Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge DWYER; Dissent by Judge PAEZ.
I. INTRODUCTION
In this antitrust case originally brought in state court under the Cartwright Act, Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code §§ 16700-16770, the plaintiff milk producers
3.The defendants are Kraft Foods, Inc. ("Kraft”), Alpine Lace Brands, Inc., and Borden, Inc. The district court dismissed the action as to a fourth defendant, National Cheese Exchange, for lack of personal jurisdiction; the milk producers have expressly waived any appeal from that order.
This court has jurisdiction of appeals from “all final decisions” of the district court. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. No party has argued that jurisdiction is absent, but we must address the issue sua sponte. WMX Technologies, Inc. v. Miller,
The cheese makers’ motion in the district court was styled a motion to dismiss “the complaint” rather than “the action.” An order granting such a motion must be accompanied by leave to amend unless amendment would be futile. Lopez v. Smith,
The record here shows that the district court intended its order to end the case. Although the cheese makers sought dismissal of the complaint, they repeatedly argued that the plaintiffs not only did not, but “cannot,” allege essential parts of an antitrust or unfair competition claim. The milk producers opposed the motion on the merits and, in the alternative, asked leave to amend “unless it is determined that no possible amendment would cure the complaint’s deficiencies.” The district court’s order reads simply: “It is Ordered that the motions to dismiss be, and hereby are, Granted.” This ruling necessarily entailed a denial of the alternative request for leave to amend and a determination, in the words of Lopez,
We have so held in several earlier cases. In Gerritsen we said: “Failure to allow leave to amend supports an inference that the district court intended to make the order final. Furthermore, the court’s intention of finality is evinced by its apparent conclusion that amendment of the complaint would not save the action.”
The inference that finality was intended is especially strong here in light of the milk producers’ explicit request for leave to amend unless the court determined that no possible amendment would avoid dismissal. No one has suggested an amendment that could change the district court’s ruling.
Also probative is the understanding of the district court clerk that a final dismissal was ordered. The clerk’s docket entry describes the dismissal order as “terminating case.” A “JS-6” stamp on the order shows that the clerk reported the case as terminated to the Administrative Office of the United States Courts. See District Court Clerks Manual § 4.09b. The parties’ understanding has been the same, as reflected in their briefs on appeal.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo the district court’s order of dismissal for failure to state a claim. See Wyler Summit Partnership v. Turner Broad. Sys., Inc.,
IV. ALLEGATIONS OF THE COMPLAINT
The complaint sets out three claims. The first, naming all defendants, alleges a combination in restraint of trade in violation of the Cartwright Act, Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 16720. The second, also naming all defendants, alleges that the combination in restraint of trade, and acts done pursuant to it, violated the Unfair Competition Act, Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 17200. The third, naming Kraft only, alleges that Kraft violated the Unfair Competition Act by monopolizing and attempting to monopolize.
The third claim is deemed abandoned because the milk producers have not opposed its dismissal in their briefs and argument to this court. See Fed. R.App. P. 28(a)(9)(A) (requiring that the appellant’s brief contain “appellant’s contentions and the reasons for them”). See also Essery v. Department of Transp.,
For present purposes, the key allegations of the complaint are as follows: The plaintiff milk producers are “residents and citizens of California who have sold milk directly or indirectly to one or more of the defendants”; the defendant cheese makers purchase bulk cheese and milk for use in their products; NCE, in Wisconsin, operated the only national cash auction market for bulk cheese; the cheese makers “purchased substantial quantities of milk from plaintiffs and the members of the class, either directly or indirectly”; the cheese makers “did not compete and ... instead acted together to suppress the cost of milk purchased by them from plaintiffs and the members of the class”; “[b]y collusively manipulating NCE prices to levels lower than would prevail under conditions of free and open competition, [the cheese makers] lowered their procurement costs for bulk cheese bought off the NCE pursuant to NCE-based formula prices”; the NCE prices “determined the cost of fluid milk used by Kraft in its cheese plants”; the cheese makers formed a combination “in unreasonable restraint of trade and commerce” in violation of the Cartwright Act; the terms of the unlawful combination included “depressing, fixing, pegging,
The complaint details how the cheese makers allegedly did these things. The milk producers seek treble damages, an injunction, and other relief.
V. SUFFICIENCY OF THE COMPLAINT
In the absence of a statement by the district court of reasons for the dismissal, the cheese makers on appeal raise a variety of arguments. They contend that the complaint fails to plead antitrust injury and antitrust standing as required by the Cartwright Act; that relief is barred by the filed rate doctrine; that the Commerce Clause precludes application of California’s antitrust statute in this context; and that the milk producers’ related claims under the state’s unfair competition statute also must be dismissed. We consider these arguments in light of the rules, summarized above, governing motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim.
A. Cartwright Act and Sherman Act
The Cartwright Act, adopted in 1907, and the Sherman Act, adopted in 1890, have in common the goal of prohibiting trade-restraining combinations and monopolies and thereby preserving competition. The federal statute’s purpose is stated in Northern Pacific Railway v. United States,
The Sherman Act was designed to be a comprehensive charter of economic liberty aimed at preserving free and unfettered competition as the rule of trade. It rests on the premise that the unrestrained interaction of competitive forces will yield the best allocation of our economic resources, the lowest prices, the highest quality and the greatest material progress, while at the same time providing an environment conducive to the preservation of our democratic political and social institutions. But even were that premise open to question, the policy unequivocally laid down by the Act is competition.
The California statute’s goal is described in Exxon Corp. v. Superior Court,
The Cartwright Act (Bus. & Prof.Code, § 16700 et seq.), as the Sherman Antitrust Act (15 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.), was enacted to promote free market competition and to prevent conspiracies or agreements in restraint or monopolization of trade.
There are, however, differences in statutory wording and legislative history that lead, in some respects, to different results. In State of California ex rel. Van de Kamp v. Texaco, Inc.,
Admittedly, in past statements we have suggested that the Cartwright Act is patterned after the Sherman Act. As shown above, however, historical and textual analysis reveals that the Act was patterned after the 1889 Texas act and the 1899 Michigan act, and not the Sherman Act. Hence judicial interpretation of the Sherman Act, while often helpful, is not directly probative of the Cartwright drafters’ intent, given the different genesis of the provision under review.
Thus, federal antitrust precedents are properly included in a Cartwright Act analysis, but their role is limited: they are “often helpful” but not necessarily decisive.
The Sherman Act prohibits “[e]very contract, combination ... or conspiracy, in restraint of trade.” 15 U.S.C. § 1. The Cartwright Act prohibits, among other things, any combination “[t]o prevent competition in [the] sale or purchase of ... any commodity” or to “[a]gree in any manner to keep the price of ... [any] commodity ... at a fixed or graduated figure.” Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 16720(c) and (e)(2).
Under both statutes, certain types of collusive conduct are held to be so destructive of competition, and so devoid of redeeming value, that they are conclusively presumed to be unreasonable — i.e., they are per se violations. See Northern Pac. Ry.,
Foremost in the category of per se violations is horizontal price-fixing among competitors. This long-established rule was explained by the Supreme Court in United States v. Trenton Potteries Co.,
The same rule applies in California: “Under both California and federal law, agreements fixing or tampering with prices are illegal per se.” Oakland-Alameda County Builders Exch. v. F.P. Lathrop Constr. Co.,
The California statute explicitly makes price fixing by buyers unlawful. See Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 16720(c) (prohibiting any combination to prevent competition in the “sale or purchase of any commodity” (emphasis added)). The federal decisional law, based on a more generally worded statute, reaches the same result. See United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co.,
When a per se violation such as horizontal price fixing has occurred, there is no need to define a relevant market or to show that the defendants had power within the market. See, e.g., FTC v. Superior Ct. Trial Lawyers Ass’n,
The cheese.makers cite In re Beef Industry Antitrust Litigation,
[a]ny attempt at conspiracy between only two of those packers to depress fed cattle prices could not succeed, because the other packers, especially the other two major competitors, could raise their own fed cattle prices a small amount, effectively buy away the fed cattle that had previously been the source of sales to [the defendants].
Id. at 516. We need not decide whether In re Beef is consistent with controlling Supreme Court precedent or California law because the case is inapposite. First, the court there found that the plaintiffs had failed to submit sufficient proof of a conspiracy, id. at 514, a question not involved in the present Rule 12(b)(6) motion. Second, there was no allegation that the defendant cattle purchasers were able to, and did, concertedly depress a statewide commodity price by manipulating a minimum price formula. That claim here is exactly contrary to the In re Beef holding that the alleged conspiracy “could not succeed.” According to the present complaint, the conspiracy had the means to, and did, succeed.
C. Antitrust Standing
Private suits to enforce the Sherman Act are authorized by Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15(a), which provides that “any person who shall be injured in his business or property by reason of anything forbidden in the antitrust laws may sue therefor ... and shall recover threefold the damages by him sustained, and the cost of suit, including a reasonable attorney’s fee.” Despite the apparent breadth of the phrase “any person,” the Supreme Court has held that Congress did not intend to afford a remedy to everyone injured by an antitrust violation simply on a showing of causation. The plaintiff must have “antitrust standing.” To determine whether that requirement is met, the court must “evaluate the plaintiffs harm, the alleged wrongdoing by the defendants, and the relationship between them.” Associated Gen. Contractors of California, Inc. v. California State Council of Carpenters,
Antitrust standing is required under the Cartwright Act. See Rolling v. Dow Jones & Co.,
(a) Antitrust Injury
The first factor—the “nature of the’ plaintiffs alleged injury”—requires a showing of “antitrust injury,” i.e., “injury of the type the antitrust laws were intended to prevent and that flows from that which makes defendants’ acts unlawful.” Atlantic Richfield Co. v. USA Petroleum Co.,
Parsing the Supreme Court’s definition, we can identify four requirements for antitrust injury: (1) unlawful conduct, (2) causing an injury to the plaintiff, (3) that flows from that which makes the conduct unlawful, and (4) that is of the type the antitrust laws were intended to prevent.
The complaint here plainly alleges unlawful conduct, i.e., a per se antitrust violation, and that the conduct was intended to and did injure the plaintiffs.
The fallacy of this argument becomes clear when we recall that the central purpose of the antitrust laws, state and federal, is to preserve competition. It is competition — not the collusive fixing of prices at levels either low or high — that these statutes recognize as vital to the public interest. The Supreme Court’s references to the goals of achieving “the lowest prices, the highest quality and the greatest material progress,” Northern Pac. Ry.,
The cheese makers’ argument also confuses vertical price fixing (e.g., resale prices imposed by a manufacturer on its distributors) with horizontal price fixing (collusive price setting or stabilization by competitors). Under federal law, vertical arrangements that set minimum prices are illegal per se while those that set maximum prices are tested under the rule of reason and may or may not be deemed to have anticompetitive consequences. See State Oil Co. v. Khan,
When buyers agree illegally to pay suppliers less than the prices that would otherwise prevail, suppliers are obviously injured in fact. The suppliers’ loss also constitutes antitrust injury, for it reflects the rationale for condemning buying cartels — namely, suppression of competition among buyers, reduced upstream and downstream output, and distortion of prices.
Most courts understand that a buying cartel’s low buying prices are illegal and*989 bring antitrust injury and standing to the victimized suppliers. Clearly mistaken is the occasional court that considers low buying prices pro-competitive or that thinks sellers receiving illegally low prices do not suffer antitrust injury.
To hold otherwise would be contrary to long-established antitrust law.
Antitrust injury requires that the “injured party be a participant in the same market as the alleged malefactors.” American Ad Management,
(b) Directness of the Injury
The plaintiffs must prove injury in fact, and the claimed injury must be sufficiently direct. Under federal law, there must be “not a mere causal link, but a direct effect.” City of Pittsburgh v. West Penn Power Co.,
The cheese makers argue that the milk producers were free to sell their milk to others at higher prices than the minimum levels set by the CDFA. But that argument merely denies that the plaintiffs were damaged in fact. It does not speak to the complaint, which alleges that the plaintiffs were damaged when the defendants fixed milk prices at artificially low levels and thereby caused plaintiffs to “receive! ] less for milk than they otherwise would have received in the absence of the defendants’ unlawful conduct.” These disputed claims of causation and injury cannot be decided on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion.
The defendants also contend that since the market allegedly restrained was that for cheese, and the milk support price was set by a state agency, the chain of causation is too tenuous to support re-
That the alleged conspiracy restrained prices for two commodities — bulk cheese and milk — would not immunize the defendants against antitrust claims. The milk sellers, insofar as the alleged conspiracy was meant to and did reduce their sales prices, suffered a direct injury. Antitrust violations frequently entail multiple means and objectives (e.g., restraining both purchase prices and sales prices or boycotting to enforce price stabilization). See, e.g., FTC v. Superior Ct. Trial Lawyers Ass’n,
In cases such as this, plaintiffs should be given the full benefit of their proof without tightly compartmentalizing the various factual components and wiping the slate clean after scrutiny of each. The character and effect of a conspiracy are not to be judged by dismembering it and*991 viewing its separate parts, but only by looking at it as a whole.
Accord Beltz Travel Serv. v. International Air Transport Ass’n,
The extent to which antitrust injury is recognized under the Cartwright Act is enlarged, by statute, in comparison to federal law. The Act provides, at Calif. Bus. & Prof.Code § 16750(a) (emphasis added):
Any person who is injured in his or her business or property by reason of anything forbidden or declared unlawful by this chapter, may sue therefor ... to recover three times the damages sustained by him or her....
This action may be brought by any person who is injured in his or her business or property by reason of anything forbidden or declared unlawful by this chapter, regardless of whether such injured person dealt directly or indirectly with the defendant.
The last clause was added by the California legislature following the Supreme Court’s decision in Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois,
(c) Speculative Nature of Harm
The cheese makers argue that because other factors influence milk prices, the harm to plaintiffs is speculative. See Associated Gen. Contractors,
(d) The Risk of Duplicative Recovery
There appears to be no risk of this nature. The allegedly underpaid plaintiffs sustained the injury. The cheese makers
. (e) Complexity in Apportioning Damages
This factor comes into play when multiple classes or layers of claimants seek, or might seek, compensation. It is totally absent here.
In summary, all elements of antitrust standing are satisfied on the face of the present complaint.
D. The Filed Rate Doctrine
California has a regulatory scheme for the marketing of milk. The legislature determined that it was “essential to establish minimum producer prices at fair and reasonable levels so as to generate reasonable producer incomes that will promote the intelligent and orderly marketing of market milk ... and that minimum producer prices established [by the director of the CDFA (the ‘Director’) ] should not be unreasonably depressed because other factors have affected the levels of retail prices paid by consumers.” Cal. Food & Agrie. Code § 61802(h). To achieve these ends the Director is authorized “to prescribe marketing areas and to determine minimum prices” to be paid to milk producers. Cal. Food & Agrie. Code § 61805. Between 1989 and 1997, the period of claimed injury to the plaintiffs, the Director used the NCE bulk cheese price as part of a formula to compute the minimum price of milk in California. By rigging the NCE price, according to the complaint, the cheese makers artificially depressed the minimum price for milk, to plaintiffs’ damage. The cheese makers now argue that the filed rate doctrine requires dismissal of the action.
The filed rate doctrine originated in Keogh v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway,
This case, however, involves only a state antitrust law being applied where an agency of that state has set a commodity price that, according to the complaint, was wrongfully depressed by manufacturers who collusively manipulated data submitted to and used by the agency. Whether damages can be awarded to the injured parties is a matter of state law. California has held, in contrast to federal law, that no filed rate doctrine exists as a bar. In Cellular Plus, Inc., v. Superior Court,
[W]e find no compelling underlying logic or policy reasons for denying a Cartwright Act cause of action for treble damages to a person injured by reason of a price fixing conspiracy, even if the fixed prices had been approved as reasonable by a regulatory agency.
Id. at 1241-42,
The Cellular Plus court set out a number of reasons for not following Keogh and Square D, see
In a related argument, the cheese makers contend that the Director in 1989 and 1995 considered and rejected claims that the NCE bulk cheese price was rigged. The milk producers agree that the Director decided to keep the NCE price in the California minimum milk price formula, but deny that he exonerated the defendants or made any findings that would permit or justify price-fixing. This dispute, like others raised by the parties, has no place in deciding a motion under Rule 12(b)(6). We express no opinion as to the merits of the argument because, however it might be resolved at a later stage, it cannot support a dismissal for failure to state a claim.
E. The Commerce Clause
The cheese makers argue that the milk producers’ action, if allowed to proceed, would run afoul of the Commerce Clause, U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3. But the Supreme Court has made clear that neither the Sherman Act nor the Commerce Clause preempts state antitrust laws. See, e.g., California v. ARC Am. Corp.,
F. Unfair Competition Claim
The milk producers’ unfair competition claim is brought under California’s Unfair Competition Act, Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 17200, which prohibits “any unlawful, unfair or fraudulent business act or practice.” The cheese makers contend that because the antitrust claim must be dismissed, the unfair competition claim must fail as well because any finding of unfairness must be “tethered to some legislatively declared policy or proof of some actual or threatened impact on competition.” Cel-Tech Communications, Inc. v. Los Angeles Cellular Tel. Co.,
First, the quoted statement in Cel-Tech was limited to claims of “unfairness to competitors,” a category of cases unlike the case at bar. Id.
Second, the argument must fail in any event because the milk producers’ antitrust claim survives the present challenge.
Third, a plaintiff may bring an unfair competition claim under California law unless some other provision bars the action by clearly permitting the conduct. See id. at 184,
VI. CONCLUSION
It bears repeating that we are not concerned with which side will prevail at trial, or even with whether the milk producers’ claims will survive summary judgment. The cheese makers’ motion under Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) tests only whether the complaint’s allegations are such that a set of facts within their scope could entitle the plaintiffs to relief. The present complaint satisfies that test.
REVERSED AND REMANDED as to claims one and two; AFFIRMED as to claim three. Plaintiffs/appellants will recover their costs in this court.
Notes
. The plaintiffs are Knevelbaard Dairies, a general partnership, and John and Sam Kne-velbaard. They sue for themselves and a putative class of others similarly situated. We express no opinion as to whether a class should be certified pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.
. The milk producers say: "The district court demonstrated its intent to issue an appealable dismissal by directing that it be entered pursuant to the rule governing entry of judgments. See Martinez, v. Gomez,
"The district court dismissed this action on December 4, 1998.” They conclude: "Nor could any amendment consistent with Knevel-baard’s core allegations possibly cure the deficiencies in its complaint. Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, the district court’s decision to dismiss Knevelbaard’s case with prejudice should be affirmed.”
. The milk producers do not contend that they are exempt from the antitrust injury requirement because the cheese makers corn-mitted a per se violation, nor would any such contention be tenable. They argue only that
. Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, Inc.,
Due to the vagaries of the bowling industry, Brunswick, a large bowling equipment manufacturer, had become "by far the largest operator of bowling centers” in the country. Brunswick,429 U.S. at 480 ,97 S.Ct. 690 . Pueblo challenged Brunswick’s acquisition of some of Pueblo’s competitors who were on the verge of bankruptcy. Pueblo alleged that the acquisitions threatened to create a monopoly, given Brunswick’s market power. Pueblo’s claimed injury was the additional profit it would have earned had its competitors been allowed to fold. See id. at 479-80,97 S.Ct. 690 . The Supreme Court held that Pueblo’s claimed injury did not how from the illegality of Brunswick’s conduct. If the acquisitions violated § 7, it was only because the acquisitions "brought a 'deep pocket’ parent into a market of ‘pygmies.’ " Id. at 487,97 S.Ct. 690 . Pueblo's injuries, however, were unrelated to Brunswick's potential to monopolize, that which made the acquisition potentially unlawful. Any rescue of the troubled centers would injure Pueblo in the same way.
Atlantic Richfield Co.,
. Other cases holding that antitrust claims may be pursued by parties injured as the result of the knowing and collusive submission of false information to a' government agency include Clipper Exxpress v. Rocky Mountain Motor Tariff Bureau,
. To constitute horizontal price fixing, the agreement among competitors need not involve the ultimate price. In Socony-Vacuum, the Court condemned a concerted program by oil companies to purchase surplus gasoline on the spot market to prevent prices from falling, noting that even if the conspirators "were in no position to control the market, to the extent that they raised, lowered, or stabilized prices they would be directly interfering with the free play of market forces.”
. The complaint alleges that the plaintiffs "sold milk directly or indirectly to one or more of the defendants " and that the putative class is composed of "all persons who reside in the State of California and who sold milk, directly or indirectly, to any of the defendants during the period from January 1, 1988, to April 1997.” (Emphasis added.) The parties have not briefed, and we need not decide, whether milk sellers who sold to non-conspirator buyers, at prices claimed to be artificially low because of the market effects of defendants' conspiracy, would have standing to seek damages from defendants. There is a split of authority on that subject. See, e.g., In re Arizona Dairy Products Litigation,
. The cheese makers' reliance on Day v. AT & T Corp.,
. Cases holding that nondiscriminatory state economic regulation may be imposed despite an impact on interstate commerce are collected at ABA Section of Antitrust Law, Antitrust Developments, 745-46 (4th ed. 1997).
. Contrary to the majority's statement that the plaintiffs sought leave to amend unless the court determined no possible amendment would cure the complaint's deficiencies^] plaintiffs actually requested leave to amend "to determine if they can allege facts sufficient to meet the applicable legal standard set forth by this Court." This may seem a minor distinction, but to the extent the majority seeks to divine from the district court’s silence just what the court intended in granting defendants’ motion to dismiss, it is necessary to state accurately what plaintiffs sought if, as happened, the district court granted defendants' motion. The majority errs here. The plaintiffs wanted a chance to amend if the district court granted the motion. By granting the motion, the district court implicitly acknowledged plaintiffs' request, particularly given the absence of a statement that a sepa
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting:
I respectfully dissent on two separate grounds. First, I cannot agree with the majority’s conclusion that we have jurisdiction over this appeal. The record contains no “final decision” of the district court, as 28 U.S.C. § 1291 requires. Second, even if we did have jurisdiction, I do not agree with the majority that plaintiffs have adequately stated claims for relief under California’s Cartwright Act and unfair competition law, California Business and Professions Code §§ 17200 et seq. Accepting plaintiffs’ allegations as true, as we must under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, plaintiffs do not (and cannot) allege any anti-competitive effect resulting from defendants’ purported collusion. Accordingly, they fail to state either an antitrust or unfair competition claim under California law.
I
Jurisdiction
Even if the parties do not raise the issue of our jurisdiction, we must. WMX Technologies, Inc. v. Miller,
It is well established that an order dismissing a complaint but not the underlying action is not a final order and is not, therefore, appealable. Wright v. Gibson,
The district court’s Order of December 11,1998 was brief:
The Court has considered defendants’ motions to dismiss, together with the moving and opposing papers. It is Ordered that the motions to dismiss be, and hereby are, Granted.
The district court plainly did not dismiss the entire action. By its terms, the Order is not final and appealable.
The Order, however, bears several stamps. In addition to those stating “filed” and “entered,” one is a checklist of four items: “Docketed,” “Mid copy Ptys,” “Mid Notice Ptys,” and “JS-6.” The fourth item refers to the JS-6 Termination Report that enables the clerk’s office to report monthly to the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts on the number and type of cases the court has terminated. See District Court Clerks Manual § 4.09b. Under the Federal Rules, the clerk is responsible for keeping the civil docket, entering, among other things, “all appearances, orders, verdicts, and judgments!)]” Fed. R.Civ.P. 79(a). Here, the clerk’s entry in the civil docket reads: “ORDER by Judge Terry J. Hatter granting dfts’ motion to dismiss [14-1], [7-1] terminating case (Ent 12/15/98), MD JS-6, mid cpies & nots. (lori) [Entry date 12/15/98].” The clerk’s entry in the docket and the stamp on the face of the Order thus conflict with the Order’s language.
The Local Rules for the Central District of California similarly provide that “[njotation in the civil docket of entry of a memorandum of decision, an opinion of the Court, or a minute order of the Clerk shall not constitute entry of judgment pursuant to F.R. Civ. P. 58 and 79(a) unless specifically ordered by the judge.” Local Rules for the Central District of California, Rule 14.10.5. “The clerk’s act of entering a minute order — even a minute order that would satisfy the separate judgment requirement — can not effect an entry of judgment unless the district court judge specifically orders it to be so.” Radio Television Espanola S.A. v. New World Entertainment, Ltd.,
On this record, it is nearly impossible to ascertain the district court’s, rather than the clerk’s, intent. There was no hearing, minute order, or statement in the Order. In addition, defendants Kraft, Borden, and Alpine Lace sought dismissal of plaintiffs’ complaint (not the action) for failure to state a claim pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. In the opposition to defendants’ motion, plaintiffs requested leave to amend if the court granted defendants’ motion.
Our analysis would not be complete without recognizing the strong policy favoring leave to amend. In dismissing for failure to state a claim, “a district court should grant leave to amend even if no request to amend the pleading was made, unless it determines that the pleading could not possibly be cured by the allegation of other facts.” Lopez v. Smith,
It is possible, of course, that the district court did intend to dismiss the entire case and enter the requisite judgment, but that intent is not discernible from this record. I am not inclined either to read the district court’s subjective intent into' the Order or to deem the clerk’s ministerial actions a substitute for the requisite final judgment. Accordingly, I would dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
II
Plaintiffs’ Failure to State a Claim for Relief
Context may not be everything, but it matters. This action presents a novel overarching question: when a state has already stepped in to eliminate the uncertainties of competition by setting a price floor, can alleged meddling with the state’s regulatory scheme which loivers that floor violate the antitrust laws? As it turns out, our courts offer no obvious answer. It is clear, though, that a rote application of antitrust law — whether federal or state — is not particularly enlightening. Only a return (briefly) to antitrust principles and common sense will aid in resolving the issue. First, though, the context.
California’s Milk Pricing System
Unlike the federal milk marketing orders that affect milk prices elsewhere in the United States, California uses a complex set of stabilization, marketing, and pooling plans to determine price. As the Dairy Marketing Branch of the California Department of Food and Agriculture (“CDFA”) stated, “[t]he intricacies of the system are often not fully understood which leads to confusion even among those whose livelihood relies on this system.” See “Milk Pricing in California,” DMB-SP-101 at http://wwio.cdfa.ca.gov/dairy/ milkpricing.pdf. Significantly for plaintiffs’ claims, the milk marketing program establishes minimum prices based on end product use. The CDFA Dairy Marketing Branch explains:
These prices are established within defined marketing areas where milk production and marketing practices are similar. Currently, California operates its milk pricing plan with two marketing areas: Northern California and Southern California. Each marketing area has a separate but essentially identical Stabilization and Marketing Plan. Each plan provides formulas for pricing the five classes of milk.
Id.
California’s milk pricing program dates back to 1935. The Legislature enacted the Milk Stabilization Act, authorizing the Director of Agriculture to set minimum prices for milk at the producer, wholesale, and retail levels. See Jersey Maid Milk Products Co. v. Brock,
Although the CDFA sets and enforces minimum prices, it has no authority to prohibit purchases and sales above that level. Opinion No. 90-936, 74 Op. Att’y Gen. 63, 64 (1991). Indeed, the California Attorney General quoted an earlier formal opinion regarding the milk marketing program with approval as follows: “The act does not in our opinion intend to protect distributors against the hazards of legitimate competition.” Id. at 67, quoting Ops. Cal. Atty. Gen. No. N.S. 2131 (1939). The Attorney General added that the relevant statutory provisions “in no way purport to deal with negotiated prices above the minimum prices established.” In sum, California establishes the price floor, artificially propping up milk prices. Plaintiffs may not sell (and defendants may not purchase) milk at a price below the floor, but nothing precludes transactions at any price above the support level. Given this context, plaintiffs cannot state a claim for violation of California’s antitrust laws based on the conduct alleged in their complaint.
California’s Antitrust Law
“The [Cartwright] Act generally condemns as unlawful ‘every trust.’ Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 16721. It defines ‘trust’ as a ‘combination of capital, skill or acts’ to restrain trade, to limit or prevent competition or to fix or control prices. Cal. Bus. & Prof.Code § 16720.” State Bar of California (Antitrust and Trade Regulation Law Section), California Antitrust Law 6-7 (1991 and Supp.1994) (“CA Antitrust Law”). “California antitrust law generally contains provisions similar to the federal antitrust law, and both find their roots in common law precedent barring restraints of trade.” See, e.g., Exxon Corp. v. Superior Court (Koutney),
Although the Cartwright Act’s structure and language differ considerably from the 'Sherman Act, California courts have repeatedly found that the Cartwright Act was “ ‘patterned after the Sherman Act.’ ” CA Antitrust Law at 22, citing Blank v. Kirwan,
California courts have now recognized that the Sherman and Cartwright Acts do differ in legislative intent and history, as well as in statutory construction and language. See CA Antitrust Law at 12. In State ex rel. Van de Karnp v. Texaco, Inc.,
Plaintiffs have alleged that defendants combined or colluded to suppress the cost of milk defendants purchased from plaintiffs. Plaintiffs assert that defendants did so by selling cheese on a commodity exchange (the short-lived National Cheese Exchange or “NCE”) at prices below those they could have sold their cheese for off the NCE. Plaintiffs allege that by combining to lower the cheese price on the NCE, defendants manipulated the California milk pricing formula, and, consequently, the price of milk. This conduct, plaintiffs maintain, constitutes “price-fixing,” and so, they also maintain, warrants application of a rule of per se liability for price-fixing. See, e.g., Rolling v. Dow Jones & Co., Inc.,
There is a well established tradition of applying a rule of per se liability to “price-fixing.” The rationale for this long-standing condemnation of business behavior that fits within the rubric of “price-fixing” was set forth over seventy years ago, when the Supreme Court explained that the “aim and result of every price-fixing agreement, if effective, is the elimination of one form of competition. The power to fix prices, whether reasonably exercised or not, involves power to control the market and to fix arbitrary and unreasonable prices.” United States v. Trenton Potteries Co.,
To every rule, though, there are exceptions and limits. And in this area, the Supreme Court has inveighed against unthinking application of the rule of per se liability when the basic justification for the rule is not present. It is not altuays the case that a practice that fits the term “price-fixing” in fact raises the concerns identified in Trenton Potteries. See BMI v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.,
Following such a functional approach, the Court in Khan held that vertical maximum price fixing is not per se illegal price-fixing; the Court in BMI similarly held that price-fixing of the product of a joint venture was not per se illegal price fixing. The common thread in both cases was that an analysis of the economic effects of the practices did not make it clear that the rule of reason would condemn the practice.
While one can find allegations of literal “fixing” of “prices” in this case, the alleged behavior is functionally different from the price-fixing that courts have condemned as illegal per se. Plaintiffs fail to allege de
The majority, citing a well-respected treatise by Professors Areeda and Hoven-kamp, plausibly assert that if defendants successfully colluded to buy at a lower price, potential anticompetitive harm would occur if the buyers were able to drive the buying price below the price that would exist in competitive equilibrium. If buyers successfully fix sub-competitive prices in this way, transactions that would have occurred if buyers and sellers were subject to competitive conditions do not occur. Sellers lose sales opportunities (the upstream decrease in output Areeda and Hovenkamp identify) and, potentially, buyers sell fewer goods (the downstream decrease in output that Areeda and Hoven-kamp describe).
But that is not what we have here. Assuming that defendants succeeded in manipulating the NCE so as to cause the CDFA to set a lower price support, we must remember that all this means is that there is now a lower floor — a lower price below which sellers are restrained from making deals. The effect — contrary to the paradigm case in which market participants meddle with prices — is simply to allow deals to be made over a broader range of potential prices. The existence of a new, lower price floor does not mandate that any sellers or buyers make deals at or near the new floor. Absent some other alleged restraint on the market, the actual price will be determined by sellers and buyers acting independently of their respective competitors. With the lower price floor, the end result is a broader scope for independent deal-making and the free play of market forces.
This negative assessment of the alleged anti-competitive consequences further leads to the conclusion that plaintiffs face another obstacle, one that is fatal to their claim. Notably, plaintiffs erroneously assert that they need not plead an antitrust injury when they allege a per se violation. The Supreme Court resolved this issue a decade ago in Atlantic Richfield Company v. USA Petroleum Company,
The antitrust injury requirement serves an important function. As the Supreme Court explained, the requirement “ensures that the harm claimed by the plaintiff cor
[P]rocompetitive or efficiency-enhancing aspects of practices that nominally violate the antitrust laws may cause serious harm to individuals, but this kind of harm is the essence of competition and should play no role in the definition of antitrust damages.
Id. at 344,
Nothing in recent California antitrust jurisprudence eliminates the antitrust injury requirement. In Cellular Plus, the court observed that the scope of the requirement was broader than under the Sherman Act, but relied on the definition in Rolling, which in turn cited the Supreme Court’s decision in Brunswick.
Indeed, in cases since Cellular Plus, courts have affirmed California’s continued reliance on federal law for interpretive guidance. See, e.g., Freeman v. San Diego Ass’n of Realtors,
Following Brunsiuidc, plaintiffs have been required to prove “injury of the type the antitrust laws were intended to prevent and that flows from that which makes defendants’ acts unlawful.”
By alleging that the milk price supports would have been higher in the absence of the defendants’ manipulation of the NCE, plaintiffs acknowledge that California’s milk prices are not set in a competitive market. Over four decades ago, the United States Department of Agriculture explained the reasoning behind milk support prices, applicable to this day:
to control price cutting and “destructive” competition, to protect against producer price cuts and losses caused by dealers’ bankruptcies; to protect a state’s producers and distributors against competition from low-priced out-of-state milk, to maintain distributor margins that will enable the industry to pay reasonable prices to producers; to prevent price manipulation by distributors for the purpose of strengthening their competitive position, to check rebates and other advantages given customers with exceptional bargaining powers and to make determination of resale prices public rather than a matter for secret understanding.
See L.J. (Bees) Butler, “Making Sense of California Milk Standards and Prices,” 3 Agricultural and Resource Economics Update 3, 5 (Winter 2000), quoting USDA-AMS, Report No. 98 (1955). The public policy behind price supports is distinctly non competitive in nature. See also Knudsen Creamery,
Although not so alleged in their complaint, plaintiffs characterize their claims as involving either a “buyers’ cartel”
The anti-competitive harm plaintiffs have alleged, namely, lowering of the milk price floor, will have one of two effects, neither of which is “anti-competitive.” If defendants managed to force the price floor down lower than it otherwise would be but that level was still above the price that would exist in a competitive market without any price supports, the lower price floor will simply allow mutually-beneficial transactions that would not have occurred under the higher price floor. The lower price floor actually opens the market up more to the forces of competition.
The second possibility is that the price floor resulting from defendants’ conduct will be beloiu competitive equilibrium. There still will be no harm to competition precisely because only a price floor is at issue. Milk producers still are permitted to sell at prices above the floor. And without an actual buyer cartel, the price that results should be the price set at competitive equilibrium. After all, milk producers will not sell below cost just because the law permits them to do so.
In sum, plaintiffs have not alleged price-fixing conduct by defendants that should properly be analyzed as per se violations. Moreover, even granting that defendants succeeded in manipulating the price of cheese on the NCE and the milk pricing formula in California, plaintiffs have offered no viable theory or relevant authority to explain how lowering the price floor would restrain competitive forces. Accordingly, I would affirm the district court’s order.
. My conclusion regarding the first claim dictates the same result on plaintiffs’ second claim for relief for violation of California’s unfair competition law, Bus. & Prof.Code §§ 17200 et seq. As set forth below, plaintiffs did not allege any anti-competitive effect of defendants’ alleged collusion. Plaintiffs remained free to sell their milk at any price above the support level. The behavior that plaintiffs allege caused the California Department of Food and Agriculture (“CDFA”) to set a lower price,floor had the effect of increasing the potential number of mutually beneficial transactions between milk buyers and sellers. Under Cel-Tech Communications, Inc. v. Los Angeles Cellular Telephone Company,
. Because plaintiffs failed to allege any anti-competitive effects of defendants' conduct, I do not address defendants’ arguments on the "filed-rate doctrine” (discussed in part V.D. of the majority's opinion) and the Commerce Clause (discussed in part V.E.).
. "The general authority of the Director of Agriculture to fix minimum prices under the Milk Control Act ... has been considered and upheld.” Challenge Cream & Butter Ass’n v.
. "On December 30, 1976, the Director issued orders suspending minimum retail milk price regulations throughout the state.” Id. at 842,
. Plaintiffs requested an opportunity to re-plead under the “rule of reason/’ although they offered no specifics as to their ability to do so.
. The Court noted that it had previously held that plaintiffs still had to show antitrust injury in a case involving horizontal price fixing.
. This type of cartel exists when members of the cartel force suppliers to charge them prices below the competitive level. See Vogel v. American Society of Appraisers,
. The supra-competitive price maintained by the price supports would restrain milk producers from selling milk to willing buyers at prices that still would be above marginal cost. The lowering of that supra-competitive price would permit those transactions, which otherwise would not occur.
