OPINION OF THE COURT
These two antitrust cases, brought by two dental laboratories against an artificial tooth manufacturer and many of its dealers, are before us for the second time. In the first of the two cases, we must decide whether the District Court properly denied the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on their monopolization claim against the manufacturer as well as the Court’s denial of the plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration of its summary judgment ruling and subsequent dismissal of their complaint. In the second case, we must decide whether the District Court properly dismissed the plaintiffs’ conspiracy to restrain trade and conspiracy to monopolize claims against both the manufacturer and its dealers for failure to state a claim. Although for slightly different reasons than those articulated by the District Court, we agree with the District Court’s conclusions and will affirm its rulings.
I.
These appeals arise from two related antitrust cases filed in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware:
Howard Hess Dental Laboratories, Inc. v. Dentsply International, Inc. (“Hess”)
and
Jersey Dental Laboratories v. Dentsply
*244
International, Inc. (“Jersey Dental”).
1
Because we set forth the factual background of both cases in great detail in a prior appeal,
see Howard Hess Dental Labs. Inc. v. Dentsply Int’l, Inc.,
The plaintiffs in both cases are two dental laboratories (referred to in this opinion as the “Plaintiffs”). One of the defendants in both
Hess
and
Jersey Dental,
Dentsply International, Inc., manufactures artificial teeth, among other things, which it sells to the Plaintiffs and other laboratories through a network of authorized dealers (referred to in this opinion as the “Dealers”), several of which are named defendants only in
Jersey Dental.
The Plaintiffs use Dentsply’s artificial teeth to make dentures. In both cases, the Plaintiffs essentially allege that Dentsply “foreclosed its competitors’ access to [D]ealers by explicitly agreeing with some [D]ealers that they will not carry certain competing brands of teeth and by inducing other [D]ealers not to carry those competing brands of teeth” and that Dentsply, “by agreement [with] its [D]ealers, ... set[ ] the [Dealers’ resale prices.”
Hess I,
The Plaintiffs brought the
Hess
suit against Dentsply in 1999, alleging several antitrust conspiracies and seeking both monetary and injunctive relief. The District Court granted Dentsply’s subsequent motion for summary judgment on the Plaintiffs’ damages claim, concluding that the Plaintiffs lacked standing under
Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois,
On appeal, we affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Hess I,
On remand, the Plaintiffs filed a five-count amended complaint in
Jersey Dental.
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In Count One, they re-alleged their conspiracy to restrain trade claim under Section 1 of the Sherman Act. Counts Two and Three asserted conspiracies to monopolize under Section 2 of the Sherman Act against the Dealers and Dentsply, respectively. Count Two sought damages as well as injunctive and declaratory relief while Count Three sought only injunctive and declaratory relief. Counts Four and Five asserted conspiracies to restrain trade under Section 1 of the Sherman Act against the Dealers and Dentsply, respectively, again seeking both damages as well as injunctive relief as to the Dealers and only injunctive and declaratory relief as to Dentsply. Motion practice ensued. In
Jersey Dental,
the Dealers moved to dismiss Counts Two and Four of the amended complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), as did Dentsply as to Counts Three and Five. In
Hess,
the Plaintiffs moved for summary judgment on their monopolization claim under Section 2 of the Sherman Act against Dentsply. The District Court denied the Plaintiffs’ summary judgment motion in
Hess
and granted both the Dealers’ and Dentsply’s respective motions to dismiss in
Jersey Dental,
and dismissed Counts Two through Five of the amended complaint.
2
Howard Hess Dental Labs., Inc. v. Dentsply Int’l, Inc.,
The Plaintiffs in
Hess
subsequently filed what they styled as a motion to supplement the record and to amend the District Court’s summary judgment ruling, asking for permission to provide the District Court with evidence to show the existence of anticompetitive injury. Meanwhile, in
Jersey Dental
the Plaintiffs moved for certification of appealability of the District Court’s dismissal of their claims in the amended complaint. In ruling on the motion to amend and the motion for certification,
Howard Hess Dental Labs., Inc. v. Dentsply Int’l, Inc.,
Nos. 99-255
&
01-267,
The Plaintiffs have filed timely notices of appeal in both cases. In Hess, they challenge the District Court’s denial of *246 their summary judgment motion on Count Two’s monopolization claim, denial of their motion for reconsideration, and dismissal of their complaint. In Jersey Dental, they challenge the District Court’s various grounds for dismissal of Counts Two through Five for failure to state a claim.
II.
The District Court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Our review of the District Court’s denial of summary judgment is plenary.
Chambers v. Sch. Dist. of Phila. Bd. of Educ.,
We review a denial of a motion for reconsideration for abuse of discretion, but we review the District Court’s underlying legal determinations de novo and factual determinations for clear error.
Max’s Seafood Cafe v. Quinteros,
Our review of the District Court’s dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) is plenary.
Nationwide Life Ins. Co. v. Commonwealth Land Title Ins. Co.,
III.
Our analysis is bifurcated. We begin with the District Court’s rulings in Hess and turn next to its rulings in Jersey Dental.
A. Hess
1. Denial of the Motion for Summary Judgment
In Hess, Count Two of the Plaintiffs’ complaint asserted a monopolization claim in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act and sought an injunction essentially to prevent Dentsply from both imposing exclusive dealing agreements on the Dealers and retaliating against those Dealers that do not submit to Dentsply’s demands.
Section 2 of the Sherman Act imposes liability on “[e]very person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States[.]” 15 U.S.C. § 2. A private party may pursue injunctive relief against “threatened loss or damage” stemming from a violation of Section 2. 15 U.S.C. § 26. To meet their initial summary judg
*247
ment burden on their claim for injunctive relief, the Plaintiffs had to show “(1) threatened loss or injury cognizable in equity; (2) proximately resulting from the alleged antitrust violation.”
McCarthy v. Recordex Serv., Inc.,
The Plaintiffs sought to meet their burden primarily by relying on the doctrine of collateral estoppel and this Court’s decision in
United States v. Dentsply International, Inc.,
In their summary judgment motion in Hess, the Plaintiffs argued that our holding in the Government Case that Dentsply had engaged in anticompetitive practices compelled an inference of antitrust injury to the Plaintiffs. The District Court disagreed, concluding that while such an inference was certainly plausible, a determination of injury-in-fact to the Plaintiffs was not necessary to our decision in the Government Case. As a consequence, the District Court found that collateral estoppel did not apply. 3
Under the doctrine of collateral estoppel, “once an issue is actually and necessarily determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, that determination is conclusive in subsequent suits based on a different cause of action involving a party to the prior litigation.”
Montana v. United States,
For interrelated reasons, we do not find that any of the first three elements required for collateral estoppel is met here. But most significantly, we do not find that the third element is satisfied.
See Hawksbill Sea Turtle v. Fed. Emergency Mgmt. Agency,
If issues are determined but the judgment is not dependent upon the determinations, relitigation of those issues in a subsequent action between the parties is not precluded. Such determinations have the characteristics of dicta, and may not ordinarily be the subject of an appeal by the party against whom they were made. In these circumstances, the interest in providing an opportunity for a considered determination, which if adverse may be the subject of an appeal, outweighs the interest in avoiding the burden of relitigation.
Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 27 cmt. h (1982). “[I]n determining whether the issue was essential to the judgment, we must look to whether the issue was critical to the judgment or merely dicta.”
Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Pa. Pub. Util. Comm’n,
Applying these standards to this case, we do not find that any inference of anti-competitive injury to the Plaintiffs was essential to our determination that Dents-ply had committed an antitrust violation. The Plaintiffs’ claim for injunctive relief hinges on whether they have established antitrust injury. To establish as much, they had to show injury “of the type the antitrust laws were designed to prevent and that flows from that which makes [Dentsply’s] acts unlawful.”
Cargill, Inc. v. Monfort of Colo., Inc.,
In addition to declining to collaterally estop Dentsply, the District Court concluded that the Plaintiffs did not meet their summary judgment burden because they
*249
made no showing of antitrust injury. The Court reasoned that because the Government Case injunction already prohibited Dentsply from pursuing the very conduct that gave rise to the Plaintiffs’ claim, the Plaintiffs had to “demonstrate a need for further, non-duplicative measures to those already in place.”
Howard Hess I,
In
United States v. Borden Co.,
The Plaintiffs argue that the District Court “attempted to maneuver around
[Borden]
on the ground that, in
Borden,
unlike here, it was the private plaintiff rather than the Government who was first to obtain the requested relief.” (Appellants’ Br. 32 (record citation omitted).) In their view, under the antitrust laws “relief may be granted to private plaintiffs based on the same threat that justified a prior grant of similar injunctive relief to the Government.”
(Id.
at 33.) It is true that
Borden
refused to say that the existence of one type of injunction, public or private, cannot at least be taken into account by a trial judge in weighing whether a subsequent plaintiff, whether public or private, has shown the requisite antitrust injury.
See
Although the law is clear that public and private antitrust injunctions may coexist without regard for one another, nothing in
Borden
intimates that a private litigant is relieved of its evidentiary burden of showing an entitlement to injunctive relief when the government has already obtained its own injunction. We said as much in
Mid-West Paper Products Co. v. Continental Group, Inc.,
For purposes of this appeal, two important principles emerge from
Mid-West Paper.
First, under
Borden
a trial court faced with an injunction request may factor into its equitable analysis the effect of another injunction on the plaintiffs showing of injury. Therefore, the District Court’s consideration of the Government Case injunction in its assessment of the Plaintiffs’ right to injunctive relief was not impermissible
per se.
While the District Court likely ascribed too much weight to the Government Case injunction in assessing the Plaintiffs’ right to their own injunction, the Court clearly also found that the Plaintiffs failed to meet their burden of presenting evidence to show that they were entitled to such relief. And that brings us to
Midr-West Paper’s
second important principle: a plaintiff bears the obligation of presenting evidence demonstrating injury even where another injunction is already in place. There can be no doubt that the Plaintiffs left that obligation unfulfilled. As they did before the District Court, the Plaintiffs refer us to several factors that, in their view, show why an injunction is necessary. Significantly, however, the Plaintiffs have packaged those factors as mere arguments, not evidence. That approach does not carry the day at summary judgment.
Cf. Thornton v. United States,
The Plaintiffs claim, for instance, that the term of the Government Case injunction — seven and one-half years — is not long enough to ensure that they will not suffer harm. They assert that Dents-ply still retains monopolistic market share despite that injunction and will be able to resume its anticompetitive practices once the injunction expires because, according to them, the market for artificial teeth is relatively stagnant. But even assuming that an antitrust defendant’s “ability” to engage in anticompetitive conduct were, standing alone, enough to justify injunctive relief, the Plaintiffs’ prognosis of Dents-ply’s future conduct is unsupported by record evidence. In any event, if the Plaintiffs are threatened with antitrust injury at or near the end of the Government Case injunction’s term, nothing prohibits them from petitioning a court for relief at that point. The Plaintiffs also rely on the alleged nationwide presence of 7,000 dental laboratories that are “better situated to monitor Dentsply’s exclusive dealing praetices[.]” (Appellants’ Br. 38.) Tellingly, the Plaintiffs cite no authority for the proposition that a plaintiff may avoid its obligation of showing injury merely by claiming to be a more effective antitrust policeman than the government, and we are aware of no such authority.
Cf. Massachusetts v. Microsoft Corp.,
A review of their pleadings before the District Court reflects that the Plaintiffs for the most part sought to meet their summary judgment burden simply by telling the District Court what they did not need to do. Specifically, in their moving papers the Plaintiffs asserted that they did not need to prove irreparable injury; did not have to show that they had standing to sue for damages; and were not barred from obtaining injunctive relief merely because the government had already secured one against Dentsply. Importantly, following remand from this Court’s prior appeal, there is no hint in the record that the Plaintiffs sought to engage in any additional discovery or made any effort to introduce any factual material for the District Court to consider. The Plaintiffs’ strategy betrays a misunderstanding of the summary judgment stage of litigation. A party moving for summary judgment must clear two hurdles to meet its initial burden. It must show that (1) there are no genuine questions of material fact and (2) the party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see McCarthy,
2. Denial of the Motion for Reconsideration
After the District Court denied their motion for summary judgment, the Plaintiffs asked the Court to amend its summary judgment ruling and for permission to supplement the record with evidence that, in their view, demonstrated the antitrust injury the District Court had found wanting. The District Court construed the motion as one for reconsideration and denied it, concluding that the evidence the Plaintiffs were seeking to introduce would be relevant only if they had shown that Dentsply’s anticompetitive conduct would likely recur. 4 Because they had failed to make such a showing, the District Court reasoned, reconsideration was unwarranted.
“The purpose of a motion for reconsideration ... is to correct manifest errors of law or fact or to present newly discovered evidence.”
Max’s Seafood Cafe,
The stated aim of the Plaintiffs’ motion was to submit the very evi
*252
dence the District Court had found they had failed to present in their summary judgment motion. However, “new evidence,” for reconsideration purposes, does not refer to evidence that a party obtains or submits to the court after an adverse ruling. Rather, new evidence in this context means evidence that a party could not earlier submit to the court because that evidence was not previously available.
See De Long Corp. v. Raymond Int’l, Inc.,
3. Dismissal of the complaint
After denying the Plaintiffs’ motion for an injunction and their motion for reconsideration, the District Court noted the procedurally “awkward” posture of the case.
Howard Hess II,
We see no error in the District Court’s action. Ordinarily, a district court’s denial of a motion for summary judgment means only that there remain genuine questions of material fact for resolution by the fact finder.
See Kutner Buick, Inc. v. Am. Motors Corp.,
*253 B. Jersey Dental
In
Jersey Dental,
the Plaintiffs alleged a conspiracy to monopolize in violation of Section
2
of the Sherman Act in Counts Two and Three of their amended complaint and a conspiracy to restrain trade in violation of Section 1 in Counts Four and Five. A Section
2
conspiracy claim has four elements: (1) an agreement to monopolize; (2) an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy; (3) a specific intent to monopolize; and (4) a causal connection between the conspiracy and the injury alleged.
See, e.g., United States v. Yellow Cab Co.,
The District Court dismissed all four counts on several grounds. The Court dismissed Counts Three and Five, which sought injunctive relief against Dentsply, for the same reasons it denied the Plaintiffs’ summary judgment motion in Hess. The Court dismissed Counts Two and Four, to the extent they sought damages from the Dealers, on the basis of Illinois Brick, concluding that the coconspirator exception of that case did not apply because Dentsply and the Dealers were not coequal participants in the conspiracy. The District Court also dismissed Counts Two and Three, against the Dealers and Dentsply, respectively, based on its determination that the Plaintiffs did not sufficiently allege the element of specific intent on the part of the Dealers. Finally, the Court found that the dismissal of Counts Two through Five was proper because of the Plaintiffs’ failure to adequately allege the agreement element of the Section 1 and Section 2 claims asserted in those counts. The Plaintiffs dispute nearly all of the District Court’s conclusions. 5 Given these overlapping alternative holdings, we find it most expeditious to begin with the District Court’s finding as to the agreement element of Counts Two through Five, and then move on to the other portions of the District Court’s ruling. 6
*254 1. Allegation of an agreement
The District Court found the dismissal of Counts Two through Five warranted in part based on its conclusion that the Plaintiffs did not adequately allege an agreement among Dentsply and the Dealers. The Plaintiffs seek to revive their conspiracy claims essentially by reference to their allegations that “every Dealer agreed to the same plan — Dealer Criterion 6”; that “every Dealer knew that every other Dealer agreed, or would agree, to this same plan”; and that “it ... was obvious to each Dealer that — only if all of the other Dealers complied — would the purpose of Dealer Criterion 6 be achieved.” (Appellants’ Br. 68-69.)
Section 1 claims are limited to combinations, contracts, and conspiracies, and thus always require the existence of an agreement.
See In re Ins. Brokerage Antitrust Litig.,
The amended complaint in this case alleges a two-tiered conspiracy. First, it alleges that the defendants conspired to “maintain Dentsply’s monopoly of the manufacture of artificial teeth and/or premium artificial teeth for sale in the United States, to restrain trade for the sale of artificial teeth and/or premium artificial teeth in the United States by the implementation of an exclusive dealing arrangement, and to exclude Dentsply’s competitors from the markets for such teeth in the United States[.]” (App.435.) Second, it alleges that the defendants conspired “to sell such teeth to dental laboratories at anti-competitive prices determined by Dentsply and agreed to by the Dealer Defendants.” (Id.) To carry out this conspiracy, Dents-ply allegedly has sold teeth to the Dealers on the condition “that [the Dealers] restrict their dealings with rival manufacturers[.]” (Id. at 452.) The Dealers, the Plaintiffs allege, “knew that this exclusive dealing arrangement was and is an illegal restraint of trade designed to maintain Dentsply’s monopoly.” (Id. at 440.)
In our review of the amended complaint, we understand the Plaintiffs to allege a hybrid of both vertical and horizontal conspiracies.
(See, e.g., id.
at 435)
*255
(“Defendants,
each with all of the others,
have entered into two interrelated conspiracies[.]” (emphasis added).) That sort of conspiracy, sometimes dubbed a “hub-and-spoke” conspiracy,
see, e.g., Impro Prods., Inc. v. Herrick,
involves a hub, generally the dominant purchaser or supplier in the relevant market, and the spokes, made up of the distributors involved in the conspiracy. The rim of the wheel is the connecting agreements among the horizontal competitors (distributors) that form the spokes.
Total Benefits Planning Agency, Inc. v. Anthem Blue Cross & Blue Shield,
Here, even assuming the Plaintiffs have adequately identified the hub (Dents-ply) as well as the spokes (the Dealers), we conclude that the amended complaint lacks any allegation of an agreement among the Dealers themselves. The amended complaint states only in a conclusory manner that all of the defendants — Dentsply and all the Dealers included — conspired and knew about the alleged plan to maintain Dentsply’s market position. The amended complaint alleges, for instance, that “Dentsply made clear to each ... dealer that every other Dentsply dealer was ... required to agree to the same exclusive dealing arrangement, and that every other Dentsply dealer had so agreed.” (App. 442.) Iterations of this allegation are sprinkled throughout the amended complaint.
(E.g., id.
at 443, 451, 454, 456, 458-59.) But to survive dismissal it does not suffice to simply say that the defendants had knowledge; there must be factual allegations to plausibly suggest as much.
See Twombly,
Instead of underscoring factual allegations plausibly suggesting the existence of an agreement, the Plaintiffs invite us to infer that the Dealers were aware of each other’s involvement in the conspiracy because, as market participants, they all knew that Dentsply was the dominant player in the artificial tooth market and because they all had an economic incentive to create and maintain a regime in which Dentsply reigned and the Dealers did its bidding. In that regime, the Plaintiffs tell us, the Dealers would all benefit from Dentsply’s policies because they would all be able to charge dental laboratories artificially inflated prices for teeth in their various regions of operation. We do not disregard the logical appeal of this argument. Certainly, the objective of many antitrust conspiracies is to control pricing with an eye to increasing profits. But simply because each Dealer, on its own, might have been economically motivated to exert efforts to keep Dentsply’s business and charge the elevated prices Dentsply imposed does not give rise to a plausible inference of an agreement among the Dealers themselves.
Cf. Twombly,
Before both the District Court and us, the Plaintiffs have tried to hedge then-bets. They argue that even if they have not adequately alleged an overarching conspiracy between and among Dentsply and all of its Dealers, they at least have adequately alleged several bilateral, vertical conspiracies between Dentsply and the Dealers. There is arguably some support for what amounts to a “rimless” conspiracy.
See Kotteakos v. United States,
The Plaintiffs have failed to allege any facts plausibly suggesting a unity of purpose, a common design and understanding, or a meeting of the minds between and among Dentsply and all of the Dealers. Accordingly, we will affirm the District Court’s determination that the Plaintiffs have failed to adequately allege the agreement element of their Section 1 and Section 2 claims.
2. Allegation of Specific Intent
The District Court dismissed the conspiracy to monopolize claims asserted in Counts Two and Three on the alternative ground that the Plaintiffs failed to adequately allege specific intent on the part of the Dealers.
9
Specific intent is an essential element of a conspiracy to monopolize claim.
Bonjorno v. Kaiser Aluminum & Chem. Corp.,
Here, the Plaintiffs point us to their allegations that the defendants “have acted with the specific intent to unlawfully maintain a monopoly!,]” (App.452); that “the intended effect of th[e] exclusive dealing arrangement ... has been the elimination of any and all competition!]”
(id.
at 440); and that the defendants “knew that this exclusive dealing arrangement was
*258
and is an illegal restraint of trade designed to maintain Dentsply’s monopoly[,]”
(id.).
In essence, the Plaintiffs allege that Dentsply’s pricing policies were unlawful, that the Dealers knew as much, and that they signed on to those policies knowing full well they were unlawful. But that allegation, in its many iterations, is conclusory. There are no facts behind it, so it does not plausibly suggest knowledge of unlawfulness on the Dealers’ part. We could feasibly infer the Dealers’ specific intent to further Dentsply’s monopolistic ambitions if the Plaintiffs had stated enough factual matter to suggest some coordination among the Dealers, something to suggest that they knew that Dentsply was spearheading an effort to squash its competitors by pressing the Dealers into its service and keeping prices artificially inflated.
10
We have already determined, however, that the Plaintiffs’ allegations that the Dealers conspired with Dentsply are deficient, so we cannot infer the Dealers’ specific intent from their mere participation in the conspiracy, as the Plaintiffs urge. In fact, the only actual conduct the Plaintiffs have alleged on the part of the Dealers is that each one of them, acting on its own, signed a bilateral dealing agreement with Dentsply. The only plausible inference from that conduct is that each Dealer sought to acquire, retain and/or increase its own business. Significantly, the antitrust laws do not prohibit such conduct.
See, e.g., U.S. Steel
Corp.
v. Fortner Enters., Inc.,
Because we find that the Plaintiffs failed to sufficiently allege specific intent, we agree with the District Court’s dismissal of Counts Two and Three on this ground.
3. Application of Illinois Brick
In addition to finding that the Plaintiffs did not adequately allege specific intent or an agreement, the District Court dismissed Counts Two and Four under Illinois Brick. The Court recognized that Hess I did not address whether the Plaintiffs could pursue damages claims against the Dealers because the Dealers were not parties to that suit. The District Court concluded, however, that Illinois Brick’s general coconspirator exception did not apply here because the Plaintiffs did not allege facts to show that the Dealers were in fact eoconspirators with Dentsply.
The Plaintiffs fault the District Court’s consideration of any exception at all to
Illinois Brick.
In the Plaintiffs’ view,
Illinois Brick
is inapposite because they buy directly, not indirectly, from the Dealers. But that circumstance is immaterial be
*259
cause the amended complaint does not adequately allege that the Dealers are members of a conspiracy with Dentsply. As we explained in
Hess I,
the Plaintiffs could come within
Illinois Brick’s
coconspirator exception only if the Dealers were precluded from asserting claims against Dentsply because their participation in the conspiracy was “truly complete.”
Hess I,
The Plaintiffs also argue that, even assuming the District Court’s application of
Illinois Brick
was correct as to their request for overcharge damages, the Court made no finding as to their request for lost profits. In
Hess I,
we explained that “[w]hen antitrust violators cause prices to increase through monopolization, a price-fixing conspiracy, or exclusionary conduct, the harm they cause members of the distribution chain comes in two forms: (1) overcharges paid for goods actually purchased; and (2) lost profits resulting from the lost opportunity to buy and resell a greater volume of goods.”
Although
Hess I
admittedly did not categorically bar lost profits damages in this circuit, we need not explore this issue any further in this case. In this Court, issues that are not “specifically presented to the District Court” ordinarily are waived on appeal,
see Pension Benefit Guar. Corp. v. White Consol. Indus., Inc.,
VI.
For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the District Court’s rulings in their entirety.
Notes
. These cases were brought as putative class actions but have never been certified as such.
. The District Court also granted the motions of several of the Dealers in Jersey Dental to dismiss the amended complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction and improper venue. That portion of the District Court’s ruling is not at issue here.
. Because the applicability
vel non
of collateral estoppel is a question of law, we ordinarily exercise plenary review over a district court's collateral estoppel analysis.
See Cospito v. Attorney Gen. of the United States,
. Neither party contests the District Court's interpretation of the Plaintiffs' motion as one for reconsideration, and thus we accept that interpretation as correct.
. In their briefs, the Plaintiffs do not impugn the District Court’s dismissal of their claims for injunctive relief against Dentsply as asserted in Counts Three and Five to the extent the Court found that the Plaintiffs lacked standing to pursue those claims given their failure to allege facts demonstrating antitrust injury. As such, the Plaintiffs have waived any contest to that portion of the District Court’s ruling.
See Holk v. Snapple Beverage Corp.,
. The defendants argue that the Plaintiffs should be judicially estopped from claiming, as they do in their amended complaint, that the Dealers were Dentsply’s equals in the alleged conspiracy because of the Plaintiffs' previous allegations in these proceedings that Dentsply coerced the Dealers into participating in its anticompetitive practices. The doctrine of judicial estoppel "bar[s] a party from taking contradictory positions during the course of litigation.”
G-I Holdings, Inc.
v.
Reliance Ins. Co.,
. The standard for a Section 2 violation is "the more stringent monopoly standard[,]”
Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image Technical Servs., Inc.,
. The Plaintiffs rely on
Fineman v. Armstrong World Industries, Inc.,
. The Plaintiffs argue that the District Court erroneously applied a heightened pleading standard by requiring them to allege not only that the Dealers knew that Dentsply would achieve a monopolistic position but, additionally, that they "wanted” Dentsply to obtain a monopoly, thereby "confus[ing] motive with intent.” (Appellants' Br. 81-83.) We agree that no authority of which we are aware mandates the conclusion that a defendant’s intent to violate the antitrust laws is negated if the defendant was coerced into committing a violation. It is well settled that at the summary judgment stage a court may dispose of an antitrust conspiracy claim in "the absence of any plausible motive to engage in the conduct charged!]”
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
. As the Plaintiffs correctly note, the agreement element of their conspiracy claims arguably is not negated by their allegation that the Dealers may have been coerced into submitting to Dentsply's pricing policies.
See Perma Life Mufflers, Inc. v. Int’l Parts Corp.,
. The Plaintiffs contend that the defendants cannot complain that they were caught unawares by their request for lost profits damages. That may be so, but the doctrine of waiver does not serve as a surprise-avoidance mechanism alone. It ensures that a particular issue is given a full airing, permitting each party to present its views and the trial court to make an initial determination. Most important for our purposes, the doctrine allows us to review both those views and that determination in arriving at our own considered judgment.
