 53; D. Queen Dep. Tr. at 27-28.
8. CMH was a declining hospital prior to defendants obtaining control thereof, and defendants took “constructive action” after obtaining control of CMH. Latham Dep. Tr. at 186-187.
9. On February 3,1984, the County and the defendants entered into a Lease Agreement (“Lease Agreement”) (H-460 thru -490) to effectuate the General Agreement.
10. Section 3.1 of the Lease Agreement provides:
LESSEE [defendants] acknowledges that, in addition to employees and contract physicians, the Hospital is served by a medical staff. LESSEE agrees to accept, on Commencement Date, all members of the medical staff in good standing on that date with the same privileges at Hospital, and to continue such privileges until their normal expiration date, provided they remain in good professional standing in accordance with medical staff rules, regulations and bylaws. It is the intent of the parties that the Hospital will have an open staff except for those departments traditionally served by contract physicians.
11. Section 8.1 of jche Lease Agreement provides, in pertinent part:
LESSEE agrees to offer continued employment, at no reduction in salary or benefits, to all Hospital employees who are and remain in good standing and who desire to continue their employment with LESSEE.
12. Exhibit “B” to the Lease Agreement set out a “Schedule of Material Contracts to which [the County], or Hospital is a party or by which any of them is bound or will be bound as of the Commencement Date [of the Lease Agreement] and which affect or relate to the Leased Properties or the operation of the Hospital to the best of both parties’ knowledge.” Section 7.1 of Lease Agreement. [H-471, H-518 thru -520.] This schedule of Material Contracts lists, inter alia, “A pathology agreement with Harry S. Latham, M.D., dated July 1, 1983, terminating on a month to month basis.” Item No. 15. [H-518 thru -520.]
13. Prior to defendants’ assuming control of CMH, the County viewed plaintiffs as having contracted with the Hospital, not the County. D. Queen Dep. Tr. at 26.
14. Prior to February 1984 CMH had been operated under the auspices of the County. Moran Dep. Tr. at 48; Medley Dep. Tr. at 7-10; Tidikis Dep. Tr. at 15-16.
15. There is no evidence in the record that defendants share with the County any profits or losses from the operation of CMH.
16. In March 1962, CMH entered into a Contract for Pathology Services with Dr. Steuer (the “Steuer Agreement”). [TM-172 thru -173.] The Steuer Agreement provided, inter alia,
1. The pathologist assumes the obligation as the Director of the Department in [CMH].
3. The pathologist will assume the responsibility for the conduct of the Department of Pathology and will devote such time as is necessary to provide proper and adequate service.
5. The professional income of the pathologist shall be determined by the following arrangement: the rate of compensation shall be 40% of gross billings for out-patients and in-patients of each case, certified charity excluded. Pathological fees will be collected by [CMH] in the name of the hospital. Financial settlement will be made between [CMH] and the pathologist on the calendar month of the first day of the succeeding month____
6. The pathologist shall have the right to set all laboratory and pathology fees.
8. This agreement shall be for one year and shall be deemed to be automatically renewed unless terminated in writing by either party at least 120 days prior to the annual renewal date.”
17. The Steuer Agreement was, in essence, renewed by the parties through August 1979, when it was amended to reflect the fact that (in 1976) Dr. Latham had joined Dr. Steuer in supplying pathology services at CMH and in managing CMH’s Pathology Department. [TM-104 thru -108.] 2
18. The 1979 Amendment stated, in pertinent part that:
. 1. The Pathologist shall provide for the proper functioning of all phases of the Pathology Department’s activities.
3. The Pathologist shall operate and conduct the Department of Pathology at Cherokee County Memorial Hospital ... providing fully the professional needs of [CMH] in a manner satisfactory to [CMH].
19. The 1979 Amendment also stated that the Pathologist “is at all times acting and performing as an independent contractor” (H 6), 3 reduced compensation from 30% to 25% of “gross monthly Clinical and Anatomical Pathology Charges,” (¶ 7) and provided that the contract had a one year term “and shall be automatically renewed” unless written notice of termination shall be delivered within 120 days prior to the expiration of the agreement.
20. After the 1979 Amendment, the Steuer Agreement was further amended in 1981 to add Dr. Latham as a signatory (hereinafter the Steuer Agreement shall be denominated the “Steuer/Latham Agreement”), and to reduce the compensation rate to 19% of adjusted gross monthly Clinical and Anatomical Pathology charges. (TM-109-110) 4
21. With the Steuer/Latham Agreement set to expire on July 31, 1984, CMH and plaintiffs extended that Agreement “so that said Agreement will expire on sixty (60) days written notice to either party by the other party,” effective August 1, 1984. (TM-100-101.) (The “1984 Addendum”).
22. On May 10, 1985, pursuant to the 1984 Addendum, CMH gave plaintiffs written notice that the Steuer/Latham Agreement would terminate within 60 days of plaintiffs’ receipt of the notice. (TM-75.)
23. The non-renewal of the Steuer/Latham Agreement was communicated to plaintiffs in a manner which did not breach that Agreement. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 159.
24. Defendants had the absolute right not to renew the Steuer/Latham Agreement. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 159.
25. On July 15, 1985, defendants entered into a contract with Dr. Mijanovich, whereby he became the exclusive pathology provider at CMH. (JM-30 thru -43.)
26. The Mijanovich Contract is a one year contract, and is subject to termination by either party without cause upon 90 days written notice, and to termination for cause by CMH upon one day written notice. Paragraph 17 of the Mijanovich Contract provides that Dr. Mijanovich shall be compensated as follows: $113,900 for clinical laboratory and administrative services rendered, and Dr. Mijanovich “shall separately bill and collect for all patients for Anatomical Pathology and Clinical Pathology Services rendered.” Exhibit “B” to Mijanovich Contract, (JM-42).
27. CMH has no economic interest in the professional fees generated by Dr. Mijanovich with respect to surgical/anatomical consults, for which he separately bills. Exhibit “B” to Mijanovich Contract (JM-42).
28. The terms and conditions set forth in the Mijanovich Contract were initially proposed by defendants to plaintiffs in May 1984, (TM-176, TM-178 thru -191), but were rejected by plaintiffs in June 1984 (TM-132 thru -144). Plaintiffs counter-proposed that they receive $201,600 for all clinical laboratory and administrative services rendered. [TM-144.]
29. For the 23 years prior to defendants entering into the Mijanovich Contract, plaintiffs (and their designees) had been the sole pathology providers at CMH. Steuer Dep. tr. at 34-35.
31. During the Steuer/Latham Agreement CMH’s pathology department did not function in accordance with high professional standards. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 417.
32. The arrival of Dr. Mijanovich created competition with plaintiffs for the provision of pathology services that did not exist prior to the arrival of Dr. Mijanovich. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 99.
33. Plaintiffs never competed on the basis of price in providing pathology services under the Steuer/Latham Agreement. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 479-480.
34. Defendants’ decision not to renew the Steuer/Latham Agreement was made solely by employees of defendants. Tidikis Dep. Tr. at 66; Moran Dep. Tr. at 56-57.
35. The County was neither consulted about nor did it otherwise influence, or seek to influence, defendants’ decision whether to renew the Steuer/Latham Agreement or defendants’ decision whether to enter into a pathology contract with pathologists other than plaintiffs. Medley Dep. Tr. 37, 53; Moran Dep. Tr. at 56-57.
36. The decision whether to renew the Steuer/Latham Agreement was solely within the purview of defendants. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 159.
37. The responsibility of determining whether, and if so, under what terms, to renew the Steuer/Latham Agreement was not within the purview of the CMH board of directors or medical staff. August 1, 1984 Addendum to Steuer/Latham Agreement [TM-100]; General Agreement § 7 [H-449]; Steuer Dep. Tr. at 668-670, 678.
38. Defendants are not, and have never been, parties to the Bylaws of the Medical Staff of CMH (“Bylaws”). Bylaws [Appendix B(l) to Defendants’ Trial Brief.]
39. Defendants have never agreed to be bound by the Bylaws. Id.
40. The Bylaws deal with granting and revocation of medical staff privileges, not with whether a contract with a physician ought to be entered into or renewed. Id.
41. The Bylaws do not confer upon plaintiffs a right to have access to CMH’s pathology department. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 726.
42. Defendants’ non-renewal decision was based on a variety of business factors, including a determination that it was in the best interests of CMH and its patients that the Steuer/Latham Agreement be replaced with the Mijanovich Contract. Tidikis Dep. Tr. at 56-57; Moran Dep. Tr. at 32.
43. Defendants’ decision not to renew the Steuer/Latham Agreement was not made for the purpose of obtaining a competitive advantage over, or inflicting competitive injury upon, the plaintiffs. Latham Dep. Tr. at 208-213; Steuer Dep. Tr. at 307-323.
44. The substitution of Dr. Mijanovich for plaintiffs as CMH’s exclusive contract pathology provider has not resulted in an increase in price over competitive levels, or a diminution of quality. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 469-71; Barrett Dep. Tr. at 48, 92.
45. Certain members of CMH’s board of directors and medical staff shared defendants’ view that the interests of CMH and its patients would be best served by replacing plaintiffs as the contract pathologists at CMH, and they assisted defendants in their efforts to recruit a new contract pathologist. Moran Dep. Tr. at 56-58; 91-94. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 316-321.
46. None of the members of CMH’s board of directors or its medical staff referenced in the preceding numbered paragraph compete with plaintiffs, and none of their conduct was intended to obtain a competitive advantage over or to inflict competitive injury upon plaintiffs. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 305-324.
47. Members of the Board of directors and medical staff entertained negative views about plaintiffs even before defend
48. Dr. Mijanovich was completing his residency in Wisconsin at the time he filed an application with defendants’ corporate headquarters in California seeking a contract to furnish pathology services. Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 33-42.
49. At the time he submitted the above-referenced application to defendants, Dr. Mijanovich was pursuing potential employment opportunities throughout the United States. Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 33-42.
50. At the time defendants were considering Dr. Mijanovich’s application, they were considering entering into a contract with a pathologist from Florida to furnish pathology services at CMH. Latham Dep. Tr. at 205.
51. Hospitals recruit pathologists in a nationwide market. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 465-468.
52. The “exclusivity” provision in the Mijanovich Contract was inserted by defendants, and was not requested by Dr. Mijanovich. Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 72-73.
53. Dr. Mijanovich did not exert any pressure on defendants to enter into a contract with him. Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 37-43.
54. For 21 years, plaintiffs operated a pathology laboratory in an office housed in a building owned by Dr. Steuer located adjacent to CMH. Plaintiffs continue to operate this laboratory. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 13.
55. Plaintiffs have continued up to the present time to perform pathology work in their private, non-hospital-based laboratory adjacent to CMH even after the Steuer/Latham Agreement was not renewed. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 131.
56. Prior to Dr. Mijanovich’s arrival at CMH, almost all of the physicians in Gaffney sent their office-generated clinical and surgical pathology work to pathology reference laboratories located outside of South Carolina. Very few of these physicians used the pathology facilities of CMH or plaintiffs’ private laboratory for their office-generated specimens. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 62-63; Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 98-102.
57. After the arrival of Dr. Mijanovich, most of the physicians in Gaffney stopped using pathology reference laboratories located outside of South Carolina, and began using CMH’s pathology facilities for their office-generated specimens. Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 99-102.
58. In 1984, 38.8% of the residents of Cherokee County who were hospitalized were hospitalized in a hospital other than CMH; see Harris Affidavit at ¶ 24; in 1985, 40.4% of the residents of Cherokee County who were hospitalized were hospitalized in a hospital other than CMH. Id.
59. Twelve of CMH’s staff physicians, who account for 42.1% of CMH’s total admissions in Fiscal Year 1987, have staff privileges at hospitals other than CMH. Harris Affidavit at ¶ 38.
60. CMH perceives itself to be in competition with hospitals outside of Cherokee County, including hospitals in Spartanburg, Union, and Shelby. Watson Dep. Tr. at 8-9, 22; Barrett Dep. Tr. at 112.
61. CMH is perceived by consumers, and its staff physicians to be in competition with the hospitals referenced in the preceding paragraph. Hammett Dep. Tr. at 55-56. Johnson Dep. Tr. at 20; Gutta Dep. Tr. at 22-24; Watson' Dep. Tr. at 8-9, 22; Steuer Dep. Tr. at 66-71.
62. In Fiscal Year (“FY”) 1985 CMH’s occupancy rate was 42.6%. Harris Affidavit at ¶ 37. In FY 1986 CMH’s occupancy rate was 39.5%: Id. In FY 1987 CMH’s occupancy rate was 32.1%. Id.
63. Consumers of hospital services in Cherokee County view hospitals located outside Cherokee County as good substitutes for the services offered by CMH. Johnson Dep. Tr. at 20; Watson Dep. Tr. at 8-9, 22.
64. Hospitals always arrange for the provision of pathology services to their patients. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 438-440.
65. A physician’s decision whether to seek privileges at a particular hospital is not influenced by the identity of the pathol
66. Pathology services at CMH have always been furnished pursuant to a request by, or instruction from, the attending physician, not the patient. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 440.
67. Pathology services rendered to patients at CMH are always rendered in connection with the provision of hospital services. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 504-507.
68. Pathologists at CMH have only occasional face-to-face contact with patients receiving pathology services. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 464-465.
69. During the long life of the Steuer/Latham Agreement, a physician or patient rarely, if ever, requested the services of a specific pathologist, i.e., Dr. Steuer or Dr. Latham. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 440-468; Latham Dep. Tr. at 219-220.
70. During their many years of service at CMH under the Steuer/Latham Agreement, plaintiffs spent most of their time at CMH in the pathology laboratories. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 440-468, 513.
71. Prior to and at the time of the non-renewal of the Steuer/Latham Agreement plaintiffs had medical staff privileges at CMH. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 215.
72. Even after the Steuer/Latham Agreement was not renewed, plaintiffs’ medical staff privileges at CMH remained intact. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 215.
73. Plaintiffs’ medical staff privileges at CMH have remained intact up through the present time. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 215; Amended Complaint at ¶ 5.
74. After the arrival of Dr. Mijanovich, certain staff physicians at CMH requested that plaintiffs perform primary pathological consults. Moran Dep. Tr. at 165; Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 27-29.
75. These requests were not made pursuant to any preexisting agreements, binding or otherwise, between said physicians and plaintiffs. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 715-724.
76. The staff physicians making these requests were not obligated to do so; these requests were strictly voluntary on the part of each said staff physician. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 715-724.
77. Plaintiffs were not obligated to accept these requests. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 716-724.
78. No physician on the medical staff at CMH ever promised plaintiffs that he (or she) would request that plaintiffs perform primary pathological consults. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 716-724.
79. No physician on the medical staff at CMH ever promised plaintiffs that he (or she) would request that plaintiffs perform primary pathology consults in the event that the Steuer/Latham Agreement was not renewed. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 716-724.
80. Plaintiffs never promised any physicians on the medical staff of CMH that they would perform primary pathology consults in the event the Steuer/Latham Agreement was not renewed. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 716-724.
81. After Dr. Mijanovich arrived at CMH, plaintiffs were, pursuant to the Mijanovich Contract, prohibited from using CMH’s pathology laboratories and from performing primary pathology consults on specimens generated at CMH. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 683-684; Moran Dep. Tr. at 163-169; Tidikis Dep. Tr. at 102-106.
82. In order to offer pathology services at any hospital, it is necessary for the pathologist to have staff privileges as well as a contract with that hospital to provide pathology services. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 679, 681.
83. As a general rule, pathology services are not offered at a hospital by pathologists who are in competition with each other. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 251, 255-257.
84. As a general rule, it is more efficient for pathologists to furnish pathology services at a hospital in coordination, rather than in competition with each other. Latham Dep. Tr. at 36-37; Steuer Dep. Tr. at 252, 255-259.
85. As a general rule, it is more efficient for the pathology department of a hospital to be under the control of a single person. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 387.
87. It is practical for plaintiffs to offer pathology services at hospitals other than CMH without changing their present residences. Steuer Dep. Tr. 707-08.
88. From 1966 up to the present, plaintiffs have had the sole contract to provide pathology services at Wallace Thompson Hospital in Union, South Carolina. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 34-35; 89-90.
89. Plaintiffs have continued to furnish pathology services at Wallace Thompson Hospital even after the Steuer/Latham Agreement was not renewed. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 132-33.
90. Plaintiffs have never competed with each other in providing pathology services at CMH or Wallace Thompson Hospital. Latham Dep. Tr. at 183.
91. Apart from their disinclination to compete with each other, nothing has prevented plaintiffs from competing with each other in furnishing pathology services at CMH or Wallace Thompson Hospital. Latham Dep. Tr. at 179.
92. The identity of a hospital’s pathologist does not affect the hospital’s ability to attract patients. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 502-03.
93. To the knowledge of all parties, with the possible exception of a single hospital in Arkansas, all hospitals in the United States require that pathology services be furnished in accordance with a contract between the pathologist and the hospital. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 696; Latham Dep. Tr. at 229-30.
94. To the knowledge of all parties, with the possible exception of a single hospital in Arkansas, no hospital in the United States has a contract with more than one pathologist or one group of pathologists to offer pathology services at that hospital. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 249-51; Latham Dep. Tr. at 229-30.
95. To the knowledge of all parties, with the possible exception of a single hospital in Arkansas, no hospital in the United States permits pathologists to furnish pathology services at a hospital in competition with each other. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 249-51; Latham Dep. Tr. at 229-30.
96. To the knowledge of all parties, with the possible exception of a single hospital in Arkansas, the relief requested here by plaintiffs is unique insofar as it would permit a pathologist or a group of pathologists to offer primary pathology services at a hospital despite the fact that said group does not have a pathology contract with that hospital. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 507-514, 696; Latham Dep. Tr. at 229-30.
97. Exclusive contracts with pathologists accrue significant advantages to hospitals generally; in particular, they promote “order” in the provision of pathology services. Steuer Dep. Tr. 580-591; 606-610.
II. FINDINGS OF LAW
A. Federal Antitrust Claims
At its core, plaintiffs’ case amounts to a challenge to a unilateral decision by the administration of CMH to substitute Dr. Mijanovich — the hospital’s current pathologist — for the plaintiffs, who together had been the long-standing sole providers of pathology services at the hospital prior to Dr. Mijanovich. For defendants’ conduct to give rise to antitrust liability, plaintiffs must demonstrate that the hospital’s decision to contract exclusively with Dr. Mijanovich resulted from an unlawful agreement, or that the hospital or Dr. Mijanovich has market power in a properly defined antitrust market. As a matter of law, neither such showing can be made in this case.
Plaintiffs do not challenge the legality of defendants’ contract with Dr. Mijanovich. Instead, they argue only that the defendants’ decision to require that all primary pathology services at the hospital be performed by Dr. Mijanovich is illegal because it unreasonably restrains competition in the rendering of primary pathology consults at the hospital. As will be shown below, plaintiffs’ antitrust arguments have been
1. Standard for Summary Judgment
To prevail on a motion for summary judgment, the moving party must show that there are no genuine issues of material fact and that it is, therefore, entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). Thereafter, the non-moving party “may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of his pleading, but his response ... must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e).
The Supreme Court has recently described the non-moving party’s burden in the context of alleged antitrust conspiracies as follows:
To survive [defendants'] motion for summary judgment, [plaintiffs] must establish that there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether [defendants] entered into an illegal conspiracy that caused [plaintiffs] to suffer a cognizable injury. This showing has two components. First, [plaintiffs] must show more than a conspiracy in violation of the antitrust laws; they must show an injury to them resulting from the illegal conduct____
Second, the issue of fact must be ‘genuine.’ When the moving party has carried its burden under Rule 56(c), its opponent must do more than simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts____ Where the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the non-moving party, there is no ‘genuine issue for trial.’
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
A threshold question in analyzing the antitrust implications of a business practice is whether it will lessen competition, not whether it harms a competitor.
Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, Inc.,
The Supreme Court has described antitrust injury as
[Ijnjury of the type the antitrust laws were intended to prevent and that flows from that which makes defendants' acts unlawful. The injury should reflect the anticompetitive effect either of the violation or of anti-competitive acts made possible by the violation. It should, in short, be ‘the type of loss that the claimed violations ... would be likely to cause.’
Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, Inc.,
At the core of plaintiffs’ complaint are allegations that the defendants have acted to restrain competition in the furnishing of medical/surgical hospital services and professional pathology services in Cherokee County. Amended Complaint at 1ÍH 32, 51. Since CMH is the only hospital in Cherokee County, plaintiffs are, in effect, alleging that CMH is the relevant market for this case. As discussed below, the provision of such services at CMH does not constitute a relevant market for antitrust purposes. Even if plaintiffs had established the existence of such a market, however, they nonetheless failed to demonstrate either the presence of competition within that “market” prior to the termination of their contract with CMH, or any lessening of such competition after that termination.
Plaintiffs’ services to CMH were at all times provided pursuant to a contract with the hospital. At no time during the period that plaintiffs were the contract pathologists at CMH did the hospital contract with any other pathologists, nor do plaintiffs contend that they engaged in competition with any other pathologists at CMH at any time prior to the termination of their contract. Since that time, of course, Dr. Mijanovich has been the sole contract pathologist at the hospital. Thus, reduced to its essentials, plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint rests not on any showing of lessened competition, but merely on the fact that they are disappointed competitors who must now provide their services elsewhere.
In
Jefferson Parish Hospital District No. 2 v. Hyde,
It may well be true that the [exclusive] contract made it necessary for [plaintiff] and others to practice elsewhere____ But there has been no showing that the market as a whole has been affected at all by the contract____ There is simply no showing here of the kind of restraint on competition that is prohibited by the Sherman Act.
Id.
31-32,
For 23 years, plaintiffs had what amounted to an exclusive contract to provide pathology services at CMH.
7
In 1985, the hospital decided to contract instead with Dr. Mijanovich. Merely changing exclusive contractors, however, cannot constitute a violation of the antitrust laws.
Great Escape, Inc. v. Union City Body Co.,
We agree. However, every contract between a buyer and seller has precisely the effect of which the [plaintiffs] complain. When a buyer contracts with one seller, a second seller no longer has access to the buyer’s business to the extent it is covered by the existing contract. This consequence, however, is not unlawful. The [plaintiffs] have confused an agreement to boycott with an agreement to buy and sell services.
Id. at 871.
In opposing defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, the only injury to competition alleged by plaintiffs relates to a claim that prices for pathology services are higher than those charged by plaintiffs when they were the contract pathologists at CMH. Even assuming that this assertion were true, it would not establish injury to competition because the relevant inquiry is not whether prices have increased, but whether they have increased over the competitive level. Plaintiffs, however, failed to offer any evidence regarding competitive pricing levels. The only evidence in the record regarding price changes establishes that the pathology charges of defendants and Dr. Mijanovich were based on prices charged by their competitors. Barrett Dep. Tr. at 102-111, 172; Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 171, 235, 252-260, 288.
8
Moreover, doctors who formerly sent their office-generated specimens to out-of-state reference laboratories have switched to CMH since the arrival of Dr. Mijanovich. The fact that consumers of pathology services have switched to, rather than away from, Dr.
3. Applicability of the Rule of Reason
Plaintiffs characterize defendants’ exclusive contract with Dr. Mijanovich as a per se unlawful tying arrangement and a per se unlawful group boycott in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act. Amended Complaint at UU 40, 47, 49. As shown below, however, there is no basis for applying the per se rule to these facts, which means that the competitive effects of the actions of the defendants must be assessed in properly defined antitrust markets. When that is done, the conclusion that the defendants have not violated the antitrust laws is inescapable.
In determining whether an agreement unreasonably restrains trade, courts have employed two methods of analysis:
In the first category are agreements whose nature and necessary effect are so plainly anticompetitive that no elaborate study of the industry is needed to establish their illegality — they are illegal per se. In the second category are agreements whose competitive effect can only be evaluated by analyzing the facts peculiar to the business, the history of the restraint, and the reasons why it was imposed.
National Society of Professional Engineers v. United States,
The
per se
rule is reserved for activities that “always or almost always tend to restrict competition and decrease output.”
Broadcast Music, Inc. v. CBS,
Similarly, with respect to the tying, a plaintiff must establish that the defendant “has sufficient economic power with respect to the tying product to appreciably restrain free competition in the market for the tied product and [that] a not insubstantial amount of interstate commerce is affected.”
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. United States,
Under the rule of reason, the plaintiff bears the burden of proving that the practice in question is unreasonable.
E.g., United States v. Arnold, Schwinn & Co.,
Even if a plaintiff succeeds in proving a restraint on competition in a relevant market, the restraint must also be shown to be “substantially adverse.”
Schwinn, supra
at 375,
Plaintiffs’ claims that the defendants have run afoul of the rule of reason can be disposed of by virtue of plaintiffs’ failure to establish that the defendants have market power in a properly defined market.
Liability in antitrust law almost always requires proof of market power. This is because market power is an essential ingredient of injury to consumers. Market power means the ability to injure consumers by curtailing output and raising price; no possible injury, no market power; no market power, no violation; injury to consumers is therefore an essential ingredient of liability.
Fishman v. Estate of Wirtz,
As demonstrated below, there is no basis in the record for any finding of market power because there is insufficient evidence to support plaintiffs’ purported market definitions. Moreover, plaintiffs have offered no evidence to refute defendants’ contention — amply supported by
Collins v. Associated Pathologists, Ltd.,
Plaintiffs have advanced numerous antitrust arguments seeking to challenge defendants’ exclusive contract with Dr. Mijanovich (the “Mijanovich contract”). Plaintiffs’ principal argument is that the Mijanovich Contract violates Section One of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, which renders unlawful any contract, combination or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce. Plaintiffs claim that the Mijanovich contract is a combination and conspiracy in restraint of, trade (Count I), an illegal tying arrangement (Counts IIA and IIB) and an unlawful boycott (Count III). Although plaintiffs have not explicitly abandoned any of their claims under Section One, in their Memorandum opposing summary judgment and at oral argument plaintiffs emphasized almost exclusively their concern that the Mijanovich contract constituted an illegal
4. Tying Arrangement
In order to establish that an arrangement constitutes an illegal tying arrangement plaintiffs must demonstrate that the defendants have attempted to sell one product (the tying product) on the condition that the buyer also purchase a second product (the tied product), and that the defendants have “ ‘sufficient economic power with respect to the tying product to appreciably restrain free competition in the market for the tied
product____Rockingham, supra,
(i) Product Market
Plaintiffs claim that the Mijanovich Contract constitutes an illegal tying arrangement in two respects: first, that CMH patients undergoing “surgical-type procedures in which tissue is removed from the body” must also “purchase a primary anatomical pathology consultation on that tissue from Dr. Mijanovich.” Count IIA; and second, that CMH patients undergoing “medical/surgical procedures requiring clinical pathology consultations must “purchase a primary clinical consultation from Dr. Mijanovich.” Count IIB. Plaintiffs claim that defendants have “sufficient economic power” in the “relevant market” for each of the tying products “to appreciably restrain free competition in the market” for each of the tied products.” Count IIA and IIB. Plaintiffs further claim that defendants “participate in the revenues derived from [each of] the tied productfs].” Id. Finally, plaintiffs allege that the Mijanovich Contract constitutes a “per se unlawful tying arrangement.” Id.
The Supreme Court has recently made clear that alleged tying arrangements should be adjudged under the
per se,
rather than the rule of reason, only when it is “probable” that defendants have “market power” in the market for the tying product.
Jefferson Parish Hospital District No. 2 v. Hyde,
does not have either the degree or the kind of market power that enables him to force customers to purchase a second, unwanted product in order to obtain the tying product, an antitrust violation can be established only by evidence of an unreasonable restraint on competition in the relevant market.
Id.
at 18,
In assessing plaintiffs’ tying arguments under the rule of reason, the plaintiffs must first demonstrate the existence of two separate products. In
Hyde
the Supreme Court set forth the analytical framework for determining whether one or two products are involved in an alleged tying arrangement. This “turns not on the functional relation between them, but rather on the character of the demand for the two items.”
Hyde, supra,
The Court notes at the outset that plaintiffs have offered no evidence to support
There is, however, no evidence in the record which would warrant a finding that these alleged products constitute separate markets for purposes of this case. To the contrary, the uncontradicted evidence in the record establishes that professional pathology services are offered to hospital inpatients only in conjunction with the provision of inpatient hospital services, and that hospital patients consume professional pathology services only in conjunction with the consumption of hospital inpatient services. In short, the only record evidence regarding consumption of pathology services by hospital inpatients unequivocally demonstrates that there is no separate demand for professional pathology services by hospital inpatients.
The Court’s conclusion that professional pathology services do not constitute a separate product from inpatient hospital services is reinforced by
Collins v. Associated Pathologists, Ltd.,
The plaintiff in
Collins
argued that the hospital had illegally tied hospital services and pathology services. In rejecting plaintiff’s tying arguments the
Collins
Court focused on the statement in
Hyde
that “analysis of whether one or two products are involved in an alleged tying scheme ‘turns not on the functional relation between them, but rather on
the character of the demand for the two items.’ ” Hyde, supra,
[T]he vast majority of work performed by pathologists involve laboratory tests and analyses that require the pathologist to rely a great deal upon the hospital’s physical facilities and equipment. Thus, it is easy to see the pathologist as similar to an employee of the hospital rather than an independent contractor hired by the hospital for each specific task he must perform. The evidence shows that there is some demand for pathological services on an outpatient basis, not in connection with the provision of other hospital services, but the number of such requests are insubstantial when compared to the amount of pathological work done for hospital-based patients. In addition, the work of a pathologist is laboratory based, so there is not the close, face-to-face contact between the physician and the patient as there is in the practice of anesthesiology. Finally, the evidence is overwhelming that patients never request specific pathologists, and it is only on rare occasions that physicians themselves request the services of a specific pathologist____
Because pathologists are recognized as having a hospital-based practice rather than a practice oriented toward obtaining individual patients, the Court finds that pathological services are just one of the many services provided by a hospital for the care of its patients. The Plaintiff’s claim of an unlawful tying arrangement between the Defendant Hospital and APL must fail on these Motions for Summary Judgment, because there are not separate and distinct products involved.
Collins, supra, at 60,619.
The record here contains uncontroverted evidence consistent with and supportive of the reasoning of the
Collins
Court.
13
Ac
Even assuming that professional pathology services constituted a separate product, an illegal tying arrangement would not exist unless plaintiffs could prove that defendants had an economic interest in the tied product. The Court finds that although defendants do derive revenue from the sale of pathology services, it is undisputed that defendants do not share in the pathology fees earned by Dr. Mijanovich. In this respect the instant case is no different from Rockingham where a neurologist challenged a decision by a hospital to designate a certain group of radiologists as the official interpreters of all CT scans performed for patients of the hospital. In rejecting the allegation of that hospital CT scans had been illegally tied to professional CT scanning services, the Court found that
[t]he hospital is not a competitor in the market for the tied product. It receives no part of the fee for interpreting the scans. In this respect the case differs from Jefferson Parish where the hospital and the anesthesiologists shared the fees for anesthesiological services____ The lack of the hospital’s economic interest in the tied product is sufficient to defeat [the] tying claim under either theory that he presses.
Rockingham, supra,
Plaintiffs seek to distinguish Rocking-ham on two grounds: first, whereas in Rockingham “the defendants were not requiring the purchasers of medical/surgical hospital services to also purchase a CT scan”, in the instant case “[w]ith certain limited exceptions, each patient who purchases a hospital surgical-type procedure in which tissue is removed from the body is required by hospital policy to also purchase an anatomical consultation performed by Dr. Mijanovich.” Plaintiffs’ Memorandum in Opposition to Summary Judgment (“Plaintiffs’ Mem.”) at 41.
Plaintiffs have mischaracterized both the holding in
Rockingham
and the facts disclosed by uncontroverted evidence in the record here. The
Rockingham
court rejected the argument that the hospital had exploited its alleged control over medical/surgical services because “[t]he hospital does not require each of its patients to undergo a [CT] scan. The patient’s physician determines whether a scan is needed.”
Rockingham, supra,
Plaintiffs next seek to distinguish
Rockingham
on the ground that “the plaintiff in
Rockingham
failed to establish ... that the hospital had an economic interest in the provision of CT scans____ [Whereas,] Cherokee Memorial Hospital has a direct unequivocal economic interest in anatomical consultations performed by Dr. Mijanovich. For in-patient procedures, the bill is split. The hospital and Dr. Mijanovich both directly bill the patient for their respective portion.” Plaintiffs’ Mem. at 42. Plaintiffs’ factual claims miss the point of the holding in
Rockingham.
The finding in
Rockingham
that the hospital had no “economic interest in the interpretation of CT scans”,
As in Rockingham, CMH “receives no part of [Dr. Mijanovich’s] fees.” Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 117-120. Likewise, CMH has no input or control over the professional fees set by Dr. Mijanovich for performing primary anatomical consults. These fees are set solely by Dr. Mijanovich and billed directly by him to in-patients (or their payors) as a “professional component.” Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 117-120; Barrett Dep. Tr. at 20-24, 35-41. 15 The only revenues derived by CMH from primary anatomical consults relate to the “technical component” which CMH bills directly to its patients (or their payors). The “technical component” relates to the use of the materials and equipment in CMH’s pathology department, and has no relationship whatsoever to Dr. Mijanovich’s professional fee. Thus, contrary to plaintiffs’ assertions, CMH has no economic interest in the tied product, i.e., the professional fees of Dr. Mijanovich.
Plaintiffs’ also argue that “the defendants in this case do sell the technical component of anatomical surgical consults and in that sense share profits with Dr. Mijanovich in the sale of those services.” Plaintiffs’ Supp. Mem. at 52. Plaintiffs’ argument reflects a basic misunderstanding of their antitrust theory of this case. Plaintiffs’ principal antitrust contention is that CMH
is an ‘essential facility’ for the practice of pathology in Cherokee County, South Carolina. That is, a physician who specializes in pathology must have access to the equipment owned and/or controlled by the hospital in order to practice his profession. If Cherokee Memorial Hospital is allowed to retain an exclusive contract pathologist and deny access to its pathology equipment for other qualified physicians, including the Plaintiffs, the result will be a restraint on free trade in the market for the provision of hospital services and professional pathology services in the relevant geographic market.
Amended Complaint at If 30. Thus, plaintiffs are not complaining about the fact that CMH’s equipment is used to furnish pathology services; instead, plaintiffs complain about their being denied access to that equipment because denial of access deprives them of the ability to earn professional fees. Thus, the tied product is the professional fees earned by the contract pathologist, not the technical fees earned by the hospital. Moreover, there is no evidence in the record that furnishes CMH or Dr. Mijanovich with power to raise prices above competitive levels. See discussion, infra, re: injury to competition.
(ii) Geographic Market
Even assuming that there is a separate tied product, and that defendants
The first component of the relevant antitrust market, the product market, includes reasonably interchangeable services or products, that is, products or services which may be substitutes for the identical products or services in question, but only if such substitutes are actually competitive with the products or services in question. 17 For purposes of deciding the present motion the Court will assume the correctness of plaintiffs’ assertion that the relevant product is hospital services.
The second component of the relevant antitrust market, the geographic market, is that geographic area in which there is effective competition in the sale and distribution of particular products or services, and in which persons or entities actually do, or potentially may, compete in the conduct of their business operations. “The definition of a relevant geographic market varies from case to case depending on the type of product and the geographical characteristics of an area, but the relevant geographic market must identify the area of effective competition that the defendant encounters when it offers its product or service for sale.”
Collins, supra,
at 60,620,
citing Tampa Electric Co. v. Nashville Coal Co.,
Plaintiffs assert that the relevant geographic market “is mostly within Cherokee County, South Carolina and specifically covers a 10 to 20 mile radius of the hospital.”, 18 Amended Complaint at If 15. This assertion appears to hinge on the fact that “CMH is the only hospital in Cherokee County and as such is in a dominant market position.” Id. Plaintiffs also rely on the fact that the majority, i.e., 60%, of the residents of Cherokee County are hospitalized at CMH. As will be shown below, plaintiffs’ asserted relevant geographic market reflects their preference for performing pathology services at the only hospital in the county (CMH), and does not reflect “commercial reality,” i.e., it ignores the perspective of consumers (i.e., patients, physicians, the hospital and third-party payors). Steuer Dep. Tr. at 620-621. 19
The Federal Trade Commission has recently confirmed that the boundaries of a relevant geographic market in the context of the hospital industry depend upon barriers to entry and the ability of consumers to switch to other hospitals.
Because we are concerned only with an area in which competition could be harmed, the relevant geographic market must be broad enough that buyers would be unable to switch to alternative sellers in sufficient numbers to defeat an exercise of market power by firms in the area____ If an exercise of market power could be defeated by the entry of products produced in another area, both areas should be considered part of the same geographic market ..., since competition could not be harmed in the smaller area____
Looking at a “static” snapshot of a market is thus insufficient in itself____ Rather, evidence of current market behavior must be viewed in a ‘dynamic’ framework that considers the possible competitive responses of firms outside the current market area to anticompetitive behavior of firms within.
In the Matter of Hospital Corporation of America,
106 FTC 361, 466 (1985),
aff'd. Hospital Corporation of America v. FTC,
The “dynamic” analysis described by the Commission is at the heart of antitrust analysis; it is central to the concept of market definition. 21 The “dynamic” analysis hinges on the adducing of evidence of elasticity of demand and barriers to entry. In the absence of such evidence it simply is not possible to infer whether a service area constitutes a geographic market for antitrust purposes. 22
In any event, the Court has concluded not only that plaintiffs have failed to adduce evidence sufficient to support their alleged geographic market, but also that the evidence in the record affirmatively demonstrates that the relevant geographic market is larger than Cherokee County. Approximately 40% of the residents of Cherokee County who were hospitalized used hospitals other than CMH,
i.e.,
hospitals outside the county. The out-of-county hospitals used most by Cherokee County residents were those located in Spartanburg, although a considerable number of patients also chose hospitals in North Carolina. Harris Affidavit at ¶ 24. Moreover, there are seven hospitals within 26 miles or 31 minutes driving time of CMH. Harris Affidavit at II29.
26
In short,
competes with the ones that are nearest to us, which are Spartanburg General, Doctors Memorial, Mary Black [all in Spartanburg], Cleveland Memorial [in Shelby, N.C.], Gaston Memorial [in Gastonia, N.C.], and York General [now known as Piedmont Medical Center, in York County], and possibly, even Divine Saviour [in York County, S.C.] and possibly, even Union [Wallace Thompson Hospital in Union, S.C.]
Steuer Dep. Tr. at 67. Dr. Steuer also testified that Mary Black Hospital, in particular, has taken “a lot of patients away from Cherokee Memorial,” and that CMH is “a very weak hospital.” Id. at 68. Similarly, Dr. Gutta, a urologist on the staff of CMH and Mary Black Hospital testified that he considered hospitals in Shelby, Spartanburg, York County and even Charlotte to be in competition with CMH. Gut-ta Dep. Tr. at 25-26. Dr. Hammett, a long-standing general practitioner in Gaffney, also testified that many residents of Cherokee County choose to be hospitalized in Spartanburg. More specifically, Dr. Hammett testified that CMH may “dominate” Cherokee County in the sense that it offers the only hospital facilities within the borders of the county “but now, with transportation what it is, people can drive to Spartanburg almost as easily that they can go across this town [Gaffney] at 5 p.m.” Hammett Dep. Tr. at 55-56.
The fact that hospitals located in Spartanburg, at least, are recognized as attractive alternatives to Cherokee Memorial for residents of Cherokee County is also confirmed by the testimony of George Johnson, Vice-President of Corporate Communications of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of South Carolina (“Blue Cross”). Blue Cross currently provides health insurance to approximately 40% of the people in South Carolina who are eligible for non-government insurance. Johnson Dep. Tr. at 10. As such, Blue Cross is a major purchaser of hospital services on behalf of its clients, most of whom are employers who, in turn, offer Blue Cross to their employees. Id. at 10-11.
Recently, Blue Cross began marketing a preferred provider organization (“PPO”) in Cherokee County. A PPO is a means of health insurance whereby the insurance company contracts with a network of health care providers, including hospitals. The insurer attempts to negotiate favorable rates of reimbursement for the cost of health care that reflect the volume of patients the insurer expects to deliver to the preferred health care provider. The insurer then passes through some of this cost savings to subscribers in the form of lower co-payments and reduced deductibles, which creates the incentive for the patient to use the preferred providers and, in turn, creates the volume to support the “discount.” Id. at 11-15.
Mr. Johnson explained that one of the principal criteria used by Blue Cross in identifying those hospitals with which it will seek to negotiate a preferred provider contract is the geographic accessibility of the hospital to potential subscribers.
Id.
at 16. Thus, to be involved in a PPO, a hospital must offer certain basic services,
e.g.,
obstetrics and an emergency room, and it must be within a distance that people are willing to travel for their hospital needs.
Id.
at 21. For purposes of the PPO presently being marketed to employers in Cherokee County, the hospital with which Blue Cross has negotiated preferred provider status is Mary Black in Spartanburg.
Id.
at 18. In preparation for negotiating with Mary Black Hospital, Blue Cross contacted representatives of employers in Cherokee
there has been no stated or perceived resistance to using a preferred hospital in Spartanburg County. It’s a general feeling that a lot of people in Cherokee County already use hospitals outside the county.
Id.
Accordingly, there can be no doubt that the geographic market in which CMH competes must include at least the hospitals in Spartanburg. Those hospitals are perceived as attractive alternatives to CMH by physicians, third party payors and above all by patients, who “vote with their feet” by leaving the county in large numbers when they require hospitalization. Among the effects of this “outmigration” from Cherokee County is a declining census at CMH, which has been operating at substantially less than 50% of its capacity in terms of occupancy. Harris Affidavit at 1117. It defies credulity to suggest, as plaintiffs have, that a hospital with a substantial majority of its beds empty is somehow exploiting market power.
The case law likewise makes clear that plaintiffs’ claim that the relevant antitrust market consists of a single hospital is patently absurd. As in
Collins
and
Dos Santos v. Columbus-Cuneo-Cabrini Medical Center,
When market shares for more properly defined hospital markets are calculated, CMH can be seen in true perspective. Far from the “dominance” alleged, but not substantiated, by plaintiffs, CMH’s share of a market including the hospitals in Spartan-burg varies from approximately 10% to 15%, depending upon whether market shares are measured by licensed beds, patient days or admissions. Harris Affidavit at If 31. Moreover, even those shares probably overstate the hospital’s role in the market because it is likely that a properly defined market should include the three nearby North Carolina hospitals (Crawley Memorial (Boiling Springs, N.C.), Kings Mountain Memorial Hospital (Kings Mountain, N.C.) and Cleveland Memorial Hospital (Shelby, N.C.). When these hospitals are included, CMH’s market share is between 7.5% and 10.7%. Harris Affidavit at 1Í33.
In sum, CMH’s low shares in these markets, along with its steadily declining occupancy rates,
id.
at II37, and the excess capacity at competing hospitals demonstrate that CMH has no market power and thus has neither the incentive nor the ability to reduce competition in any properly defined market for hospital services. Any
5. Exclusive Dealing
Plaintiffs also challenge the Mijanovich Contract on the ground that it constitutes an illegal exclusive dealing arrangement. 28 Exclusive dealing arrangements are analyzed under the rule of reason, and the inquiry focuses on whether the arrangement forecloses competition among producers or suppliers in a substantial share of the affected market. This
involves determining the type of goods involved and the market area in which the seller operates and within which the purchaser can practicably turn for supplies. The last step in this analysis is a determination of whether the competition foreclosed by the contract constitutes a substantial share of the relevant market, that is, whether the opportunities for other traders to enter into or remain in that market are significantly limited by the contract.
Collins, supra
at 60,612 (citing
Tampa Electric Co. v. Nashville Coal Co.,
This means that one must view the situation from the point of view of pathologists competing for work, rather than from the point of view of patients in the Hospital and the choices available (or foreclosed) to them when they need pathological services.
Collins, supra, at 60,613. 29
The reasons primarily relied upon by the Collins court for this conclusion were because the patient generally takes no part in the selection of a particular pathologist and because the hospital has responsibility for assuring the availability of pathology services to its patients. Id. Those reasons apply with equal force here. See, e.g. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 427, 439, 696; Latham Dep. Tr. at 220-21; Tidikis Dep. Tr. at 56-57, 106.
Morever, as in
Collins,
the plaintiffs here have offered no evidence to support their assertion that CMH constitutes a relevant market for the provision of pathology services apart from their personal preference to offer their services at that hospital. Far more significant is Dr. Steuer’s testimony that Dr. Mijanovich’s relationship with. CMH does not interfere with Dr. ,Steuer’s ability to provide pathology service to or at any hospital other than Cherokee, Steuer Dep. Tr. at 469-70, his testimony that the hospital’s contract with Dr. Mijanovich has no impact on the hospital’s ability to attract patients,
Id.
at 502-3, and
It is equally clear that virtually all hospitals arrange for pathology services by contracting with a single pathologist or group of pathologists and that the market in which hospitals seek to contract with pathologists (and pathologists seek to contract with hospitals) is national in scope. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 75, 465-468; Latham Dep. Tr. at 19, 236, Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 34-37; Harris Affidavit at MI 34, 41-42. Thus, to paraphrase Collins, even though pathologists (such as plaintiffs) who do not have a contract with a hospital may be foreclosed from that hospital, “there still exist many opportunities in hospitals nationwide to pursue a career elsewhere. The real market by which the Court must assess the anticompetitive effect of this exclusive arrangement is the market hospitals look to in hiring pathologists, and [plaintiffs have] failed to show that this market is anything but nationwide.” Collins at 60,614.
A necessary result from this conclusion regarding the geographic scope of the pathology market is that causing foreclosure of an opportunity at a single hospital cannot constitute a violation of the antitrust laws. Moreover, there is nothing to prevent plaintiffs from bidding for the pathology contract at CMH. The hospital’s contract with Dr. Mijanovich is terminable by either party on 90 days notice, which suggests that the hospital can cancel the contract if another pathology provider makes a better bid. Collins at 60,614. It is at this level that competition drives the hospital/pathologist relationship.
The record evidence is uncontroverted that plaintiffs participated in a competitive bidding process to obtain the exclusive pathology contract at CMH. Unfortunately for them, plaintiffs’ bid was approximately twice the amount for which the contract was eventually awarded. The result which obtained is understandably not to the liking of plaintiffs, but it is precisely the result which a competitive bidding process is expected to yield: the contract was awarded to the lowest bidder. The fact that a pathologist is foreclosed from practicing at a single hospital is of no competitive significance because there are many opportunities in hospitals nationwide to pursue a career elsewhere. In sum, “[t]he mere fact that one aspiring competitor has been refused a job does not entitle him to a remedy under the antitrust laws, because the antitrust laws are designed to protect competition, not competitors.”
Id.
at 60,-615 (citing
Brown Shoe Co. v. United States,
6. Antitrust Conspiracy
The Fourth Circuit recently addressed the legal standard applicable to plaintiffs' conspiracy allegations:
To survive a motion for summary judgment in an antitrust conspiracy case, a plaintiff must establish that there is a genuine issue of material fact whether defendants entered into an illegal conspiracy that caused the plaintiff to suffer a cognizable injury. Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. v. Zenith Radio Corporation,475 U.S. 574 ,106 S.Ct. 1348 , 1355-56 [89 L.Ed.2d 538 ] (1986)....
Concerted activity is the essential element of [plaintiff’s] claim under Section 1 of the [Sherman] Act. Terry’s Floor Fashions, Inc. v. Burlington Industries, Inc.,763 F.2d 604 , 610 (4th Cir.1985). But conduct as consistent with permissible competition as with illegal conspiracy does not itself support an inference of antitrust conspiracy. The party opposing summary judgment must present evidence that tends to exclude the possibility that the alleged conspirators acted independently: ‘[t]hat is, there must be direct or circumstantial evidence that reasonably tends to prove ... a conscious commitment to a common scheme designed to achieve an unlawful objective.’ See Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Service Corp., 465 U.S. 752 , 764 [104 S.Ct. 1464 , 1471,79 L.Ed.2d 775 ] (1984)....
Rockingham, supra,
In Counts I, III and IV of the Amended Complaint, plaintiffs advanced causes of action under Section 1 (conspiracy to restrain trade, boycott) and Section 2 (conspiracy to monopolize) of the Sherman Act which require a showing that defendants were engaged in a conspiracy with others. The record, however, unequivocally supports defendants’ claim that they acted unilaterally 31 in deciding not to renew the Steuer/Latham Agreement, and in deciding to enter into the Mijanovich Contract. There is no evidence which even tends to indicate that either of those decisions was made jointly by defendants with any other person or entity. Messrs. Tidikis and Moran, both of whom are employees of defendants, testified that defendants unilaterally determined that it was in defendants’ best interest not to renew the plaintiffs’ contract. Each of them cited numerous legitimate business reasons in support of defendants’ decision; 32 none of the reasons cited by Messrs. Tidikis or Moran included a desire by defendants to secure a competitive advantage over or to inflict competitive injury upon plaintiffs. Likewise, plaintiffs do not contend that defendants were motivated by an anticompetitive animus in deciding not to renew the Steuer/Latham Agreement, nor do plaintiffs claim that the goals underlying defendants’ decision not to renew the Steuer/Latham Agreement were otherwise impermissible (except insofar as the decision had the effect of excluding plaintiffs from practicing pathology at CMH).
The only evidence suggesting concerted action by defendants is plaintiffs’ testimony that members of the medical staff, members of CMH’s board of directors, and Dr. Mijanovich assisted defendants both in implementing their decision not to renew the plaintiffs’ contract, and in entering into
With respect to Dr. Mijanovich, plaintiffs’ only complaint is that he eventually signed the contract which had the effect of displacing plaintiffs as the sole pathology providers at Cherokee Memorial. Plaintiffs do not contend that defendants exerted pressure on Dr. Mijanovich or that Dr. Mijanovich exerted pressure on defendants.
In these circumstances there is simply no evidentiary support for plaintiffs’ claims that defendants combined and conspired with others in deciding to enter into a contract with Dr. Mijanovich in lieu of plaintiffs. The record is devoid of any evidence that defendants and others “‘had a conscious commitment to a common scheme designed to achieve an unlawful objective.’ ”
Monsanto, supra,
[The] Hospital had the right to hire or not hire Dr. Collins as an independent pathologist, based upon its perceived need for pathologists in addition to those working for APL. To suggest that APL used its influence to cause St. John’s Hospital to reach this decision is merely to suggest that APL wanted St. John’s to abide by the terms of its contract with APL, in which the Hospital agreed that APL would provide complete and adequate professional pathology services.
In short, plaintiffs’ conspiracy arguments ultimately reduce themselves to an assertion that defendants negotiated secretly with Dr. Mijanovich, and that defendants eventually entered into a contract with Dr. Mijanovich. These factual allegations do not, as a matter of law, permit an inference of antitrust conspiracy. Plaintiffs’ conspiracy claims are likewise suitable for summary disposition due to plaintiffs’ failure to controvert defendants’ factual assertion that their decision to contract exclusively with Dr. Mijanovich hinged on quality of service and other legitimate business reasons.
33
In the absence of explicit, direct evidence of an anticompetitive conspiracy, plaintiffs’ conspiracy allegations must be rejected where the defendants demonstrate legitimate business reasons for their action. “That the challenged conduct of appellants is consistent with legitimate activity ... weighs against inferring a conspiracy.”
Cooper v. Forsyth County Hospital Authority, Inc.,
In sum, there is a total lack of evidence of the relevant conspiracy. “The absence of proof of a conspiracy also supports ... entry of summary judgment against [plaintiffs] on his claims of a group boycott,
Since plaintiffs have failed to adduce record evidence that would support a finding of joint collective action, summary judgment is warranted as to Counts I and III and the conspiracy to monopolize portion of Count IV.
7. The Section Two Claims
In Count IV of the Amended Complaint, plaintiffs allege monopolization, attempted monopolization and conspiracy to monopolize claims under Section Two of the Sherman Act. The markets allegedly victimized under these claims are medical/surgical services and professional pathology services in Cherokee County. As the foregoing discussion suggests, however, plaintiffs’ failure to substantiate their allegations regarding the product and geographic markets relevant to this case mandates summary judgment for the defendants on these claims as well.
(i) Monopolization
Monopoly power is “the power to control market prices or exclude competition.”
United States v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
From this Court’s previous discussion regarding the product market relevant to this case, it follows that plaintiffs’ monopolization claims must fail. In light of the Court’s conclusion, in the context of plaintiffs’ tying claims, that the provision of pathology services is not a separate product or service from the package of services offered by a hospital, it would be anamolous to find that pathology services do constitute a separate product market for purposes of monopolization analysis. “Because the Court finds as a matter of law that there is no relevant product market consisting of providing pathological services to individual patients, the [p]laintiff[s] must necessarily fail in [their] attempts to allege monopolization with regard to this product market.” Collins, supra, at 60,-620.
Moreover, as a matter of law plaintiffs cannot prevail on their allegation of monopolization in the product market of
(ii) Attempted Monopolization
In order to prove attempted monopolization the plaintiff must demonstrate that the defendants had a specific intent to monopolize and that there was a dangerous probability that the attempt would be successful in achieving a monopoly in the relevant market.
Swift & Co. v. United States,
Here, the record demonstrates unequivocally that defendants had neither the incentive nor the ability to injure competition in any relevant market. To the contrary, because of the structure of the market in which CMH competes, a decline in the quality or an increase to supra-competitive levels in the price of services provided at the Hospital would injure, not benefit the Hospital. Not surprisingly, therefore, plaintiffs can point to no evidence that the defendants had a specific intent to monopolize. In addition, there is no evidence to suggest that the conduct of CMH — which was not engaged in competition with the plaintiffs — was in any sense predatory.
(iii) Conspiracy to Monopolize
The elements of the offense of conspiracy to monopolize are (1) the existence of a combination or conspiracy; (2) an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy; (3) a substantial amount of commerce affected; and (4) specific intent to monopolize.
United States v. Yellow Cab Co.,
Finally, two other conclusions of the Fourth Circuit in the
Rockingham
case are useful in placing the Section 2 claims here in proper perspective. First, the Court specifically rejected the plaintiff’s claim that his radiologist competitors, who were the only official interpreters of CT scans in the county, had monopoly power because “the hospital’s board, which unilaterally designated them, can relieve them of their position at any time.”
Rockingham,
B. The State Antitrust Claims
In Count VII of their Amended Complaint plaintiffs claim, on the basis of the same allegations purportedly giving rise to federal antitrust liability, that the defendants have “committed unlawful acts which adversely affect competition in violation of S.C.Code Ann. § 39-3-10 and have entered into agreements or relationships which give rise to monopolies and agreements in restraint of trade in violation of S.C.Code Ann. §§ 39-3-130 and 39-3-149.” Amended Complaint at 11 60. Because “South Carolina has long adhered to a policy of following federal precedents in matters relating to state trade regulation enforcement,”
In re Wiring Device Antitrust Litigation,
C. The State and Federal Unfair Trade Claims
In Count VIII of their Amended Complaint plaintiffs allege that defendants’ conduct violates S.C.Code Ann. § 39-5-20, which prohibits unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive practices, as well as the federal Unfair Trade Practice Act, 15 U.S.C. § 45.
35
With respect to the unfair trade claim under state law, S.C. Code Ann. § 39-5-140(a) creates a private right of action for persons damaged by acts or practices declared unlawful by § 39-5-20. This cause of action is limited, however, “to only those unfair or deceptive acts or practices ... that affect the public interest.”
Noack Enterprises Inc. v. Country Corner Interiors Inc.,
D. The Federal Civil Rights Claim
In Count V of their Amended Complaint, plaintiffs have alleged a violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Section 1983 provides:
Every person who, under color of any [law] ... of any State ... subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States ... to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution ... shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law____
42 U.S.C. § 1983. In order to prevail on this claim, plaintiffs must show that defendants were acting under color of state law and that defendants’ conduct deprived plaintiffs of rights, privileges or immunities that are protected by the United States Constitution.
See Gomez v. Toledo,
1. Action Under Color of State Law
Plaintiffs have argued that defendants’ actions were taken under color of state law because (i) CMH was never officially dissolved as a special purpose district and (ii) defendants’ conduct constituted state action under the standards set forth in
Modaber.
Although there is no blanket rule which can be applied to every type of action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
Burton v. Wilmington Parking Authority,
In
Modaber v. Culpeper Memorial Hospital, Inc.,
(1) in an exclusively state capacity,
(2) for the state’s direct benefit, or
(3) at the state’s specific behest.
Id. at 1025. 38 Each of these concepts is discussed in detail below.
The General Agreement and the Lease Agreement make it abundantly clear that the defendants and Cherokee County intended that defendants would:
construct and operate ... an entirely new hospital (the “New Hospital”) in substitution for and replacement of [CCMH] ..., and to operate under [their] own auspices a hospital (the “Interim Hospital”) in the place and stead ... and at the site of [CCMH], until such time as the New Hospital shall commence operations.”
General Agreement at p. 1; Lease Agreement at p. 1. In addition, the General Agreement states that the defendants will operate the Interim Hospital “for [their] own account,” General Agreement § 3, and that Cherokee County “shall cease to operate [CCMH]” on the date when the Interim Hospital commences operations, General Agreement § 3.04. And, perhaps most importantly, the General Agreement also provides that the defendants “will have final authority and responsibility for all decisions relating to the management and operation of the Interim Hospital and the New Hospital.” General Agreement § 7. These provisions establish that Cherokee County intended to abandon in its entirety its responsibility for and interest in the operation of CCMH as a special purpose district. In light of this compelling evidence, it is clear that defendants’ conduct did not constitute state action. To hold otherwise merely because the formal procedures required to dissolve a special purpose district may not have been followed would exalt form over substance. It is equally clear, for the reasons discussed below, that plaintiffs cannot establish state action under any of the standards discussed by the Fourth Circuit in Modaber. This is especially true where, as here, the state has expressed an intention not to be involved with the very activity alleged to constitute state action.
First, the
Modaber
court explained that a private party acts in an exclusively state capacity when it exercises powers traditionally exclusively reserved to the state,
id.,
citing
Jackson,
Second,
Modaber
teaches that a private party acts for the state’s direct benefit when it shares the rewards and responsibilities of a private venture with the state.
Id.
The
Modaber
court specifically rejected contentions that acceptance of Hill-Burton Act grants and Medicare and Medicaid benefits and the extensive federal and state regulation of hospitals transformed a private hospital’s conduct into state action.
Id.
at 1026-27. Nor does an agreement to accept indigent patients constitute state action.
Greco v. Orange Memorial Hospital Corp.,
This is consistent with
Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.,
Plaintiffs also contend that the lease of the hospital building and grounds by defendants from Cherokee County suggest state action. The Fifth Circuit has considered this situation in
Greco,
Finally, plaintiffs contend that contracts between defendants and the County required retention of medical staff, including plaintiffs, and included ongoing obligations of defendants to Cherokee County, and that by virtue of the contract Cherokee County retains control over the operations and policies of Cherokee. The Supreme Court recognized in
Rendell-Baker v. Kohn,
Third,
Modaber
explained that a private party acts at the state’s specific behest when it does a particular act which the state has directed or encouraged.
Modaber,
In sum, plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that the relationship between defendants and Cherokee County was such that defendants acted “under color of state law” within the meaning of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Although the absence of state action is alone sufficient to defeat plaintiffs’ claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, it is also clear that plaintiffs have not established that they have been deprived of any constitutionally protected right.
2. Deprivation of a Protected Right
In order to establish the existence of a valuable liberty or property interest that is entitled to due process protection, plaintiffs must demonstrate that they have “more than an abstract need or desire for it ... [or] a unilateral expectation of it. [They] must, instead, have a legitimate claim of entitlement to it.”
Bd. of Regents v. Roth,
First, the record shows that plaintiffs’ pathology contract provided that either party may terminate the agreement upon 60 days written notice. August 1, 1984 Addendum to Steuer/Latham Agreement. In fact, Dr. Steuer has admitted that defendants had every right not to renew plaintiffs’ pathology contract with CMH and to enter into a new pathology contract with another pathologist. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 159. Second, Dr. Steuer has admitted that his medical staff privileges in pathology (as distinguished from his rights under the Steuer/Latham Agreement) have not been changed in any way since CMH was acquired by the defendants. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 215. Third, plaintiffs have admitted that they currently maintain a private laboratory with the capacity to perform anatomical and surgical pathology and that their ability to perform anatomical and surgical pathology does not depend on access to the clinical laboratory facilities at CMH. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 131. Fourth, Dr. Steuer has admitted that plaintiffs have the ability to earn income from sources other than CMH. Steuer Dep. Tr. at 617. These facts lead inexorably to the conclusion that defendants’ conduct has not in any way affected plaintiffs’ ability to practice pathology in Cherokee County or plaintiffs’ staff privileges at CMH.
In
Engelstad v. Virginia Municipal Hospital,
Staff privileges do not establish an employment contract with the hospital. Nor do they guarantee a doctor that his authorized practice in the hospital will have a particular economic value. Rather, the use a doctor makes of his staff privileges depends upon some independent source ... In the case of a pathologist that source may be some independent contractual arrangement with the hospital to provide pathology services to the hospital.
With this background, we can now address [the physician’s] claim that the termination of his directorship effectively reduced or terminated his staff privileges. Whatever expectation [the physician] had of earning a particular level of income from his pathology practice was predicated upon his contract to serve as director of pathology, not his staff privileges. Indeed, it was his contract with the hospital that gave economic meaning to the exercise of his staff privileges.
The bylaws’ procedural requirements were intended only to cover cases where a doctor’s privileges have been reduced or terminated, which is typically the result of complaints regarding the doctor’s professional competence or ethical behavior. Those procedures were not intended to cover cases, like the present one, where the use a doctor can make of his staff privileges has been incidentally affected by the hospital’s administrative decision to terminate a personal service contract with the hospital. [The physician’s] staff privileges guaranteed him only the authority, not the wherewithal, to practice his profession. His authority to practice his profession at the hospital has not been reduced or terminated, but remains intact.
Id. at 267-68. Engelstad thus provides conclusive support for this Court’s conclusion that plaintiffs have not been deprived of any liberty or property right at all because they still retain their medical staff privileges at CMH. 40
In sum, then, it is clear from the record that plaintiffs have failed to present any evidence that defendants’ conduct constituted state action or that defendants’ conduct deprived plaintiffs of any constitutionally protected rights. Under such circumstances, this Court has no choice but to grant defendants’ motion for summary judgment regarding plaintiffs’ claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
E. The State Common Law Causes of Action
In Count VI of their Amended Complaint (¶ 56-58), plaintiffs allege that defendants tortiously interfered “with Plaintiffs’ rights and negotiations to contract with physicians and patients in Cherokee County.”
Id.
at f! 57. This claim is based on the “request for plaintiffs’ professional pathol
In order to prevail on the claim for tortious interference with contractual relations, plaintiffs must first establish the existence of a valid contract,
Parker v. Brown,
Plaintiffs have alleged only that defendants have diverted the staff physicians’
requests
to perform pathology services. They have not alleged, nor have they adduced any evidence, that the elements necessary to establish a valid contract are present in this case. Such requests, if they carry any contractual significance at all, can only be viewed as offers. A “mere declaration of intent will not give rise to a contract.”
Caulder,
Even if plaintiffs somehow managed to establish that the “requests” forming the basis for Count YI constituted enforceable contracts, however, they must also prove that the claimed interference was without justification.
Keels v. Powell,
Plaintiffs have also alleged two separate claims for breach of contract (Counts IX and X) based on defendants’ alleged termination of plaintiffs’ staff privileges without good cause. In Count IX, plaintiffs allege that they were third party beneficiaries under the Lease Agreement entered into between defendants and Cherokee County and that defendants breached their obligation undertaken in Section 3.1 of the Lease Agreement that they would not terminate plaintiffs’ staff privileges without good cause. In Count X, plaintiffs allege that the bylaws of the medical staff constitute a contract between plaintiffs and defendants and that defendants violated their obligation under the bylaws not to terminate plaintiffs’ staff privileges without good cause. In order to prevail on either of these claims, plaintiffs must first show that defendants' decision not to renew plaintiffs’ pathology contract actually constituted a revocation of plaintiffs' medical staff privileges. This Court has already concluded in its discussion of plaintiffs’ claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 that defendants' decision not to renew plaintiffs’ pathology contract had no impact at all on plaintiff’s medical staff privileges.
43
Notes
. Throughout this Order and Memorandum the Court will reference the record by citing deposition transcripts and other documents used by the parties in discovery. Documents produced by the parties have been paginated in accordance with a designation identifying the party or individual providing the document.
. Prior to the 1979 Amendment the Steuer Agreement had been amended at least once, in December 1970, to reduce the rate of compensation from 40% to 30% of gross billings.
. Paragraph 11 of the 1979 Amendment further stated: "The Pathologist has entered into the contractual relationship with [CMH] to provide professional services and this does not imply that he is an employee of [CMH] or Cherokee County.”
. The Steuer/Latham Agreement was further amended in May 1983 to change the compensation formula as follows: the pathologists would receive 80% of gross, monthly Anatomical Pathology charges, and 16% of adjusted gross monthly Clinical Lab Charges, (TM-113). In July 1983 the Steuer/Latham Agreement was further modified to reduce compensation to 13.5% of adjusted gross monthly clinical lab charges. (TM-114.)
. In
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
. Although courts have been reluctant in the past to award summary judgment in antitrust cases,
see Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting System,
. Plaintiffs take the position that their contractual relationship with CMH was not exclusive. While the word "exclusive" did not appear in plaintiffs’ contracts with CMH, those contracts unquestionably made plaintiffs responsible for fulfilling all of the hospital’s professional pathology requirements. Plaintiffs’ argument to the contrary is frivolous.
. Mr. Barrett, manager of CMH's pathology laboratory, explained that the hospital had formerly used a single tier pricing structure that applied to both inpatient and outpatient pathology services. After the arrival of Dr. Mijanovich and Mr. Barrett, the hospital established a separate outpatient price structure in order to compete more effectively with reference labs. Outpatient prices were therefore lowered and prices for inpatient pathology services were adjusted upward, but only to levels that were competitive with the other hospitals with which CMH competes in providing inpatient services.
The overall effect was a better gross margin and we were not overpriced according to inpatient pricing with our surrounding admitting hospitals. We now offered much lower out-patient pricing — on a separate pricing schedule that they never had before.
Barrett Dep. Tr. at 110-111.
. Valley Liquors, Inc. v. Renfield Importers, Ltd.,
. The Court also notes that in Hyde the Supreme Court did not apply the per se test in a factual setting analogous to the instant case, and that the Court there appears to have "substantially ‘softened’ ” its position regarding strict application of the per se test. Collins v. Associated Pathologists, Ltd., 1987-1 Trade Cas. (CCH) If 67,603 at 60,618. The Court notes further that the Fourth Circuit recently did not apply a per se analysis in Rockingham, which also involved a fact pattern quite similar to that presented here.
. Even assuming it were appropriate to make such a distinction, this would not change the Court’s decision here because there is no evidence to support a finding that purchasers of inpatient hospital services viewed professional anatomical or clinical pathology services as being separate from the provision of inpatient hospital services. Moreover, to the extent that distinguishing between professional anatomical and clinical pathology is appropriate, the Court notes that plaintiffs have apparently abandoned their claims regarding clinical pathology. At this juncture plaintiffs appear to persist only in their arguments regarding anatomical pathology-
. Although there was a factual dispute in Collins regarding whether the agreements between the pathology group and the hospital were, in fact, exclusive, the Court found that dispute not to be material to its decision. Rather, the Court concluded that the agreements at issue were not an unreasonable restraint of trade even if they did operate as exclusive contracts. Collins, supra at 60,612.
. The
Collins
Court distinguished
Hyde,
wherein the Supreme Court, in rejecting an antitrust challenge to an exclusive contract between a hospital and an anesthesia provider, had nonetheless found that anesthesia services were a separate product from hospital services. The
Hyde
Court’s analysis relied heavily on the fact that "patients or surgeons often request specific anesthesiologists to come to a hospital to provide anesthesia, and that the choice of an individual anesthesiologist separate from the choice of a hospital is particularly frequent in respondent’s specialty, obstetric anesthesiology.”
Hyde, supra,
. Patients’ physicians choose what procedures a patient needs. Mijanovich Dep. Tr. at 146. This fact is conceded by plaintiffs. Plaintiffs’ Mem. at 3. Moreover, plaintiffs do not contend that physicians or their patients are forced to purchase medically unnecessary or inappropriate pathology consults.
. The
Rockingham
court distinguished
Hyde,
"where the hospital and the anesthesiologists shared the fees for anesthesiological services.”
. A relevant antitrust market has also been defined as "a product or group of products and a geographical area in which it is sold such that a hypothetical, profit-maximizing firm ... that was the only present and future seller of those products in that area "could profitably raise prices above competitive levels for a significant period of time.” Department of Justice 1984 Merger Guidelines, 49 Fed.Reg. 26,824-826 (1984).
. See Department of Justice 1984 Merger Guidelines, 49 Fed.Reg. 26,824 (1984).
. Plaintiffs offered no indication of the precise contours of this radius. It is clear, however, that the area included within the 20-mile radius of CMH extends well beyond the boundaries of Cherokee County, reaching into both North Carolina and Spartanburg.
. "The Plaintiff’s personal preference to continue his practice at [a particular hospital] does not justify excluding another area hospital from the ‘relevant’ geographical market.”’
Kuck v. Bensen,
.
E.g., Consul, Ltd. v. Transco Energy Co.,
. The Fourth Circuit has used similar language in describing geographic market definition:
'The geographic market should consist of an area in which the defendants operate and which the plaintiff can reasonably turn to for supplies." ... The penultimate question, towards which this preliminary inquiry into market definition is directed, is whether the defendant has market power: the ability to raise prices above levels that would exist in a perfectly competitive market. The geographic market demarcation should not be too tightly drawn, unless clear evidence exists that potential competitors outside the region are hindered from entering. A market drawn too tightly, either in geographic terms that exclude potential suppliers or in product terms that exclude potential substitutes, creates the illusion of market power where none may exist."
Consul, Ltd. v. Transco Energy Co.,
.
See, e.g., Syufy Enterprises v. American Multicinema, Inc.,
Plaintiffs seek to circumvent their failure to adduce record evidence of barriers to entry by arguing that there are "significant" barriers to entering the acute care hospital market in Gaffney. Plaintiffs’ Mem. at 36-37. The "barriers” inaccurately identified by plaintiffs relate solely to constructing a hospital in Cherokee County, not to the ability of hospitals outside the County to offer services to county residents. Plaintiffs’ inexplicably ignore the fact that in order to sell hospital services to county residents it is not necessary for a hospital to be located in the County. This is evidenced by the fact that hospitals outside the County presently sell their services to over 40% of the residents of the County. Plaintiffs are, in any event, wrong in claiming that one of the barriers to entry is "that in order for a new hospital to enter the Cherokee County market it must first obtain a certificate of need from the County itself.” Plaintiffs’ Mem. at 37. In fact, the state, not the County, awards certificates of need, and these certificates are necessary only to construct a facility, not to offer services to residents of a county different from that in which the hospital is located. Department of Health and Environmental Control, Regulation 61-15. Thus, for example, Spartanburg hospitals do not require certificates of need to offer their services to Cherokee County residents. Plaintiffs also claim that there are "significant economic barriers to entry in the market." Plaintiffs' Mem. at 37. This conclusory assertion is made without reference to the record, and, in fact, there is no record evidence to support it.
. Defendants’ expert testimony was tendered to the Court in an Affidavit by Dr. Barry Harris which accompanied their memorandum in support of summary judgment. Dr. Harris is an industrial organization economist who has testified frequently in hospital and other antitrust cases. Plaintiffs have not challenged Dr. Harris' qualifications.
.
Hyde, supra.
. Plaintiffs have declined to offer expert testimony on market definition issues. Plaintiffs apparently believe that expert testimony is not necessary to address these issues despite the fact that when Dr. Steuer was asked his understanding of the tying and tied products alleged in paragraph 38 of his Complaint, he responded: "Well, I’m glad you asked that, because I don’t understand it at all." Steuer Dep. Tr. at 712. Failure to adduce expert testimony on competitive issues such as market definition augurs strongly in favor of granting summary judgment against an antitrust plaintiff.
See, e.g., Military Services Realty Inc.
v.
Realty Consultants of Virginia,
. It should be noted that these driving times (based on the most direct route at speeds at or
. The courts have routinely rejected single facility markets in numerous other industries.
E.g., R.D. Imports Ryno Industries, Inc. v. Mazda Distributors (Gulf), Inc.,
. At oral argument plaintiffs' counsel claimed that they had attacked the Mijanovich Contract only on tying grounds, and insisted they had not claimed that it constituted an impermissible exclusive dealing arrangement. Counsel’s suggestion reflects a misreading of Count I of the Complaint and the Amended Complaint, both of which claimed that defendants and unnamed others had combined and conspired "to unreasonably prevent and restrain competition in the furnishing of additional hospital services and professional pathology services to the public and the Plaintiffs will be prevented from practicing their profession and competing in the providing of professional pathology services.” Moreover, in responding to defendants’ arguments in their memoranda that the Mijanovich Contract did not constitute an illegal exclusive dealing arrangement, plaintiffs never indicated that defendants had wrongly construed Count I of the Complaint or Amended Complaint.
. This is consistent with
Hyde,
where the Court stated that a rule of reason analysis of an exclusive contract between a hospital and an anesthesiologist "involves an inquiry into the actual effect of the exclusive contract on competition among anesthesiologists."
Hyde, supra,
. In
Ross v. Communications Satellite Corp.,
. Since defendants are under common ownership they must be treated as a single entity for antitrust purposes.
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp.,
. Mr. Tidikis, defendants' Regional Vice President, testified that based on various existing deficiencies, licensure and inspection problems and continuing "service level problems," it was his perception that a great deal of improvement was necessary in the CMH Pathology Department. Tidikis Dep. Tr. at 23, 109. Among these problems were deficiencies in the laboratory, id. at 23, turn-around time and reliability of results, id. at 26, and problems with supervision of the laboratory by the pathologist, id. at 27. Mr. Tidikis also testified as to the advantages of exclusivity from the perspective of hospital administration: e.g., it establishes one point of contact with responsibility for the medical direction of a department affixed with one individual or group, and also facilitates risk management. Id. at 56-57. Defendants offered plaintiffs a contract which, if accepted by plaintiffs, would have facilitated the correction of the problems in the Pathology Department, particularly in relation to "the defining of responsibilities of and supervision and who was going to do what in the laboratory.” Id. at 109. Plaintiffs rejected that contract and defendants entered into a contract with Dr. Mijanovich, who was willing to provide the pathology services required by CMH at a cost to the hospital substantially below both the amount previously paid to plaintiffs and the figure proposed by plaintiffs during the negotiations which preceded their non-renewal.
.
Cf. Cooper
v.
Forsyth County Hospital Authority, Inc.,
. Plaintiffs belatedly attempted to avoid this conclusion by suggesting for the first time in their Opposition to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment that they do compete with the hospital for the provision of the technical component of anatomical surgical consults. To the extent that this claim has any validity, it can relate only to competition for providing the technical component of anatomical surgical consults for pathology specimens generated from locations other than CMH. Such competition occurs in the market in which the CMH pathology laboratory competes primarily with reference labs located throughout the southeast. The only evidence in the record regarding this reference lab market confirms that it is characterized by vigorous competition and is not susceptible to monopolization by CMH.
. It is well established that there is no private right of action under the Federal Trade Commission Act.
Holloway v. Bristol-Myers,
. Action under color of state law is analyzed under the same standards required to demonstrate state action under the Fourteenth Amendment.
United States v. Price,
.
See Rendell-Baker v. Kohn,
. Two later Court cases reach conclusions consistent with
Modaber.
In
Blum v. Yaretsky,
In
Carter v. Norfolk Community Hospital Association,
. The Fourth Circuit had held in a line of cases that acceptance of Hill-Burton Act grant funds was sufficient to establish state action on the part of recipient hospitals.
Modaber,
. Collins also contains language indicating that a physician's rights as a contract physician have nothing to do with his rights as a member of the medical staff. See discussion at n. 43 herein.
. The action for tortious interference with contractual relations has' never been expanded by the South Carolina courts to encompass prospective contractual relations.
Smith v. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, Inc.,
We think that the limitation on a cause of action for intentional interference to instances where there is a valid contract in existence is justified by the fact that the parties have a property right in an existing contract ... [but] the law affords no protection to rights which are not yet in existence.
Smith, supra,
. A similar claim under Illinois law was considered and rejected by the Collins court. There, the plaintiff pathologist claimed that the defendants had tortiously interfered with his medical staff privileges. After finding that the plaintiffs staff privileges had not, in fact, been reduced, because the exclusive pathology contract at issue was valid under federal and state antitrust laws, the court granted summary judgment for defendants on the tortious interference claim. Specifically, Collins noted:
Because the Court has found that the agreement was legal and did not violate antitrust laws, the Plaintiff cannot argue that the parties to the agreement committed a tort by adhering to the terms of that agreement. The Court finds that even if the Defendants had caused [the hospital] to comply with the agreement by not hiring [the plaintiff pathologist], such action was taken pursuant to a lawful agreement and cannot form the basis for [plaintiffs] claim that [the defendants] interfered with [plaintiffs] staff privilege because he was refused future employment at the Hospital.
Collins, Slip Op. at A-52.
. Collins provides further support for this Court’s conclusion that plaintiffs have not been deprived of their medical staff privileges as a result of defendants’ decision not to renew their pathology contract. The plaintiff in Collins likewise alleged that the defendant hospital "did not comply with the bylaws of the hospital when they substantially removed or reduced [plaintiffs'] staff privileges in pathology by preventing him from practicing pathology in the pathology laboratory." (Slip Op. at A-49). In accepting the hospital's argument that "[plaintiff] was not entitled to any type of procedure regarding his staff privileges, because the Hospital never removed or reduced the Plaintiff’s staff privileges”, id., the Collins Court noted:
A hospital requires that a physician have staff privileges at its facility as a means of insuring that a doctor is qualified to practice in his profession and that the hospital will fulfill its public service function of delivering quality medical services to its patients. [Plaintiff] was not entitled to be employed by the Hospital simply because the Hospital had granted him staff privileges, even if the Hospital would not have employed him had he not had staff privileges. A hospital’s decision to grant or deny staff privileges is based upon the qualifications of the physician, and a hospital is not required to employ everyone to whom it has granted staff privileges.
In the present case, [plaintiff] is asserting that because St. John’s Hospital had granted him staff privileges, he was entitled to practice pathology in the Hospital’s pathology laboratory, using the Hospital’s laboratory equipment. However, St. Johns’ Hospital declined to hire [plaintiff] because they already had a contractual arrangement with APL for the provision of all of their pathology services. The Hospital never made an issue out of Dr. Collins’ qualifications to practice pathology, which would have been the real issue at a hearing involving the reduction or removal of his staff privileges. Dr. Collins maintains his staff privileges at St. John’s Hospital at the current time under a leave of absence status; because the Hospital never reduced or removed his staff privileges, there was no issue or dispute about his qualifications which a hearing and other procedures in the by-laws could have addressed. It is true that [plaintiff] has been refused employment by St. John's Hospital, but this is due to the contract between the Hospital and APL and cannot be characterized as a reduction or removal of staff privileges which would require the procedural protections written into the Hospital’s by-laws. The Court orders summary judgment in favor of the Defendants on Count IX.
Collins, slip op. at A-50.
