In August 1985, the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) told the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Pharmacy (“the Board”) that it would investigate three Board rules to see whether these rules unreasonably restrained competition and hurt consumers. The first rule essentially prohibited advertising in which one pharmacist claimed superiority to (or disparaged) another; the second rule prohibited mail order pharmacies; and the third rule prevented pharmacies from establishing “branch offices” or “pick-up stations”, say, at work places, where patients could drop off, and pick up, prescriptions that the “main office” (in the interim) would fill in batches. See Mass.Regs.Code tit. 247, §§ 7.00(7), (14), (26) (1979), subsequently amended, Feb. 6, 1987. (See Appendix.)
The FTC asked the Board to cooperate with the investigation. The Board refused to do so. The FTC then issued subpoenas, which the Board resisted, and which the *689 FTC eventually asked the district court to enforce. See 15 U.S.C. § 49 (1982). The district court ordered the subpoenas enforced, and the Board now appeals that enforcement order. We believe the order is legally proper.
The Board concedes that the FTC has broad legal power to issue investigative subpoenas. See United States v. Morton Salt Co.,
For one thing, a subordinate state governmental unit enjoys antitrust "immunity" only when it acts pursuant to a "clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed" state policy. Lafayette v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.,
For another thing, where "state regulation by a private party is involved," and where there is a "gauzy cloak of state involvement over what is essentially a private" anticompetitive activity, California Retail Liquor Dealers Association v. Midcal Aluminum, Inc.,
The Board points out that in
Massport,
Massport,
however, is clearly distinguishable. Because
Massport
was not a subpoena enforcement case, we could look at the complaint and directly compare the claimed activities with Massport’s authorizing legislation. Moreover, in
Massport
we could not conceive how the activities attacked could fall outside the area of immunity delineated by clear state policy; in this case, as our previous discussion suggests, that is not so. Rather, here we do not now know whether the Board’s activities will turn out to lie “close to,” or far from, the state statutes’ basic purpose; nor do we know whether they will turn out to fall inside or “outside that area of [agency] autonomy involving ‘ “ordinary” [agency] errors or abuses in the administration of powers conferred by the state.’ ”
Massport,
This factual uncertainty is precisely why this “sort of dispute” ought not to be
settled in a subpoena enforcement proceeding. An agency’s investigations should not be bogged down by premature challenges to its regulatory jurisdiction. These subpoenas do not fit within the narrow exception proscribing agency investigations that wander unconscionably far afield; the Commission’s regulatory jurisdictions over appellants may be clouded but it is not plainly spurious.
Federal Trade Commission v. Swanson,
The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
APPENDIX
The original and amended versions of the three regulations at issue are as follows:
Original Versions
Mass.Regs.Code ch. 247 §§ 7.00(7), 7.00(14), 7.00(26) (1979).
New Versions
2A1 CMR 7.00(7) — “A pharmacist shall not utilize advertising which makes claims of professional superiority that he or she cannot substantiate.”
Mass.Regs.Code ch. 247 §§ 7.00(7), 7.00(14), 7.00(26) (1987).
