Intel Corporation appeals the grant of a preliminary injunction by the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama. 1 We vacate the injunction.
Intel is a manufacturer of high performance computer microprocessors. The microprocessors are sold to producers of various computer-based devices, who adapt and integrate the microprocessors into products that are designed and sold for particular uses. These producers are called original equipment manufacturers, or OEMs. Intergraph Corporation is an OEM, and develops, makes, and sells computer workstations that are used in producing computer-aided graphics. From 1987 to 1993 Intergraph’s worksta *1350 tions were based on a high performance microprocessor developed by the Fairchild division of National Semiconductor, embodying what is called the “Clipper” technology. Intergraph owns the Clipper technology and patents thereon. In 1993 Intergraph discontinued use of Clipper microprocessors in its workstations and switched to Intel microprocessors. In 1994 Intel designated Intergraph a “strategic customer” and provided Intergraph with various special benefits, including proprietary information and products, under non-disclosure agreements.
Starting in late 1996 Intergraph charged several Intel OEM customers with infringement of the Clipper patents based on their use of Intel microprocessors. The accused companies sought defense and indemnification from Intel. Negotiations ensued between Intel and Intergraph. Intel inquired about a license to the Clipper patents, but the proposed terms were rejected by Intergraph as inadequate. Intel then proposed certain patent cross-licenses, also rejected by Intergraph. Intel also proposed that the non-disclosure agreement relating to a new joint development project include a license to the Clipper patents; this too was rejected by Inter-graph. As negotiations failed and threats continued the relationship deteriorated, and so did the technical assistance and other special benefits that Intel had been providing to Intergraph.
In November 1997 Intergraph sued Intel for infringement of the Clipper patents. Intergraph also charged Intel with other violations of law, including fraud, misappropriation of trade secrets, negligence, wantonness and willfulness, breach of contract, intentional interference with business relations, breach of express and implied warranties, and violation of the Alabama Trade Secrets Act. Intergraph demanded that Intel be enjoined from infringement of the Clipper patents, and the award of compensatory and punitive damages and trebled damages.
Intergraph moved to enjoin Intel pen-dente lite from cutting off or delaying provision of the special benefits that Intel had previously provided to Intergraph. Following Intel’s opposition to this motion Intergraph amended its complaint to charge Intel with violation of the antitrust laws. After a hearing, the district court held that Intel was a monopolist and had violated sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act or was likely to be so shown, and issued a preliminary injunction that included the following provisions:
a. Intel shall supply Intergraph with all Intel product information, including but not limited to technical, design, development, defect, specification, support, supply, future product, product release or sample data, whether existing in product data books, “yellow backs,” Confidential Information Transmittal Records, email or other mediums ..., whether it is on an advance basis for the development of motherboards, graphics subsystems or workstations utilizing Intel’s existing, or future generation products (hereinafter “Product Development”), or current products as needed for support of such products....
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c. Intel shall supply Intergraph with an allocation, and set aside a supply of microprocessors, semiconductors, chips, and buses (hereinafter “Chips”) on an advance basis for product development (“Chips Samples”), in such quantities as forecasted by Intergraph in the same manner and the same terms as is done by Intergraph’s similarly situated Competitors, ....
d. Within eleven (11) days of the date on which Intergraph posts the bond, as required by subsection (h) of this order, Intel shall supply Intergraph with 25 sets of Deschutes Chips Samples, together with all technical data needed to permit Intergraph to develop, design, and manufacture its products ....
e. Intel shall supply Intergraph with an allocation, and set aside a supply, of Chips which have been manufactured by or on behalf of Intel for distribution (hereinafter “Production Chips”), as well *1351 as all future chips proposed by, or available from Intel, including but not limited to 333mhz Pentium II, BX, Deschutes and Merced Chips, in accordance with a forecast supplied by Intergraph....
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(ii) Intel shall supply Intergraph with Production Chips not yet available from Intel’s authorized distributors (“Early Production Chips”) in such quantities as forecasted by In-tergraph, or in proportional quantities as supplied to Intergraph’s similarly situated Competitors, ...
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i. Intergraph shall maintain the confidentiality of all Information, Third Party Information, Chip Samples and Early Production Chips, in accordance with the terms, conditions and procedures of the applicable non-disclosure agreements as previously agreed to by the parties....
Intel appeals, arguing that no law requires it to give such special benefits, including its trade secrets, proprietary information, intellectual property, pre-release products, allocation of new products, and other preferences, to an entity that is suing it on charges of multiple wrongdoing and is demanding damages and the shutdown of its core business. Intel states that its commercial response to Intergraph’s suit is not an antitrust violation, and that this “garden-variety patent dispute” does not warrant the antitrust remedy here imposed. Intel also states that the scope of the injunction far exceeds the special benefits that had previously been accorded to In-tergraph, and that it is unworkable, as well as unfair to Intel’s overall business relationships, for the court to promote Inter-graph to a disproportionately favored position.
Intergraph’s response is that it can not survive in its highly competitive graphics workstation business without these services and benefits from Intel, and that the district court simply acted to preserve In-tergraph’s prior commercial position while the parties litigate unrelated patent issues. Intergraph states that the national interest requires that patentees be free to enforce their patents without risk of retaliatory commercial response from the accused in-fringer. Intel disputes these premises, and also points out the incongruity of In-tergraph’s statement that it is essential to Intergraph’s business that it have the products for which it is demanding the shutdown of Intel’s production.
Standard of Review
On appellate review, except for issues within the Federal Circuit’s exclusive jurisdiction we apply the discernable law of the regional circuit.
See Mikohn Gaming Corp. v. Acres Gaming, Inc.,
In
Lucero v. Operation Rescue,
The grant of a preliminary injunction is reviewed on the standard of abuse of discretion. This standard requires plenary review of the correctness of the district court’s rulings on matters of law, including the correctness of the legal crite
*1352
ria used in evaluating the likelihood of success on the merits.
See Bah v. City of Atlanta,
While recognizing that an appropriate range of discretionary authority is possessed by the trial court in weighing and balancing the criteria of relief
pendente lite,
the Eleventh Circuit has not generally used a “sliding scale” wherein the severity of the hardship may lessen the showing of likelihood of success on the merits. In
Snook v. Trust Co. of Georgia Bank, N.A.,
We conclude that the antitrust rulings of the district court are incorrect in law or are devoid of sufficient factual support to present a substantial likelihood of establishing an antitrust law violation with respect to the issues presented. We also conclude that the district court’s alternate contract-based ground for the injunction is unsupported on the facts presented.
Intel as “Monopolist”
The district court ruled that Intergraph is likely to succeed in showing that Intel is a “monopolist,” whereby Intel’s withdrawal of the benefits it had previously accorded to Intergraph and other actions were deemed to violate sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act. 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2. 2 The *1353 court relied on several legal theories, viz.: (1) the essential facility theory and the corollary theory of refusal to deal, (2) leveraging and tying, (3) coercive reciprocity, (4) conspiracy and other acts in restraint of trade, (5) improper use of intellectual property, and (6) retaliatory enforcement of the non-disclosure agreements. The court alternatively ruled that Intergraph is likely to succeed on its contract claims, including the claim that the mutual at-will termination provision of the non-disclosure agreements is unconscionable. While the parties dispute some of the factual determinations of the district court, the court’s dispositive rulings were made as a matter of law, and are subject to plenary review.
Intel states that unlawful monopolization was not shown, as a matter of law, because Intergraph and Intel are not competitors. Unlawful monopolization requires both the existence of monopoly power and anticompetitive conduct.
See
3 Phillip E. Areeda & Herbert Hovenkamp,
Antitrust Law,
& 650a, at 66 (1996) (“Unlawful monopolization under § 2 of the Sherman Act requires both power and ‘exclusionary’ or anticompetitive conduct before any kind of relief is appropriate.”) Monopoly power is generally defined as the power to control prices or exclude competition in a relevant market; anticompetitive conduct is generally defined as conduct whose purpose is to acquire or preserve the power to control prices or exclude competition.
Id.
at 67 (“[T]he relevant conduct is often described as ‘exclusionary’ in the sense that it impairs the opportunities of rivals and is neither ‘competition on the merits’ nor more restrictive than reasonably necessary for such competition.”) The prohibited conduct must be directed toward competitors and must be intended to injure competition.
See Spectrum Sports, Inc. v. McQuillan,
Such conduct must affect the relevant product market, that is, the “area of effective competition” between the defendant and plaintiff.
See American Key Corp. v. Cole Nat'l Corp.,
The antitrust law has consistently recognized that a producer’s advantageous or dominant market position based on superiority of a commercial product and ensuing market demand is not the illegal use of monopoly power prohibited by the Sherman Act. In
Aspen Skiing Co. v. Aspen Highlands Skiing Corp.,
Intel does not dispute the high market share achieved by its high performance microprocessors. However, that is not a violation of law. Intel stresses that it is not in competition with Intergraph in any relevant market; that its relationship with Intergraph is that of supplier and customer, not competitor. Although the district court found that Intel and Inter-graph compete or will compete in the future in the “graphics subsystems” market, as we discuss post, Intel points out, and Intergraph does not dispute, that neither firm possesses monopoly power in this market. Intel stresses that violation of the Sherman Act requires the use of monopoly power to exclude competition or maintain prices, see Areeda, Antitrust Law, & 650a at 66, none of which is here alleged.
Although the district court recognized that Intel’s market power derives from the technological superiority of its products, the court found a
prima facie
case of market power based on Intel’s market share of high performance microprocessors, and concluded that Intel had willfully acquired and maintained monopoly power in the high-end microprocessor market, although the record did not show an effect on competition in any market in which Intergraph competes with Intel. The district court concluded that “[a] sixty to sixty-five percent market share establishes a
prima facie
case of market power and creates a genuine issue
of
dangerous probability of monopolization,”
Intel’s market power in the microprocessor market is irrelevant to the issues of this case, all of which relate to the effect of Intel’s actions on Intergraph’s position in its own markets. There is substantial precedent discussing Sherman Act constraints with respect to a single firm’s conduct toward another firm when there is no effect or threat of monopolization flowing from that conduct. In
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp.,
The conduct complained of is Intel’s withdrawal or reduction of technical assistance and special benefits, particularly pre-release access to Intel’s new products, in reaction to Intergraph’s suit for patent infringement. However, the Sherman Act does not convert all harsh commercial actions into antitrust violations. Unilateral conduct that may adversely affect another’s business situation, but is not intended to monopolize that business, does not vio
*1355
late the Sherman Act.
See Levine v. Central Fla. Med. Affiliates, Inc.,
Defining the relevant market is an indispensable element of any monopolization or attempt case,
U.S. Anchor,
The district court found that Intel possessed monopoly power in two “relevant markets”: (1) the market' for high-end microprocessors, and (2) the submark-et of Intel microprocessors. Neither one is a market in which Intergraph and Intel are in competition with each other. Inter-graph states that it competes in the microprocessor market by virtue of its Clipper patents. However, the patent grant is a legal right to exclude, not a commercial product in a competitive market. Inter-graph abandoned the production of Clipper microprocessors in 1993, and states no intention to return to it. Firms do not compete in the same market unléss, because of the reasonable interchangeability of their products, they have the actual or potential ability to take significant ’ business away from each other.
U.S. Anchor,
The district court also mentioned the graphics subsystems market as a relevant market, describing Intergraph and Intel as competitors in that market, and finding that Intel has plans to enter the workstation market. There was neither evidence nor suggestion of monopoly power by Intel in these markets, or the willful acquisition or maintenance of monopoly power in In-tergraph’s market. We shall discuss the issue of Intel’s entry into downstream markets in connection with the district court’s finding of illegal “leveraging.” However, the observation in
Ad-Vantage Telephone Directory Consultants, Inc. v. GTE Directories Corp.,
*1356
Intel’s conduct with respect to Inter-graph does not constitute the offense of monopolization or the threat thereof in any market relevant to competition with Inter-graph. The Sherman Act is a law in the public, not private, interest. And even if the district court’s view of Intel as a monopolist were accepted, as stated in
Mr. Furniture Warehouse, Inc. v. Barclays American/Commercial Inc.,
We turn to consideration of the specific grounds on which the district court applied the Sherman Act to the relationship between these entities and, finding a likelihood of violation of the antitrust laws, awarded antitrust-type relief to Inter-graph.
The “Essential Facility” Theory
The “essential facility” theory of Sherman Act violation stems from
United States v. Terminal RR Ass’n,
The district court found that “the Advance Chips Samples and advance design and technical information are essential products and information necessary for In-tergraph to compete in its markets.” Reasoning that “[t]he antitrust laws impose on firms controlling an essential facility the obligation to make the. facility available on non-discriminatory terms,” the court held that Intel’s action in withdrawing these benefits violated the Sherman Act. As authority the district court cited
Otter Tail Power Co. v. United States,
Intergraph argues that the essential facility theory provides it with the entitlement, in view of its dependence on Intel microprocessors, to Intel’s technical assistance and other special customer benefits, because Intergraph needs those benefits in order to compete in its workstation market. However, precedent is quite clear that the essential facility theory does not depart from the need for a competitive relationship in order to incur Sherman Act liability and remedy.
See, e.g., Caribbean Broadcasting Sys., Ltd. v. Cable & Wireless PLC,
In Otter Tail Power an electric utility withheld access to its power transmission lines from municipalities that wanted to establish their own municipal power distribution systems. Otter Tail Power’s use of its monopoly power as a regulated utility, to refuse to “wheel” competitive electricity over its lines, along with its refusal to sell wholesale power to the municipal systems, was held to violate section 2 of the Sherman Act. The Court also noted that Otter *1357 Tail Power had entered into a series of territorial allocation schemes with other electric utilities, which were held to be per se antitrust violations.
In
Aspen Skiing
the owner of three of the four major ski areas in Aspen raised its revenue demands for continuing a joint lift ticket arrangement with the fourth ski area, such that it was tantamount to refusal to continue the joint ticket program. The Court upheld the jury instruction to determine whether Aspen Skiing “willfully acquired, maintained, or used [monopoly] power by anti-competitive or exclusionary means or for anti-competitive or exclusionary purposes,” as well as the instruction that “a firm possessing monopoly power has no duty to cooperate with its business rivals” unless the purpose is predatory or anticompetitive. Having approved these premises and statements of law, the Court stated that it was “unnecessary to consider the possible relevance of the ‘essential facilities’ doctrine.”
In
MCI Communications,
Although the viability and scope of the essential facility theory has occasioned much scholarly commentary, no court has taken it beyond the situation of competition with the controller of the facility, whether the competition is in the field of the facility itself or in a vertically related market that is controlled by the facility. That is, there must be a market in which plaintiff and defendant compete, such that a monopolist extends its monopoly to the downstream market by refusing access to the facility it controls.
See TV Communications Network, Inc. v. Turner Network Television, Inc.,
Ignoring this weight of jurisprudence, Intergraph argues that violation of the Sherman Act under the essential facility theory does not depend on whether Intel and Intergraph are competitors in any market. That is incorrect. As we have discussed, the presence of a competitive relationship is fundamental to invoking the Sherman Act to force access to the property of another.
See Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. United States,
Intergraph also phrases Intel’s action in withholding access to its proprietary information, pre-release chip samples, and technical services as a “refusal to deal,” and thus illegal whether or not the criteria are met of an “essential facility.” However, it is well established that “[i]n the absence of any purpose to create or maintain a monopoly, the [Sherman] act does not restrict the long recognized right of a trader or manufacturer engaged in an entirely private business, freely to exercise his own independent discretion as to parties with whom he will deal.”
United States v. Colgate & Co.,
Courts have recognized that “[t]he relationship between a manufacturer and its customer should be reasonably harmonious; and the bringing of a lawsuit by the customer may provide a sound business reason for the manufacturer to terminate their relations.”
House of Materials, Inc. v. Simplicity Pattern Co.,
A “refusal to deal” may raise antitrust concerns when the refusal is directed against competition and the purpose is to create, maintain, or enlarge a monopoly. For example, in
Lorain Journal Co. v. United States,
*1359
Intergraph provided no support for its charge that Intel’s action in withholding' “strategic customer” benefits from Inter-graph was for the purpose of enhancing Intel’s competitive position. Although the district court found that there was a lack of business justification for Intel’s actions, there was no showing of harm to competition with Intel; thus the need did not arise to establish the defense of business justification. As stated in
California Computer Products, Inc. v. International Bus. Mach. Corp.,
To the extent that Intergraph has presented on this appeal, or the district court relied on, a theory of refusal to deal based on Intel’s withdrawal of the special customer benefits (Intel continued to sell to Intergraph as a regular customer), a basis for violation of the antitrust laws has not been established.
Leveraging
The district court held that Intel “has attempted to leverage its monopoly power in the ‘X86’ CPU market to prevent Inter-graph from competing in the graphics subsystem and workstation markets and to control and dominate competition in these markets through discriminatory and favored agreements and understandings with some of Intergraph’s competitors.” The district court found that Intel was itself in the graphics subsystems market, for Intel “signed an agreement to purchase Chips & Technology Company, an experienced and successful producer of graphics chips and chip sets” and was in the process of developing a graphics chipset. The court held that these actions were an illegal leveraging of monopoly power in violation of the Sherman Act, and that this warranted the remedy imposed in the preliminary injunction.
Antitrust liability based on leveraging of monopoly power is a concept of imprecise definition, for the courts have varied in their requirements of the nature of the advantage obtained in the assertedly leveraged market. The district court relied on
Berkey Photo, Inc. v. Eastman Kodak Co.,
The concept of illegal leveraging arose in
United States v. Griffith,
*1360
Some circuits have explicitly rejected the standard stated in
Berkey Photo.
In
Fineman v. Armstrong World Industries, Inc.,
Intergraph made no proffer to show that Intel possessed market power in either the graphics subsystems market or the workstation market. A manufacturer’s plan to enter a downstream market is not a
per se
antitrust violation based on a theory of leveraging. An integrated business does not offend the Sherman Act by drawing on its competitive advantages of efficiency, experience, or reduced transaction costs, in entering new fields. These advantages are not uses of monopoly power.
See AD/SAT,
The district court’s ruling that Intel’s expansion into the computer workstation and graphics subsystems markets constitutes illegal leveraging appears to be based on a per se theory of future Sherman Act violation. It is an enlargement of antitrust theory and policy to prohibit downstream integration by a “monopolist” into new markets. The specter of Intel’s resources and talent is not evidence of future Sherman Act violation. As we have discussed, the purpose of the antitrust laws is to foster competition in the public interest, not to protect others from competition, in their private interest. Inter-graph cites section 16 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. ’26, as authority for the district court’s ruling. Section 16 authorizes action “against threatened loss or damage by a violation of the antitrust laws.” The salutary purpose is to prevent antitrust injury before it happens. However, the conduct to be prevented must be such that if it occurred would violate the antitrust laws. Section 16 authorizes prevention of the consequences of antitrust violation; it does not create the violation.
The injunction can not be supported on a theory of illegal leveraging.
Coercive Reciprocity and Tying
The district court found that Intel engaged in unlawful “coercive reciprocity,” defined by the court as “the practice of using economic leverage in one market coercively to secure competitive advantage *1361 in another,” by its proposals to settle the patent dispute. The court referred to Intel’s “overall course of conduct, including its tying of a continued supply to Inter-graph of CPUs and technical information with its demand for Intergraph’s relinquishment of its Clipper technology patents without costs to Intel.” The court depicted Intel’s proposals as a per se..anti-trust violation “because of its pernicious effect and economic similarity to illegal tying cases,” in violation of both sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act.
The district court cited cases wherein economic leverage in one product was used to coerce dealing in another product. In
Betaseed, Inc. v. U & I Inc.,
To violate the Sherman Act the entity that coerces reciprocal dealing must be a monopolist in one product and thus be positioned to require dealing in the coerced product, which but for the monopolist’s coercion could be acquired elsewhere. Thus Betaseed, the only processor of sugar beets geographically accessible to the U & I company, conditioned the processing of U & I’s beets on the purchase by U & I of Betaseed’s beet seeds, thereby excluding competition in the market for beet seed. Similarly in
Spartan Grain & Mill Co. v. Ayers,
In contrast, Intel’s various licensing proposals furthered no illegal relationship. It is Intergraph, not Intél, that owns the Clipper patents. To the extent that the record mentions these negotiations, it appears that Intergraph is interested in selling or licensing the Clipper patents, but has deemed Intel’s various Offers to be inadequate. Intel did not demand that Intergraph buy its products, and the record describes no market in which Intel’s licensing proposals were shown to have distorted competition.
See Betaseed,
The district court provided no explanation of its terse holding that Intel’s proposal to trade a license under the Clipper patents for continuation of the “strategic customer” program violated both sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act. No conspiracy is identified, although “conspiracy is an essential element of all Section 1 violations,”
American Key Corp.,
No threat or actual monopolization is asserted to flow from the various rejected patent license proposals. Commercial negotiations to trade patent property rights for other consideration in order to settle a patent dispute is neither tying nor coercive reciprocity in violation of the Sherman Act. Although the district court calls Intel’s actions “hardball,” it is not the judicial role to readjust the risks in high-stakes commercial dealings. The district court erred in law in ruling that on the theories of coercive reciprocity and tying Intel per se violated sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act. The antitrust-based remedy here imposed can not be supported on these theories.
Use of Intellectual Property To Restrain Trade
In response to Intel’s argument that its proprietary information and pre-release products are subject to copyright and patents, the district court observed that Intel’s intellectual property “does not confer upon it a privilege or immunity to violate the antitrust laws.” That is of course correct. But it is also correct that the antitrust laws do not negate the paten-tee’s right to exclude others from patent property.
See Cygnus Therapeutics Sys. v. ALZA Corp.,
The district court stated that “[u]nlawful ‘exclusionary conduct can include a monopolist’s unilateral refusal to license a [patent or] copyright or to sell a patented or copyrighted work,’ ” quoting from Image Technical Services. This quotation, however, is part of a longer passage which imparts a quite different meaning:
Under the fact-based approaches of As-iere Skiing and Kodak, some measure must guarantee that the jury account for the procompetitive effects and statutory rights extended by the intellectual property laws. To assure such consideration, we adopt a modified version of the rebuttable presumption created by the First Circuit in Data General, and hold that “while exclusionary conduct can include a monopolist’s unilateral refusal to license a [patent or] copyright,” or to sell its patented or copyrighted work, a monopolist’s “desire to exclude others from its [protected] work is a presumptively valid business justification for any immediate harm to consumers.”
Image Technical Servs.,
Further, Intergraph is not seeking a license under Intel’s patents and copyrights, but a preferred position as to the products that embody this intellectual property before they are commercially available, as well as access to trade secrets. In
Bonito Boats, Inc. v. Thunder Craft Boats, Inc.,
The district court’s conclusory statement that Intel was using its intellectual property to restrain trade was devoid of evidence or elaboration or authority. A Sherman Act violation can not be so imprecisely invoked.
The Conspiracy Theory
The district court found that Intergraph was likely to prove that sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act were violated by Intel in conspiring with Intergraph’s OEM competitors, by aiding them in customer presentations and assistance on the asserted condition that the customer would deal with the OEM that made the presentation, and not with Intergraph. The district court characterized this action as an effort to “persuade Intergraph’s customers to boycott Intergraph.”
Intel readily concedes that it participates in presentations with workstation producers, and apparently had done so in conjunction with Intergraph in the past. To establish a boycott under section 1 there must be an illegal agreement in restraint of trade; we have been directed to no showing where a customer was required to agree not to deal with Intergraph in order to receive Intel’s presentation.
See United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co.,
Section 2 prevents persons from “combining or conspiring with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce”; such a claim requires deliberate concerted action with the specific intent to achieve an unlawful monopoly, accompanied by acts in furtherance of the conspiracy. Intel states, without challenge by Intergraph, that there is no evidence that its presentations had any effect on actual or potential monopolization in this field. On the evidence presented, a violation of section 2 was not supported. See Herbert Hovenkamp, Federal Antitrust Policy: The Law of Competition and its Practice 266 (1994) *1364 (“If a monopoly manufacturer sells to fifty retailers, and then arbitrarily cuts one of them off, the retail market will remain competitive. There is no plausible way that such a refusal can result in a lower output or higher prices.”)
The federal antitrust laws “do not create a federal law of unfair competition or ‘purport to afford remedies for all torts committed by or against persons engaged in interstate commerce.’ ”
Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.,
The events here complained of do not state an antitrust claim, whether or not they may state a claim under some other theory. In
NYNEX Corp. v. Discon, Inc.,
The Non-Disclosure Agreements
In 1994 Intel and Intergraph entered into the first of a series of non-disclosure agreements concerning the protection of Confidential Information as defined therein. The Agreements provide that “Neither party has any obligation to disclose Confidential Information to the other,” that there is no “obligation to buy or sell products,” that both parties may “cease giving Confidential Information to the other party without liability,” and that either party can “terminate this Agreement at any time without cause upon notice to the other party” with return of the Confidential Information. Under these agreements Intel provided Intergraph with the trade secret and proprietary information and pre-re-lease products here at issue.
The district court ruled that “Intel’s retaliatory lawsuits and the threatened and actual termination of its nondisclosure agreements (NDAs) with Inter-graph, under which Intel provided technical information to Intergraph, constitute unlawful restraints of trade.” The court held that Intel could not terminate the agreements and the provision of Confidential Information thereunder, since there was no legitimate business justification for doing so. The court concluded that “Intel’s enforcement of the at-will termination provisions through two retaliatory lawsuits and other threatened actions is unreasonably onerous and intended to restrain competition by Intergraph and others.” However, onerous actions do not in themselves constitute antitrust violations,
see Brooke Group,
The district court also ruled that the at-will termination clause was “unconscionable” at the time the non-disclosure agreements were entered into, or at least would be unconscionable if Intel were now
*1365
permitted to terminate the agreements and discontinue the disclosures they had enabled. The district court rejected the argument that unconscionability as a ground of contract illegality was intended for consumer protection, and held that “the principle applies with equal force in the commercial field.” We observe, however, that the Alabama courts, like others, have emphasized that “Rescission of a contract for unconscionability is an extraordinary remedy usually reserved for the protection of the unsophisticated and the uneducated.”
Wilson v. World Omni Leasing, Inc.,
Trade secrets and other proprietary information and products including pre-re-lease samples of chips are commercial property, and the terms of their disclosure and use are traditional matters of commercial contract. Intergraph does not state that it objected to the mutual at-will termination provision when the contract was entered. Indeed, the district court found that when Intergraph switched from the Clipper technology “Mr. Grove did not commit Intel to provide a perpetual supply of chips, pre-released chips, or confidential information [and] did not commit Intel to any continued or ‘perpetual business relationship’ with Intergraph.”
In an agreement relating to confidential information, negotiated between commercial entities, it is not the judicial role to rewrite the contract and impose terms that these parties did not make. Such intrusion into the integrity of contracts requires more than changed relationships. No fraud or deception is here alleged. Even on the district court’s view of the mutual termination clause as unconscionable, the remedy would be rescission or imposition of a termination notice period, not the Sherman Act remedy of enforced disclosure of trade secrets and proprietary information and provision of pre-released products, none of which is required to be disclosed under any agreement. Neither the conclusion that the termination of the agreements violated the Sherman Act, nor the content of the injunction, can be supported on the ground that the non-disclosure agreements contained a termination at-will provision.
Alternatively, the district court held that since the non-disclosure agreements lacked a termination date, the court could impose one. The court ruled that “reasonable notification would take effect at the conclusion of the Deschutes and Merced Programs. continuing through 1999.” This reformation, adding some twenty months to the date of the court’s injunction Order, is not accompanied by an analysis of the original understanding of the parties or by evidence of objective termination parameters for similar agreements, and is without precedent. Although the weight of this aspect has been diluted by the passage of time and other events, 3 this judicial revision of the parties’ contract is without support.
Non-disclosure agreements were apparently also involved in connection with Intel’s refusal to authorize help to Inter-graph for removal of a “bug” or defect in a product, an event described by the district
*1366
court as “requiring Intergraph to spend substantial time and resources to solve the problem and delaying Intergraph’s product entry into the market.” The withdrawal of technical service is not a violation of the antitrust laws. As stated in
Brooke Group,
The March 1997 Letter
The district court also ruled that Intel had contractually committed itself to continue to provide Intergraph with preferred customer benefits. This ruling was based on a letter written by an Intel representative in March 1997, when Intergraph was beginning to inform the OEMs about the Clipper patents. The letter stated that Intergraph would be treated as “a strategic customer in present and future programs” that are “currently being managed under Non-Disclosure Agreements.” The district court considered this letter to be in conflict with and thus to supersede the non-disclosure agreements, rendering “illusory” the termination-at-will provision of the agreements and requiring Intel to provide strategic customer benefits into the future.
The district court found that this letter is likely to be established as an enforceable contract “of a sufficiently definite duration.” Recognizing the absence from the letter of basic contract terms, for the letter contained no statement of obligations, duration, price, quantity, etc, the district court held that the Alabama UCC “gap-filler” rules could be used to create a binding contract. Thus the district court held that the duration was “at least through 1999, when the Merced program is publicly launched, and perhaps through the year 2000.” However, the letter’s broad usages, its lack of specificity, and its silence on virtually all of the elements of a contract, negate its interpretation as replacing the non-disclosure agreements with specific obligations, and separate it from the sort of document subject to a “gap-filler” expedient. Ala.Code §§ 7-2-305 to 310. There is no gap-filling exercise that can reasonably include all of the terms of the district court’s injunction order.
Thus we do not share the district court’s view of this letter as changing and replacing the non-disclosure agreements as to major contractual provisions. Indeed, the letter refers to the terms of the current non-disclosure agreements as governing future relationships. Although the letter may be viewed as one of reassurance to Intergraph, the letter by its terms did not •supersede the non-disclosure agreements. The judicial obligation in document interpretation is to attempt to determine the mutual intent at the time, but not to impose an interpretation that would be likely to have been rejected at the time. Whatever the correct reading of this letter, it can not be read as binding Intel to new substantive obligations that were not mentioned in the letter.
The preliminary injunction can not be sustained on the ground that it is simply implementing the Intel letter of March, 1997.
Everything Taken Together
Intergraph argues that the various theories of antitrust liability discussed by the district court should not be viewed separately but should be taken together, lest the slate be “wiped clean” after each aspect fails to violate the Sherman Act, citing
Continental Ore Co. v. Union Carbide & Carbon Corp.,
Conclusion
Despite the district court’s sensitive concern for Intergraph’s well-being while it conducts its patent suit against Intel, there must be an adverse effect on competition in order to bring an antitrust remedy to bear. The remedy of compulsory disclosure of proprietary information and provision of pre-production chips and other commercial and intellectual property is a dramatic remedy for antitrust illegality, and requires violation of antitrust law or the likelihood that such violation would be established. In the proceedings whose record is before us, Intergraph has not shown a substantial likelihood of success in establishing that Intel violated the antitrust laws in its actions with respect to Intergraph, or that Intel agreed by contract to provide the benefits contained in the injunction. The preliminary injunction is vacated.
Costs
Costs to Intel, Fed. Cir. R. 39.
INJUNCTION VACATED
Notes
.
Intergraph Corp. v. Intel Corp.,
. Section 1. Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, is declared to be illegal. Every person who shall make any contract or engage in any combination or conspiracy hereby declared to be illegal shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by fine not exceeding $10,000,000 if a corporation, or, if any other person, $350,000, or by imprisonment not exceeding three years, or by both said punishments, in the discretion of the court.
Section 2. Every person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by fine not exceeding $10,000,-000 if a corporation, or, if any other person, $350,000, or by imprisonment not exceeding three years, or by both said punishments, in the discretion of the court.
. We take notice that a consent order, reported to provide some of the same relief as does the preliminary injunction, has been entered by the Federal Trade Commission. Intel Corp., Docket No. 9288 (FTC March 1999) (Agreement Containing Consent Order). That proceeding, under Section 5 of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. § 45, is not before us.
. The district court also described this event as a breach of warranty. Evidence on this issue is not provided. Intergraph's claim in this suit, and the relief awarded, is not for breach of warranty, but for antitrust violation.
