ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS CERTAIN CLAIMS IN PLAINTIFFS’ SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT
Buyers and lessees
1
of new motor vehicles have sued automobile companies and two national dealer associations. They claim that these defendants conspired among themselves and with unnamed dealers to prevent less-expensive Canadian vehicles from entering the American market. This conduct, they contend, foreclosed a discount distribution channel and caused new vehicle prices in the United States to rise to artificially high levels. I ruled previously that these consumers can seek in-junctive relief under federal antitrust law.
After that ruling, these consumers filed a Second Amended Complaint. They still do not name the dealers as defendants, although they do allege that the automobile companies and dealer associations engaged in concerted action with American and Canadian dealers. Second Am. Consolidated Class Action Compl. for Violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act (“Second Am. Compl.”) (Docket Item 109). They continue to seek damages from the automobile companies and dealer associations, but this time for violations of state antitrust and consumer protection statutes and on the basis of common law restitution. They also still seek injunctive relief under federal antitrust law. All defendants move to dismiss a number of the state law claims pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss Certain Claims in Pis.’ Second Am. Compl. (“Defs.’ Mot.”) (Docket Item 122).
The motion to dismiss is Granted as to the Louisiana antitrust claim, but Denied as to the antitrust claims for the District of Columbia, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, South Dakota, Tennessee, West Virginia and Wisconsin. The defendants did not move to dismiss the Arizona, California, Kansas, Maine, North Carolina, North Dakota and Vermont antitrust claims. Therefore, the antitrust claims remain for sixteen states and the District of Columbia.
The motion to dismiss is Granted as to the state, consumer protection claims for Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee and Virginia. The plaintiffs have not opposed the motion to dismiss the Illinois, Oregon, Texas and Washington consumer protection claims and the motion to dismiss those claims is also Granted. The motion to dismiss is Denied as to the consumer protection claims for Arkansas, Maine, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico and Vermont. The motion to dismiss the consumer protection claims for the District of Columbia, Idaho and Utah is Granted as to the dealer associations, but otherwise Denied. The defendants did not move to dismiss the consumer protection claims for Alaska, California, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina and West Virginia. Therefore, consumer protection claims remain for fourteen states and the District of Columbia.
The motion to dismiss is Granted as to all restitution claims against the dealer associations. The motion to dismiss the restitution claims is Denied as to the states where state antitrust or consumer protection claims remain, but otherwise Granted.
I. APPLICABLE STANDARDS
(A) Facts
In ruling on a 12(b)(6) motion, I “must accept as true the well-pleaded factual allegations of the complaint [and] draw all reasonable inferences therefrom in the plaintiffs favor.”
LaChapelle v. Berkshire Life Ins. Co.,
(B) Law
In ruling on state law claims, I follow a decision of the highest state court “unless there are very persuasive grounds for believing that the state’s highest court would no longer adhere to it.” 19 Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller and Edward H. Cooper,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 4507, at 92 (1982);
see also Johnson v. Fankell,
II. ANALYSIS
I deal with the claims that are new to the Second Amended Complaint in three categories: state antitrust claims, state consumer protection claims and restitution claims.
(A) State Antitrust Claims
The defendants urge me to dismiss eleven of the eighteen state antitrust claims primarily because of state bans on indirect purchaser lawsuits and what they say is the plaintiffs’ failure to allege sufficient intrastate conduct.
District of Columbia, Michigan and Minnesota Antitrust Claims
For the District of Columbia, Michigan and Minnesota, the defendants move to dismiss on the ground that the plaintiffs “pleaded monopolization — a single actor offense — rather than a combination in restraint of trade.” Defs.’ Mot. at 6. The plaintiffs respond that an inadvertent typographical error caused this pleading mistake.
3
Pis.’ Opp’n to Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss Certain Claims in Pis.’ Second Am. Compl. (“Pis.’ Opp’n”) at 2 n. 2 (Docket Item 135). The defendants do not pursue the issue in their Reply memorandum. I accept the plaintiffs’ correction. I also note that the plaintiffs need not cite the correct statutory provision to state a claim for relief, because “[a] complaint sufficiently raises a claim even if it points to no
Louisiana Antitrust Claim
The defendants challenge the Louisiana antitrust claim on the basis that indirect purchasers cannot recover for antitrust injury in Louisiana. The parties do not cite, and I have not found, any Louisiana state court opinions on point. Accordingly, I follow the Fifth Circuit’s holding in
Free v. Abbott Laboratories, Inc.,
Mississippi Antitrust Claim
In support of their motion to dismiss the Mississippi antitrust claim, the defendants argue that the Mississippi antitrust statute is limited to intrastate conduct. To be sure, in many ways, the Mississippi antitrust statute is inward-looking.
6
Nevertheless, the definition of “trust or combine” is broad, and the statute prohibits agreements to “restrain trade,” “increase ... the price of a commodity” or “hinder competition in the production,
importation ...
sale or pur
Both sides point to
Standard Oil Co. of Kentucky v. State,
In this case, a reasonable inference from the Second Amended Complaint 7 is that the manufacturers wanted Mississippi dealers (like those of every other state) to charge Mississippi consumers higher prices as a result of the lack of competition from imported Canadian vehicles. 8 This would “hinder competition in the ... importation ... of a commodity.” See Miss. Code Ann. § 75-21-1. Moreover, some of those sales would occur wholly within the State of Mississippi, after the vehicle had been “incorporated into the general mass of property” in the state, thereby falling within the compass of the Mississippi antitrust statute. The motion to dismiss the Mississippi antitrust claim is therefore Denied.
Nevada Antitrust Claim
The defendants contend that Nevada’s antitrust coverage is limited to intrastate activities. They rely solely on the statutory language; neither side cites case law. The Nevada Unfair Trade Practice Act enumerates a wide range of prohibited anticompetitive behaviors and declares it “unlawful to conduct any part of any such activity in this state.” Nev.Rev.Stat., § 598A.060. The allegations of the Second Amended Complaint certainly could have been more fulsome on this subject. Nevertheless, I conclude that it is reasonable to read it as alleging concerted action among the manufacturers and Nevada dealers, a conspiracy contemplating vehicle sales in Nevada at higher prices because of the exclusion of Canadian vehicles.
See
Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 39, 65 (naming United States dealers as coconspirators and alleging concerted action between United States dealers and defendants to implement the conspiracy). Under such a reading, the Second Amended Complaint
New Mexico Antitrust Claim
The defendants seek dismissal of the New Mexico claim for failure to allege sufficient intrastate activity. New Mexico prohibits every conspiracy “in restraint of trade or commerce, any part of which trade or commerce is within this state.” N.M. Stat. Ann. § 57-1-1. Unlike some state statutes, the New Mexico antitrust provision makes it crystal clear that only the trade or commerce, not necessarily the conspiracy, must be within the state. The New Mexico statute further specifies that an effect on, or involvement of, interstate or foreign commerce does not bar application of the state statute. Id. § 57-1-13. New Mexico vehicle sales' are certainly trade or commerce within the State of New Mexico. The defendants’ motion to dismiss the New Mexico antitrust claim is therefore Denied. 9
South Dakota Antitrust Claim
The South Dakota statute declares: “A contract, combination, or conspiracy between two or more persons in restraint of trade or commerce any part of which is within this state is unlawful.” S.D. Codified Laws § 37-1-3.1. The statutory language is ambiguous as to whether it is a part of the conspiracy or a part of the trade or commerce that must be within the state. Nevertheless, it is logical to assume that the state intended its antitrust coverage to be as broad as possible. Therefore, I conclude that the plaintiffs need only allege that a part of the trade or commerce occurred within South Dakota. The sales of motor vehicles in South Dakota satisfy this requirement.
Even if part of the conspiracy must occur within the state, the Second Amended Complaint contains sufficient allegations to survive a motion to dismiss. As with the Nevada antitrust claim, I read the Second Amended Complaint as alleging South Dakota dealers’ participation in the conspiracy in an attempt to maintain high prices of motor vehicle sales in South Dakota. See Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 39, 65. The motion to dismiss the South Dakota antitrust claim is therefore Denied.
Tennessee Antitrust Claim
The Tennessee Court of Appeals has recently analyzed the coverage of the Tennessee antitrust statute in great depth.
Sherwood v. Microsoft Corp.,
No. M2000-01850-COA-R9CV,
Sherwood
held that indirect purchasers can recover damages under Tennessee antitrust law.
I conclude that the Second Amended Complaint here, with the reasonable inferences to be drawn from it, satisfies the
Sherwood
substantial-effects standard. The Second Amended Complaint’s allegation of concerted action by dealers to increase new car prices necessarily implicates substantial effects on commerce within Tennessee. It is reasonable to infer that manufacturers wholesale their vehicles to dealers in Tennessee and make significant profits from Tennessee transactions. According to the Second Amended Complaint, retail prices throughout the country (thus including Tennessee) are higher as a result of the prohibition on importing Canadian cars. According to
Sherwood,
“the [Tennessee] legislature clearly intended that the Act apply to anti-competitive conduct that decreases competition in or increases the price of goods paid by consumers in Tennessee even though those goods may have arrived in Tennessee through interstate commerce.”
West Virginia Antitrust Claim
The defendants argue that West Virginia bars indirect purchasers from recovering damages. The West Virginia Antitrust Act does not explicitly address the issue, providing only that “[a]ny person who shall be injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of the provisions of this article may bring an action therefor.” W. Va.Code § 47-18-9. The statute includes a harmonization provision, which directs that the Antitrust Act is to be construed “in harmony with ruling judicial interpretations of comparable federal antitrust statutes.”
Id.
§ 47-18-16. The same provision states that the law is to be construed “liberally.”
Id.
Section 47-18-20 gives the West Virginia Attorney General authority to “make and adopt such rules and regulations as may be necessary for the enforcement and administration of [the Antitrust Act].” The Attorney General has issued a legislative rule providing that “[a]ny person who is injured directly or indirectly by reason of a violation of the
Under West Virginia Supreme Court precedent, a legislative rule approved by the legislature generally “has the force of a statute itself,” and “is entitled to more than mere deference; it is entitled to controlling weight.”
Boggess v. Workers’ Comp. Div.,
The West Virginia Supreme Court states that in reviewing an agency’s legislative rule, a
court must first ask whether the Legislature has directly spoken to the precise question at issue. If the intention of the Legislature is clear, that is the end of the matter, and the agency’s position only can be upheld if it conforms to the Legislature’s intent. No deference is due the agency’s interpretation at this stage.
Id.
at 422. I conclude that the West Virginia Legislature did not speak directly to whether indirect purchasers can recover state antitrust damages. The harmonization provision alone is not enough to amount to a direct statement, for harmonization is not as strict as the defendants would like. In Nebraska, for example, the antitrust statute requires that when any language in the state statute is “the same as or similar to the language of a federal antitrust law,” Nebraska courts “shall follow the construction given to the federal law by the federal courts.” Neb.Rev.Stat. § 59-829. Nevertheless, the Nebraska Supreme Court has held that indirect purchasers can recover damages under Nebraska antitrust law notwithstanding
Illinois Brick. Arthur v. Microsoft Corp.,
According to the West Virginia Supreme Court, if the legislative intent is not clear,
the [next] question for the court is whether the agency’s answer is based on a permissible construction of the statute. A valid legislative rule is entitled to substantial deference by the reviewing court. As a properly promulgated legislative rule, the rule can be ignored only if the agency has exceeded its constitutional or statutory authority or [if the rule] is arbitrary or capricious.
Boone Mem’l Hosp.,
I also conclude that the Second Amended Complaint sufficiently alleges the necessary intrastate activity. Although the West Virginia statute, like the South Dakota statute, is not specific as to whether it is the commerce or the illegal conduct that must be inside the state, 13 I conclude that the allegations suffice for the reasons I discussed concerning South Dakota. See Buscher v. Abbott Labs., No. 94-C-755, at 2 (W.Va.Cir.Ct. Jan. 27, 1994) (Pis.’ Opp’n., Palmer Decl. Ex. A) (“Thus, the Antitrust Act prohibits a conspiracy that restrains West Virginia trade or commerce, regardless of the locus of the conspiracy.”). 14 My conclusion is fortified by the fact that the monopoly section of West Virginia’s antitrust statute covers a monopoly “any part of which is in this state.” W. Va.Code § 47-18-4. The motion to dismiss the West Virginia antitrust claim is therefore Denied.
Wisconsin Antitrust Claim
The parties inform me that the Wisconsin Supreme Court currently has under review a case that may control the outcome of their arguments here on the scope of Wisconsin’s antitrust statute.
See Olstad v. Microsoft Corp.,
(B) State Consumer Protection Statutes
The plaintiffs assert claims under the consumer protection statutes of thirty-nine states and the District of Columbia. 15 The defendants ask me to dismiss thirty-four of them. 16 The plaintiffs concede four of those. 17 That leaves thirty consumer protection statutes at issue.
(1) In General: For states whose consumer protection statutes prohibit only fraudulent or deceptive conduct, does the Second Amended Complaint contain sufficient allegations?
Nowhere does the Second Amended Complaint specifically assert fraudulent or deceptive conduct. 20 Nor do the plaintiffs point to any fraud or deception in their legal memoranda. 21 Only at oral argument did the plaintiffs’ lawyers specify what the deception was. There, they argued that the defendants’ failure to inform consumers of the conspiracy to keep out Canadian ears had inflated new car prices in the United States. This omission or failure to disclose was material, they argued, because it deprived consumers of choice when purchasing vehicles.
The plaintiffs’ late-articulated claim of deception by omission does not withstand scrutiny. The Second Amended Complaint charges that prices were lower in Canada and higher in the United States for the same vehicles. Second Am. Compl. ¶ 1. There is no assertion that this price differential was hidden from, or unknown to, consumers. On the contrary, the Second Amended Complaint details public aspects of the conspiracy’s restriction on imports. Second Am. Compl. ¶ 51 (describing Canadian dealers’ policy of requiring new car buyers to sign “No-Export” agreements), ¶ 55 (alleging refusal to honor warranties on cars imported from Canada), ¶ 65 (alleging refusal to convert speedometers and odometers from the metric system). For all that appears, if United States consumers failed to acquire the cheaper Canadian vehicles, it was because they did not care to, or because the alleged conspiracy prevented Canadian dealers from selling to them (or to a dis
(2) Specific State Statutes
Arizona Consumer Protection Claim
The Arizona Consumer Fraud Act (“ACFA”) prohibits
the act, use or employment by any person of any deception, deceptive act or practice, fraud, false pretense, false promise, misrepresentation, or concealment, suppression or omission of any material fact with intent that others rely upon such concealment, suppression or omission, in connection with the sale or advertisement of any merchandise whether or not any person has in fact been misled, deceived, or damaged thereby.
Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 44-1522(A). The Arizona Court of Appeals has held that an ACFA plaintiff must show “a false promise or misrepresentation made in connection with the sale or advertisement of merchandise and the hearer’s consequent and proximate injury.”
Dunlap v. Jimmy CMC of Tucson, Inc.,
The ACFA contains a permissive harmonization provision. It states: “It is the intent of the legislature, in construing subsection A, that the courts may use as a guide interpretations given by the federal trade commission and the federal courts to 15 United States Code §§ 45, 52 and 55(a)(1).” Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 44-1522(C). The plaintiffs contend that because antitrust violations and group boycotts are violations of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 41-58, the harmonization provision should yield the same result under the ACFA. 23 Pis.’ Opp’n at 7-8; Pis.’ Oral Argument Ex.
It is true that Arizona’s harmonization provision allows Arizona judges to consider interpretations of the FTC Act. But it does not require that they follow those federal
The defendants’ motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claim under the Arizona Consumer Fraud Act is therefore Granted.
Arkansas Consumer Protection Claim
The Arkansas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“ADTPA”) forbids certain enumerated “[djeceptive and unconscionable trade practices,” as well as “any other unconscionable, false, or deceptive act or practice in business, commerce, or trade.” Ark.Code Ann. § 4-88-107(a). It also prohibits: “(1) The act, use, or employment by any person of any deception, fraud, or false pretense; [and] (2) The concealment, suppression, or omission of any material fact with the intent that others rely upon the concealment, suppression, or omission.” Id. § 44-88-108. The ADTPA is not patterned directly on the FTC Act and does not contain a provision harmonizing its interpretation with that of the FTC Act. See Ark.Code Ann. §§ 4-88-101 to - 115; Pridgen, supra, § 3:5.
I have previously ruled' that the plaintiffs do
not allege
any false or deceptive acts. I turn to whether the alleged conspiracy is “unconscionable.” The ADTPA does not defíne the term “unconscionable.”
See
Ark.Code Ann. §§ 4-88-101 to -115. In
Arkansas ex rel. Bryant v. R & A Investment Co.,
a case involving usurious contracts, the Supreme Court of Arkansas looked to contract law to define “unconscionable” under the ADTPA. The court stated that “[t]wo important considerations are whether there is a gross inequality of bargaining power between the parties to the contract and whether the aggrieved party was made aware of and comprehended the provision in question.”
I find no support in the ADTPA or Arkansas caselaw for a ban on indirect
CADA and NADA are not exempt from the reach of the ADTPA. The ADTPA prohibits unconscionable, false or deceptive acts or practices “in business, commerce, or trade.” Ark.Code Ann. § 4-88-107(a)(10). The statute does not define “business,” “commerce” or “trade,” but these terms are broad enough to encompass CADA’s and NADA’s activities, as alleged in paragraphs 2, 36 and 37 of the Second Amended Complaint. ADTPA liability is not limited to sellers of goods. See Ark.Code Ann. § 4 — 88—113(f) (“Any person who suffers actual damage or injury as a result of an offense or violation as defined in this chapter has a cause of action to recover actual damages, if appropriate, and reasonable attorney’s fees.”).
The defendants’ motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ Arkansas consumer protection claim is therefore Denied.
Colorado Consumer Protection Claim
The Colorado Consumer Protection Act (“CCPA”) enumerates a list of behaviors prohibited as “deceptive trade practices.” Colo.Rev.Stat. § 6-1-105. 27 The plaintiffs allege only that the defendants violated the catchall provision, section 6-l-105(u), which declares it a deceptive trade practice to:
Fail[] to disclose material information concerning goods, services, or property which information was known at the time of an advertisement or sale if such failure to disclose such information was intended to induce the consumer to enter into a transaction.
The Colorado Supreme Court has held that to establish a claim under the CCPA,
Connecticut Consumer Protection Claim
In
Vacco v. Microsoft Corp.,
First, the more indirect an injury is, the more difficult it becomes to determine the amount of [the] plaintiffs damages attributable to the wrongdoing as opposed to other, independent factors. Second, recognizing claims by the indirectly injured would require courts to adopt complicated rules apportioning damages among plaintiffs removed at different levels of injury from the viola-tive acts, in order to avoid the risk of multiple recoveries. Third, strugglingwith the first two problems is unnecessary when there are directly injured parties who can remedy the harm without these attendant problems.
Id. at 1066.
The last two factors of the analytical framework described in
Vacco
weigh strongly against the plaintiffs here. Recognizing CUTPA claims by these buyers could well lead to duplicative recoveries. It would undoubtedly produce complicated damages apportionment issues. I referred to these problems in ruling that the plaintiffs, as indirect purchasers, could not recover damages under their federal antitrust claims.
31
In re New Motor Vehicles Canadian Exp. Antitrust Litig.,
I conclude that the defendants’ motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ CUTPA claim must be Granted.
Delaware Consumer Protection Claim
The Delaware Consumer Fraud Act (“DCFA”) prohibits “[t]he act, use or employment by any person of any deception, fraud, false pretense, false promise, misrepresentation, or the concealment, suppression, or omission of any material fact with intent that others rely upon such concealment, suppression or omission, in connection with the sale ... of any merchandise.”
32
Del. Code. Ann. tit. 6, § 2513(a). Because the Delaware statute requires deception or omission of a material fact, allegations of which I have found missing in the Second Amended Complaint, the defendants’ motion to dismiss must be Granted.
See McDuffy v. Koval,
District of Columbia Consumer Protection Claim
The defendants’ motion to dismiss the District of Columbia (“D.C.”) consumer protection claim against the dealer associations, CADA and NADA, is GRANTED. D.C.’s highest court has ruled that the D.C. Consumer Protection Procedures Act (“DCCPPA”)
clearly contemplates complaints against “merchants” who “supply the goods or services which are or would be the subject matter of a trade practice.” While a “merchant” is not limited to the actual seller of the goods or services complained of, he must be a “person” connected with the “supply” side of a consumer transaction.
Howard v. Riggs Nat’l Bank,
As for the automobile companies, the DCCPPA contains a long list of actions that constitute “unlawful trade practices,” almost all of them having to do with deception. D.C.Code Ann. § 28-3904. I have already explained that the Second Amended Complaint does not adequately allege deception. In fact, the plaintiffs’ allegations do not approximate any of the “unlawful trade practices” listed in section 28-3904.
D.C.’s highest court, however, has interpreted the statute more broadly:
The Consumer Protection Procedures Act is a comprehensive statute designed to provide procedures and remedies for a broad spectrum of practices which injure consumers. While the [DCCPPA] enumerates a number of specific unlawful trade practices, the enumeration is not exclusive. A main purpose of the [DCCPPA] is to assure that a just mechanism exists to remedy all improper trade practices. Trade practices that violate other laws, including the common law, also fall within the purview of the [DCCPPA].
Georgia Consumer Protection Claim
Georgia’s Fair Business Practices Act (“GFBPA”) requires that a plaintiff deliver to any prospective defendant a written demand “identifying the claimant and reasonably describing the unfair or deceptive act or practice relied upon and the injury suffered” at least thirty days before filing a GFBPA claim. Ga.Code Ann. § 10-1-399(b). Here, the plaintiffs maintain that their earlier antitrust complaints initially filed across the country and the subsequent Consolidated Amended Complaint filed in this Court satisfy this notice requirement. Pis.’ Opp’n at 12. Although the notice requirement “must be liberally construed,”
Stringer v. Bugg,
Idaho Consumer Protection Claim
The defendants’ motion to dismiss the Idaho consumer protection claim against CADA and NADA is Granted.
Regarding the automobile companies, Idaho Code section 48-603 enumerates prohibited unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices, and includes a catchall provision forbidding “[e]ngaging in any act or practice which is otherwise misleading, false, or deceptive to the consumer,” id. § 48-603(17). The Second Amended Complaint does not allege any of the prohibited practices listed in the ICPA, and does not otherwise allege a misleading, false or deceptive act.
The ICPA also prohibits “[a]ny unconscionable method, act or practice in the conduct of any trade or commerce.” Id. §§ 48-603C(l); 48-603(18). Section 48-603(c)(2) lists four “circumstances” to guide courts in determining whether a challenged behavior is unconscionable: first, whether the defendant took advantage of a consumer who was unable to protect his or her own interests; second, whether the defendant knew that the price “grossly exceeded” market value; third, whether the “transaction ... was excessively one-sided in favor of the alleged violator”; and finally, whether the conduct “would outrage or offend the public conscience, as determined by the court.” Allegations as to the second and fourth “circumstances” may be inferred from the Second Amended Complaint. There, the plaintiffs allege that prices for new motor vehicles in the United States are ten to thirty percent greater than prices for the same vehicles in Canada, and that the defendants were aware of and attempted to maintain this potentially gross price disparity by conspiring to keep Canadian vehicles out of the United States. Second Am. Compl. ¶ 1. It is reasonable to infer that the defendants’ alleged attempts to prevent this competition “would outrage or offend the public conscience.”
Although the ICPA is not modeled directly on the FTC Act, Idaho Code section 48-604(1) instructs courts to give “due consideration and great weight ... to the interpretation of the federal trade commission and the federal courts relating to section 59(a)(1) of the federal trade commission act (15 U.S.C. § 45(a)(1)).” The FTC Act prohibits antitrust violations,
see FTC v. Cement Inst.,
In light of allegations satisfying some of the circumstances for finding unconscionable acts under the ICPA, the persuasive guidance from the FTC Act’s prohibition on antitrust violations and the Supreme Court of Idaho’s directive to interpret the ICPA liberally, I Deny the automobile company defendants’ motion to dismiss the Idaho consumer protection claim.
Kentucky Consumer Protection Claims
Two sections of Kentucky’s Consumer Protection Act (“KCPA”) and a separate remedies provision are at stake. I deal with them separately.
Section 367.170
In section 367.170, the KCPA forbids “unfair, false, misleading, or deceptive acts or unfair practices.” But as indirect purchasers, the plaintiffs cannot maintain their claim against the automobile companies or dealer associations. Under section 367.170, a consumer “may not maintain a private action against a seller with whom he did not deal or who made no warranty for the benefit of the subsequent purchaser,” because the statutory language “plainly contemplates an action by a purchaser against his immediate seller.”
Skilcraft Sheetmetal, Inc. v. Ky. Mach., Inc.,
Section 367.175
Kentucky’s antitrust provision, Ky.Rev. Stat. Ann..§ 367.175, is included within the KCPA. 37 Because section 367.175 is a penal statute with no private cause of action, however, I turn to section 446.070, the remedies provision, to see if this claim can survive the motion to dismiss. 38
Section 446.070
Section 446.070 provides “A person injured by the violation of any statute may recover from the offender such damages as he sustained by reason of the violation, although a penalty or forfeiture is imposed for such violation.” Ky.Rev. Stat. Ann. § 446.070. To recover under section 446.070 for a violation of section 367.175, the plaintiffs must show that the violation of section 367.175 proximately caused their injuries,
see Shields v. Booles,
The motion to dismiss the Kentucky consumer protection claims against all the defendants is therefore Gkanted.
Maine Consumer Protection Claim
Pre filing Notice
Under Maine’s Unfair Trade Practices Act, a prospective plaintiff must deliver to the prospective defendant “a written demand for relief, identifying the claimant and reasonably describing the unfair and deceptive act or practice relied upon and the injuries suffered” at least thirty days before filing an action. 5 M.R.S.A. § 213(1-A). However, the Maine Law Court has held that “the notice requirements of section 213(1 — A) are not jurisdictional.”
Oceanside at Pine Point Condo. Owners Ass’n v. Peachtree Doors, Inc.,
Fraudulent or Deceptive Conduct
Maine forbids “[u]nfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce.” 5 M.R.S.A. § 207. I have already explained that the Second Amended Complaint does not sufficiently allege deception, but Maine’s Unfair Trade Practices Act also prohibits unfair methods of competition and is modeled on the FTC Act.
See
Pridgen,
supra,
§ 3:5. The Maine statute also contains a provision directing courts to interpret it in harmony with the FTC Act, 5 M.R.S.A. § 207(1), and the Maine Law Court examines federal precedent in interpreting it.
Tungate v. MacLean-Stevens Studios, Inc.,
The Second Amended Complaint characterizes the alleged conspiracy as a group boycott. Second Am. Compl. ¶ 3. A group boycott is an agreement by competitors “not to deal with, or to deal only on specified terms with, other economic actors.” ABA Section of Antitrust Law,
Antitrust Law Developments
104 (5th ed.2002). Group boycotts violate the Sherman Act and the FTC Act’s prohibition on unfair methods of competition.
FTC v. Superior Court Trial Lawyers Ass’n,
CADA and NADA
The Maine statute permits a person who buys “services ... primarily for personal, family or household purposes” to sue for loss caused by another person’s use “of a method, act or practice declared unlawful by section 207.” 5 M.R.S.A. § 213. CADA and NADA point out that the Second Amended Complaint does not allege that they “have engaged in any trade with consumers.” Defs.’ Mot. at 7 n. 6. I turn to section 207, therefore, to determine whether its prohibition is limited to those who engage directly in consumer transactions. Section 207 prohibits “[u]nfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce.” 5 M.R.S.A. § 207. It does not limit the scope of its prohibition to consumer transactions. 41 (Obviously, the plaintiffs will still have to prove causation between CADA’s and NADA’s activities and the plaintiffs’ alleged consumer injuries.)
The defendants’ motion to dismiss the Maine consumer protection claims is therefore Denied.
Maryland Consumer Protection
The Maryland Consumer Protection Act (“MCPA”) forbids any “unfair or deceptive trade practice,” Md.Code Ann., Com. Law, § 13-303, and provides a nonexclusive list of prohibited acts, id. § 13-301. Subsection 9 of Section 13-301 prohibits “knowing concealment, suppression, or omission of any material fact with the intent that a consumer rely on the same in connection with ... [t]he promotion or sale of any consumer goods.” I have previously explained that the Second Amended Complaint, even if amended by the plaintiffs’ oral argument, does not adequately allege deception or material omission.
As for the term “unfair,” the MCPA also declares that “[i]t is the intent of the General Assembly that in construing the term ‘unfair or deceptive trade practices’, due consideration and weight be given to the interpretations of § 5(a)(1) of the Federal Trade Commission Act by the Federal Trade Commission and the federal courts.”
42
Id.
§ 13-105. A purpose of section 13-105 is to “achieve a fair comparability between what the FTC and [the
Massachusetts Consumer Protection Claim
At least thirty days before filing an action under the Massachusetts consumer protection statute, consumer plaintiffs must mail or deliver to any prospective defendant “a written demand for relief, identifying the claimant and reasonably describing the unfair or deceptive act or practice relied upon and the injury suffered.” Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A, § 9(3) (“chapter 93A”). The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has “often held that ‘[a] demand letter listing the specific deceptive practices claimed is a prerequisite to [a chapter 93A] suit and as a
special element must be alleged and proved.’ ” Spring v. Geriatric Auth. of Holyoke,
Contrary to the plaintiffs’ assertion, Pis.’ Opp’n at 12, the initial complaints filed across the country and the Amended Complaint filed in this Court almost seven months prior to the filing of the Second Amended Complaint cannot “effectively act as the required notice.”
43
The pur
Michigan Consumer Protection Claim
The Michigan Consumer Protection Act (“MICPA”) forbids only itemized “[u]nfair, unconscionable, or deceptive methods, acts or practices.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 445.903(1). The MICPA does not contain a harmonization provision,
see
Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 445.901-.921, and is not modeled directly on the FTC Act,
compare
Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 445.901-.921
with
15 U.S.C. § 45. The plaintiffs argued in their oral argument hearing exhibit that the MICPA should be liberally construed to achieve its intended purpose of prohibiting unfair practices in trade or commerce, citing
Forton v. Laszar,
Minnesota Consumer Protection Claim
The plaintiffs have failed to state a claim under the applicable Minnesota consumer protection statutes.
45
Minnesota’s Uni
Missouri Consumer Protection Claim
The Missouri Merchandising Practices Act (“MMPA”) provides:
The act, use or employment by any person of any deception, fraud, false pretense, false promise, misrepresentation, unfair practice or the concealment, suppression, or omission of any material fact in connection with the sale or advertisement of any merchandise in trade or commerce ... in or from the state of Missouri, is declared to be an unlawful practice.
any practice which ... [o]ffends any public policy as it has been established by the Constitution, statutes or common law of this state, or by the Federal Trade Commission, or its interpretive decisions; or ... [i]s unethical, oppressive, or unscrupulous; and ... [presents a risk of, or causes, substantial injury to consumers.
Mo.Code Regs. Ann. tit. 15, § 60-8.020(1) (authorized by Mo.Rev.Stat. § 407.145). 47 The regulation also states that “[pjroof of deception, fraud, or misrepresentation is not required to prove unfair practices as used in section 407.020.1.” 48 Mo.Code Regs. Ann. tit. 15, § 60-8.020(2). I conclude that the alleged conspiracy could qualify as an “unfair practice” in violation of the MMPA under the Missouri regulation. 49
But in
Duvall v. Silvers, Asher, Sher & McLaren, M.D.’s, [sic] Neurology, P.C.,
The plaintiffs cannot avoid this state law antitrust prohibition on indirect purchaser suits by making the same claim under Missouri’s consumer protection statute. The plaintiffs’ indirect purchaser status bars them from recovering for the alleged conspiracy under the MMPA. The motion to dismiss the Missouri consumer protection claim is therefore Granted.
Montana Consumer Protection Claim
In language very similar to section 5(a)(1) of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. § 45(a)(1), Montana’s consumer protection statute prohibits “unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce.” Mont.Code Ann. § 30-14-103;
see Plath v. Schonrock,
The plaintiffs contend that the conspiracy alleged here is a Sherman Act violation, a “group boycott,” that also violates the FTC Act. Second Am. Compl. ¶ 3; Pis.’ Oral Argument Ex.;
see Superior
As explained for the Maine consumer protection statute, the application of the Montana consumer protection statute is not limited to those who engage directly in consumer transactions. CADA and NADA are thus not automatically exempt.
The motion to dismiss the Montana consumer protection claim is therefore Denied.
New Hampshire Consumer Protection Claim
New Hampshire prohibits the “use [of] any unfair method of competition or any unfair or deceptive act or practice in the conduct of any trade or commerce
within this state.”
N.H.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 358-A:2 (emphasis added). New Hampshire state courts have not addressed whether it is just the trade or commerce or the unlawful act itself that must occur within the state. New Hampshire federal court decisions have interpreted the statute to require that the offending conduct occur within New Hampshire.
Pacamor Bearings, Inc. v. Minebea Co.,
New Hampshire sales are trade or commerce within the state. Regarding offending conduct in New Hampshire, the plaintiffs allege that the conspiracy involved concerted efforts to affect the prices of motor vehicles sold throughout the United States (thus including New Hampshire). See Second Am. Compl. ¶ 1 (alleging conspiracy to exclude Canadian motor vehicles from the United States market and resulting maintenance of high prices of motor vehicles in the United States). It is reasonable to read the Second Amended Complaint as alleging that the defendant automobile manufacturers and dealer associations conspired with New Hampshire dealers to ban Canadian motor vehicles from the market, resulting in higher motor vehicle prices in New Hampshire. See Second Am. Compl. ¶ 39 (naming the dealer associations and United States dealers as co-conspirators). The involvement of New Hampshire dealers in the conspiracy constitutes “offending conduct” in New Hampshire.
As with Maine and Montana, the New Hampshire consumer protection statute does not apply only to those who have directly engaged in trade or commerce with consumers. CADA and NADA are thus not exempt from the reach of the New Hampshire consumer protection statute.
The motion to dismiss the New Hampshire consumer protection claim is therefore Denied.
The New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act (“NJCFA”) forbids
[t]he act, use or employment by any person of any unconscionable commercial practice, deception, fraud, false pretense, false promise, misrepresentation, or the knowing, [sic] concealment, suppression, or omission of any material fact with intent that others rely upon such concealment, suppression or omission, in connection with the sale or advertisement of any merchandise ... whether or not any person has in fact been misled, deceived, or damaged thereby.
N.J. Stat. Ann. § 56:8-2. The NJCFA is not directly modeled on the FTC Act and does not contain a harmonization clause. See N.J. Stat. Ann. §§ 56:8-1 to -152; Pridgen, supra, § 3:5.
I have ruled that the Second Amended Complaint, as “amended” by oral argument, does not allege fraud or deception. Therefore, I turn to whether the alleged conspiracy is an unlawful “unconscionable commercial practice.” The Supreme Court of New Jersey has held that, under the NJCFA, “[t]he standard of conduct that the term ‘unconscionable’ implies is lack of ‘good faith, honesty in fact and observance of fair dealing.’ ”
Cox v. Sears Roebuck & Co.,
In
Cox v. Sears Roebuck & Co.,
the Supreme Court of New Jersey held that noncompliance with New Jersey’s Home Improvement Practices regulations, N.J. Admin. Code § 13:45A-16.2 (promulgated by the Attorney General under section 56:8-4 of the NJCFA), constituted a violation of the NJCFA.
Cox,
New Mexico Consumer Protection Claim
The New Mexico Unfair Practices Act (“NMUPA”) prohibits “[u]nfair or deceptive trade practices and unconscionable trade practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce.” N.M. Stat. Ann. § 57-12-3. “Unfair or deceptive trade practice” is separately defined in section 57-12-2(D), and includes “an act specifically declared unlawful pursuant to the [NMUPA]” as well as any false or misleading statement that does or has the capacity to deceive or mislead. Because I have ruled that the plaintiffs have failed to adequately allege deception or a capacity to deceive, I turn to the unconscionable trade practice standard, also separately defined.
An unconscionable trade practice is “an act or practice ... which to a person’s detriment: (1) takes advantage of the lack of knowledge, ability, experience or capacity of a person to a grossly unfair
The defendants contend that the plaintiffs’ indirect purchaser status prevents them from pursuing an NMUPA claim. Nothing in the NMUPA precludes indirect purchaser suits. See N.M. Stat. Ann. §§ 57-12-1 to -24. I observe that New Mexico’s antitrust statute expressly provides a cause of action for “any person threatened with injury or injured in his business or property, directly or indirectly.” N.M. Stat. Ann. § 57-l-3(A) (emphasis added). There are thus no limitations on indirect purchasers’ standing under the antitrust statute that would counsel against indirect purchaser suits for antitrust violations under the NMUPA. 59 The plaintiffs, as indirect purchasers, may thus pursue their NMUPA claim for the alleged conspiracy.
As for CADA and NADA, New Mexico’s consumer protection statute does not limit its application to those who have directly engaged in trade or commerce with consumers. CADA and NADA are therefore not exempt from its coverage.
The motion to dismiss the New Mexico consumer protection claim is therefore Denied.
New York Consumer Protection Claim
New York’s General Business Law § 349 (“section 349”) provides: “Deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any business, trade or commerce in the furnishing of any service in this state are hereby declared unlawful.” N.Y. Gen.
As I previously explained, even if the plaintiffs “amend” their Second Amended Complaint with their claims at oral argument, they do not allege any practice that could be considered deceptive or likely to mislead a reasonable consumer under section 349. Their “omissions” argument fails because the failure to reveal the conspiracy did not affect the price of the vehicles or the consumer’s decision to purchase the vehicle. At oral argument the plaintiffs contended that the alleged conspiracy, which the plaintiffs characterize as a “group boycott,” Second Am. Compl. ¶ 3, violates section 349. Although section 349 is modeled on the FTC Act,
Oswego,
North Dakota Consumer Protection Claim
North Dakota’s consumer protection statute declares unlawful “[t]he act, use, or employment by any person of any deceptive act or practice, fraud, false pretense, false promise, or misrepresentation, with the intent that others rely thereon in connection with the sale or advertisement of any merchandise,” N.D. Cent.Code § 51-15-02. The statute does not include the
North Dakota courts have had few occasions to interpret the North Dakota consumer protection statute. In
State ex rel. Spaeth v. Eddy Furniture Co.,
the Supreme Court of North Dakota affirmed the dismissal of a North Dakota consumer protection claim and noted in dictum that it was upholding “the trial court’s determination that the conduct in this case was not fraudulent or deceitful, and therefore not violative of Chapter[ ] ... 51-15.”
Ohio Consumer Protection Claim
The Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act (“OCSPA”) forbids a supplier from engaging in an unfair or deceptive act or practice, Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 1345.02(A), or an unconscionable act
or
practice, Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 1345.03(A), in connection with a consumer transaction. The plaintiffs do not allege an unfair or deceptive act, defined as an act that “has the likelihood of inducing in the mind of the consumer a belief which is not in accord with the facts.”
62
Richards v. Beechmont Volvo,
The plaintiffs have also failed to allege an unconscionable practice in violation of section 1345.03. The OCSPA lists a number of circumstances for courts to consider when determining whether an act is unconscionable.
63
Ohio Rev.Code Ann.
The defendants’ motion to dismiss the Ohio consumer protection claims is Granted on the basis that the plaintiffs failed to allege unfair, deceptive or unconscionable conduct.
Oklahoma Consumer Protection Claim
The Oklahoma Consumer Protection Act (“OCPA”) prohibits both “deceptive” and “unfair” trade practices. Okla. Stat. tit. 15, § 753(20). The plaintiffs have not sufficiently alleged a “deceptive trade practice,” defined in the OCPA as an actually or potentially misleading or deceptive practice. See Okla. Stat. tit. 15, § 752(13). The alleged conspiracy to keep Canadian cars out of the United States, Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 1-3, does constitute an “unfair trade practice,” defined as “any practice which offends established public policy or [any] practice [that] is immoral, unethical, oppressive, unscrupulous or substantially injurious to consumers.” See Okla. Stat. tit. 15, § 752(14). The plaintiffs’ indirect purchaser status, however, prevents them from maintaining their OCPA claim.
In
Major v. Microsoft Carp.,
the Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma affirmed the decision of the trial court that the OCPA “should not extend to anticompetitive con
I find
Major
to be a reasonable interpretation of Oklahoma law and conclude, therefore, that the plaintiffs, as indirect purchasers, cannot assert a consumer protection claim for damages based upon anti-competitive conduct.
64
Although indirect purchasers may recover for fraud,
see BrannOn v. Munn,
The motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ Oklahoma consumer protection claim is therefore Granted.
Pennsylvania Consumer Protection Claim
The Pennsylvania Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law (“PUTPCPL”) prohibits “[u]nfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce as defined by [sections 201-2(4)(i) to (xxi) ] and regulations promulgated under section 3.1 of this act.” Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 73, § 201-3. Although the statute is to be liberally construed,
see Commonwealth v. Monumental Props., Inc.,
Rhode Island Consumer Protection Claim
The Rhode Island Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“RIDTPA”) prohibits a list of behaviors designated as “[u]nfair methods of competition [or] unfair or deceptive acts or practices,” R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 6-13.1-1(5) to -2. The RIDTPA also provides that it shall not “apply to actions or transactions permitted under laws administered by the department of business regulation or other regulatory body or officer acting under statutory authority of this state or the United States.” R.I. Gen. Laws § 6-13.1-4. The Supreme Court of Rhode Island has ruled that this provision exempts from the RIDTPA’s coverage “all those activities and businesses which are subject to monitoring by state or federal regulatory bodies or officers.”
State v. Piedmont Funding Corp.,
Because the conduct at issue in this lawsuit appears to be subject to monitoring by the Rhode Island Department of Administration, the RIDTPA’s exemption provision may apply. “When the party claiming exemption from the [RIDTPA] shows that the general activity in question is regulated by [state or federal regulatory bodies or officers], the opposing party ... then has the burden of showing that the specific acts at issue are not covered by the exemption.”
Piedmont,
In support of their contention that the RIDTPA claim is viable, the plaintiffs point to
Park v. Ford Motor Co.,
Because the defendants have persuasively argued that the general activity in question (automobile sales) is regulated by a state or federal regulatory body or officers, and because the plaintiffs have failed to carry their burden of showing that the specific acts in question are not covered by the exemption,
see Piedmont,
South Dakota Consumer Protection Claim
South Dakota’s statute on Deceptive Trade Practices and Consumer Protection, S.D. Codified Laws §§ 37-24-1 to -40, prohibits only those acts or practices specifically designated as unlawful in the statute.
See, e.g.,
S.D. Codified Laws § 37-24-6 (enumerating what constitutes a prohibited “deceptive act or practice”);
id.
§ 37-24-31 (permitting a civil action for recovery of actual damages for “any person who claims to have been adversely affected by any act or a practice declared to be unlawful by § 37-24-6”). The only applicable provision declares it “a deceptive act or practice for any person to ... [k]nowingIy and intentionally act, use, or employ any deceptive act or practice, fraud, false pretense, false promises, or misrepresentation or to conceal, suppress, or omit any material fact in connection with the sale or advertisement of any merchandise.” S.D. Codified Laws § 37-24-6(1).
See also Northwestern Pub. Serv. v. Union Carbide Corp.,
The plaintiffs responded to the motion to dismiss the South Dakota consumer pro
Tennessee Consumer Protection Claim
The Tennessee Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”), TenmCode Ann. §§ 47-18-101 to -125, declares unlawful “[ujnfair or deceptive acts or practices affecting the conduct of any trade or commerce.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-18-104(a). The act or practice “need not be willful or knowingly made [for a plaintiff] to recover actual damages under the [TCPA].”
Smith v. Scott Lewis Chevrolet, Inc.,
The plaintiffs state that the TCPA is “substantially modeled on the [FTC Act]” and suggest that I adopt the FTC Act’s definition of “unfair acts.”
68
Pis.’ Opp’n at 7. The TCPA does direct courts to look to federal interpretations of the FTC Act for guidance when interpreting the TCPA.
69
Tenn.Code Ann. § 47-18-115. Nevertheless, I follow the narrower interpretation of the Tennessee courts and apply the Tennessee Court of Appeals’ recent holding that deception is required for a TCPA claim.
Messer Griesheim Indus.,
Utah Consumer Protection Claim
The Utah Consumer Sales Practices Act (“UCSPA”) prohibits deceptive and unconscionable acts or practices
“by a supplier
in connection with a consumer
As to the remaining defendant automobile companies, the UCSPA prohibits both deceptive acts or practices, Utah Code Ann. § 13-11-4, and unconscionable acts or practices, Utah Code Ann. § 13-11-5. I have previously determined that the plaintiffs do not adequately allege fraud or deception. (Section 13-11-4 in the UCSPA enumerates the types of behaviors that constitute deceptive acts or practices: the plaintiffs’ allegations do not fall into any of the enumerated categories.) I turn, therefore, to whether the alleged anticompetitive conduct is an unconscionable practice in violation of the UCSPA.
The Utah Consumer Sales Practices Act is modeled on the Uniform Consumer Sales Practices Act (“Uniform Act”). Pridgen,
supra,
§ 3:7;
see also Carlie v. Morgan,
Utah courts, in the few cases in which they have had the occasion to address unconseionability under the UCSPA, have looked to contract law concepts to define “unconscionable.”
See Woodhaven Apartments v. Washington,
Although section 13-11-5(2) in the UCS-PA states that “[t]he unconscionability of an act or practice is a question of law for the court,” at this stage I do not have sufficient information to come to a conclusion as to whether or not the defendants engaged in unconscionable behavior under Utah law. The motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ Utah consumer protection claim against the defendant automobile companies is therefore Denied.
Vermont Consumer Protection Claim
The Vermont Consumer Fraud Act (“VCFA”) prohibits “unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce.” Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 9, § 2453(a). It authorizes a private cause of action by “any consumer who contracts for goods or services in reliance upon ... or who sustains damages or injury as a result of any false or fraudulent representations or practices prohibited by section 2453 of this title.” 71 Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 9, § 2461(b).
The defendants argue that to state a consumer protection claim under the VCFA, the plaintiffs must allege fraudulent or deceptive commercial practices. Defs.’ Mot. at 7;
id.
App. I.A, at 8.1 have found that the Second Amended Complaint fails to make such allegations. It is true that Vermont cases dealing with allegations of consumer fraud have required the plaintiff to allege a misleading representation.
See, e.g., Greene v. Stevens Gas Serv.,
The question raised but left unanswered in
Lalande
arises from the ambiguous language of section 2461 of the VCFA, which provides a private remedy for “false or fraudulent representations or practices prohibited by section 2453.” Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 9, § 2461(b). If “false or fraudulent” modifies both “representations” and “practices,” then a private plaintiff may only bring an action for false or
In
Elkins v. Microsoft Corp.,
a case decided later the same year as
Lalande,
the Supreme Court of Vermont recognized a private remedy under section 2461,
72
despite the absence of any allegation of fraud or deception.
73
See
The VCFA provides for relief against “the seller, solicitor or other violator.” Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 9, § 2461(b) (emphasis added). The VCFA does not require that a defendant have directly engaged in trade with consumers. Therefore CADA and NADA are not exempt from VCFA coverage.
Consequently, the motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claims under the Vermont Consumer Fraud Act is Denied.
Virginia Consumer Protection Claim
The Virginia Consumer Protection Act (“VCPA”), Va.Code Ann. §§ 59.1-196 to -207, prohibits a list of what are described as “fraudulent acts or practices.” Va.Code Ann. § 59.1-200. The only listed item potentially applicable to this case prohibits the use of “any other deception, fraud, false pretense, false promise, or misrepresentation in connection with a consumer transaction.” Va.Code Ann. § 59.1-200(14). Thus, the plain language of the statute requires fraud or misrepresentation, and Virginia courts have so interpreted it.
74
See Lambert v. Downtown Garage, Inc.,
I have already determined that the plaintiffs have not adequately alleged fraud or deception, including misrepresentation. Consequently, the motion to dismiss the Virginia consumer protection Claim ÍS GRANTED.
(C) Restitution Claims
The plaintiffs have asserted a claim for “restitution under common law” for fifty states and the District of Columbia. Second Am. Compl. ¶ 4; Pis.’ Opp’n App. F. It is a defendant’s gain rather than a plaintiffs damage that is the conventional measure of restitutionary recovery. 75 The premise of the plaintiffs’ claim here is that the defendants have “benefited” by receiving increased revenues as a result of their “unlawful acts,” and that it would be “inequitable for Defendants to be permitted to retain the benefit” that was “conferred by” the plaintiffs. Id. ¶ 155. As relief, the plaintiffs seek “a constructive trust consisting of the benefit to Defendants as a result of [their] inequitable conduct.” 76 Id. ¶ 156.
In contemporary United States common law, restitution based, upon unjust enrichment takes at least two forms.
77
“It may
The reason the plaintiffs seek a restitution remedy here is clear. Illinois Brick has stymied their efforts to seek federal antitrust damages. If they face similar obstacles to their recovery under state statutes (and the previous sections of this opinion demonstrate that such obstacles exist in many states), only common law restitution can put money in their pockets. 81 This background, the Second Amended Complaint, and the plaintiffs’ legal memorandum initially led me to conclude that the plaintiffs were seeking restitution solely as a remedy for a predicate wrong — the antitrust violation — rather than trying to create liability based upon the freestanding doctrine of unjust enrichment. 82 But I also see portions of the plaintiffs’ legal memorandum 83 that suggest that they are making a claim for freestanding unjust enrichment as well, and the defendants treat them as doing so, Defs.’ Reply at 12. I will therefore address both categories.
Whatever its basis, the defendants ask me to dismiss the restitution claim
in toto.
Defs.’ Mot. at 17. They argue that the common law of no state recognizes this restitution claim because: (a) the dealer associations received
no
benefit from the plaintiff consumers, and any benefit to the automobile companies came not from the plaintiff consumers but from the dealers to whom the automobile companies wholesaled their vehicles; (b) the plaintiff con
I accept the first argument as to the dealer associations. The Second Amended Complaint alleges no benefit to the dealer associations, let alone a benefit that could be disgorged. The dealer associations are therefore entitled to dismissal of the restitution claims against them.
For the automobile company defendants, I analyze separately the two apparent premises of the plaintiffs’ claim for restitution.
(1) Freestanding or Autonomous Restitution
A claim for freestanding or autonomous restitution in the context of behavior regulated by an independent body of law (here, antitrust and consumer protection statutes) is “more nettlesome” than a parasitic claim.
85
The premise for such a claim must be that,
86
even if the defendants’ conduct is blameless under the substantive requirements of federal and state antitrust statutes and state consumer protection statutes, the plaintiffs nevertheless can still obtain restitution of some part of their vehicle purchase price. But such a conclusion could result in restitution undermining another body of substantive law, to the extent that the scope of antitrust laws and consumer protection statutes is designed to permit unfettered economic activity in matters that are not within their proscription.
87
Cf
. Steamfitters Local Union No. 420 Welfare Fund v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
In any event, unjust enrichment ordinarily does not furnish a basis for liability where parties voluntarily have negotiated, entered into and fully performed their bargain, as consumers do in buying vehicles. According to section 107(1) of Restatement (First) of Restitution:
A person of full capacity who, pursuant to a contract with another, has performed services or transferred property to the other or otherwise has conferred a benefit upon him, is not entitled to compensation therefor other than in accordance with the terms of such bargain, unless the transaction is rescinded for fraud, mistake, duress, undue influence or illegality, or unless the other has failed to perform his part of the bargain. 88
The automobile purchasers here paid their purchase prices and obtained their vehicles. The Second Amended Complaint does not seek to rescind these sales, and it does not assert that purchasers failed to receive the benefit for which they bargained in buying the vehicles.
For these reasons, I conclude that the plaintiffs cannot prevail on a claim of restitution based upon freestanding unjust enrichment.
(2) Restitution for a Wrong (Parasitic Restitution)
The more likely basis of the plaintiffs’ claim for restitution is that the defendants engaged in wrongful conduct in violating the antitrust laws and that any resulting benefit they gained is unjust enrichment. The critical issue here, where violation of other substantive laws is the premise for recovery, is the effect of any statutory definition of the remedy. In other words, the statute creating liability can override otherwise relevant common law restitution principles by permitting such relief, by prohibiting such relief or by limiting or enlarging the scope of restitutionary relief. In this case, the allegations of unlawfulness concern federal antitrust law, state antitrust law and state consumer protection statutes. In that context, I do not have unlimited compass as a common law judge to determine what the remedy should be. Instead, I must determine whether a restitutionary remedy is available for those particular statutory viola
(i) Restitutionary Recovery for Violations of Federal Antitrust Law
Certainly no restitutionary remedy can escape the limitations the United States Supreme Court imposed on federal antitrust recovery in Illinois Brick, and the plaintiffs do not argue that it can. 89 Therefore, as indirect purchasers, the plaintiffs may not use state common law restitution to recover money from the defendants for violation of the federal antitrust laws. 90
(ii) Restitutionary Recovery for Violations of State Antitrust Law
Some states permit indirect purchasers to recover under their antitrust statutes and some do not. For those states that have maintained the
Illinois Brick
prohibition on indirect purchaser recovery, I conclude that it would subvert the statutory scheme to allow these same indirect purchasers to secure, for the statutory violation, restitutionary relief at common law (or in equity).
91
But the defendants have presented no authority to show that where state law
does
allow an indirect purchaser to recover for violating state antitrust statutes, the recovery must be measured only by the damage to the plaintiff rather than
As with state antitrust laws, the defendants have pointed me to no authority that state consumer protection statutes limit relief to compensation of a plaintiffs damage rather than disgorgement of a defendant’s gain. Therefore, the request for the alternate restitutionary remedy will remain for those states where I have concluded that indirect purchaser ■ plaintiffs may pursue the consumer protection remedy. 98
(iv) Restitutionary Recovery of Profits Earned by the Defendants as a Result of Sales in State X Where the Price is Aryuably Inflated Because the Defendants Violated a Different State’s Antitrust or Consumer Protection Law
The Second Amended Complaint does not say one way or the other whether the plaintiffs are claiming that restitution law principles in State X permit plaintiffs who purchased vehicles in State X to recover in common law restitution from a defendant who has violated the substantive antitrust or consumer protection laws of State Y (or of States Y and Z, etc.). 99 Neither do the legal memoranda address this issue specifically. Because the Second Amended Complaint does seek — for all putative class members — a -pro rata recovery of all the “Defendants’ ill-gotten gains,” Second Am. Compl. Prayer for Relief E, however, it is lurking in the case and I conclude that I cannot ignore the issue.
The premise for such a recovery would be that the defendants’ behavior in State Y (or in this case, in several or many such states) was both illegal and anticompeti-tive, and that it had the consequence of keeping new vehicle prices artificially high in State X as well, where the plaintiffs in question purchased their vehicles. On this premise, the defendants’ anticompetitive profits are attributable to sales in all states, and arguably all such profits are therefore subject to disgorgement.
100
This
Accordingly, the defendants’ motion to dismiss the restitution claim is Granted in its entirety as to CADA and NADA. Otherwise, it is Granted In Part and Denied In Part, with the restitution claim remaining as to those states where I have ruled that indirect purchasers can pursue state antitrust or state consumer protection remedies.
III. CONCLUSION
The Motion to Dismiss Certain Claims in Plaintiffs’ Second Amended Complaint is Granted In Part and Denied In Part. The plaintiffs may proceed on their claims for damages or restitution for antitrust violations under the laws of sixteen states and the District of Columbia, and for consumer protection violations under the laws of fourteen states and the District of Columbia.
So Ordered.
Notes
. For convenience, I will refer only to buyers throughout the rest of this opinion.
. The plaintiffs left virtually unchanged the factual assertions of the First Amended Complaint, which focused on interstate and international activity in support of the federal Sherman and Clayton Act challenges. It would have been helpful if the plaintiffs had added allegations of state-directed activity.
. The plaintiffs cited section 28-4503 of the District of Columbia Code rather than section 28-4502, section 445.773 of the Michigan Compiled Laws rather than section 445.772 and section 325D.52 of the Minnesota Statutes rather than section 325D.51.
. The plaintiffs also cite
Louisiana ex rel. Ieyoub v. Borden, Inc.,
Civ. A. No. 94-3640,
. The plaintiffs cite Daniel R. Karon, “Your Honor, Tear Down That Illinois Brick Wall!" The National Movement Toward Indirect Purchaser Antitrust Standing and Consumer Justice, 30 Wm. Mitchell L.Rev. 1351, 1377-78 (2004), to support their claim that Louisiana permits indirect purchaser suits. Pis.’ Opp’n at 3 n. 4. This article contains no persuasive Louisiana authority to support the plaintiffs' position.
.For example, the price discrimination provision is directed at price differentials between localities within the state, Miss.Code Ann. § 75 — 21—3 (d), and venue lies "in the county where the trust and combine was formed, or where it exists or is carried on ... or in any county in which either of the defendants may have a domicile, or where an officer or agent of any defendant corporation may be found,” id. § 75-21-21.
. The defendants point out correctly that the plaintiffs "do not allege state-specific activities, nor do they allege that the conduct in furtherance of the purported conspiracy was directed at the commerce of any specific state.” Defs.’ Mot. at 4. As I have already noted, such detail certainly would have been helpful, but its absence is not fatal in light of the reasonable inferences to be drawn from the Second Amended Complaint.
. The plaintiffs confirm this reading in their legal memorandum, which describes the Second Amended Complaint as detailing a "scheme to force American consumers in all fifty states to pay artificially inflated prices for new automobiles.” Pis.’ Opp'n at 1.
.
United. Nuclear Corp. v. General Atomic Co.,
. The Supreme Court of Tennessee has held that "[u]npublished intermediate court opinions have persuasive force,” and noted that, "[Unfortunately, many of the best opinions of our intermediate appellate courts are unpublished.”
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Watts,
. In doing so, the Tennessee Court of Appeals cogently explained the significance of the early case of
Standard Oil Co. v. State,
117 Term. 618,
. Moreover, unlike the federal antitrust laws, West Virginia antitrust statutes do not provide for injunctive relief. Thus, if indirect purchasers cannot sue for damages, they have no recourse, not even the injunctive recourse available to indirect purchasers under federal law. That is hardly a ''harmonization” outcome.
. West Virginia Code section 47-18-3 provides: "[e]very contract ... or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce in this State shall be unlawful.”
. I recognize that this unpublished decision has limited authority under the law of West Virginia.
See State v. Myers,
. The plaintiffs make no consumer protection claim for Alabama, Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa. Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Wisconsin and Wyoming.
. The defendants state in a footnote that they “are moving to dismiss ... thirty-five of plaintiffs' forty consumer-protection claims.” Defs.' Mot. at 1 n. 1. However, the text and exhibits to the defendants' motion to dismiss make arguments to dismiss only thirty-four of the plaintiffs' consumer protection claims. Defs.' Mot. at 7-17; id. Ex. A at 3.
. _ne plaintiffs concede Illinois, Oregon, Texas and Washington. Pis.’ Opp’n App. C at 2.
. I do not address whether the plaintiffs’ indirect purchaser status bars their claims in the District of Columbia, Idaho, Maine, Montana, New Hampshire, Utah and Vermont (jurisdictions for which I have denied the motion to dismiss) because the defendants have not argued that these jurisdictions impose a direct purchaser requirement.
. The defendants argue that Georgia, Kentucky, Montana, New York, Ohio and Utah consumer protection statutes prohibit class actions. Defs.’ Mot. at 15 n. 15. (In the context of the state antitrust claims, the defendants also contend that Mississippi prohibits class actions altogether. Id. at 4 n. 2.) I find these arguments premature because I have not yet been asked to rule on whether a class can be certified.
. Paragraph 112 of the Second Amended Complaint states in a conclusoiy fashion that "[a]s a direct result of Defendants’ anticom-petitive, deceptive, unfair, unconscionable, and fraudulent conduct. Plaintiffs and members of the Class were denied access to an alternative channel of distribution of new motor vehicles and forced to pay artificially high prices.” However, there is no description anywhere of the "deception.” The defendants do not challenge the Second Amended Complaint for failure to state allegations of fraud with particularity as required by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b).
.The plaintiffs do say that the defendants "refused to honor ... warranties, disseminate safety recall information, or install properly calibrated odometers in the United States” for consumers who purchased vehicles in Canada. Pis.’ Opp'n at 8; see also Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 65-66. These allegations, however, do not involve deception.
. The defendants correctly observe that "[i]f failure to disclose participation in a purported antitrust conspiracy were sufficient to state a consumer-protection claim, then any Section 1 antitrust case would automatically become a consumer-protection case. That is not the law.” Defs.' Resp. to Pis.' Hr'g Submission at 5.
. Harmonization provisions appear in both consumer protection and antitrust statutes. A harmonization provision in a state antitrust statute might narrow potential recovery to direct purchasers, following the United States Supreme Court's interpretation of federal antitrust law in Illinois Brick. In contrast, a harmonization provision in a state consumer protection statute, which would harmonize the interpretation of the state statute with interpretations of the FTC Act, might allow for more expansive recovery to parallel the scope of the FTC Act's broad prohibitions on unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts. See 15 U.S.C. § 45(a)(1).
. I do not look to the Uniform Consumer Sales Practices Act for guidance in interpreting the ADTPA because, although both statutes prohibit enumerated deceptive and unconscionable practices, the language of the two statutes differs considerably. Compare Ark.Code Ann. § 4-88-107 with Unif. Consumer Sales Practices Act §§ 3-4.
.
Little Rock Electrical Contractors v. Entergy Corp.,
.
FTC v. Mylan Laboratories, Inc.,
In any event, unlike Mylan I and Mylan II, this case is brought by individual indirect purchasers, rather than state attorneys general. The ADTPA explicitly authorizes a private cause of action for damages. Section 4-88-113(f) provides: “Any person who suffers actual damage or injury as a result of an offense or violation as defined in this chapter has a cause of action to recover actual damages, if appropriate, and reasonable attorney’s fees.” Ark.Code Ann. § 4-88-113(f). As noted above, the language of the ADTPA does not limit this cause of action to direct purchasers. See id.
. The Colorado Consumer Protection Act is not patterned directly on the FTC Act and does not contain a harmonization provision. According to Professor Pridgen, Colorado "prohibit[s] only certain itemized practices, without a 'catch-all’ prohibition against unspecified unfair or deceptive practices.” Pridgen, supra, § 3:5 & n. 4.
. I observe that both
Hall,
. The plaintiffs also have not alleged that the withholding of information about the conspiracy "was intended to induce the consumer to enter into a transaction,” another requirement of subsection (u).
. The plaintiffs’ reliance on
U.S. West,
. Multiple recovery problems exist because the alleged conspiracy could have harmed the dealers by preventing them from buying and selling the less-expensive Canadian vehicles.
See In re New Motor Vehicles,
. The DCFA does not track the language of the FTC Act prohibiting unfair competition and unfair acts, nor does it contain a provision harmonizing the DCFA with the FTC Act. See Del.Code Ann. tit. 6, §§ 2511 to 2527. The plaintiffs have not specified whether they are bringing their Delaware consumer protection claim under Delaware's Consumer Fraud Act, Del.Code Ann. tit. 6, §§ 2511 to 2531, or Deceptive Trade Practices Act, Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, §§ 2532 to 2536. See Second Am. Compl. ¶ 119 (citing only "6 Del.Code § 2511, et seq.”). In any event, I note that the plaintiffs fail to state a claim under the Deceptive Trade Practices Act, which prohibits only enumerated deceptive trade practices, none of which encompasses the plaintiffs’ allegations.
. The DCFA states that its purpose is "to protect consumers ... from unfair or deceptive merchandising practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce
in part or wholly within this State.”
Del.Code Ann. tit. 6, § 2512 (emphasis added). The Court of Chancery of Delaware has held that "relief can be granted under the DCFA only as to those unlawful practices occurring or performed partly or wholly within Delaware.”
Goodrich v. E.F. Hutton Group, Inc.,
. The plaintiffs allege that CADA and NADA represent Canadian and United States new motor vehicle dealers, and that NADA acts as the "eyes, ears, and voice of franchised car and truck dealers in the nation’s capítol, developing positions that are presented as the collective view of dealers to Congress, courts, federal agencies and the public.” Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 36-37 (quotations omitted). The plaintiffs allege that CADA and NADA facilitated communication about the conspiracy, helped the manufacturers enforce the conspiracy and promoted the creation of a list of practices that Canadian dealers could use to stop export sales. Id. ¶ 2. These allegations, if true, show only that CADA and NADA worked with the dealers in a representative capacity, not that they were connected to the "supply side” of the consumer transaction.
. The statute also directs that it “shall be construed and applied liberally to promote its purpose.” D.C.Code Ann. § 28-3901(c), and states that one of its purposes is to "assure that a just mechanism exists to remedy all improper trade practices and deter the continuing use of such practices,” id. § 28-3901(b)(1).
. The United States District Court for the District of Columbia has applied the heightened pleading requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) to allegations of deceptive trade practices under the DCCPPA.
Witherspoon v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
. The plaintiffs did not include Kentucky in the state antitrust count of the Second Amended Complaint. But the exhibit introduced by the plaintiffs at oral argument argues that under
Kentucky Laborers,
. Because the Kentucky Supreme Court has held that the application of section 446.070 is "limited to where the statute is penal in nature, or where by its terms the statute does not prescribe the remedy for its violation,”
Grzyb v. Evans,
.
See Arnold v. Microsoft Corp.,
.The defendants contend that, according to
Tungate v. MacLean-Stevens Studios, Inc.,
. The defendants have not argued that they do not advertise, offer, sell or distribute services, the relevant statutory definition of "trade or commerce.” 5 M.R.S.A. § 206(3).
. The language of the MCPA does not follow the FTC Act. See Pridgen, supra, § 3:5. The MCPA forbids only unfair and deceptive acts, and does not include the FTC Act's prohibition on "unfair methods of competition.” Compare Md.Code Ann., Com. Law II, § 13-301 with 15 U.S.C. § 45(a).
. The plaintiffs' reliance on
Towne v. North End Isuzu, Inc.,
No. 982708B,
. The only itemized violation that possibly relates to the plaintiffs’ allegations is the prohibition on ''[c]harging the consumer a price that is grossly in excess of the price at which similar property or services are sold.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 445.903(l)(z). The plaintiffs, however, have not argued that the defendants’ alleged practices violate this provision. Even if the plaintiffs had made this argument, the applicability of this provision is questionable given that it was the dealers, and not the defendant automobile companies, who charged the plaintiffs allegedly inflated prices for motor vehicles.
. It is unclear which Minnesota statute provides the basis for the plaintiffs' Minnesota consumer protection claim. In paragraph 129 of their Second Amended Complaint, the plaintiffs cite ''Minn.Stat. § 8.31,
et seq.”
Section 8.31 delineates the rights and duties of the attorney general and provides a private right of action for a violation of various statutes including the unfair discrimination and competition statute, Minn.Stat. §§ 325D.01.07; the Unlawful Trade Practices Act, Minn.Stat. §§ 325D.09.16; the antitrust
. The plaintiffs cite
Robinson v. EMI Music Distribution, Inc.,
CIV. A. No. L-10462,
. Section 407.145 authorizes the attorney general "to promulgate ... all rules necessary to the administration and enforcement of the provisions of this chapter.” Mo.Rev.Stat. § 407.145.
. The defendants contend that a plaintiff must allege fraud or deception to recover under the MMPA, citing
Willard v. Bic Corp.,
.In
Ports Petroleum Co. v. Nixon,
the Supreme Court of Missouri limited the reach of the attorney general's broad definition of "unfair practice.”
. “Sections 416.011 to 416.161 shall be construed in harmony with ruling judicial interpretations of comparable federal antitrust statutes.” Mo.Rev.Stat. § 416.141.
. Contrary to the defendants' contention, Defs.’ Mot.App. I.A. at 5, I do not read
Matthews v. Berryman,
. The defendants concede that “the FTC Act explicitly applies to antitrust violations.” Defs.' Reply at 3.
. Montana courts, unlike courts in Maryland, discussed supra, and Oklahoma, discussed infra, have not held that an antitrust violation cannot also violate the consumer protection statute.
. The Supreme Court of New Jersey has stated that the NJCFA’s "remedial purpose [is], namely, to root out consumer fraud.”
Lemelledo v. Beneficial Mgmt. Corp. of Am.,
. Although I do not reach the issue, I note that the Law Division of the New Jersey Superior Court, in
Kieffer v. Mylan Laboratories,
No. BER-L-365-99-EM, 1999-2 Trade Cas.
. Rule 1:36-3 of the New Jersey Rules of Court prevents me from relying on the unpublished New Jersey opinions cited by both sides. See N.J. Rules of Court 1:36-3 (stating that "[n]o unpublished opinion shall constitute precedent or be binding upon any court” and that "no unpublished opinion shall be cited by any court”). For what it is worth, my conclusion is consistent with the reasoning of the Law Division of the New Jersey Superior Court in
Island Mortgages of New Jersey v. 3M,
. For a definition of unconscionable, the defendants cite
Guthmann v. La Vida Llena,
. The defendants cite
Thompson v. Youart,
.The defendants claim that "it is well established that indirect purchasers in New Mexico do not have standing to assert claims under any New Mexico statute unless specifically authorized by the statute.” Defs.’ Mot. at 11 n. 10. The cases the defendants cite to support this contention,
Marchman v. NCNB Texas National Bank,
. The plaintiffs cite a number of cases where courts have held that an alleged antitrust violation is also a violation of section 349. Pis.' Opp’n at 7 & n. 14; Pis.’ Oral Argument Ex. In all these cases, the courts determined that the antitrust violations involved, or the plaintiffs separately alleged, deceptive acts or practices prohibited by section 349.
See Excellus Health Plan, Inc. v. Tran,
. The plaintiffs cite the Tennessee Circuit Court case of
Robinson v. EMI Music Distribution, Inc.,
. Claiming that the OCSPA is one of a number of state consumer protection statutes "substantially modeled" on the FTC Act, the plaintiffs urge me to follow the FTC's definition of "unfair acts” in interpreting the OCS-PA. Pis.' Opp’n at 7. Section 1345.02(A) of the OCSPA is similar to the FTC Act in that it forbids unfair or deceptive acts or practices, but the OCSPA notably does not contain the FTC Act’s prohibition on "unfair methods of competition.” Compare Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 1345.02(A) with 15 U.S.C. § 45(a)(1). The OCSPA does contain a harmonization provision, which provides: "In construing division (A) of this section, the court shall give due consideration and great weight to federal trade commission orders, trade regulation rules and guides, and the federal courts' interpretations of subsection 45(a)(1) of the [FTC Act] ....” Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 1345.02(C). Nevertheless, I follow the Ohio courts' definition of "unfair or deceptive act or practice” rather than the FTC Act’s definition of "unfair acts.”
.Section 1345.03(B) of the OCSPA provides:
In determining whether an act or practice is unconscionable, the following circumstances shall be taken into consideration:
(1) Whether the supplier has knowingly taken advantage of the inability of the consumer reasonably to protect his interests because of his physical or mental infirmities, ignorance, illiteracy, or inability to understand the language of an agreement;
(2) Whether the supplier knew at the time the consumer transaction was entered into that the price was substantially in excess of the price at which similar property or services were readily obtainable in similar consumer transactions by like consumers;
(3) Whether the supplier knew at the time the consumer transaction was entered into of the inability of the consumer to receive a substantial benefit from the subject of the consumer transaction;
(4) Whether the supplier knew at the time the consumer transaction was entered into that there was no reasonable probability of payment in full of the obligation by the consumer;
(5) Whether the supplier required the consumer to enter into a consumer transaction on terms the supplier knew were substantially one-sided in favor of the supplier;
(6) Whether the supplier knowingly made a misleading statement of opinion on which the consumer was likely to rely to his detriment;
(7) Whether the supplier has without justification, refused to make a refund in cash or by check for a returned item that was purchased with cash or by check, unless the supplier had conspicuously posted in the establishment at the time of the sale a sign stating the supplier's refund policy.
Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 1345.03(B).
.
FTC v. Mylan Laboratories, Inc.,
.
Pirozzi v. Penske Olds-Cadillac-GMC, Inc.,
. The motor vehicle regulation statute applies to "[a]ny person who engages directly in purposeful contacts within this state in connection with the offering or advertising for sale of, or has business dealings with respect to, a motor vehicle within the state.” R.I. Gen. Laws § 31-5.1-2. The statute thus applies to all the defendants, including the dealer associations, because all the defendants allegedly conspired to keep Canadian motor vehicles out of the United States (presumably including Rhode Island) and maintain artificially high prices for motor vehicles sold throughout the United States (including motor vehicles within Rhode Island). Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 1-2, 39.
. The relevant provision of Rhode Island General Laws section 8-2-14(a) gives the superior court "concurrent original jurisdiction with the district court in all other actions at law in which the amount in controversy exceeds the sum of five thousand dollars ($5,000) and does not exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000).”
. The TCPA is similar to the FTC Act in that it prohibits unfair or deceptive acts; however, the TCPA, unlike the FTC Act, does not prohibit unfair methods of competition. Compare Tenn.Code Ann. § 47-18-104(a) with 15 U.S.C. § 45(a)(1).
. In determining whether a practice is “unfair'' under the FTC Act, the Federal Trade Commission considers "(1) whether the practice ... offends public policy as it has been established by statutes, the common law, or otherwise ... (2) whether it is immoral, unethical, oppressive, or unscrupulous; (3) whether it causes substantial injury to consumers.”
FTC v. Sperry & Hutchinson Co.,
.Moreover, there is authority for the assertion that the TCPA does not apply to anticom-petitive behavior.
See Sherwood v. Microsoft Corp.,
No. M2000-01850-COA-R9-CV,
. Section 2453(a) of the VCFA also prohibits "[u]nfair methods of competition in commerce,” and in paragraph 107 in Count III of the Second Amended Complaint the plaintiffs have pleaded the Vermont antitrust violation under this section. Since 2000, section 2465 of the VCFA has authorized suit by "[a]ny person who sustains damages or injury as a result of any violation of state antitrust laws, including section 2453 of this title.” The defendants have not moved to dismiss the plaintiffs’ Vermont antitrust claims. Consequently, I address here only the viability of the plaintiffs’ claims under the "unfair or deceptive acts or practices” prong of section 2453(a).
.
Elkins
was an antitrust case, but at the time of the objected-to conduct, in February 1999,
. Likewise, in
Russell v. Atkins,
the Supreme Court of Vermont permitted a claim for anti-competitive behavior under the VCFA to survive a motion for summary judgment on facts that did not include allegations of fraud.
.Blanchette v. Toll Bros.,
No. 176526,
.
Aladdin Elec. Assocs. v. Town of Old Orchard Beach,
. I doubt that a constructive trust is the appropriate remedy. As the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit stated in 'Williams Electronics Games, Inc. v. Garrity:
[Wjhen restitution is sought in a law case and the plaintiff is not seeking to impress a lien on particular property, but just wants an award of profits, he cannot obtain a constructive trust, because there is no res (that is, no fund or other specific piece of property) for the trust to attach to. He can still get restitution in such a case, but as a legal remedy for a legal wrong, not as an equitable remedy for a legal or an equitable wrong.
.Professor Rendleman states:
Restitution is divided into two branches. First is restitution for breach, which occurs after the defendant breaches a non-restitution substantive standard by, for example, committing a tort or breaching a contract. Here the plaintiff may choose restitution as an alternative to compensatory damáges. Second is freestanding restitution, which the court bases on the defendant's unjust enrichment without finding any other violation of substantive law.
Doug Rendleman,
When is Enrichment Unjust? Restitution Visits an Onyx Bathroom,
36 Loy. L.A. L.Rev. 991, 993 (2003). Professor. Gergen identifies three categories: unjust enrichment, restitution for wrongs and policy-based restitution. Mark P. Gergen,
What Renders Enrichment Unjust?,
79 Tex. L.Rev. 1927, 1929 (2001). Professor Laycock also identifies three categories: unjust enrichment, disgorgement of the defendant's gains
. Ofer Grosskopf, Protection of Competition Rules Via the Law of Restitution, 79 Tex. L.Rev.1981, 2010 (2001); see also Hanoch Dagan, Restitutionary Damages for Breach of Contract: An Exercise in Private Law Theory, 1 Theoretical Inquiries L. 115, 133 n. 76.
. See Mark P. Gergen, Restitution as a Bridge Over Troubled Contractual Waters, 71 Fordham L.Rev. 709, 736-37 (2002); Rendle-man, supra, at 993.
. See Andrew Kull, Rationalizing Restitution, 83 Cal. L.Rev. 1191, 1222-26 (1995).
. Using restitution in this way apparently is a growing phenomenon. The plaintiffs cite eight other cases where a similar strategy has been pursued for indirect purchaser claims against the pharmaceutical industry. Pis.’ Opp’n at 1 n. 1.
. The plaintiffs say that their restitution claim flows from the defendants' “unlawful acts.” Second Am. Compl. ¶ 155; see also id. ¶ 3 ("The Automobile Companies were unjustly enriched as a result of this [antitrust group boycott] and conspiracy.”); id. ¶ 71 (seeking recovery under Count V, the restitution count, for "persons harmed by Defendants' unlawful conduct”); Pis.’ Opp’n at 17 (stating that "Plaintiffs here allege that, as a result of Defendants' unlawful conspiracy ... [Plaintiffs] conferred a benefit ... that it would be unjust under the circumstances for Defendants to retain”); id. at 18 (stating the same basis for the unjust enrichment claims).
.Generally, the plaintiffs do not differentiate between the two bases for restitution. Among the statements supporting the conclusion that they advance the autonomous claim as well are the following: "Plaintiffs here ... pursue an independent, long recognized, available claim for unjust enrichment.” Pis.’ Opp’n at 20 n. 34; “[p]laintiffs need not show ... even that Defendants’ conduct was illegal under the laws of any state,” id. at 16.
.For states that do permit indirect purchasers to make antitrust claims, the defendants also argue that the "plaintiffs have no need of an unjust enrichment claim because they have an adequate legal remedy,” and that "[cjourts do not impose equitable remedies where plaintiffs have an adequate remedy at law.” Defs.’ Mot. at 25. This argument is not pertinent to the statutory interpretation undertaking. Indeed, several state antitrust statutes explicitly permit equitable relief.
See, e.g.,
Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 44-1408(B) ("A person threatened with injury or injured in his business or property by a violation of this article may bring an action for appropriate injunc-tive or other equitable relief ....”); D.C.Code Ann. § 28-4508 ("Any person who is injured in that person's business or property by reason of anything forbidden by this chapter may bring a civil action for damages, for appropriate injunctive or other equitable relief, or for both.”); S.D. Codified Laws § 37-1-14.3 ("A person injured in his business or property by a violation of this chapter may bring an action for appropriate injunctive or other equitable relief ....”). To the extent that I am dealing with a court-created remedy, I observe that the United States Supreme Court has recognized that restitution is often a legal, rather thán an equitable, remedy: "The kind of restitution that petitioners seek ... is not equitable — the imposition of a constructive trust or equitable lien on particular properly — but legal — the imposition of personal liability for the benefits they conferred upon respondents.”
Great-West Life & Annuity Ins. Co. v. Knudson,
534 U.S, at 214,
. See Rendleman, supra, at 993.
. Because the plaintiffs do not elaborate upon the basis for a freestanding claim, I must deduce what their argument would be.
. See Rendleman, supra, at 1002-03 (suggesting "that a judge or jury ought to emphasize the question: Will granting the plaintiff restitution undermine a policy of property, contract, tort or other substantive law?”).
.
Accord Fetrone v. Resnick,
No. CV000443779S,
.
See In re Terazosin Hydrochloride Antitrust Litig.,
.
Cf. FTC
v.
Mylan Labs., Inc.,
. See
In re Terazosin,
.
See Porter v. Warner Holding Co.,
.
See, e.g., Williams Elecs. Games, Inc. v. Garrity,
. See, e.g., Daniel Friedmann, Restitution for Wrongs: The Measure of Recovery, 79 Tex. L.Rev. 1879, 1880 (2001) (noting that the plaintiff’s loss and the defendant’s gain “ordinarily represent two sides of the same coin”).
. On the other hand, if any class that is ultimately certified is narrow, the plaintiff class may see disgorgement of all the ill-gotten gains as potentially more generous than damages.
.
See State ex rel. Kidwell v. Master Distribs., Inc.,
.
Cf. FTC v. Mylan Labs., Inc.,
.
See People v. Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
. Statutory interpretation will determine whether the residents of State X can recover statutory remedies from defendants who violate the statutory laws of State Y. Generally, I expect that such recovery is unlikely,
see, e.g., Freeman Indus.,
.This is not the same as the controversial notion of “umbrella liability.” (Under a theory of umbrella liability, an antitrust plaintiff seeks damages for purchases from the defendants' competitors because the defendants, as a result of their conspiracy,- created a "price umbrella” under which nonconspiring competitors could charge artificially high prices.
See In re Coordinated Pretrial Proceedings in Petroleum Prods. Antitrust Litig.,
.
See Freeman Indus.,
. The argument still would not permit a restitutionary claim against tire dealer associations, however, because diere is no assertion that the associations have received a benefit from any increased revenues to the automobile companies.
. I have not addressed one of the arguments die defendants make, that a plaintiff seeking restitution for unjust enrichment must have conferred a benefit directly upon the defendant. That topic has divided the courts. A number of courts have held that indirect purchasers cannot recover restitution/disgorgement.
See In re Relafen Antitrust Litig.,
