This is аn antitrust case of Doric simplicity — yet some difficulty. Harold Vogel, an experienced gem appraiser, charges a flat one percent fee, subject to a minimum fee of $10. He was a member of the principal (and to simplify this opinion we shall pretend the only) defendant, the American Society of Appraisers, until it expelled him pursuant to a bylaw of the Society which states “that it is unprofessionаl and unethical for the appraiser to do work for a fixed percentage of the amount of value ... which he determines at the conclusion of his work.” His expulsion, published in the Society’s newsletter on March 1, 1983, caused Vogel to lose referrals from members of the Society and from other appraisers. (Appraisers specialize — Vogel, for example, in gems — and therefore an apрraiser will sometimes refer a customer to another appraiser.) Vogel brought this suit under section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, alleging that the bylaw constituted a price-fixing agreement among the members of the Society and that his expulsion from the Society constituted a boycott of him by the members. He moved for a preliminary injunction that would have required his reinstatement pending the decision of the case on the merits. This was denied, and he appeals the denial under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1).
The Society argues that Vogel has not shown irreparable harm and therefore is not entitled to an injunction, regardless of the merits of his suit. Although irreparable harm is (with minor and irrelevant exceptions) one of the prerequisites to obtaining a preliminary injunction, all it means is that the plaintiff is unlikely to be made whole by an award of damages or other relief at the end of the trial. See
Semmes Motors, Inc. v. Ford Motor Co.,
So Vogel has some equity in his application for a preliminary injunction— but maybe not much. He argues that his right tо permanent relief probably will appear as soon as he moves for summary judgment. This implies that when the district judge ruled on the application for a preliminary injunction the period of irreparable harm was expected to be brief and the amount of that harm therefore quite limited. There was no long-dragged-out trial in the offing during which the plaintiffs losses would be mounting up. Where the imbalance of harms is very great, the plaintiff is entitled to a preliminary injunction upon a showing just of a modest prospect of success on the merits. But if the balance is closer, whether because each party, or neither party, can show substantial harm if the ruling on the application for preliminary injunction goes against him, the plaintiff must show a greater likelihood of success in order to get the injunction. See
Omega Satellite Products Co. v. City of Indianapolis,
In considering his chances, we need not assess the boycott allegations separately. A boycott is illegal per se under the antitrust laws only if used to enforce a rule or policy or practice that is itself illegal per se. See
Wilk v. American Medical Ass’n,
If the bylaw forbidding members of the American Society of Appraisers to charge for appraisal on a fixed-percentage basis is a form of price fixing, it is illegal per se and Vogel, as a victim of illegal price fixing and an illegal boycott, would be entitled to reinstatement. It is not hard to find judicial statements to the effect that any interference with price brought about by an agreement between competitors is illegal price fixing. The best-known example is
United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co.,
But judicial language about the per se illegality of competitors’ tampering with price must, like all legal language, be read with sensitivity to its context. In general, the only types of horizontal price agreements that the antitrust laws have been held to forbid are those that have the purpose or likely effect of raising price above the competitive level. See
United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
There are two exceptions to the principle that the only horizontal price “tampering” that is illegal per se is the type calculated to raise the market price above the competitive level. First, buyer cartels, the object of which is to force the prices that suppliers charge the members of the cartel below the competitive level, are illegal per se. See, e.g.,
Mandeville Island Farms, Inc. v. American Crystal Sugar Co.,
Were it not for Maricopa, it would be clear that the Society’s prohibition of fixed-percentage appraisals was not illegal per se, as the prohibition seems unrelated or at most very tenuously relatеd to any purpose or probable consequence of raising the price of appraisals. Members of the Society are free despite the prohibition to charge as much or as little as they like. Of course one pricing option is taken away from them, and if it were an option that promoted price competition, its prohibition would be highly suspect. But there is no indication it is. While it is true thаt, if rigidly adhered to, fixed-percentage fees will yield tiny charges for appraising items of slight value, Vogel's method does not work that way. He charges a minimum fee of $10, which means that he charges one percent only for appraisals of $1,000 or more and charges progressively higher percentages as the value of the item appraised falls off from there (for example, 10 percent for an item worth $100).
The apparent tendency of the pricing system that the Society has outlawed is to raise, not lower, the absolute level of appraisal fees, especially for expensive items. For the system gives the appraiser a stake in the value appraised and therefore makes him likely to err on the high side in estimating that value. It conduces not only to high prices but to high prices unrelatеd to the costs of the appraiser’s work, even when there is no fraud in the appraisal. Although there doubtless is some positive correlation between the value of an item and the amount of time the appraiser puts in on appraising it, a 10-carat diamond worth 100 times as much as a one-carat diamond is not, on that account alone, likely to require or receive 100 times the amount of attеntion from the appraiser. Fixed-percentage appraisal fees seem more closely geared to differences in the wealth of customers than to differences in appraisers’ time costs or skills — seem in fact to be a method of price discrimination, which is normally anticompetitive. (Not always, though, as we saw in discussing secret discounts from a cartel price, which are discriminatory since they are selective rather than across the board, normally being offered to the biggest customers only. See Stigler, The Organization of Industry, supra, at 43-44, 60.)
Of course, if there is vigorous competition among appraisers, it will limit both the percentage charged and the amount of the appraisal, and may even prevent Vogel from adhering to his fixed-percentage method. But his suit is based on the assumption that competition has not had this effect, so maybe there isn’t much competition in gem appraising — we just don’t know. Competition to one side, sometimes a customer will want and be quite content to pay for a high appraisal — if for example he is trying to sell the item being appraised. But the challenged bylaw does not limit the fee or the appraisal; it merely outlaws a method of fee setting that seems to invite the appraiser to practice a fraud on his customer, by first announcing that his fee is a fixed percentage and then over-appraising the item; or, at the very least, that invites discrimination against wealthier, or less sophisticated, customers. Another strike against the fixed-percentage fee system is that (according to a letter attached to one of Vogel’s briefs in the district court) the one percent fee that Vogel charges is (or was) the industry norm; so by abolishing the system the Society may, for whatever reason, have been breaking up a collusive arrangement.
Ethical concerns have often, and unavailingly, been offered as reasons for limiting price competition. See, e.g.,
National Society of Professional Engineers v. United States,
The challenged bylaw is more likely a praiseworthy effort at self-regulation than a device for facilitating supracompetitive pricing. This is not to say that the Society’s members are altruists. Presumably they are profit-maximizers. They may merely think that a practice likely to bring the appraisal business into disrepute will depress profits in the long run. They may even be concerned with potentiаl antitrust liability from adhering to a one percent fee system — a type of “ethical” concern to which antitrust law ought to give some weight.
The strongest objection to banning fixed-percentage fees is that by putting pricing on the Society’s agenda the ban could foster price fixing. The letter mentioned earlier indicates that when the Society outlawed the fixed-percentage fee its members had “difficulty in abiding by” the new rule, prompting the Society’s vice-president (whose last name, Gadd, has powerful associations for students of antitrust law, see
American Column & Lumber Co. v. United States,
The Supreme Court has told us that before we leap to the conclusion that an agreement among competitors is price fixing we should take a quick look to see whether it has clear anticompetitive consequences and lacks any redeeming competitive virtues. See
Broadcast Music, Inc. v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.,
All this leaves out of account, however, the possibility that the
Maricopa
decision signals an expansion of the traditional per se rule against price fixing beyond agreements likely to reduce competition. Commentators have wondered how an agreement by sellers to limit the amount they will charge their customers — the agreement in
Maricopa
— can reduce competition. See Easterbrook,
Maximum Price Fixing,
48 U.Chi.L.Rev. 886 (1981); Harrison,
Price Fixing, the Professions, and Ancillary Restraints: Coping with Maricopa County,
1982 U.Ill.L.Rev. 925, 936-44; Liebeler,
1983 Economic Review of Antitrust Developments: The Distinction Between Price and Nonprice Distribution Restrictions,
31 UCLA L.Rev. 384, 397-98 (1983). But the price ceiling in
Maricopa
may have been intended as a target or even a floor — a concern heightened by the fact that 85 to 95 percent of the county’s doctors were charging at or above the ceiling. See
Now Vogel may be able to prove at trial that the bylaw is an unreasonable restraint of trade and is therefore unlawful under section 1 even though not illegal per se. But this will require him to establish a relevant market (by adding up the sales of all the gem appraisers to whom customers in the various areas served by the Society’s gem-appraiser members could turn if those members charged supracompetitive prices for appraising, see
Tampa Elec. Co. v. Nashville Coal Co.,
Affirmed.
