ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS TO DISMISS
INTRODUCTION
Before the Court are five motions to dismiss brought by Defendants Chemtura Corporation and Uniroyal Chemical Company (C 04-1648, Docket No. 433), Defendant Michael Duchesne (C 06-5700, Docket No. 71), Defendant Joseph B. Eisenberg (C 06-5700, Docket No. 65), Defendant Peter D. Welch (C 06-5700, Docket No. 77), and Defendant James J. Conway (C06-5700, Docket No. 90.)
For the following reasons, the Court GRANTS IN PART AND DENIES IN PART each of the Motions, as discussed below.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs Bridgestone Americas Holding, Inc., Bridgestone Firestone North American Tire LLC, Bandag, Inc., and Pirelli LLC (collectively “Plaintiffs”) originally filed this antitrust action against Defendants Chemtura Corporation and Uniroyal Chemical Company (collectively “Chemtura”) on June 29, 2006 in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee. (Docket No. 1) On September 19, 2006, the action was transferred to this district for coordination or consolidation with MDL proceedings already before this Court in In Re Rubber Chemicals Antitrust Litigation, Case No. C-04-1648 MJJ. (Docket No. 1.)
On September 22, 2006, Plaintiffs filed an Amended Complaint. (Docket No. 8.) Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint added four new individual defendants: Michael Du-chesne, Joseph B. Eisenberg, Peter D. Welch, and James J. Conway. Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint also newly demanded damages for injuries allegedly suffered in foreign commerce under the Sherman and Clayton Acts, and pleaded that the domestic-injury exception created by the Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act (“FTAIA”) applied. Generally, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants engaged in a conspiracy to fix prices for rubber chemicals in both domestic and foreign markets, and that Plaintiffs suffered injury by paying higher prices for rubber chemicals than they would have paid in the absence of the alleged conspiracy. Plaintiffs seek damages for alleged injuries beginning in 1993 and continuing into 2003. (Amended Complaint ¶¶ 1-2.) The named Plaintiffs seek damages not only on behalf of themselves, but on behalf of subsidiaries and affiliates of each named Plaintiff who purchased products from Chemtura in various locations around the world. (Id. ¶¶ 15-19.) Plaintiffs allege that these subsidiaries and affiliates have assigned any and all of their claims to the named Plaintiffs. (Id.)
Chemtura and the individual defendants now move to dismiss the bulk of Plaintiffs’
LEGAL STANDARD
A. Rule 12(b)(1).
Rule 12(b)(1) authorizes a party to move to dismiss a claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction; thus, the Court presumes lack of jurisdiction, and the party seeking to invoke the court’s jurisdiction bears the burden of proving that subject matter jurisdiction exists.
See Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co.,
A facial attack is one where “the challenger asserts that the allegations contained in a complaint are insufficient on their face to invoke federal jurisdiction.”
Safe Air for Everyone v. Meyer,
B. Rule 12(b)(6).
A motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) tests the legal sufficiency of a claim.
Navarro v. Block,
ANALYSIS
A. Subject Matter Jurisdiction.
Defendants raise a facial Rule 12(b)(1) attack and contend that Plaintiffs foreign injuries must be dismissed under Rule 12(b)(1) because they are barred by § 6a of the Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act (“FTAIA”). Defendants contend that Plaintiffs have not pled, and cannot plead, any facts establishing the “domestic-injury exception” created by § 6a.
The FTAIA sets forth a general rule that excludes from the scope of the Sherman Act all conduct involving non-import foreign commerce unless two conditions are met: (1) the alleged conduct has a “direct, substantial and reasonably foreseeable effect” on U.S. domestic commerce, and (2) that the domestic anti-competitive effect “gives rise to” a claim under the Sherman Act. Section 6a of the FTAIA provides, in relevant part, that:
Sections 1 to 7 of [the Sherman Act] shall not apply to conduct involving-trade or commerce (other than import trade or import commerce) with foreign nations unless—
(1) such conduct has a direct, substantial and reasonably foreseeable effect-
(A) on trade or commerce which is not trade or commerce with foreign nations, or on import trade or import commerce with foreign nations; or
(B) on export trade or export commerce with foreign nations, of a person engaged in such trade or commerce in the United States; and
(2) such effect gives rise to a claim under the provisions of sections 1 to 7 of this title, other than this section.
15 U.S.C. § 6a.
1. The domestic injury exception of the FTAIA requires that the foreign injury be proximately caused by the domestic effects of the anti-competitive conduct.
The parties fundamentally disagree on the application of this domestic-injury exception to the case before this Court. Both sides agree that Plaintiffs’ alleged injury includes, in part, injury suffered domestically by purchasing rubber chemicals in the domestic market at inflated prices. Both sides agree that this Court has subject matter jurisdiction to resolve such allegations. However, Defendants contend that, notwithstanding this Court’s subject matter jurisdiction over that “domestic” portion of Plaintiffs’ claims, Section 6a of the FTAIA requires dismissal of Plaintiffs’ claims of injury resulting from purchases in foreign markets to the extent Plaintiffs cannot establish a direct and proximate causal relationship between the domestic effect of the anti-competitive conduct and the purported foreign injury. Plaintiffs disagree, arguing that the appropriate analysis under Section 6a of the FTAIA does not require such “claim-splitting” and that, if a proper plaintiff has a valid claim premised on anti-competitive conduct that arises even in part from the domestic effects of that conduct, that plaintiff can recover all damages resulting relating to the anti-competitive conduct, whether foreign or domestic, under the Sherman Act.
At first glance, Plaintiffs’ proffered interpretation of Section 6a of the FTAIA is a plausible reading of the statute. As Plaintiffs point out, Section 6a does not expressly speak in terms of excluding foreign injury or foreign damages from the
This Court, however, is not interpreting Section 6a in a vacuum, and must consider the gloss put on Section 6a by controlling precedent. In
F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. v. Empagran S.A.,
Plaintiffs are correct insofar as they point out that the fact pattern before this Court is distinguishable in a potentially important respect from that in
Empagmn I.
In
Empagmn I,
the plaintiffs claim was based solely on injury suffered in foreign markets that was independent of any adverse domestic effect of the anti-competitive conduct. Here, in contrast, though Plaintiffs allege foreign injury analogous to that at issue in
Empagmn I
(see discussion below), they also allege that domestic injury resulted from purchases they made in domestic markets affected by the anti-competitive conduct.
Empa-gmn
I’s specific holding, which explicitly depended on the fact that “foreign harm alone gives rise to the plaintiffs claim”
(id.
at 166,
Nonetheless, the Supreme Court’s discussion of the FTAIA exception in
Empa-gmn I
has significant ramifications for how this Court should analyze the circumstances before it. Though Plaintiffs are correct that Section 6a does not expressly speak in terms of foreign “injury”, the
our courts have long held that application of our antitrust laws to foreign anticompetitive conduct is nonetheless reasonable, and hence consistent with principles of prescriptive comity, insofar as they reflect a legislative effort to redress domestic antitrust injury that foreign anticompetitive conduct has caused.
Id.
at 165,
In this Court’s view, the principles of comity identified in Empagran I are central to the question of statutory interpretation before this Court, and counsel this Court away from an interpretation of the FTAIA that would permit Plaintiffs to adjudicate its claims of foreign injury before this Court, to the extent such injury did not arise from the domestic effects of Defendants’ alleged anti-competitive conduct. The higher prices in foreign markets of which Plaintiffs complain here are not the consequence of any domestic anti-competitive effect that Congress sought to ward against by enactment of the FTAIA. Moreover, by providing Plaintiffs with the ability under the FTAIA to recover damages for any injury that arises from the domestic effects of the anti-competitive conduct, Congress has adequately provided a remedy for the injury that Congress sought to redress. Interpreting the FTAIA to permit Plaintiffs to bring claims for independent foreign injury, merely because they also suffered domestic injury arising from the same conduct, would significantly encroach upon the traditional jurisdictional prerogatives, and run afoul of principles of prescriptive comity. Plaintiffs proposed interpretation of the FTAIA would also be inconsistent with how the Supreme Court viewed the legislative history of the FTAIA.
Plaintiffs contend that the legislative history of the FTAIA supports their contention that the Sherman Act can reach foreign injury when that injury is caused by anticompetitive conduct that also has domestic effects. After reviewing the legislative history, however, the Court finds no clear statement of Congressional intent supporting Plaintiffs’ position.
See
H.R. Rep. 97-686, 1982 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 2487. To the contrary, the legislative history indicates that the amendments were designed “to require that the ‘effect’ providing the jurisdictional nexus must also be the basis for the injury alleged under the antitrust laws.”
Id.
at 2497. Moreover, as the Supreme Court observed in
Empagran I,
the legislative history also indicates that Congress did not intend the FTAIA to expand the Sher
Plaintiffs also urge the Court to regard the entirety of their allegations of injury against as a single “claim” that cannot be split or analyzed for its separate domestic and foreign components. The Court rejects this position as inconsistent with jurisdictional principles and an attempt to elevate form over substance. The FTAIA defines the scope of justiciable claims under the Sherman Act that involve foreign commerce, and the Supreme Court’s comity analysis in
Empagran I
makes clear that the type of
injury
involved determines the justiciability of the alleged claims.
PosLEmpagran,
courts vetting allegations of antitrust injury have not permitted the FTAIA to extend jurisdiction over foreign injury independent of domestic effects merely because the same plaintiff is also able to allege domestic injury caused by the same anticompetitive conduct. For example, in
In re Intel Corp. Microprocessor Antitrust Litig.,
This Court concludes that the domestic injury exception of the FTAIA requires that, for foreign injury to be justiciable under the Sherman Act, the foreign injury be proximately caused by the domestic effects of the anti-competitive conduct.
2. Plaintiffs’ alleged foreign injury was not proximately caused by the domestic effects of Defendants’ anti-competitive conduct.
The Court next turns to the question of whether the foreign injury alleged by
The leading authority on the meaning of the “gives rise to” wording of the Section 6a(2) of the FTAIA is
Empagran v. F. Hoffmann-LaRoche Ltd.,
[bjecause the appellee’s product (vitamins) was fungible and globally marketed, they were able to sustain super-competitive prices abroad only by maintaining super-competitive prices in the United States as well. Otherwise, overseas purchasers would have purchased bulk vitamins at lower prices either directly from U.S. sellers or from arbitrageurs selling vitamins imported from the United States, thereby preventing the appellees from selling abroad at the inflated prices.
Id. at 1270. The plaintiffs argued that the conspirators accomplished their objective by “fixing a single global price for the vitamins.” Id. at 1270 n.5.
The D.C. Circuit, however, found such allegations insufficient, holding that the “statutory language — ‘gives rise to’ — indicates a direct causal relationship, that is, proximate causation, and is not satisfied by the mere but-for ‘nexus’ [plaintiffs] advanced in their brief.” Id. at 1271. The D.C. Circuit found that:
While maintaining super-competitive prices in the United States may have facilitated [defendants’] scheme to charge comparable prices abroad, this fact demonstrates at most but-for causation. It does not establish ... that the U.S. effects of the defendants’ conduct— i.e., increased prices in the United States — proximately caused the foreign [plaintiffs’] injuries ... The but-for causation the [plaintiffs] proffer establishes only an indirect connection between the U.S. prices and the prices they paid when they purchased vitamins abroad.
Id. at 1271. The D.C. circuit noted that, instead, “it was the foreign effects of price-fixing outside of the United States that directly caused, or ‘gave rise to’, their losses outside of the United States when they purchased vitamins abroad at super-competitive prices.” Id. 6
3. Leave to amend is not appropriate here.
Having concluded that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ allegations of foreign injury as currently pleaded, the Court must now consider whether Plaintiffs should be provided with an opportunity to further amend their complaint to attempt to allege facts that would establish the requisite direct causal connection between the domestic effects of Defendants’ anti-competitive conduct and the foreign injury. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a) provides that leave to amend a pleading “shall be freely given when justice so requires.” However, leave to amend will be denied where the amendment would be futile, or where the amended complaint would be subject to dismissal.
Saul v. U.S.,
It is apparent to this Court that if granted leave to amend here, Plaintiff would be able to plead more specific allegations that the alleged cartel originally targeted tire companies with significant operations in the United States, but came to realize that for their efforts to succeed, they would have to maintain inflated prices for these
Accordingly, because this Court finds that amendment would be futile, the Court denies Plaintiffs leave to amend.
Accord Latino Quimica-Amtex,
B. Statutes Of Limitations Issues.
In their Motions, Defendants assert that various statute of limitations defenses require dismissal of part or all of Plaintiffs’ claims.
Plaintiffs seek damages for alleged injuries beginning in 1993 and continuing into 2003. (Amended Complaint ¶¶ 1-2.) Plaintiffs first brought claims in this action for domestic injuries against Chemtura on June 29, 2006. Plaintiffs first brought claims against the individual defendants, and against Chemtura for foreign injuries, on September 22, 2006. Claims brought under the Sherman Act are subject to a four-year statute of limitations. 15 U.S.C. § 15b. Accordingly, if no tolling doctrine applies, Plaintiffs’ claims for domestic injuries against Chemtura are limited to injuries suffered as a result of overt acts that took place on or after June 29, 2002. Likewise, if no tolling doctrine applies, Plaintiffs’ claims against the individual defendants, as well as their claims against Chemtura for foreign injuries, are limited to injuries suffered as a result of overt acts that took place on or after September 22, 2002.
In an attempt to avoid application of the four-year statute of limitations that would otherwise apply to their antitrust claims, Plaintiffs include allegations of fraudulent concealment in their Amended Complaint. Specifically, Plaintiffs contend that they could have not have discovered the existence of the conspiracy through the exercise of due diligence until October 2002, when Chemtura first made partial public disclosures that the Department of Justice was investigating the rubber chemicals industry. (Amended Complaint ¶ 76.) Defendants contend that Plaintiffs have failed to plead due diligence with sufficient particularity to establish tolling under the fraudulent concealment doctrine. The Court disagrees, and finds that Plaintiffs have pleaded fraudulent concealment with sufficient particularity to survive a motion to dismiss.
To successfully plead fraudulent concealment, Plaintiffs must “plead facts showing that [Defendants] actively misled [them], that [they] had neither actual nor constructive knowledge of the facts constituting [their] claim for relief despite [their]
Taking the facts alleged in the Amended Complaint as true, Defendants engaged in a self-concealing conspiracy that did not give rise to any facts that would put Plaintiffs on inquiry notice that there was a cartel or that the prices being charged for rubber chemicals were the product of a conspiracy. Plaintiffs have alleged, with specificity, numerous affirmative acts of concealment in furtherance of the conspiracy, both by Chemtura and by the individual Defendants, including secret meetings to set prices, agreement not to publicly discuss the nature of the scheme, destruction of documents that might evidence their actions, and pretextual justifications for the inflated prices of rubber chemicals. (Amended Complaint ¶¶ 66, 76-81.) Such facts, if true, would not give rise to any information that would “excite the inquiry of a reasonable person” and thereby require Plaintiffs to engage in affirmative steps to attempt to discover the conspiracy. Under these circumstances, Plaintiffs’ allegation that they could not have discovered the alleged conspiracy “at an earlier date by the exercise of reasonable due diligence because of the deceptive practices and techniques of secrecy employed by the Defendants and their Co-Conspirators” to conceal the conspiracy (Amended Complaint ¶ 77) is a sufficient allegation of due diligence. “Plaintiffs are not under a duty continually to scout around to uncover claims which they have no reason to suspect they might have.”
In re Coordinated Pretrial Proceedings in Petroleum Products Antitrust Litig.,
Several of the individual Defendants contend that even if Plaintiffs have adequately alleged fraudulent concealment against Chemtura, Plaintiffs have failed to specify with particularly any affirmative acts of concealment taken by the individual Defendants. The Court rejects this argument. Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint adequately alleges that the individual Defendants played a role in the affirmative acts of concealment, including the offering of false and pretextual reasons for the price-fixing meetings that these individual Defendants allegedly attended. (Amended Complaint ¶¶ 61, 66, 77-81.) For the same reason, the Court rejects the argument raised by Defendant Welch in his reply brief that Plaintiffs’ allegations of fraudulent concealment fail as to him because Plaintiffs have not adequately pleaded reliance on misrepresentations relating to the meetings that Welch attended. Though Plaintiffs did not use the talismanic words “reasonable reliance” in their Amended Complaint, Plaintiffs have adequately pleaded that they were misled by (i.e., relied upon) Defendants’ affirmative acts of concealment (Amended Complaint ¶¶ 76-81) and that it was reasonable to do so insofar as they allege they “could not have discovered the existence of the combination and conspiracy alleged herein at an earlier date by the exercise of reason
Accordingly, this Court will not dismiss Plaintiffs’ claims at this stage for failure to plead specific acts of inquiry, when it cannot yet be determined whether such inquiry was required. As many courts have noted in the antitrust conspiracy context, it is generally inappropriate to resolve the fact-intensive allegations of fraudulent concealment at the motion to dismiss stage, particularly where the proof relating to the extent of the fraudulent concealment is alleged to be largely in the hands of the alleged conspirators. (Amended Complaint ¶¶ 79-80.) “[I]n antitrust cases, where the proof is largely in the hands of the alleged conspirators, dismissals prior to giving the plaintiff ample opportunity for discovery should be granted very sparingly.”
In re Infant Formula Antitrust Litig.,
On the facts alleged by Plaintiffs, application of the fraudulent concealment doctrine tolls the running of the statute of limitations with respect to the injuries asserted by Plaintiffs until October 2002, the date that Chemtura first made public disclosures about the Department of Justice antitrust investigation of the rubber chemicals industry. Because Plaintiffs brought their claims asserted in the Amended Complaint before four years had passed once the statute of limitations begun running, Plaintiffs’ claims against each of the Defendants are timely for purposes of the pending motions. 10
C. Additional Arguments Raised By Individual Defendants.
Finally, the Court addresses several additional grounds for dismissal raised by the individual Defendants that are not addressed above.
1. Eisenberg’s contention that he withdrew from the conspiracy upon resigning from Chemtura on December 31, 2001.
Defendant Eisenberg contends that the statute of limitations has expired as
2. Welch’s contention that Plaintiffs’ claims are undercut by documentary evidence incorporated into the Amended complaint.
Defendant Welch contends that Plaintiffs’ claims against him must be dismissed both because they are too conclusory to state a cognizable claim, and because they are undercut by documentary evidence incorporated into the Amended Complaint. Neither argument persuades the Court.
First, Plaintiffs’ allegations against Welch are specific and substantial enough to state a cognizable claim. Plaintiffs allege far more than that Welch merely met with competitors — they specifically allege his involvement in agreeing to implement price increases. (Amended Complaint ¶¶ 66(a), 66(h), 66(j) & 66(Z).) More, the complaint adequately alleges Welch’s general participation in the allege conspiracy to fix rubber chemical prices. (Amended Complaint ¶¶ 25, 59-63.)
Accord Beltz Travel Service, Inc. v. Int’l Air Transport Ass’n,
Second, the 1996 email referenced in paragraph 66(e) of the Amended Complaint does not, as Welch contends, contradict Plaintiffs’ other allegations so much that Plaintiffs would be unable to establish liability if they proved the facts alleged. The mere fact that Welch was allegedly replaced as Chemtura’s principal contact for price-fixing with Flexsys does not nullify Plaintiffs’ allegations that Welch engaged in price-fixing behavior before being replaced (Amended Complaint ¶ 66(a) & 66(e)), nor that he nonetheless continued to participate in price-fixing discussions and agreements even after being replaced as Chemtura’s principal contact with Flex-sys (Amended Complaint ¶ 66(h), 66(j) & 66(1)).
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS IN PART AND DENIES IN PART each of the Motions. The Court DISMISSES WITHOUT LEAVE TO AMEND Plaintiffs’ Sherman Act claims against all Defendants to the extent they seek to recover damages for foreign injury,
i.e.,
the purchase of rubber chemicals at allegedly inflated prices in foreign markets for use outside of the United States. Plaintiffs may proceed with their Sherman Act claims to the extent they seek to recover damages for domestic injury,
ie.,
the purchase of rubber chemicals at allegedly inflated prices in the domestic market or for use within the United States. In all
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs Bridgestone Americas Holding, Inc. and Bridgestone Firestone North American Tire, LLC have reached a settlement in principle and have not filed an opposition to the motion. After the Motions to Dismiss were filed, the parties also stipulated to the dismissal with prejudice of the Second Cause of Action in the Amended Complaint, for violations of Tennessee state antitrust law, against all Defendants. (C 06-5700, Docket No. 119.)
. For the same reason, the three
post-Empa-gmn
district court cases cited by Defendants do not squarely tackle the issue now before the Court. In each of those cases, the plaintiffs at issue did not participate in the U.S. market and could not draw a causal relationship between domestic anticompetitive effects and any of the injury they alleged.
See Latino-Quimica-Amtex
S.A. v.
Akzo Nobel Chemicals B.V.,
. The problematic nature of Plaintiffs' assertion that they are merely asserting a single “claim” is underscored by their acknowledgment that they are actually asserting an amalgamation of claims, not only those native to the named Plaintiffs, but those assigned to the named Plaintiffs by their foreign affiliates and subsidiaries. (Amended Complaint ¶¶ 14-19, Opposition at 4 n. 4.) Plaintiffs cannot convert a non-justiciable claim, originally accrued by a foreign affiliate or subsidiary and asserting only independent foreign injury, into a justiciable claim merely by assigning it to another plaintiff that holds a justiciable claim.
.
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp., 461
U.S. 752,
. The Court declines Plaintiff's invitation to adopt different interpretations of the causation portion of the FTAIA test reached by some lower courts before the decisions in
Empagran II.
For example, the Court finds that
Crompton Corp.
v.
Clariant Corp., 220
F.Supp.2d 569 (M.D.La.2002) and
In re Vitamins Antitrust Litigation,
. Subsequent district court decisions around the country have applied the D.C. Circuit’s proximate causation test when analyzing the domestic-injury exception of the FTAIA.
See Latino-Quimica-Amtex
S.A
v. Akzo Nobel Chemicals B.V.,
. In the alternative, Defendants also contend that Plaintiffs lack standing under the Sherman Act to pursue their claims of foreign injury. This analysis implicates many of the same jurisdictional issues under the FTAIA, and the same considerations that mandate a finding of no subject matter jurisdiction weigh against a finding of antitrust standing. However, in view of the Court's dismissal of the Sherman Act claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, there is no need for consideration of Defendants' alternative contention that Plaintiffs lack standing.
. Because Defendants bring only a facial Rule 12(b)(1) challenge, the Court did not consider the content of the Sasse Declaration or other evidence not pleaded in the complaint when determining whether to dismiss Plaintiffs' claims as currently pleaded.
See Wolfe v. Strankman,
. Moreover, Defendants’ contention that the active concealment ceased before October 2002 raises factual issues outside the scope of the Amended Complaint. As with the factual dispute regarding due diligence, the Court finds these issues inappropriate for resolution at the pleadings stage; they are better addressed in the Rule 56 context.
. The Court therefore need not reach Defendants' assertions that the class action tolling doctrine does not apply to Plaintiffs’ claims, nor the individual Defendants’ assertions that Plaintiffs should not be permitted to rely on the tolling provisions of Section 5(1) of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 16(1). Given the Court’s finding that Plaintiffs have adequately pleaded fraudulent concealment up and until October 2002, Plaintiffs do not need to separately obtain the benefit of the class action tolling doctrine to render timely their claims for injury as far back as 1993.
