This is an alleged class action brought on behalf of buyers and sellers of residential property in the New Orleans area. Claiming that the defendant realty associations and realtors have conspired to fix the prices
*1318
of their services, the plaintiffs seek declaratory and injunctive relief as well as the recovery of treble damages. In proceedings below, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss
1
asserting that the challenged brokerage activities were wholly intrastate in nature and thus fell beyond the reach of federal antitrust prohibitions. Initially, the district court withheld ruling on this motion and prescribed further discovery limited to the question of whether the facts of this case could be brought within
Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar,
Our starting point is the recognition that jurisdiction under the Sherman Act extends to the furthest reaches of congressional power to regulate commerce.
United States
v.
South-Eastern Underwriters Ass’n,
In the present case, the appellants argue that in today’s world, real estate brokerage activities meet both tests of jurisdiction. We emphasize, though, that with both the “in commerce” and “effect on commerce” tests, we do not consider all of the ramifications that real estate sales have on nation-wide commerce. Instead, we must
*1319
focus on the impact of the particular activities challenged in the appellants’ complaint. The test is not that “the acts complained of affect a business engaged in interstate commerce, but that the conduct complained of affects the interstate commerce of such business.”
Page v. Work,
The more compelling jurisdictional argument advanced by the appellants is their contention that the controverted brokerage activities substantially affect interstate commerce. This question has spawned a significant conflict of authority. Cases finding an interstate commerce nexus include
United States v. Atlanta Real Estate Bd.
1972 Trade Reg.Rep. ¶ 73, 825 (N.D.Ga.1971);
Knowles v. Tuscaloosa Bd. of Relators,
No. 75-P-591 (N.D.Ala.) (unreported);
Wiles
v.
Tampa Bd. of Realty, Inc.,
No. 74-136 Cir. T-K (M.D.Fla.) (unreported);
United States
v.
Jack Foley Realty, Inc.,
(1977) Trade Reg.Rep. (D.Md.1977);
Gateway Assoc. Inc. v. Essex-Costello, Inc.,
The second and primary averment is that the defendants participate in securing home financing and title insurance “obtained from sources outside the State of Louisiana.” Armed principally with this allegation, the appellants advance three arguments to overcome the district court’s dismissal of their action. First, they contend that allegations of
per se
violations, such as price fixing, give rise to a presumption of a substantial effect on commerce. Next, appellants argue that even without the benefit of this presumption, the facts and allegations of the present case are controlled by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar,
Initially, we reject the argument that an allegation of a
per se
violation creates presumptive federal jurisdiction. As the lower court correctly observed, the
per se
rule bears solely on the merits of a claim by conclusively establishing the unreasonableness of a particular restraint. This principle does not eliminate the need for a jurisdictional determination of whether a restraint sufficiently impacts on commerce that is interstate. Supreme Court decisions have never said that a
per se
allegation reduces jurisdictional requisites. On the contrary, the Court has analyzed jurisdiction without differentiating between
per se
and rule of reason allegations.
Compare Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar,
*1321
In asserting that
per se
cases carry built-in jurisdiction, the appellants point to the seemingly abbreviated commerce clause analysis in
Burke v. Ford,
Rejecting the contention that per se allegations provide automatic jurisdiction, we turn to appellants’ claim that this case is controlled by Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar, supra. Underlying the Supreme Court’s determination of jurisdiction in Goldfarb was the two-fold analysis that identifies substantial interstate commerce, then ascertains whether the allegedly restrained activity is “integral” or “necessary” to that commerce. In Goldfarb, the commerce was the interstate business of title insurance and home financing. The *1322 record shows that millions of out-of-state dollars flowed into Virginia as a consequence of these transactions; accordingly, the substantiality of this commerce was beyond question. The activity charged in Goldfarb was price-fixing by attorneys of their fees for title examinations. To connect the alleged restraint to the interstate commerce, the Supreme Court affirmed detailed district court findings which established
(i)n financing realty purchases lenders require, ‘as a condition of making the loan, that the title to the property involved be examined . . . . Thus a title examination is an integral part of an interstate transaction . . . .’
Given the substantial volume of commerce involved, and the inseparability of this particular legal service from the interstate aspects of real estate transactions, we conclude that interstate commerce has been sufficiently affected.
The lower court in the present case distinguished Goldfarb by finding that real estate brokerage constituted an incidental rather than integral part of the interstate commerce of title insurance and realty financing. Through ample discovery, the lower court heard essentially uncontradicted evidence that the brokerage function terminates when a home buyer and seller are brought together. This activity does not extend to the procurement of financing or title insurance. With respect to these latter transactions, the district court found that brokers occupy no more than an incidental, informational role. Therefore, unlike the attorneys in Goldfarb whose participation in title insurance was statutorily mandated, real estate brokers are neither necessary nor integral participants in the “interstate aspects” of realty financing and insurance.
This dichotomy between incidental and integral functions is based upon
United States v. Yellow Cab Co.,
We endorse the lower court’s conclusion that
Goldfarb
does not govern this
*1323
case. The factual determinations underlying the holding that real estate brokerage does not substantially affect interstate commerce must be upheld unless clearly erroneous.
United States v. Oregon Medical Society,
Rejecting the appellants’ theories of
per se
jurisdiction and
Goldfarb,
we come to their claim that they are entitled to a trial on the merits to more fully develop their jurisdictional assertions. For many courts, the dazzling complexity of antitrust litigation rarely commends dismissal in advance of trial.
See, e. g, Cherney Disposal Co. v. Chicago & Suburban Refuse Disposal Ass’n,
Applying this standard to the present case, we hold that pre-trial dismissal was proper. Here, the issues of jurisdiction could be readily separated from the merits. The substantiality of particular interstate commerce and the nature of the defendants’ role in such commerce comprise one issue. A separate analytic concept is raised by the question of whether these defendants conspired to fix the price for their services. Confronting the discrete issue of the commerce nexus, the district court allowed the appellants months of discovery to develop their
Goldfarb analogy,
which was practically the sole jurisdictional argument proffered. The other interstate commerce theory to be derived from the pleadings, the movement of out-of-state home buyers into the New Orleans area, was correctly discarded as a matter of law. We therefore hold that it was not “impossible to decide the one without the other.” In fact, the jurisdictional issue could be and was extricated from the merits, thoroughly aired in advance of trial, and correctly resolved by the district court.
Compare McBeath v. Inter-American Citizens for Decency Committee, supra, with Rosemound Sand & Gravel v. Lambert Sand & Gravel,
*1324
With our endorsement of the district court’s determination that this particular real estate activity neither occurs in nor substantially affects interstate commerce, we must ascertain the character of the adjudication to be rendered. The district court styled its judgment as a 12(b)(6) dismissal for failure to state a claim which was treated as a summary judgment insofar as matters outside of the pleadings were considered. Additionally, though, the court said that “the motion might properly be viewed as one for dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We hold that this latter characterization reflects the proper disposition of this case. Because the sufficiency of the commerce nexus is both a substantive element and a jurisdictional requisite for an antitrust action, there are diverse if not disparate viewpoints on the proper procedural vehicle for resolving dismissal motions.
See generally Mortensen v. First Federal Sav. & Loan Ass’n,
In conclusion, we speak to the appellants’ argument that the full realization of congressional policies mandates expansive judicial construction of the commerce clause. As the appellants observe, the acceptance of commerce clause limitations is an acknowledgment that the federal government is powerless to remedy alleged wrongs. Juxtaposed against this acknowledgment, however, is the growing spirit of federalism manifested at all levels of judicial and legislative decisionmaking. 10 This momentum is fueled by the realization that state processes are available to combat the full gamut of wrong doing, often including alleged restraints of trade.
Even in the absence of state remedy, federal power cannot be extended simply because some wrong might otherwise be uncorrected. It is axiomatic that legislative laws and policies cannot bend principles of constitutional dimensions. Thus, no matter how beneficial, the Sherman Act cannot be thrust past its commerce clause anchorage into the residual expanse of state and individual prerogative. Such a limitation of federal authority, whether requiring the dismissal of an antitrust suit or the freeing of a criminal defendant, is a necessary con- *1325 eomitant of private freedoms. With this acceptance of the limits of judicial power, we hold that there is no jurisdiction to consider this action and therefore order the case
DISMISSED.
Notes
. This case was brought under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (15 U.S.C. §§ 1 et seq.). The precise motion before the court was styled a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim which was treated as a summary judgment to the extent matters outside the pleadings were considered. See Rule 12(b), F.R.Civ.Pro. The court also stated that its ruling might be viewed as a dismissal for lack of subject matter. As we discuss
infra,
the better practice is to cast as jurisdictional any dismissals based upon a failure to establish the requisite commerce clause relationship to the challenged activity. Thus, we view the proceedings below as what the Third Circuit might call a 12(b)(1) “factual attack.”
Mortensen v. First Federal Sav. & Loan Ass’n,
. Some courts have held sufficient allegations that the defendants advertised in interstate newspapers and that they sold realty torn substantial number of purchasers situated out-of-state. See, e. g., United States v. Jack Foley Realty, Inc., 1977 Trade Reg.Rep. ¶ 61, 678, at 72, 790 (D.Md.1977). We suggest no view as to whether the addition of allegations like these would bring the defendants within the bounds of the Sherman Act.
.
See also Sapp v. Jacobs,
. The interstate travel of customers is generally viewed as generating only “remote” or “incidental” consequences to interstate commerce; this movement of people evidently does not itself constitute a substantial source of interstate commerce.
Lieberthal v. North Country Lanes, Inc.,
. The genesis of the appellants’ argument of presumptive jurisdiction probably lies in the theory’s advocacy by Professor Areeda.
See
P. Areeda, Antitrust Analysis 122 (2d ed. 1974). Citing Professor Areeda, the Seventh Circuit enunciated a far reduced jurisdictional threshold for
per se
cases in an alternative holding in
United States v. Finis P. Ernest, Inc.,
*1321 Compounding our conviction that the Supreme Court does not differentiate per se cases are two other concerns. As a matter of analysis, we perceive no jurisdictional basis for distinguishing per se and rule of reason allegations. In neither case can one presume that anticompetitive activity is underway. For example, the claim of a conspiracy, the central underpinning of a price-fix, may evaporate before hard evidence adduced at trial. Conversely, in both cases, if sufficiently stated allegations are proven, the disruption of free market forces will be established. Whether that disruption is effected by price fixing or unreasonable vertical territorial restraints, the ultimate consequences on the market are similar: supply will be constricted and prices artificially inflated. Thus the final impacts of restraints of trade would be inseparable in their ultimate effect on commerce.
Our second difficulty with a presumptive jurisdiction for per se cases is a practical one. To say the least, it can be difficult to ascertain whether particular allegations are classified under per se or rule of reason restraints. See
White Motor Co. v. United States,
. In United States v. Women’s Sportswear Ass’n, supra, the defendant stitching contractors were integral participants in the substantial interstate commerce in which 80% of the cloth was shipped in from out-of-state followed by 80% of the finished sportswear being marketed out of state. Similarly, in Mandeville Island Farms, Inc. v. American Crystal Sugar Co., supra, the defendant sugar refiners were a necessary component of the interstate commerce drawing sugar beet plants from California fields and leading to their ultimate sale as finished products in nation-wide markets. Elsewhere in this opinion, we briefly discuss the facts of Goldfarb and Yellow Cab Co.
. The enduring vitality of
Yellow Cab
has been reaffirmed in subsequent Supreme Court decisions, including
Goldfarb,
. This vital distinction is further illustrated in another antitrust context where, on analagous facts, two Supreme Court decisions diverged according to the trial court resolution of factual questions.
Compare Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. United States,
. Technically speaking, the merits and jurisdiction could never be severed because interstate commerce is an element of both. The teaching of
Rosemound Sand & Gravel, infra,
however, is that if the issues necessarily determinative of jurisdiction can be isolated and explored through discovery, dismissal in advance of trial may be appropriate. The effective use of discovery is a crucial feature of this case. The Supreme Court has instructed that “dismissals prior to giving the plaintiff ample opportunity for discovery should be granted very sparingly.”
Hospital Bldg. Co. v. Trustees Rex Hospital,
. “[A] state is not merely a factor in the ‘shifting economic arrangements’ of the private sector of the economy . . . (cite omitted) but is itself a coordinate element in the system established by the Framers for governing our Federal Union.” National League
of Cities
v.
Usery,
