1982-2 Trade Cases 64,807
In re INDUSTRIAL GAS ANTITRUST LITIGATION
Robert C. BICHAN, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CHEMETRON CORPORATION, a corporation; Allegheny Ludlum
Industries, Inc., a corporation; Airco Industrial Gas, a
division of Airco, Inc., a corporation; Air Products &
Chemicals, Inc., a corporation; Liquid Air Corporation of
North America, a corporation; Liquid Air, Inc., a
corporation; and Linde Division, a division of Union Carbide
Corporation, a corporation, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 81-2567.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Feb. 26, 1982.
Decided June 25, 1982.*
Michael W. Rathsack, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiff-appellant.
Henry P. Sailer, Covington & Burling, Washington, D. C., for defendants-appellees.
Before BAUER and POSNER, Circuit Judges, and BARTELS, Senior District Judge.**
BAUER, Circuit Judge.
The issue on appeal is whether Robert C. Bichan, a salaried executive who was terminated from his position as president of Chemetron's Industrial Gas Division and blacklisted by the industrial gas industry, has standing to bring a private treble damage action against his employer under § 4 of the Clayton Act. 15 U.S.C. § 15. The district court held that Bichan could not maintain the action because he was not within the target area of the alleged anticompetitive conduct and had not suffered an "antitrust injury." We affirm.
Bichan was hired to manage Chemetron's Industrial Gas Division. Contrary to established marketing practices, Bichan began competing for customers of other producers and was successful in obtaining an account from a customer who traditionally purchased gas from another producer. In July 1976, shortly after obtaining this account, Bichan was dismissed and, since that time, has been unable to secure similar work in the industry.
Bichan alleges that a conspiracy existed to fix prices, to impose conditions of sales on customers and to allocate customers. He maintains that he was fired and blacklisted because he refused to adhere to these illegal practices. He argues that having lost salary and bonuses as a direct result of his refusal to participate in the conspiracy, he has suffered an "injury in his business or property" within the meaning of § 4 of the Clayton Act. 15 U.S.C. § 15.
Analysis of whether Bichan may maintain a treble damages action under § 4 is a two step process. First, we must determine whether Bichan's injury is an "antitrust injury" which is inextricably related to, and caused by, the alleged anticompetitive conduct. Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, Inc.,
As the district court judge noted, the question of who may bring a private treble damages action under § 4 is characterized by doctrinal confusion. In re Uranium Antitrust Litigation,
While courts have been in agreement that the right to bring treble damages actions should be limited, they have devised differing tests to identify which parties should be permitted to sue under § 4. To date, at least three tests have been adopted: (1) the target area test; (2) the direct injury test; and (3) the "zone-of-interest" test. All three tests attempt to identify those persons who have suffered an injury which flows from antitrust violations. The target area test focuses on the area affected by the anticompetitive conduct, requiring that the plaintiff be within the area of the economy which was endangered by a breakdown of competition and that plaintiff's injury be a direct result of the lessening of that competition. In re Multidistrict Vehicle Air Pollution M. D. L. No. 31,
However, not all persons who have suffered an injury flowing from the antitrust violation have standing to sue under § 4. From the class of injured persons suffering an "antitrust injury" only those parties who can most efficiently vindicate the purposes of the antitrust laws have antitrust standing to maintain a private action under § 4. Jeffrey v. Southwestern Bell,
* We first consider whether Bichan has sustained an "antitrust injury". We conclude he has not.
The parties agree that there is no Seventh Circuit precedent dealing specifically with Bichan's situation, but they differ as to the significance of this fact. Bichan argues that despite the lack of controlling precedent, the cause of his injury, the anticompetitive marketing scheme, is precisely the type of restraint of commerce proscribed by the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, and remediable by § 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15. He argues that since the purpose of the antitrust laws is to provide compensation for injury as well as to preserve a competitive market structure, these laws should be interpreted not only to punish conspirators but also to protect persons who induce and encourage competition.
In contrast, appellees (collectively Chemetron), relying on Hawaii v. Standard Oil Co.,
The parties agree that this circuit has adopted the target area test and that if Bichan is to prevail, he must show that he has been a target of the alleged conspiracy. Bichan concedes that in the past, producers, wholesalers, retailers, or consumers have been the parties traditionally found to be targets of anticompetitive conduct. Nevertheless, he argues that § 4 protection should also be extended to executive employees who attempt to encourage competition for two reasons. First, he asserts that extending protection to those who encourage competition is consistent with the goals of the antitrust laws. Second, he contends that protecting those who encourage competition is the most effective method of eliminating antitrust violations.
In support of his contention that his termination and blacklisting is an "antitrust injury," Bichan relies on Radovich v. National Football League,
In Radovich and Nichols the alleged conspiracies were directed at restricting freedom of employment and inhibiting competition in the labor market. Radovich involved a boycott to prevent football players from transferring to teams in other leagues; Nichols involved an employee no-switching agreement in which publishers agreed not to employ each other's former employees until six months after the termination of the former employment. Since the conspiracies in both cases were intended to restrict competitive conditions in the labor market, the injuries complained of, restriction of employment alternatives, were directly related to the anticompetitive restraints. See Lupia v. Stella D'Oro Biscuit Co., Inc.,
In contrast, Bichan does not stand in the same shoes as the plaintiffs in Radovich and Nichols. His injury did not result from a lack of competition in the labor market. The conspiracy Bichan charges was aimed at restraining competition in the industrial gas market, causing higher prices for consumers and potential loss of profits for nonconspiring producers. Since the area of the economy endangered by the anticompetitive scheme was not the labor market, Bichan can claim no "antitrust injury."
Further, we agree with the district court that McNulty does not support Bichan's claim because its decision is based on faulty reasoning. There the court applied the wrong standard to determine whether plaintiff's discharge for objecting to anticompetitive behavior was an "antitrust injury," incorrectly focusing on whether the injury was caused "by reason of" the anticompetitive behavior rather than, as Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, Inc.,
Bichan acknowledges that Lupia v. Stella D'Oro Biscuit Co., Inc.,
Bichan's attempts to distinguish Lupia fail. First, we decline to speculate as to what effect Bichan would have had on the market had he not been terminated. More significantly, even assuming arguendo that Bichan would have, as he alleges, dramatically reduced anticompetitive activity, appellant's br. at 11, his ability to affirmatively promote competition is totally irrelevant to a determination of whether Bichan himself has sustained an "antitrust injury." The fact remains that the target area test requires that the injuries sustained flow from a lessening of competition in the marketplace. The injuries Bichan has suffered did not derive from the lessening of competition in the industrial gas industry.
We are aware of the recent Ninth Circuit case which holds that a sales manager in a situation very similar to that of Bichan's may bring a private treble damages suit. Ostrofe v. H. S. Crocker Company, Inc.,
Having analyzed Brunswick as limiting § 4 to suits for damages directly caused by the anticompetitive effect of the antitrust violation, the Crocker majority then disregards that analysis. Ignoring Brunswick 's clear teachings, it substitutes its own ideas of what the policies underlying the antitrust laws should be and concludes that Congress intended that § 4 protect any injury falling "within the core of Congressional concern underlying the substantive provisions of the antitrust laws allegedly violated."
We reject the Crocker holding. We believe Judge Kennedy's dissent, maintaining that, under sound antitrust principles, a marketing director whose injury has nothing to do with the alleged anticompetitive conduct of price fixing has not sustained an "antitrust injury," is the more reasoned analysis, and we adopt it here.
We disagree with the majority analysis in Crocker for several reasons. First, we read Brunswick to hold that § 4 protects only those persons injured as consumers or competitors in a defined market or in a discrete area of the economy. Second, reading Brunswick in conjunction with Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois,
We decline to usurp the legislative role and rewrite the treble damages provision to extend antitrust protection beyond that dictated by established precedent and Congressional intent. Applying the established rules of this circuit, we conclude that Bichan has sustained no "antitrust injury" because, while he may have suffered some injury-in-fact he was not the target of the alleged anticompetitive practices and his injury, therefore, did not result from the defendants' acquisition or exploitation of market power.
II
However, the presence of an antitrust injury is not the sole determinant of whether Bichan may maintain a treble damages suit. Pan-Islamic Trade Corp. v. Exxon Corp.,
Unless § 4's phrase "by reason of" is interpreted to require a direct causal link between the antitrust violation and the resulting injury, the courts would be flooded with antitrust litigation. If § 4 were construed "to permit treble damages suits by every creditor, stockholder, employee, subcontractor, or supplier of goods and services that might be affected, the lure of a treble recovery, implemented by the availability of the class suit as facilitated by the amendment of Rule 23 F.R.C.P., would result in an overkill, due to an enlargement of the private weapon to a caliber far exceeding that contemplated by Congress." Calderone Enterprises Corp. v. United Artists Theatre Circuit, Inc.,
While the legislative history to § 4 indicates that the treble damages remedy was intended primarily as a "consumer welfare prescription," Reiter v. Sonotone Corp.,
While Bichan may seek to vindicate his interests in the state courts, he may not maintain a § 4 treble damages action in federal court. We agree with the district court that Bichan has failed to establish that he has sustained an "antitrust injury" or that he has antitrust standing. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Pursuant to Circuit Rule 16, this opinion has been circulated among all judges of this court in regular active service because it creates a conflict between the Seventh and Ninth Circuits. No judge voted to hear the matter en banc. Judge Sprecher died on May 15, 1982 without having expressed an opinion on the matter
The Honorable John R. Bartels, Senior Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, is sitting by designation
See Page, Antitrust Damages and Economic Efficiency: An Approach to Antitrust Injury, 47 U.Chi.L.Rev. 467 (1980), where he argues that a plaintiff should not be permitted to recover for injury from an antitrust violation that does not foster inefficiency in the marketplace. Page contends that "the predominant goal of antitrust enforcement is the enhancement of competition rather than the subsidization of small and inefficient businesses," id. at 468, and believes that treble damages actions will promote economic efficiency, his term for consumer welfare, only if the size of the award approximates the social cost caused by the violation, discounted by the likelihood that the conduct will be discovered and penalized. Id. at 472
In re Multidistrict Vehicle Air Pollution M. D. L. No. 31,
In its opinion the district court also rejected Bichan's reliance on these cases. We agree with the district court's analysis and, therefore, consider these cases only briefly here
We also note that McNulty is distinguishable on its facts. There, the plaintiff received substantial bonuses based on the volume of sales in his territory. The anticompetitive practices reduced the volume of sales, adversely affecting the amount of these bonuses. Thus, the injury in McNulty was, in part, the result of a lessening of competition in the affected industry. In contrast, as the district court noted, Bichan has not alleged any loss of commissions due to decreased competition in the industrial gas market. McNulty does not advance Bichan's position
