OPINION AND ORDER
By motion dated August 17, 2009, Defendant Honeywell International, Inc. (“Defendant” or “Honeywell”) moves to dismiss Plaintiff Integrated Systems & Power, Inc.’s (“Plaintiff’ or “ISPI”) complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. On September 21, 2009, Plaintiff filed its opposition to Defendant’s motion and on October 13, 2009, Defendant filed its reply in further support of its motion to dismiss. The Court heard oral argument on November 20, 2009. For the reasons discussed herein, Defendant’s motion is granted and Plaintiffs complaint is dismissed without prejudice.
I. Facts
Plaintiff ISPI is a corporation engaged in the business of selling, installing and servicing fire-detection and alarm systems, including NOTIFIER systems manufactured by Defendant Honeywell. (Comply 6.)
1
Through the NOTIFIER division of its Fire Solutions Group, Honeywell manufactures commercial fire alarm systems, as well as related technology, peripheral devices and accessories.
(Id.
As an authorized NOTIFIER distributor, ISPI sold only NOTIFIER fire-detection and alarm systems. (Id. ¶ 12.) On the other hand, after ISPI became a NOTIFIER distributor, in addition to servicing NOTIFIER systems, ISPI continued to provide service to its pre-existing portfolio of customers with Simplex fire-detection alarm systems — -a brand competing with NOTIFIER. (Id. ¶ 13.)
During its time as an authorized distributor, ISPI submitted bids on a number of NOTIFIER service contracts, where the client’s system had been sold, installed and/or previously serviced by a different NOTIFIER authorized distributor. (Id. ¶¶ 19-24.) ISPI frequently submitted the lowest bid for such service contracts. In some cases ISPI successfully obtained the contracts in question (id. ¶¶ 20(d), 23, 24); in some cases it was unsuccessful and the client remained with the “incumbent” distributor despite ISPI’s lower bid. (id. ¶¶ 20(a), (b)). Other dealers, against whom ISPI was bidding for service contracts, complained to Honeywell about ISPI’s bidding practices, and Honeywell in turn warned ISPI on a number of occasions that such low-ball bidding was a problem. (Id. ¶¶ 19-23, 25, 28.) Honeywell instructed ISPI not to bid for service contracts against other authorized NOTIFIER distributors and told ISPI that Honeywell “expects [ISPI] to cooperate and not bid.” (Id. ¶ 20(d).)
At a meeting among NOTIFIER distributors on April 28, 2009, shortly after ISPI was awarded a contract with the United States Postal Service for fire alarm maintenance at 13 postal service sites, other NOTIFIER distributors besides ISPI again complained to Honeywell about ISPI’s practice of bidding against other authorized NOTIFIER distributors. (Id. ¶¶ 24, 25.) The distributors pressured Honeywell to terminate ISPI as an authorized distributor and, in response to the distributors’ requests, demands and/or threats, Honeywell agreed to terminate its Distributor Agreement with ISPI. (Id. ¶ 25.)
By letter dated June 4, 2009, Honeywell gave notice to ISPI that it would terminate ISPI’s distributorship without cause on 30 days notice, effective July 6, 2009 in accordance with the terms of the Distributor Agreement. (Id. ¶¶ 11, 26.) In two telephone conversations between representatives of ISPI and Honeywell on June 8 and 16, 2009, Honeywell told ISPI that it terminated ISPI because of ISPI’s practice of bidding for service contracts against other distributors and referenced examples of ISPI’s bidding, complaints from other distributors and previous warnings given by Honeywell to ISPI. (Id. ¶ 28.)
II. Plaintiffs Antitrust Allegations
Plaintiff alleges that NOTIFIER distributors, other than ISPI, agreed among themselves to engage in the conduct complained of: (i) to allocate customers; (ii) to not compete for service contracts; (iii) to submit non-competitive bids; and (iv) to complain to Honeywell about ISPI’s low bids on service contracts. (Compl.lffl 1, 15,
In its complaint, Plaintiff lists the relevant product market as “the sale, installation and servicing of NOTIFIER fire-detection and alarm system products” and the relevant geographic market as New York City. (Id. ¶ 8.) Plaintiff asserts that the alleged agreement among the NOTIFIER distributors constitutes a horizontal conspiracy (Id. ¶¶ 1, 16, 18, 27), and that such conduct constitutes a per se violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act (Id. ¶¶ 29-33). In the alternative, if the alleged conspiracy is not deemed to be a per se violation, Plaintiff asserts that the complained of conduct is unlawful under the rule of reason because the anticompetitive effects of Honeywell’s conduct outweigh the pro-competitive effects, if any. (Id. ¶¶ 34-37.)
III. Discussion
Defendant moves to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Generally, a complaint must merely contain “a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a)(2). In recent years the Supreme Court has clarified and refined the appropriate pleading standard:
Rule 8(a)(2) still requires a “showing,” rather than a blanket assertion, of entitlement to relief. Without some factual allegation in the complaint, it is hard to see how a claimant could satisfy the requirement of providing not only “fair notice” of the nature of the claim, but also “grounds” on which the claim rests.
Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
A. Per Se Analysis
The primary point of dispute between the parties is whether the complaint has alleged conduct that is properly analyzed under the per se rule for Sherman Act violations or under the so-called “rule of reason.” While Plaintiff repeatedly asserts that Defendant’s conduct constitutes a “horizontal conspiracy,” and therefore is a per se violation, this characterization is a legal conclusion that the Court does not accept as true on a motion to dismiss. Therefore, as a threshold question, the Court must determine whether the complaint adequately alleges a horizontal conspiracy, as Plaintiff claims.
The Supreme Court has stated that “[i]t is only after considerable experience with certain business relationships that courts classify them as per se violations of the Sherman Act.”
United States v. Topco Assocs., Inc.,
Without question, the conduct complained of in this case includes both horizontal and vertical components. Plaintiff alleges that the agreement at issue is one among the NOTIFIER distributors, other than ISPI, and is therefore a horizontal conspiracy. But the specific action ISPI alleges that Honeywell took (which ISPI alleges harmed both ISPI and competition generally) was Honeywell’s termination of ISPI as an authorized NOTIFIER distributor. The termination of a distributor by a manufacturer is unquestionably a restriction or restraint between actors at different levels of the supply chain, i.e., a vertical restraint. ISPI argues that the termination of ISPI by Honeywell was in response to and in furtherance of a horizontal conspiracy among NOTIFIER distributors, and therefore urges the Court to treat the conduct complained of collectively as one horizontal conspiracy and apply the per se rule. For the reasons discussed below, under controlling Supreme Court and Second Circuit precedent, ISPI’s argument is unpersuasive.
1. Vertical Restraints Resulting from Dealer Complaints
In
Oreck Corp. v. Whirlpool Corp.,
Ten years later, in
Business Electronics Corp. v. Sharp Electronics Corp.,
Here, just as in Business Electronics and Oréele, the restraint that allegedly restricted competition and harmed ISPI (Honeywell’s termination of ISPI) was a vertical restraint imposed by a manufacturer against a distributor that allegedly came about as a result of price complaints from competing distributors, and should be evaluated under the rule of reason like those cases. Plaintiff attempts to distinguish Business Electronics and Oreck, arguing that ISPI’s termination was not merely the result of dealer complaints, but the result of a horizontal conspiracy among NOTIFIER distributors to eliminate competition and rig bids. For the reasons discussed below, Plaintiffs argument is unpersuasive.
2. Horizontal Conspiracy
ISPI cites
United States v. General Motors Corp.,
The conduct at issue in ISPI’s complaint, however, lacks two key horizontal characteristics that were involved in
General Motors.
First, in
General Motors,
not only did the associations of dealers agree to attempt to eliminate discounters, the dealers themselves actively policed the agreements not to deal with discounters.
Id.
at 141,
Second, in
General Motors,
the discounters who were eliminated from the market through the horizontal conspiracy among authorized Chevrolet dealers relied on the dealers in order to obtain cars to sell at a discount. While General Motors’ solicitations of explicit agreements from individual dealers not to do business with discounters helped cement the horizontal conspiracy in place, it was the agreement
among the dealers
to cease doing business with discounters that froze the discounters out of the market. Therefore, the Supreme Court ultimately concluded that the conduct of General Motors and the dealer associations was a
per se
violation as a joint refusal to deal or a group boycott. Citing
Klor’s, Inc. v. Broadway-Hale Stores, Inc.,
Here, unlike in General Motors, the other authorized NOTIFIER distributors who are alleged to have engaged in a horizontal conspiracy did not refuse to deal with or boycott ISPI. Indeed, the other distributors had no direct ability to influence whether ISPI could participate in the market. Assuming the facts in the light most favorable to ISPI, the actions taken by NOTIFIER distributors that eventually resulted in ISPI’s termination were the act of complaining to Honeywell. The mere act of complaining, even if undertaken by more than one distributor, is a far cry from the horizontal conspiracy involving a group boycott and refusal to deal that the Supreme Court recognized as a per se violation in General Motors.
Plaintiffs reliance on
United States v. Topco Associates, Inc.,
The instant case is inapposite because unlike in Topeo, Honeywell is not owned, operated or controlled by its licensee-distributors, the distributors did not have exclusive territories and the alleged conduct that restrained trade (the elimination of ISPI’s distributorship) was imposed vertically and unilaterally by Honeywell, not jointly and horizontally by ISPI’s co-distributors as was the case in Topeo.
In
American Motor Inns, Inc. v. Holiday Inns, Inc.
In the instant case, ISPI was subject to no similar absolute veto or exclusion imposed by other NOTIFIER distributors. Further, there is no allegation that anything in the structure of Honeywell’s distribution agreements allowed for territorial or geographic market allocation or prohibited distributors from engaging in other similar businesses as was the case in American Motor Inns. Indeed, ISPI continued to service Simplex alarm systems during the term of its distributorship with Honeywell. (Compl. ¶ 13.)
The additional out-of-circuit cases relied on by ISPI in arguing that the alleged conduct constitutes a horizontal conspiracy and a
per se
violation are distinguishable and unpersuasive.
See Miles Distribs., Inc. v. Specialty Constr. Brands, Inc.,
3. Bid Rigging
ISPI cites bid rigging cases for the proposition that bid rigging is
per se
illegal under § 1 of the Sherman Act.
(See
Pl. Opp’n at 7) (citing
Philip Morris Inc. v. Heinrich,
No. 95-CV-0328 (LMM),
The complaint sufficiently alleges that authorized NOTIFIER distributors did not tend to bid on service contracts for customers that had a pre-existing relationship with another distributor (the “incumbent” distributor). The complaint also contains well-pled allegations that when ISPI submitted low bids against incumbent distributors, those distributors complained to Honeywell and Honeywell complained to and warned ISPI. The allegation that numerous distributors all complained to Honeywell about ISPI’s bidding is insufficient to suggest plausibly that the distributors
agreed with each other
not to submit competitive bids. Supreme Court cases have long been clear that parallel conduct is not sufficient to show agreement and in order to prove a § 1 antitrust claim, a plaintiff must offer evidence tending to exclude the possibility of independent action.
Twombly,
Here, there could be any number of reasons distributors declined to bid on the service contracts where the NOTIFIER system was installed by another dealer. There may be operational efficiencies to be gained through continuity of service providers. Further, as discussed in more detail
infra,
the package of products and services provided to customers by NOTIFIER distributors includes at least three different components: sale of the equipment, installation and service. (Compilé 6, 10.) Distributors may not consider it valuable business to attempt to poach the service contract alone from an established customer instead of focusing on customers of competing alarm system brands or developing completely new customers to whom a distributor could provide all three components of a NOTIFIER package. In short, ISPI’s allegations of distributor complaints followed by action on the part of Honeywell are insufficient to constitute a plausible agreement among the distributors to rig bids for service contracts as opposed to mere parallel action.
4. Economic Impact of Alleged Horizontal Restraint
Finally, while ISPI defines the relevant market as “the sale, installation and servicing of NOTIFIER fire-detection and alarm system products” (Comply 8), ISPI only alleges that service and maintenance contracts were the subject of distributors’ agreement not to submit competitive bids
(Id.
¶¶ 15, 20-24). The business of authorized NOTIFIER distributors involves not only service and maintenance, but also sale, installation, marketing
(Id.
¶ 10), inspections, testing, cleaning, calibration
(Id.
¶ 6), and possibly the provision of peripheral devices
(Id.
¶7). Not only is the alleged horizontal conspiracy limited to a single brand — NOTIFIER—for which ISPI has not pled a high market concentration or lack of substitute brand, but the alleged horizontal conspiracy related to only one aspect of the intrabrand market for NOTIFIER products and services. A conspiracy to eliminate competition with respect to one component (within a business involving a package of numerous products and services), within one brand, within an industry in which Plaintiff has not alleged a lack of substitutes is not the type of restraint that is so “manifestly anticompetitive,” or that “would always or almost always tend to restrict competition and decrease output,” nor is it a restraint with which “courts have had considerable experience” such that a
per se
rule would be appropriate.
Leegin Creative Leather Prods., Inc. v. PSKS, Inc.,
Because this case lacks key horizontal characteristics that were present in prior cases where manufacturers have
B. Rule of Reason Analysis
The inapplicability of a
per se
analysis is not dispositive of Defendant’s motion. The conduct alleged in the complaint would constitute a violation of § 1 if that conduct “imposes an unreasonable restraint on competition,” i.e., if Defendant’s conduct is shown to be a violation under the rule of reason.
See Major League Baseball Props., Inc. v. Salvino, Inc.,
1. Relevant Market
In order to plead an antitrust violation under the rule of reason, a plaintiff must allege a relevant market, including both a product market and a geographic market.
See Mathias v. Daily News, L.P.,
To survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, an alleged product market must bear a rational relation to the methodology courts prescribe to define a market for antitrust purposes—analysis of the interchangeability of use or the cross-elasticity of demand, and it must be plausible. Cases in which dismissal on the pleadings is appropriate frequently involve either (1) failed attempts to limit a product market to a single brand ... that competes with potential substitutes or (2) failure even to attempt a plausible explanation as to why a market should be limited in a particular way.
Todd v. Exxon Corp.,
Dismissal is appropriate where the alleged product market is defined without “reference to the rule of reasonable interchangeability and cross-elasticity of demand” or where it “clearly does not encompass all interchangeable substitute products even when all factual inferences are granted in plaintiffs favor.”
Chapman v. N.Y. State Div. for Youth,
Courts in this district have consistently held that single brand name product cannot define a relevant market.
Mathias,
2. Antitrust Injury
Under the rule of reason, in order to prove a § 1 violation, a plaintiff must also show an adverse effect on competition, not merely injury to itself.
See Tops Markets Inc. v. Quality Markets, Inc.,
First, ISPI’s complaint does not contain allegations that a lack of competitive bidding in publicly-solicited service and maintenance contracts for NOTIFIER fire-detection systems would have any effect on the overall market for fire-detection systems. Second, even assuming arguendo that the relevant market as defined in the complaint is sufficient, the allegations of adverse effect on competition remain inadequate. There are no factual allegations which, if true, would show: (i) what percent of service and maintenance contracts are subject to public bidding; (ii) what percent of the market for “sale, installation and servicing” is composed of service and maintenance contracts; or (iii) whether the market for NOTIFIER service and maintenance providers includes businesses that are not authorized NOTIFIER distributors. In short, even within the narrowly-defined relevant market put forth by Plaintiff, the complaint does not allege facts showing an injury to competition, as opposed to merely showing an injury to Plaintiff.
3. Conduct Violating the Antitrust Law
Because Plaintiff failed adequately to plead a relevant product market and failed adequately to plead an antitrust injury, and each independently is grounds to dismiss the complaint under the rule of reason, the Court need not reach Defendant’s third argument that the conduct alleged is inadequate to state an antitrust violation.
IV. Conclusion
Because Plaintiff failed to allege a
per se
antitrust violation and because Plaintiff failed to allege both a relevant product market and an antitrust injury under the
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. All facts recited in this opinion are drawn from Plaintiff's complaint, which are assumed to be true for the purposes of a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).
. ISPI also cites three criminal bid rigging cases in support of the same point; they add nothing to the argument.
See United States v. Koppers Co.,
. The same analysis under
Twombly
and
Starr
may apply to the allegations of an ''agreement” to terminate ISPI between Honeywell and other NOTIFIER distributors, i.e. the vertical restraint discussed in part III.A.l,
supra.
Because, even assuming that ISPI has sufficiently alleged a vertical "agreement,” the allegations of a vertical conspiracy are insufficient to state a claim under the rule of reason
(infra,
part III.B), the issue of whether ISPI’s allegations of a vertical agreement fulfill
Twombly
s pleading requirements is not dis-positive of the instant motion. The Court merely notes that allegations that Honeywell " 'warned’ ISPI that it should not compete for the business of clients previously served by other incumbent NOTIFIER distributors” (Compl. ¶ 19), and allegations that Honeywell terminated ISPI’s distributorship "[p]ursuant and in response to the other NOTIFIER distributors' requests, demands and/or threats”
(Id.
¶ 25) do not necessarily place Honeywell’s conduct "in a context that raises a suggestion of a preceding agreement.”
Twombly,
