MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
These consolidated actions concern allegations that certain suppliers of natural gas conspired to fix inflated prices in violation of the federal antitrust laws. Several distinct categories of plaintiffs are suing several distinct categories of defendants. The issue presently before the court is ultimately one of standing: Who are the proper parties to assert the antitrust claims?
I.
The facts can be simplified for purposed of the present dispute. Three companies (defendants Amoco Production Company; CSG Exploration Company, and Cities Service Oil and Gas Corporation) and two limited partnerships formed by the companies (defendants Moxa Limited Partnership and Wamsutter Limited Partnership) produced natural gas out of the Wyoming Tight Sands formation in the State of Wyoming.. The companies, through the limited partnerships, contractually committed certain amounts of natural gas to the successors of defendant Williams Natural Gas Company (Cities Service Gas Company (CSGC), and Northwest Energy Company (NWC)), which operated an interstate pipeline and which had an affiliation with CSG.
See generally Midwest Gas Users Ass’n v. FERC,
The plaintiffs represent several vertical levels in relation to the pipeline. Farmland Industries, Inc. is an agricultural concern that purchased gas directly from the pipeline for its own consumption. Kansas Gas and Electric (KG & E) is a public utility that purchased gas directly for use in generating electricity, which was then delivered to industrial and residential consumers. Kansas Power and Light Company (KP & L) and UtiliCorp United, Inc. (UtiliCorp) are public utilities that purchased gas directly from the pipeline for their own industrial use and for delivery to industrial and residential consumers. The States of Kansas and Missouri have asserted two types of claims: (1) On behalf of residential consumers who purchased gas from the utilities, the States are in this lawsuit in a parens patriae capacity; and (2) On behalf of state agencies, municipalities, and other political subdivisions that purchased gas directly from the pipeline, the States are suing in a representative capacity. See Appendix to this Memorandum and Order (charting the vertical and horizontal relationships of the parties). The damages asserted by all plaintiffs arise from the allegedly illegal inflation of the price of natural gas. All plaintiffs seek reimbursement for the overcharge (along with the treble damage award in 15 U.S.C. § 15), with the utilities also alleging that the illegally inflated price of natural gas caused a decrease in consumer consumption and a corresponding decrease in profits. The utilities contend that because their rates are regulated, their profits are directly related to consumer demand.
Plaintiffs KG & E and KP & L and plaintiff-intervenor UtiliCorp have moved to strike certain defenses or, in the alternative, for partial summary judgment. The defenses they seek to strike deal with the “pass-on” theory of avoiding anti-trust liability. Section 4 of the Clayton Act grants certain persons standing to bring an antitrust lawsuit:
[A]ny person who shall be injured in his business or property by reason of anything forbidden in the antitrust laws may sue therefor in any district court of the United States in the district in which the defendant resides or is found or has an agent, without respect to the amount in controversy, and shall recover threefold the damages by him sustained____
15 U.S.C. § 15 (1982). Defendants Cities Service Oil & Gas Corporation, GSG Exploration Company, Amoco Production Company, and Williams Natural Gas Company have asserted numerous defenses, including allegations that the public utility plaintiffs (1) lack standing under Section 4 and (2) have not been injured in their business or property under Section 4. These defendants allege that the utilities have passed on dollar-for-dollar any illegal increase in the price of natural gas, so that the consumer has borne the entire cost of any antitrust injury. This is the “pass-on” defense. The United States Supreme Court has abolished the pass-on theory, with several narrow exceptions. Defendants assert that these exceptions apply in this case.
II.
In
Hanover Shoe, Inc. v. United Shoe Mach. Corp.,
We hold that the buyer is equally entitled to damages if he raises the price for his product. As long as the seller continues to charge the illegal price, he takes from *1113 the buyer more than the law allows. At whatever price the buyer sells, the price he pays the seller remains illegally high, and his profits would be greater were his costs lower.
Id.
at 489,
“The general tendency of the law, in regard to damages at least, is not to go beyond the first step. As it does not attribute remote consequences to a defendant so it holds him liable if proximately the plaintiff has suffered a loss. The plaintiffs suffered losses to the amount of the verdict when they paid. Their claim accrued at once in the theory of the law and it does not inquire into later events____ The carrier [i.e., the railroad] ought not to be allowed to retain his illegal profit, and the only one who can take it from him is the one that alone was in relation with him, and from whom the carrier took the sum____ Probably in the end the public pays the damages in most cases of compensated torts.”
Id.
at 490-91 n. 8,
The
Hanover Shoe
Court did recognize at least one possible exception to the unavailability of the pass-on defense — “when an overcharged buyer has a pre-existing ‘cost-plus’ contract, thus making it easy to prove that he has not been damaged.”
The other major Supreme Court opinion involving the pass-on defense was
Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois,
The defendants in
Illinois Brick
were manufacturers and distributors of concrete block. Their principal buyers were masonry contractors, who submitted bids to general contractors for the masonry portions of construction projects. In turn, the general contractors submitted bids for the overall construction project to customers
*1114
such as the State of Illinois and its political subdivisions. The State of Illinois, on behalf of in itself and its political subdivisions, filed an antitrust action against the defendants, alleging that the latter had engaged in a combination and conspiracy to fix prices in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. If all or part of the illegal overcharge was passed on by the masonry and general contractors to the plaintiffs, then seemingly the plaintiffs had been “injured in [their] person or property” under section 4 of the Clayton Act.
The Illinois Brick Court reemphasized both the basic principle that the pass-on theory is not available in antitrust litigation and the limited role that any exception could be allowed to play. The Court acknowledged two possible exceptions. The first was the Hanover Shoe cost-plus exception:
In such a situation, the purchaser is insulated from any decrease in its sales as a result of attempting to pass on the overcharge, because its customer is committed to buying a fixed quantity regardless of price. The effect of the overcharge is essentially determined in advance, without reference to the interaction of supply and demand that complicates the determination in the general case.
The Illinois Brick Court expressly considered permitting several vertical levels of injured persons to bring one lawsuit against the alleged wrongdoers (i.e., as in the present case with direct and indirect purchasers), a seemingly logical, efficient, and fair way to allocate the totality of damages suffered as a result of antitrust activity. The allure of this procedure did not impress the Supreme Court:
Permitting the use of pass-on theories under § 4 essentially would transform treble-damages actions into massive efforts to apportion the recovery among all potential plaintiffs that could have absorbed part of the overcharge — from direct purchasers to middlemen to ultimate consumers. However appealing this attempt to allocate the overcharge might seem in theory, it would add whole new dimensions of complexity to treble-damages suits and seriously undermine their effectiveness.
It is quite true that these difficulties and uncertainties will be less substantial in some contexts than in others. There have been many proposals to allow pass-on theories in some of these contexts while preserving the Hanover Shoe rule in others____
We reject these attempts to carve out exceptions to the Hanover Shoe rule for particular types of markets____
[T]he process of classifying various market situations according to the amount of pass-on likely to be involved and its susceptibility of proof in a judicial forum would entail the very problems that the Hanover Shoe rule was meant to avoid. The litigation over where the line should be drawn in a particular class of cases would inject the same “massive evidence and complicated theories” into treble-damages proceedings, albeit at a somewhat higher level of generality.
In
Illinois Brick,
the Court certainly considered that by instituting direct purchasers as the injured parties with standing in an antitrust suit, some indirect purchasers who have suffered identifiable antitrust injury might be left uncompensated. The Court did not believe this to be sufficient enough to overcome the other factors supporting the
Hanover Shoe
rule.
Id.
at 745-47,
The Supreme Court has issued several subsequent opinions concerning the proper plaintiff in an antitrust action.
See Associated General Contractors of Cal., Inc. v. California State Council of Carpenters,
Having reviewed the relevant Supreme Court authority on the issue, the court will turn to the arguments of the parties and how they fit in the scheme of the cases discussed above.
III.
First, plaintiffs States of Kansas and Missouri and the defendants [hereinafter *1116 referred to as “the opposing parties”] argue that the utilities’ motions are inappropriate because there has not been sufficient discovery in this litigation to fully disclose all possible factual issues. These cases were filed in 1985 and it is now 1988. The court does not intend to permit this litigation to drag on indefinitely. Furthermore, the court will not withhold disposition of the motions to strike or for partial summary judgment based on a possible or speculative issue of fact which the opposition has yet to determine. If the utilities can demonstrate the existence of all necessary, uncontroverted facts, there is no legal justification in withholding judgment, whether discovery has proceeded for twenty days or twenty years.
Along this same vein, the opposing parties ask the court to defer ruling on the issue because if facts or the law subsequently develop such that dismissed parties must be brought back into the litigation, the remaining parties will be prejudiced. The court believes that if the current state of the law requires dismissal, it would be inappropriate to defer a ruling based again on a possible change in the law or in the course of the litigation.
The principal alleged unestablished factual issue is whether the utilities passed on the entirety of any allegedly illegal overcharge. The opposing parties contend that if the facts establish that the rate systems governing the utilities permitted a total pass-through of any price increase (provisions titled “energy cost adjustment” or “purchased gas adjustment”), the arrangement would constitute the functional equivalent of the “cost-plus” contract exception recognized by
Hanover Shoe.
The parties appear to be asking for a “perfect pass-on” exception to the
Hanover Shoe
“no pass-on” rule. The argument for which the opposing parties now request additional discovery is precisely the argument that the Supreme Court overruled in
Hanover Shoe.
The Court expressly considered the situation in which a direct purchaser has passed on the
entire
illegal overcharge, and it rejected any dispositive effect this fact would have.
Besides the cost-plus contract exception, the parties opposing the present motions have attempted to assert several other exceptions. The first is the control exception noted by the Supreme Court in
Illinois Brick:
An indirect purchaser is a proper party when the direct purchaser is owned or controlled by its customer (or vice versa, as other federal courts have held). The Sixth Circuit has read this exception as being limited to relationships “involving such functional economic or other unity between the direct purchaser and ... the defendant ... that there effectively has been only one sale.”
Jewish Hosp. Ass’n v. Stewart Mechanical Enter., Inc.,
The second exception asserted by the opposing parties, and one that has not been addressed by the Supreme Court, is not really an “exception” at all. The theory is that when the direct purchaser participated in the allegedly illegal activities, the indirect purchaser would be the proper plaintiff. Of course, if a direct purchaser utility has participated in antitrust activity, it should be a named defendant just as the pipeline company is in the present case. In such a situation, residential and industrial consumers would become the “direct purchasers” for purposes of the Hanover Shoe analysis, because they would be the first purchasers outside the conspiracy. They would not be considered “indirect purchasers” at all. Clearly, all parties in the present litigation are operating under the premise that the utilities hold the status of “direct purchasers,” although the predecessors of Williams Natural Gas Company were in fact the first purchasers of natural gas from the producers. Because the pipeline company is alleged to have participated in the conspiracy, the utilities are considered the direct purchasers. The court has been shown no credible evidence that the utilities were part of the antitrust conspiracy in this case, nor has any such claim been filed in this suit. Therefore, the co-conspirator theory is inapplicable.
The opposing parties’ arguments have failed to convince this court of the inapplicability of
Hanover Shoe
and
Illinois Brick.
It is not a result of irrational, dogmatic adherence to precedent that this is so. There are principled reasons why the pass-on defense should not be permitted in this case. For example, the Supreme Court recognized that a goal of the antitrust laws is compensating the victims of antitrust activity.
Illinois Brick,
Additionally, the Supreme Court expressed concern that by including indirect purchasers, the ensuing “massive and complex damages litigation not only burdens the courts, but also undermines the effectiveness of treble-damages suits.”
Associated General Contractors,
The court is by no means going out on a limb in confirming the applicability of
Han-' over Shoe
to these facts. Just recently the Seventh Circuit came to the same conclusion on almost identical facts. In
Illinois ex rel. Hartigan v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co.,
For the reasons outlined above, the court finds that partial summary judgment is proper on the pass-on defense. In so finding, the court does not intend to determine the validity of a standing defense or other defense which relies on an allegation that any damages have not been the result of the type of antitrust injury contemplated by the statute, or a defense that the defendants have not engaged in antitrust activity. The court only holds that the defendants may not use the pass-on defense in arguing that any injury produced by the alleged activity has been passed through to residential and industrial consumers.
The court also is not inclined to grant Utilicorp’s other requests to strike. To the extent that any defense raised by defendants is inapplicable to UtiliCorp or any other plaintiff, the court directs defendants to clear up their positions in the final pretrial order. If at that time defendants persist in asserting defenses that any of the plaintiffs find inapplicable, an additional motion for summary judgment may be filed.
IV.
The result reached by the court presents a problem as to the status of the States of Missouri and Kansas. The court has determined that the utilities are the proper parties to assert the antitrust claim relating to natural gas delivered to residential consumers, if indeed any compensable antitrust injury has been incurred. While it may be true that the residential consumers represented by the States have suffered actual tangible injury, “[a] showing of antitrust injury is necessary, but not always sufficient, to establish standing under § 4, because a party may not be a proper plaintiff under § 4 for other reasons.”
Cargill, Inc. v. Monfort of Colo., Inc.,
IT IS BY THE COURT THEREFORE ORDERED that plaintiffs UtiliCorp, KG & E, and KP & L’s motions for partial summary judgment be granted solely on the pass-on defense. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiffs’ motions to strike be denied. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the claims of the States of Kansas and Missouri as parens patriae for their citizens who purchased natural gas from a public utility be dismissed for lack of standing.
*1119 [[Image here]]
ON MOTION FOR CERTIFICATION
On May 4, 1988, the court issued a Memorandum and Order effectively disposing of the States of Kansas and Missouri’s
par-ens patriae
claims in the above-captioned litigation. In support of the decision, the court cited
State of Illinois ex rel. Hartigan v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co.,
The court finds certification under 1292(b) to be appropriate in this situation. That statute states in relevant part:
When a district judge, in making in a civil action and order not otherwise appealable under this section, shall be of the opinion that such order involves a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion and that an immediate appeal from the order may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation, he shall so state in writing in such order.
The May 4 Memorandum and Order is not otherwise appealable, because it resolves less than all the claims of less than all the parties, and the court is not inclined to permit interlocutory appeal under Rule 54(b). Furthermore, as is evident from the court’s order and from the recent action of the Seventh Circuit, the legitimacy of a parens patriae claim in this litigation is certainly an area of dispute to which the Tenth Circuit has not spoken. This issue controls several claims of Kansas and Missouri, and an immediate appeal could avoid the possibility of having to conduct two trials in this extremely complex litigation.
*1120 The facts of this case present precisely the type of situation contemplated by Congress in section 1292(b).
Therefore, the court will certify the following question to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals:
In a private antitrust action under 15 U.S.C. § 15 involving claims of price fixing against the producers of natural gas, is a State a proper plaintiff as parens patriae for its citizens who paid inflated prices for natural gas, when the lawsuit already includes as plaintiffs those public utilities who paid the inflated prices upon direct purchase from the producers and who subsequently passed on most or all of the price increase to the citizens of the State?
Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), this certification shall not stay the proceedings in this court.
IT IS BY THE COURT THEREFORE ORDERED that the States of Kansas and Missouri’s joint motion for certification pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) be granted; IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that all other requested relief be denied.
Notes
At least one federal judge has attempted to minimize the requirement that a contract under this exception must be of fixed quantity. In
Illinois ex rel. Hartigan v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co.,
