Appellant’s complaint under section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 15, seeking treble damages for alleged violation of sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 1 and 2, was dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Appellant declined to amend and the action was dismissed.
The district court did not state its reasons for dismissal. Appellees suggest two possibilities: (1) relief was precluded by Eastern Railroad Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc.,
We think neither ground necessarily posed an “insuperable bar to relief,” and that dismissal for failure to state a claim was therefore improper. Corsican Productions v. Pitchess,
1. The complaint alleged that appel-lees induced the Attorney General of the State of Arizona to file an action which resulted in placing Arizona Savings and Loan Association in receivership and closing its business. It is conceded that section 6-423 of the Arizona Revised Statutes authorizes the Attorney General to bring such an action against a building and loan association charged with the “irregularities” specified in A.R.S. § 6-422.
In Noerr the Supreme Court held that “the Sherman Act does not prohibit two or more persons from associating together in an attempt to persuade the legislature or the executive to take particular action with respect to a law that would produce a restraint or a monopoly.”
We agree with appellees that Noerr would apply whether or not the proceeding brought by the Attorney General had substantive merit and complied with statutory procedural prerequisites. In either event, appellees’ conduct in informing the Attorney General of alleged “irregularities” and persuading him to take the action which they desired with respect to enforcement of the Arizona statute would be essentially political in nature, and basically dissimilar from the “price fixing agreements, boycotts, market-division agreements, and other similar arrangements” normally held viola-tive of the Act.
Nonetheless, Noerr does not necessarily bar relief under the present complaint. The complaint can be read as-alleging that appellees’ joint effort to influence the Attorney General was but one element in a larger, long-continued scheme to restrain and monopolize “commercial banking in particular and the financial industry in general within the State of Arizona.” Moreover, the complaint alleges that the acts of the Attorney General were those of a participating conspirator. In Parker v. Brown,
2. The complaint alleged that Coffey-ville Loan and Investment Company, Inc. (CLIC) was engaged in making loans upon real estate secured by first mortgages and deeds of trust, and in the course of this business borrowed large sums from the Arizona Savings and Loan Association. Injury and damage were alleged to have resulted from the refusal of the state court receiver to honor the Association’s contractual obligations to *567 CLIC, a result which appellees “could reasonably foresee.”
Appellees argue that the complaint must be rejected under the line of authority holding that “shareholders, creditors, directors and officers of corporations injured by monopolistic practices of competitors,” and other “persons incidentally injured by a conspiracy” cannot sue under section 4 of the Clayton Act (Conference of Studio Unions v. Loew’s Inc.,
Certainly the limitation upon liability which appellees urge does not appear clearly from the language of section 4, and the Supreme Court has said “that the courts “should not add requirements to burden the private litigant beyond what is specifically set forth by Congress * * Radovieh v. Nat’l Football League,
3. We do not hold that appellant :..has alleged a triable claim. The present allegations of the complaint are clearly inadequate. They are disconnected and incomplete. They do not sufficiently particularize the general charge of conspiracy to restrain and monopolize the Arizona financial market. They do not define the relationship between the alleged general conspiracy and those particulars which are set out, the joint activity culminating in the receivership of the Association, or the injury and damage to appellant. They do not disclose the nature of the contractual agreements with the Association which were allegedly repudiated by the receiver to appellant’s injury, and these agreements are described as being between the Association and third persons without setting out the relationship of CLIC to the latter.
However, “mere vagueness or lack of detail is not ground for a motion to dismiss, but should be attacked by a motion for a more definite statement.” 2 Moore’s Federal Practice par. 12.08, pp. 2245-46. And since despite these and other deficiencies it cannot be said with certainty from the face of the present complaint that appellant will be unable to allege a triable claim, it was error to dismiss the action for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted.
It may be well to repeat, in the words of Judge Barnes, that a motion to dismiss is not “the only effective procedural implement for the expeditious handling of legal controversies. Pretrial conference; the discovery procedures; and motions for a more definite statement, judgment on the pleadings and summary judgment, all provide useful tools for the sifting of allegations and the determination of the legal sufficiency of an asserted claim” short of trial. Rennie & Laughlin, Inc. v. Chrysler Corp.,
Reversed.
