Plaintiffs Freedom Holdings, Inc., and International Tobacco Partners, Ltd., are cigarette importers. They filed this putative class action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Alvin K. Hellerstein, Judge) to enjoin the enforcement of New York statutes enacted in furtherance of a 1998 Master Settlement Agreement (“MSA”) between a number of tobacco companies and various government entities, including New York State. Plaintiffs contend that the laws at issue, N.Y. Pub. Health Law §§ 1399-nn — 1399-pp (the “Escrow Statute”), and N.Y. Tax Law §§ 480-b, 481, *42 and 1846 (collectively, the “Contraband Statute”), impermissibly (1) restrain trade in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1; and (2) regulate out-of-state commerce in violation of the Commerce Clause, U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3. Plaintiffs now appeal from a judgment entered in favor of defendants on January 14, 2009, after a bench trial. For the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm.
I. Background
Numerous prior opinions of this court and the district court detail the extensive background of this case.
See Freedom Holdings, Inc. v. Spitzer (“Freedom Holdings I ”),
A. The Master Settlement Agreement
In November 1998, the nation’s four dominant cigarette manufacturers- — -Philip Morris, Lorillard Tobacco, Brown & Williamson, and R.J. Reynolds
1
— settled pending litigation with forty-six states,
2
the District of Columbia, and five United States territories (collectively, “the states”) by entering into the MSA. In return for releases from liability, these manufacturers agreed to make substantial annual payments to compensate the states for health care expenses incurred in the past and expected to be incurred in the future as a result of their populations’ smoking-related ailments. New York’s approval of the MSA is reflected in
State v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
1. The MSA’s Treatment of Cigarette Manufacturers
The MSA divides cigarette manufacturers into several groups. The first group consists of the four dominant manufacturers who initially executed the MSA. They are referred to as “original participating manufacturers,” or “OPMs.” The second group consists of more than fifty smaller manufacturers who joined the MSA after its initial execution. They are referred to as “subsequent participating manufacturers,” or “SPMs.” The SPMs are divided into two sub-groups: “grandfathered SPMs,” who joined the MSA within sixty days of the initial November 1998 execution date; 3 and “non-grandfathered SPMs,” who joined the MSA thereafter. A third group consists of manufacturers who have not joined the MSA. They are referred to as “non-participating manufacturers,” or “NPMs.” An NPM may become a non-grandfathered SPM at any time by signing the MSA and making prescribed payments.
2. Payment Obligations
The MSA specifies a total base payment to be made by all OPMs to the states each *43 year. In 2009, the required base payment was $9 billion. The MSA allocates the annual base payment obligation among OPMs according to their relative market share of the total number of individual cigarettes shipped by the OPMs to the fifty states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico during the preceding calendar year. The MSA then awards the base payment to the states based on prescribed allocable shares, which for New York is 12.76%.
SPMs make annual payments approximating payments made by OPMs. The advantage conferred on grandfathered SPMs for quickly joining in the MSA is that they are exempted from payments on either their 1998 market share, or 125% of their 1997 market share, whichever is greater. Thus, grandfathered SPMs pay an amount approximating the OPM payment only for each cigarette manufactured above the grandfathered threshold.
While the average per-cigarette cost of complying with the MSA is roughly equivalent among OPMs and SPMs above grandfathered thresholds, this court and the district court have observed that the SPM payment formula may, as an arithmetical matter, disproportionately increase marginal payment obligations when SPMs gain market share from OPMs.
See Freedom Holdings II,
3. Adjustments to Payment Obligations
The MSA also provides for various adjustments to participating manufacturers’ payment obligations. First, an “inflation adjustment” increases payment obligations by a minimum of 3% annually. Second, a “volume adjustment” reduces the required base payment if there is an overall decline in the volume of cigarettes sold nationwide. Third, if participating manufacturers lose market share relative to NPMs, an “NPM adjustment” reduces the required base payment by triple the amount of market share lost. See MSA § IX(d)(l)(A). 4
B. The Challenged Statutes
1. The Escrow Statute
Under the MSA, a decline in the volume of sales by participating members necessarily decreases the payments received by the states. To the extent the decline is attributable to increased sales by NPMs, states can both make up for the lost MSA payments and avoid the NPM adjustment by enacting and diligently enforcing escrow statutes. See MSA § IX(d)(2)(B). The MSA contemplates that an escrow statute will “effectively and fully neutralize[ ] the cost disadvantages that the Participating Manufacturers experience vis-avis Non-Participating Manufacturers within such Settling State as a result of the provisions of [the MSA].” Id. § IX(d)(2)(E).
The settling states have, in fact, all enacted escrow statutes. The operative section of the New York Escrow Statute challenged in this case is codified at New York Public Health Law § 1399-pp. It requires each cigarette manufacturer either (1) to join the MSA as a participating manufacturer, see id. § 1399-pp(l); or (2) to make annual payments into a state escrow fund, see id. § 1399-pp(2). The statute specifies the amount of these annual escrow payments, which are adjusted for inflation. *44 See id. at § 1399-pp(2)(a). Escrow funds are released if needed to pay certain judgments, to the extent an NPM paid more into the escrow fund than it would have paid as an SPM, or otherwise after twenty-five years. See id. § 1399-pp(2)(b).
As originally drafted, state escrow statutes, including New York’s, also contained allocable share release provisions, which allowed an NPM to recoup escrow payments to the extent the NPM paid more into the escrow fund than a state’s allocable share of MSA payments. This provided an incentive for NPMs to concentrate their sales in a single state or small group of states to minimize their escrow costs. Thus, an NPM that sold 100% of its cigarettes in New York could recoup 87.24% of its escrow payments because New York’s allocable share of MSA payments is 12.76%. Meanwhile an NPM that sold the same number of cigarettes nationwide could recoup none of its escrow payments. To avoid this outcome, in 2003, New York, like other settling states, amended its Escrow Statute to permit NPMs to obtain a release of escrow payments only to the extent they exceeded the per-cigarette payments the NPMs would have made as participants in the MSA. See N.Y. Pub. Health Law § 1399 — pp(2)(b)(ii). 5
2. The Contraband Statute
Between 1998 and 2002, MSA participants saw their market share of cigarette sales decline while NPMs’ share rose. Attributing this situation, at least in part, to the failure of certain NPMs to comply with escrow statutes, a number of states enacted “contraband statutes.”
6
See Freedom Holdings I,
C. Prior Proceedings
1. Freedom Holdings I
On April 16, 2002, plaintiffs commenced this action in the Southern District of New *45 York, alleging that New York’s Contraband Statute violated the Sherman Act, the Commerce Clause, and the Fourteenth Amendment. The district court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim, and plaintiffs appealed to this court.
We affirmed dismissal of the Commerce Clause claim, concluding that the Contraband Statute did not discriminate against out-of-state economic interests, burden interstate commerce, or regulate commerce occurring outside New York, as plaintiffs alleged.
See Freedom Holdings I,
At the same time, we reversed the dismissal of plaintiffs’ antitrust claim, applying a two-step analysis that asked, (1) whether the Contraband Statute effected a per se violation of the Sherman Act and, if so, (2) whether it was nevertheless saved by the doctrine of state action immunity. Accepting plaintiffs’ allegations as true, as we were required to do in reviewing a judgment of dismissal, we obsexwed that the Contraband Statute “allegedly enforced an express market-sharing agreement among private tobacco manufacturers, the MSA.” Id. at 224. We determined that plaintiffs pleaded both market division and price fixing to the extent “market-share increases among manufacturers are substantially ‘penalized’ ” by the MSA. Id. at 225. Thus, we concluded that plaintiffs adequately stated an antitrust claim by alleging that “the combination of the MSA, the Escrow Statutes, and the Contraband Statutes, allows OPMs to set supracompetitive prices that effectively cause other manufacturers either to charge similar prices or to cease selling.” Id. at 226.
We next considered whether the doctrine of state action immunity shielded the Contraband Statute from application of the antitrust laws.
See California Retail Liquor Dealers Ass’n v. Midcal Aluminum, Inc.,
2. Freedom Holdings II
In response to defendants’ petition for rehearing, we issued a second opinion expanding on our reasons for reversing dismissal. See Freedom Holdings II, 363 *46 F.3d 149. First, we observed that “According to the complaint, the function of the Escrow Statute is to coerce NPMs to join the MSA because the costs of compliance with the Escrow Statute are substantially higher than the costs of being an SPM.” Id. at 152; see also id. at 154.
Second, we identified the core aspect of the alleged market division as the SPM pricing formula. Parsing that formula, we noted that it was possible that SPMs were penalized for gaining market share from OPMs because, “under the MSA, if the numerator increases because the SPM has taken market share from an OPM, the denominator decreases by the amount of the increase. Thus, the SPM’s proportion of the annual payment increases by more than its proportion of overall market share.” Id. at 153. We, therefore, rejected defendants’ contention that, as a matter of law, an SPM’s marginal payment per cigarette is always lower than an OPM’s per-cigarette payment, and we concluded that plaintiffs should be afforded an opportunity to prove that “payments increase disproportionately (i.e. in more than a 1 to 1 ratio) when market share increases.” Id.
Third, as to state action immunity, we reiterated that, as alleged in the complaint, the Contraband Statute was subject to the two-part analysis of
California Retail Liquor Dealers Ass’n v. Midcal Aluminum, Inc.,
3. Freedom Holdings III, IV, and V
On remand after our decisions in
Freedom Holdings I
and
Freedom Holdings II,
plaintiffs amended their complaint and moved for a preliminary injunction barring enforcement of New York’s Escrow and Contraband Statutes. On September 14, 2004, the district court preliminarily enjoined enforcement of the Escrow Statute’s allocable share release amendment, but it denied the motion in all other respects,
see Freedom Holdings III,
4. Grand River
In
Grand River Enterprises Six Nations, Ltd. v. Pryor,
D. Freedom Holdings VI: The Challenged Judgment
On February 10, 2006, plaintiffs again amended their complaint to add a Commerce Clause claim conforming to
Grand River.
After discovery closed, the district court commenced a three-day hearing on November 18, 2008, after which it entered judgment for defendants as if after a bench trial pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52.
See Freedom Holdings VI,
1. Findings of Fact
Relying on data compiled by Pricewaterhouse Coopers in the course of its duties as the independent auditor responsible for calculating payment obligations and reporting data to the states and participating manufacturers under the MSA, the district court made a number of findings, including the following:
First, “the payment structure of the MSA does not favor the major cigarette companies over” SPMs and NPMs. Id. at 691. “[U]pdated reports revealfed]” that “OPMs continue to pay more per carton ($5.31 in 2007), including payments to the four previously settled states, than do the non-grandfathered SPMs ($5.07), and both pay more than NPMs pay under the Escrow Statutes ($5.02).” Id. While “[gjrandfathered SPMs, viewed in isolation, have the lowest average payment obligation ($2.63), since they pay nothing for cigarettes sold up to their grandfathered threshold,” id., credible expert testimony indicated that marginal cost, not average cost, determined price, see id. at 698. The marginal cost for cigarette sales above the grandfathered threshold was “about what non-grandfathered SPMs pay ($5.07), which is more than NPMs pay.” Id. at 691.
Second, NPMs had not “suffered,” but rather “prospered,” under the combined effect of the MSA and challenged state statutes. Id. at 697. Specifically, while OPMs’ total market share declined from 97.1 % to 85.9% between 1997 and 2007, NPM market share during that same period increased “from 0.4% in 1997 to a peak of 8.1% in 2003, ... to 5.4% in 2007.” Id. at 691. 9 The “figures” cited in these two groups of findings “undermine” defendants’ argument “that ‘NPMs are deterred from seeking increased market share because the high costs of compliance with the Escrow Statute preclude their competing through lower prices.’ ” Id. at 697. Indeed, this conclusion obtained even if plaintiffs had proved — which they did not — that the MSA discouraged competition among OPMs. The evidence showed not only that NPMs could exploit disproportionate price increases by MSA participants, but that they “have done so vigorously to the NPMs’ market advantage.” See id. at 699. 10
*48 Third, “[n]o evident economic force drives NPMs to the MSA.” Id. at 697. Insofar as plaintiffs complained that NPMs faced a relative tax hardship because escrow payments, in contrast to MSA payments, are not tax deductible, plaintiffs ignored an important distinction: MSA participants could “not recover their payments once made, while NPMs receive annual interest earnings on escrowed funds and will recover, after twenty-five years, any funds not applied to judgments or settlements with the States.” Id. If plaintiffs eliminated these differences “by disclaiming their rights to interest income and reversion of principal,” they would be “eligible to deduct their [escrow] payments.” Id.
Fourth, plaintiffs failed to prove that the MSA “caused [them] or other NPMs to surrender pricing autonomy.” Id. at 698. To the contrary, Christopher Nelson, chief financial officer of NPM Freedom Holdings, and Jeffrey Avo Uvezian, president of NPM International Tobacco Partners, testified that “their pricing decisions are made independently and that they are not compelled to follow price leadership by their larger competitors.” Id. Similarly, Kevin Altman, who set prices for two NPMs, CigTee and JJA Distributors LLC, “testified that both companies made independent pricing decisions that were not dictated by OPMs or SPMs.” Id. “The aggregate historical data” not only supported this testimony, it demonstrated that “NPMs have taken competitive advantage of higher prices charged by the large cigarette manufacturers.” Id. “Only the Escrow Statutes,” not the MSA, have an impact on “NPMs’ cost structure.” Id. Their effect, however, was akin to a “flat tax,” which did not violate antitrust laws. Id. at 699.
2. The Antitrust Claim
In light of these findings, the district court entered judgment for defendants on plaintiffs’ antitrust claim, holding that plaintiffs had failed to carry their burden to prove a per se violation of the Sherman Act:
[T]he MSA does not mandate or authorize conduct that necessarily constitutes a violation of the antitrust laws in all cases, or place irresistible pressure on a party to violate the antitrust laws in *49 order to comply with the [agreement]. The continued strength of NPMs proves as much, and the absence of financial pressure on NPMs to join the MSA confirms it. Nothing in the Escrow or Contraband Statutes mandates or authorizes illegal conduct in all cases, an essential ingredient of a per se antitrust violation.
Id. at 700 (internal quotation marks and modifications omitted). 11
Alternatively, the district court concluded that the challenged statutes were shielded from Sherman Act preemption by state action immunity according to the two-part test articulated in
California Retail Liquor Dealers Ass’n v. Midcal Aluminum, Inc.,
3. Commerce Clause Claim
The district court also entered judgment for defendants on plaintiffs’ claim that the extraterritorial effects of “interlocking” state escrow statutes violate the Commerce Clause by creating a uniform, national system of cigarette regulation. While the enactment of similar escrow statutes by a number of states contributed to the national increase in cigarette prices, the district court concluded that this did not equate to regulation of interstate commerce by New York because plaintiffs failed to show that “commercial actors outside New York are bound in some way by the dictates of New York statutes.” Id. at 707.
Plaintiffs timely appealed the district court’s judgment.
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
On appeal from a bench trial, we accord considerable deference to a district court’s findings of fact, which we will reverse only for clear error. We review its conclusions of law, or mixed fact and law,
de novo. See Skoros v. City of New York,
B. Antitrust Claim
In challenging the trial judgment, plaintiffs submit, as they have throughout this litigation, that the Sherman Act preempts New York’s Escrow and Contraband Statutes because those laws “implement[ ] the illegal
per se
output cartel set up in the MSA.” Second Supp. & Am. Compl. Prayer for Relief ¶ 2. As we recognized in
Freedom Holdings I,
First, the party asserting preemption must demonstrate an “irreconcilable conflict” between the challenged statute and the Sherman Act.
Rice v. Norman
*50
Williams Co.,
By contrast, restraints “unilaterally imposed by government ... to the exclusion of private control” do not violate the antitrust laws.
Fisher v. City of Berkeley,
Second, even if plaintiffs showed that the challenged statutes mandate or authorize a
per se
antitrust violation, those laws might still be saved from preemption by the doctrine of state action immunity,
see Parker v. Brown,
On appeal, plaintiffs rely heavily on our decisions in
Freedom Holdings I
and
Freedom Holdings II
in arguing that the dis
*51
trict court erred at both steps of the preemption analysis. When we reviewed the dismissal of plaintiffs’ complaint in
Freedom Holdings I
and
Freedom Holdings II,
however, plaintiffs were required only to demonstrate that they could prove some set of facts in support of their claim.
See Freedom Holdings I,
1. Plaintiffs’ Claim of a Per Se Violation of the Sherman Act
a. Plaintiffs Must Demonstrate Antitrust Injury from the Challenged StaUites
Plaintiffs argue that they proved a
per se
violation of the Sherman Act by showing that “the MSA constructed an output cartel,” Appellants’ Br. at 57, and the Escrow and Contraband Statutes “conscript[ ] NPMs into the cartel as involuntary members,”
id.
at 58. Plaintiffs contend that because they demonstrated such a
per se
violation, they were not required to adduce direct evidence of the challenged statutes’ actual anti-competitive effects.
See National Collegiate Athletic Ass’n v. Bd. of Regents of the Univ. of Okla.,
At the outset, we note that plaintiffs do not challenge the MSA directly in making their
per se
argument. Nor could they. Section 16 of the Clayton Act affords injunctive relief only to plaintiffs who suffer “threatened loss or damage by a violation of the antitrust laws.” 15 U.S.C. § 26. While a conspiracy among MSA participating manufacturers to fix prices or to divide
*52
the cigarette market among themselves would certainly violate the antitrust laws,
see United States v. Topco Assocs., Inc.,
b. Plaintiffs’ Failure To Prove that the Challenged Statutes Establish a Hybrid Restraint of Trade
Because section 1 of the Sherman Act proscribes only private party “con
*53
traet[s], combination^] ... or conspiracies] in restraint of trade,” 15 U.S.C. § 1, the threshold question at trial was whether the challenged statutes are unilateral acts of a state falling outside federal antitrust law. As the Supreme Court explained in upholding a city ordinance setting rent ceilings in
Fisher v. City of Berkeley,
antitrust laws would prohibit private property owners from “voluntarily band[ing] together to stabilize rents in the city,” but the local law involved no “concerted action.”
As we recognized in
Freedom Holdings I,
however, there is a distinction between laws whose restraints are the product of unilateral state action and those whose restraints are “hybrid.”
On their face, the New York Escrow and Contraband Statutes mandate and enforce payments that, as in
Fisher,
are “unilaterally imposed by government ... to the exclusion of private control.”
In reversing the dismissal of plaintiffs’ complaint, we nevertheless concluded that plaintiffs stated a possible claim that the challenged statutes functioned as a hybrid restraint.
See Freedom Holdings I,
On review of a challenged trial judgment, our focus necessarily shifts from what plaintiffs might plausibly prove to what the district court found they did — or did not — prove. Consistent with our obligation to view the evidence in the light most favorable to the challenged judgment, we accord great deference to the district court’s resolution of evidentiary conflicts, its choices among competing inferences to be drawn from the evidence, and its decision as to what weight to assign particular evidence.
See Anderson v. Bessemer City,
(1) Plaintiffs’ Failure To Prove that the Challenged Statutes Compelled NPMs To Join the MSA
The district court found that plaintiffs failed at trial to prove the linchpin of their hybrid restraint claim,
i.e.,
that the severity of the escrow payments established by the challenged statutes coerced NPMs to join the allegedly anticompetitive MSA. Plaintiffs initially submitted that the relative severity of escrow payments was established by the fact that, unlike MSA payments, “they are non-deductible for tax purposes.” Second Supp. & Am. Compl. ¶ 17;
see Freedom Holdings II,
Instead, they submit that the district court erred in further finding that NPMs not only do not pay substantially more under the Escrow Statute than they would pay if they joined the MSA; they pay
less. See Freedom Holdings VI,
First, plaintiffs fault the district court for relying on data reflecting OPM settlement payments nationwide, rather than data limited to states that joined the MSA. Plaintiffs assert that by including payments made to the four states that settled tobacco litigation before the MSA was executed, the data relied on by the district court inflated the cost of OPM payments by an aggregate of $1-2 billion per year. Specifically, plaintiffs contend that, in 2007, OPMs paid only $4.04 per carton to comply with the MSA, not $5.31 as found by the district court.
Second, plaintiffs submit that the data relied on by the district court was inflated because it included payments owed — but not paid — by SPMs and, further, failed to take into consideration smuggled cigarettes not reported by participating manufacturers. Plaintiffs assert that, between 2003 and 2008, SPMs have failed to pay approximately 13% of payments required by the MSA, either because those payments are disputed or because SPMs have simply defaulted on their MSA obligations.
Neither of these arguments persuades us that the district court committed clear error in rejecting plaintiffs’ claim that the escrow payments coerce NPMs to join the MSA. A comparison of MSA and escrow payments is complicated by the fact that the former are calculated based on relative market share while the latter are based on a per-cigarette fee.
See Freedom Holdings III,
In these circumstances, the district court did not clearly err in finding that plaintiffs failed to carry their burden of proving that they were required to pay so much more under the escrow statutes than under the MSA that the challenged statutes effectively compelled them to join the MSA.
(2) Plaintiffs’ Failure To Prove that the Challenged Statutes Delegate Price-Setting Authority to OPMs
Plaintiffs submit that the challenged statutes nevertheless effect a hybrid restraint of trade because they maintain the higher cigarette prices set by manufacturers participating in the MSA. The record evidence did not compel the district court to so find.
There is no doubt that escrow fees were designed to neutralize the cost disadvantage experienced by MSA participants visa-vis NPMs.
See
MSA § IX(d)(2)(E). But that is hardly sufficient to demonstrate that the challenged statutes mandate or authorize MSA participants to exercise “unsupervised private discretion” to fix prices or to penalize gains in market shares. I Areeda & Hovenkamp,
supra,
¶ 217b, at 356;
see generally Massachusetts Food Ass’n v. Mass. Alcoholic Beverages Control Comm’n,
A tax increase, like any cost, will likely be passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices, but where, as here, the state alone imposes the increased cost, there is no private collusion implicating the antitrust laws.
See Freedom Holdings VI,
In any event, the district court did not reject plaintiffs’ price fixing argument simply in theory. It found it belied in fact by substantial testimonial and documentary evidence indicating that, even under the challenged statutes, NPMs have retained pricing autonomy, which they have exercised to gain substantial market share at the expense of OPMs.
See Freedom Holdings VI,
In urging us to identify factual error,
see
Appellants’ Br. at 26-27 (maintaining
*57
that “Enforcement Statutes ha[ve] succeeded in crushing the NPMs”), plaintiffs submit that the district court’s market share findings were clearly erroneous because Pricewaterhouse Coopers based these calculations, like its MSA payment data, on national market share without distinguishing between states that joined in the MSA and states that reached independent settlements. Plaintiffs cite data suggesting that amendments to the allocable share release provision of state escrow statutes have resulted in declining NPM market share since it peaked at 8.1% in 2003. This is not surprising as such amendments require NPMs to make escrow payments on a greater percentage of cigarettes sold than previously. Further, the district court reasonably determined that the 2004 decision by General Tobacco, the largest NPM, to join the MSA also explains the expansion of SPMs’ total market share at the expense of the NPMs in the years thereafter.
See Freedom Holdings VI,
In short, we identify no error in the district court’s determination that the allegations we accepted for purposes of reviewing the dismissal of plaintiffs’ complaint — that the challenged statutes forced NPMs “to become part of the market-sharing agreement set up by the MSA,” where OPMs fixed and maintained inflated prices and penalized gains in market share,
Freedom Holdings II,
We emphasize, however, the limited scope of our decision. Because plaintiffs have not proved that the challenged statutes coerce them to join the MSA or that the MSA otherwise injures them, they lack standing to challenge provisions of the MSA that they allege constitute an illegal agreement to divide the cigarette market among participating manufacturers.
See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
2. The Sherman Act Does Not Apply to the Challenged Statutes Because They Manifest “State Action”
In
Parker v. Brown,
Parker
cautioned, however, that a state cannot “give immunity to those who violate the Sherman Act by authorizing them to violate it, or by declaring that their action is lawful.”
From these principles, we can conclude that a state’s own actions are not subject to antitrust preemption.
See Hoover v. Ronwin,
Our conclusion that plaintiffs failed to prove that New York’s Escrow and Contraband Statutes authorize Sherman Act violations obviates the need for detailed analysis of whether their alleged anti-corn
*59
petitive aspects are clearly articulated, affirmatively expressed, or actively supervised.
See Freedom Holdings I,
At the outset, we observe that the nature of the clear articulation and active supervision required by
Midcal
necessarily varies with the nature of the challenged restraint. Thus, state authorization is sufficiently clear when “the legislature contemplated the kind of action” challenged.
City of Lafayette v. La. Power & Light Co.,
a. The Creation of an Escrow Fund and Enforcement of Payment Obligations Are Clearly Articulated and Affirmatively Expressed as State Policy
Midcal’s
clear articulation/affirmative expression requirement “ensure[s] that state action immunity is afforded only to actions taken by the state.”
Id.
at 227. In
Freedom Holdings I,
we easily concluded that the entire MSA scheme satisfied this requirement because “agreement to the MSA by the New York Attorney General, approval of it by a New York court, and passage of the [Escrow and] Contraband Statutes were express acts of the State of New York.”
Id.
(footnote omitted). At the same time, we suggested that the requirement also serves the “ancillary purpose” of revealing whether “the State’s policy goals are sufficient to qualify for the
Parker
immunity,” observing that “simply protecting private parties from competition is not a sufficient goal.”
Id.
at 227 (citing
Parker v. Brown,
Now, after trial, with plaintiffs having failed to prove that the challenged statutes operated as anything more than a flat tax, we can conclude that the record permitted the district court to find even the ancillary purpose of the first
Midcal
requirement satisfied.
17
As we observed in
Freedom Holdings I,
a flat tax, far from “shelter[ing] private parties from the Sherman Act solely in order [for the state] to share monopoly profits,”
Plaintiffs do not dispute that the challenged statutes clearly articulate and affirmatively express state policy. Nor do they challenge the state’s ability to pass laws addressing health concerns associated with smoking. Rather, they submit that defendants cannot satisfy the ancillary explanatory purpose of Midcal because the MSA requires states to become “active participants in the cartel.” Appellants’ Br. at 68. Specifically, they contend that the NPM adjustment, which provides a substantial incentive for states to pass escrow laws, removes the challenged statutes from the scope of Parker immunity. We disagree.
In
Parker,
the Supreme Court observed that there was “no question of the state or its municipality becoming a participant in a private agreement or combination by others for restraint of trade,” and that the challenged statute “made no contract or agreement and entered into no conspiracy in restraint of trade or to establish monopoly.”
Perhaps recognizing that
City of Columbia
precludes our recognition of a conspiracy exception, plaintiffs urge us to conclude that the settling states, through the MSA, “engage[d] in interstate commerce as commercial participants.” Appellants’ Reply Br. at 27. While the possibility of a market participant exception is left open in
City of Columbia,
b. The Flat Tax Imposed and Enforced by the Challenged Statutes Is Actively Supervised by the State
Having concluded that the challenged statutes are clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed as state policy, we now consider whether they are actively supervised by the state. In
Freedom Holdings I,
we concluded that the state could not satisfy this requirement at the pleading stage because “[njeither the New York statutes, the MSA, nor any other New York law or regulation ‘actively superviséis]’ the pricing decisions within the allegedly-anticompetitive market structure enforced by the Contraband Statutes.”
The active supervision required to secure state action immunity necessarily depends on the facts of each case. As noted
*62
supra
at [52-53], the laws challenged in
Midcal
and
32k Liquor
effectively allowed one private party to set the prices charged by another private party.
See 324 Liquor Corp. v. Duffy,
This case is thus more akin to the situation distinguished by the Court in
32k Liquor Corp.,
when it observed that a “simple ‘minimum markup’ statute ... may satisfy the ‘active supervision’ requirement.”
Here, plaintiffs’ antitrust argument reduces to a claim that the challenged statutes, by raising their costs, have the effect of raising cigarette prices. It is undeniably the state, however, that determines the cost increase by fixing the required escrow payments.
See, e.g.,
N.Y. Pub. Health Law § 1399-pp(2)(a)(v) (requiring NPMs to contribute “for each of 2007 and each year thereafter: $.0188482 per unit sold”);
cf. Morgan v. Div. Liquor Control,
*63 Plaintiffs do not dispute that the state has engaged in this form of supervision. Indeed, the record shows that the state (1) reviews audit reports detailing the competitive effects of the MSA and challenged statutes, and (2) has responded to these reports by enacting (a) the Contraband Statute and (b) the allocable share release amendment. Rather, characterizing the state as an “active participant ] in [a] commercial enterprise,” plaintiffs maintain that it would be “paradoxical” for us to conclude that the state’s active enforcement of the Escrow Statute satisfies the active supervision prong because, they claim, the statute “is the primary tool for insulating the [participating manufacturers] from consumer oriented price competition.” Appellants’ Reply Br. at 29. We are not persuaded.
As the Supreme Court noted in rejecting a conspiracy exception to
Parker
immunity, “it is both inevitable and desirable that public officials often agree to do what one or another group of private citizens urges upon them.”
City of Columbia v. Omni Outdoor Adver., Inc.,
Once again, we note the limited reach of our ruling, which does not foreclose challenges to other potentially anti-competitive conduct in the tobacco industry. In this regard, our decision is consistent with that of the Third Circuit in
Bedell,
on which
Freedom Holdings I
relied to conclude that the state had not satisfied the active supervision requirement at the pleading stage. The
Bedell
plaintiffs were a class of cigarette wholesalers — not NPMs — who claimed to suffer losses because the major tobacco companies “imposed artificially high prices on direct purchasers.”
C. Commerce Clause Claim
The Constitution’s affirmative grant of power to Congress “[t]o regulate
*64
Commerce ... among the several States,” U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3, has long been construed to imply a negative counterpart, commonly referred to as the dormant Commerce Clause, restraining state authority over interstate commerce,
see, e.g., United Haulers Ass’n v. Oneida-Herkimer Solid Waste Mgmt. Auth.,
In support, plaintiffs rely heavily on our decision in
Grand River,
which recognized a possible claim by a different group of NPMs: “that the practical effect of the challenged statutes and the MSA is to control prices outside of the enacting states.”
Two Supreme Court decisions provide useful guidance in reviewing Commerce Clause challenges to “interlocking” state statutes. First, in
Brown-Forman Distillers Corp. v. New York State Liquor Authority,
In
Healy v. Beer Institute,
Under those circumstances, in January, when a brewer posts his February prices in Connecticut and the border States, he must determine those prices knowing that the lowest bottle, can, or case price in any State would become the maximum bottle, can, or case price the brewer would be permitted to charge throughout the region for the month of March. This is true because in February, when the brewer posts his *66 March prices in each State, he will have to affirm that no bottle, can, or case price is higher than the lowest bottle, can, or case price in the region — and these “current” prices would have been determined by the January posting. Put differently, unless a beer supplier declined to sell in one of the States for an entire month, the maximum price in each State would be capped by previous prices in the other States. This maximum price would almost surely be the minimum price as well, since any reduction in either State would permanently lower the ceiling in both.
Id.
at 339-40,
Applying these principles to the challenged statutes, we conclude that plaintiffs failed to prove any similar gridlock here. By its terms, the Escrow Statute “taxes” only cigarettes sold in New York. See N.Y. Pub. Health Law § 1399-oo(10) (defining “[u]nits sold” for purposes of Escrow Statute as “the number of individual cigarettes sold in the state ” (emphasis added)); id. § 1399-pp(2) (specifying payments “per unit sold”); see also id. at § 1399-pp(2)(b)(ii) (releasing payments from escrow “to the extent that a tobacco product manufacturer establishes that the amount it was required to place into escrow on account of units sold in the state in a particular year was greater than the [MSA] payments ... that such manufacturer would have been required to make on account of such units sold had it been a participating manufacturer” (emphasis added)). Similarly, the Contraband Statute applies only to manufacturers “whose cigarettes are sold for consumption in this state.” N.Y. Tax Law § 480-b(l) (emphasis added). Plaintiffs offered no evidence indicating that the practical effect of either of these statutes reaches beyond their terms to set minimum or maximum cigarette prices outside New York.
We recognize that escrow payments, like any tax, increase the cost of cigarettes. Unlike the statute struck down in
Healy,
however, nothing prevents manufacturers from recouping increased costs imposed by New York law from New York consumers.
See National Elec. Mfrs. Ass’n v. Sorrell,
Further, while the enactment of similar escrow and contraband statutes in most states has caused cigarette prices to rise nationwide, such statutes impose no inconsistent obligations, which might evidence extraterritorial regulation proscribed by the Commerce Clause.
See Brown-Forman Distillers Corp. v. N.Y. Liquor Auth.,
Grand River
is not to the contrary. Drawing all reasonable inferences in those plaintiffs’ favor at the pleading stage, we concluded that they had stated a colorable claim “that the practical effect of the challenged statutes and the MSA is to
control
prices outside of the enacting states by tying both the SPM settlement and NPM escrow payments to national market share, which in turn affects interstate pricing decisions.”
Plaintiffs submit that
Grand River
compels us to reverse the district court’s Commerce Clause decision because, under the amended allocable share release provision, escrow payments are still keyed, in part, to MSA payments, which in turn depend on national market share. We disagree. Plaintiffs adduced no evidence showing that the amended release provision has ever been invoked. Funds are released from escrow to the extent escrow payments exceed MSA payments,
see
N.Y. Pub. Health Law § 1399-pp(2)(b)(ii), but the district court reasonably found that, in practice, MSA payments exceed escrow payments. In the absence of contrary evidence, the district court was hardly compelled to conclude that NPM escrow payments will actually be released from the state escrow fund in amounts calculated by reference to national market share.
See International Tobacco Partners, Ltd. v. Kline,
Ultimately, plaintiffs’ Commerce Clause claim fails, as we said in
Freedom Holdings I,
because “[m]ere ‘upstream pricing impact’ is not a violation of the dormant Commerce Clause, even if the impact is felt out-of-state where the stream originates.”
Freedom Holdings VI,
A number of our sister circuits have concluded that state escrow and contraband statutes do not regulate commerce extraterritorially in violation of the Commerce Clause.
See S & M Brands, Inc. v. Caldwell,
III. Conclusion
To summarize, we conclude as follows:
1. The record evidence supports the district court’s finding that plaintiffs failed to prove that New York’s Escrow and Contraband Statutes delegate any regulatory power to private parties. Accordingly, the district court properly concluded that the challenged statutes are not preempted by the Sherman Act.
2. The record evidence further supports the district court’s determination that any potentially anti-competitive aspects of the New York Escrow and Contraband Statutes were clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed as state policy as well as actively supervised by the state itself, such that defendants qualified for state action immunity as recognized in
Parker v. Brown,
3. Plaintiffs’ failure to prove that the challenged statutes have an extraterritorial effect on commerce supports the district court’s rejection of their dormant Commerce Clause challenge to the New York Escrow and Contraband Statutes.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Brown & Williamson and R.J. Reynolds have since merged, forming Reynolds American, Inc.
. Four states — Florida, Minnesota, Mississippi, and Texas — settled litigation with the tebacco companies before the MSA was executed in 1998.
.By agreement of the parties, this sixty-day period was later expanded to ninety days.
. If participating manufacturers lose more than 16-2/3% in market share, the decrease in payment obligations is calculated "by a cornplex formula potentially increasing the [participating manufacturers'] discount.”
Freedom Holdings III,
. This amendment to the Escrow Statute states:
[T]o the extent that a tobacco product manufacturer establishes that the amount it was required to place into escrow on account of units sold in the state in a particular year was greater than the master settlement agreement payments, as determined pursuant to section IX(i) of the master settlement agreement including after final determination of all adjustments, that such manufacturer would have been required to make on account of such units sold had it been a participating manufacturer, the excess shall be released from escrow and revert back to such tobacco product manufacturer.”
N.Y. Pub. Health Law § 1399-pp(2)(b)(ii) (emphasis added).
. Defendants suggest that these laws are "generally known as the directory statutes but referred to by plaintiffs as Contraband Statutes.” Appellees’ Br. at 9. For the sake of consistency with prior opinions in this case, we use the term "Contraband Statute” to refer to the challenged provisions of the New York Tax Law.
. In so doing, we reserved a question not raised by plaintiffs' complaint: whether "any sort of interstate regulatory gridlock would occur if many or every state adopted similar legislation.”
Freedom Holdings I,
. In
Grand River Enterprises Six Nations, Ltd. v. Pryor,
. The district court found the decline in market share between 2003 and 2007 explained by the fact that "General Tobacco, the largest NPM to become a non-grandfathered SPM, joined the MSA in July 2004, which accounts for the fact that the SPMs’ total market share has expanded slightly at the NPMs' expense in the years since.”
Freedom Holdings VI,
. The district court also cited the "important public health goals and substantial fiscal ben
*48
efits” of the MSA regime,
Freedom Holdings VI,
For the reasons stated
infra
at [51-56], we conclude that plaintiffs failed to prove their antitrust claim under a traditional application of the
per se
rule. Thus, we need not here decide whether a state's beneficent purpose can ever save an otherwise illegal restraint of trade from Sherman Act preemption.
See National Soc’y of Prof'l Eng’rs v. United States,
. Accordingly, the district court also dissolved its preliminary injunction against enforcement of the allocable share release amendment to New York’s Escrow Statute.
. Some courts and commentators have observed that the two steps of inquiry may overlap.
See, e.g., Costco Wholesale Corp. v. Maleng,
. After
Freedom Holdings I
and
Freedom Holdings II,
the Supreme Court articulated a "plausibility” standard for reviewing the dismissal of a complaint.
See Ashcroft
v.
Iqbal,
- U.S. -,
. The district court suggested that this rule is limited to antitrust plaintiffs who seek treble damages under section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15, and that standing analysis is more flexible when an antitrust plaintiff seeks injunctive relief.
See Freedom Holdings VI,
In the antitrust context, courts have articulated several "efficient enforcer” factors to avoid the "duplicative recoveries” that would result from allowing "every person tangentially affected by an antitrust violation” to sue for treble damages.
Blue Shield of Va.
v.
McCready,
But suits for injunctive relief, no less than suits for damages, require a plaintiff to demonstrate an "injury in fact.”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
. At the time these cases were decided, resale price maintenance was a
per se
violation of the Sherman Act.
See Dr. Miles Med. Co. v. John D. Park & Sons Co.,
. We recognize that NPM payments are released from the state escrow fund to the extent they exceed payments that an NPM would have made if it had joined the MSA as an SPM.
See
N.Y. Pub. Health Law § 1399-pp(2)(b)(ii). Assuming
arguendo
that the MSA does penalize gains in SPM market share,
see Freedom Holdings II,
. We have no occasion to consider whether, to the extent a different plaintiff might have standing to challenge the MSA as distinct from the Escrow and Contraband Statutes, New York could offer a justification for any alleged market division among MSA participants to satisfy the ancillary purpose of the first
Midcal
requirement.
See Freedom Holdings III,
. A court may analyze a claim that a state statute is invalid because it regulates commerce extraterritorially either as a disproportionate burden on commerce under the balancing test set forth in
Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc.,
. Commentators have also cautioned that the Commerce Clause's ban on extraterritorial regulation must be applied carefully so as not to invalidate many state laws that have permissible extraterritorial effects. See generally Gillian E. Metzger, Congress, Article IV, and Interstate Relations, 120 Harv. L.Rev. 1468, 1521 (2007) ("[T]he extent of the prohibition on the states themselves should not be overstated. In practice, states exert regulatory control over each other all the time.... The prohibition on extraterritorial legislation is thus understood only to constrain a state from formally asserting legal authority outside its borders....”); Mark D. Rosen, Extraterritoriality and Political Heterogeneity in American Federalism, 150 U. Pa. L.Rev. 855, 919-30 (2002) (arguing that ban on extraterritorial regulation applies only to protectionist laws, regulations of non-citizens, and inconsistent regulations); Jack L. Goldsmith & Alan O. Sykes, The Internet and the Dormant Commerce Clause, 110 Yale L.J. 785, 795 (2001) ("Innumerable state laws affect outsiders, and no one thinks that all (or even most) of these laws violate the dormant Commerce Clause.”).
