Plаintiff appeals from the summary judgment granted to defendant. The district court held that plaintiff lacked standing to bring this antitrust action against the defendant. We affirm on the ground that the plaintiff has failed to demonstrate an antitrust injury and therefore cannot obtain damages or an injunction.
I. STATEMENT OF CASE AND FACTS
The defendant, Lamaur Inc., is a Minneapolis, Minnesota, manufacturer of beauty prоducts. Lamaur has approximately 150 authorized distributors who sell the products as either full-service or cash-and-carry operations. Full-service dealers maintain field salespersons to advertise and sell the products to beauty salons. Cash-and-carry dealers typically sell the products through flyer advertising and sell primarily to small salons, retailers or unаuthorized distributors. Lamaur prefers the full-service dealers because they provide more services to the clients and invest in advertising and active promotion of Lamaur’s product. The plaintiff, Local Beauty Supply (Local), was a distributor of Lamaur products from 1956 to September 19, 1980, with its principal place of business in Castleton, Indiana. Over that time Loсal became more and more a cash-and-carry operation.
In 1973 Lamaur entered into a Lamaur distributor agreement (LDA) with its dealers. The agreement contained three pertinent provisions. First, the distributors agreed not to sell restricted-use products (such as permanent waves and bleaches) to non-salon customers without consent from Lamaur. Second, the agreement provided that distributors who failed to provide full service and advertising would remit to Lamaur 15% of the wholesale price as a functional discount. Third, the distributors agreed to submit to auditing by Lamaur in order to ensure compliance with the previous two provisions. If a distributor breached the agreement, Lamaur could cancel the LDA without priоr notice. Local was a signatory to both the 1973 and 1977 LDA’s.
Local contends that Lamaur used the audit and functional discount provisions of the LDA to facilitate a price maintenance scheme in violation of § 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. Local maintains that it was terminated by Lamaur in order to pacify distributors complaining of Local’s sub-jobbing. As damages, Local sеeks its lost profits from its inability to sell Lamaur products. Local argues that distributors in Chicago were complaining of its sales to Victory Bee (Bee), a retail discounter in Hillside, Illinois. Local alleges that in order to keep Bee from undercutting the distributors, Lamaur decided to stop selling to its supplier, Local. When Lamaur requested an audit of Local, Local refused, claiming the audits were a ruse, designed to intimidate Local (and other distributors) into stopping sales to Bee. Because Local would not submit to this audit, it was terminated. Thus, argues Local, its termination was the direct result of an unlawful price-fixing scheme.- Local seeks treble damages under § 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15, and injunctive relief pursuant to § 16 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 26.
Lоcal filed a four-count complaint against Lamaur. Count I charged a violation of § 1 of the Sherman Act and sought ten million dollars in damages but trebled under § 4 of the Clayton Act; Count II alleged a post-termination boycott in violation of the same provision; Count III charged violations of §§ 2(d) and 2(e) of the Robinson-Patman Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 13(d) and 13(e); and Count IV claimed injunctive *1200 or $50,000 per month monetary relief. 1 Counts I, III and IV wеre dismissed for lack of standing; Count II was dismissed by agreement of the parties to allow entry of final judgment. Local bases its appeal on Counts I and IV.
II. ANTITRUST INJURY
The district court granted summary judgment to the defendant, holding that under the antitrust injury standards of
Associated General Contractors v. California St. Council of Carpenters,
A. Summary Judgment
The district court judge granted summary judgment to defendant Lamaur on plaintiff’s Sherman Act § 1 antitrust claim (Count I) and Clayton Act § 4 damаge or Clayton Act § 16 injunctive claim (Count IV) on standing grounds. Therefore, we must assume for purposes of appeal that Local can prove an antitrust violation and decide only whether Local may proceed to present evidence. We of course take Local’s allegations as true.
Lupia v. Stella D’Oro Biscuit Co.,
B. The Clayton Act
Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15, defines the class of persons who may maintain private damagе actions under the antitrust laws. The statute reads very broadly, stating that “any person who shall be injured ... by reason of anything forbidden in the antitrust laws may sue____” However, the courts have not interpreted § 4 to be as expansive as its literal language suggests. In
Associated General,
C. “Standing” Requirement
In
In re Industrial Gas Antitrust Litigation (Bichan),
The issue of antitrust standing has become somewhat confused. Some courts have considered “antitrust injury” as an additional element of standing,
e.g., John Lenore & Co. v. Olympia Brewing Co.,
D. “Antitrust Injury” Requirement
In
Brunswick v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat Inc.,
In
Brunswick,
the plaintiffs brought an action under § 7 of the Clayton Act complaining that the defendant Brunswick’s acquisition of a rival bowling alley would tend to lessen competition because of Brunswick’s “deep pocket.” The damages claimed were lost profits that would have been made had the competitors been al
*1202
lowed to go out of business. The Court found that what the plaintiffs were really complaining about was increased competition and their inability to profit from increased concentration of the market.
Id.
at 488,
The Supreme Court recently reaffirmed the
Brunswick
requirement in
Associated General,
The damages claimed by Local do not present the type of injury that the antitrust laws were intended to remedy. In its complaint, Local attempts to recover lost profits from sales of Lamaur products. Local claims that its termination was a result of Lamaur’s desire to maintain prices and pacify local distributors because Local was undercutting the fixed prices. Local was admittedly sub-jobbing. Sub-jobbing is selling at low prices to discounters who then resell to the consumers. In this way Local could avoid additional costs of advertising and promotion and “free ride” off of the other full-service distributors’ efforts. 2 Thus Local’s market (discounters) and profits were a direct result of the maintained prices. Locаl was profiting from the antitrust violation itself.
As in
Brunswick,
the award of damages or an injunction here would be “inimical to the purpose of these [antitrust] laws.”
Several decisions addressing this issue support our decision. In
Ohio-Sealy Mattress Mfg. Co. v. Sealy, Inc.,
Similarly, in
W. Goebel Porzellanfabrik v. Action Industries (Goebel),
Indeed, [Action] may actually have been benefited by Goebel’s allegedly restrictive trade practices. Assuming that all of the facts in [Action’s] counterclaim are true, the prices of Hummel figures were artificially inflated to the point where it was possible for [Action] to purchase the figures in Europe, ship them to the United States and ... still undersell Goebel distributors and make a profit.
Thus, in the absence of the complained practices, [Action] would never have had the financial attraction to import Hummel figures.
Id.
at 766. Thus the Southern District of New York Court recоgnized the same rule that we do here, viz.: damages based on profits made by a plaintiff because of the existence of an antitrust violation are not recoverable. In
Goebel,
as here, the plaintiffs’ market and profits were attributable to the violation of which they complained. This does not fit with the purpose of the antitrust laws which is to “limit the availability of § 4 reliеf only to those individuals whose protection is the fundamental purpose of the antitrust laws.”
In re Multidistrict Vehicle Air Pollution M.D.L. No. 31,
*1204 E. Injunctive Relief
Plaintiff also seeks injunctive relief, requesting that the distributorship agreement be declared a violation of the antitrust laws and that Lamaur be enjoined from carrying out its price-fixing conspiracy. See supra note 1. Section 16 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 26, provides for private equitable relief. The issue we must address is whether the Brunswick antitrust injury requirement applies to § 16 of the Clayton Act.
The standing requirements for § 16 relief have been considered less stringent than for § 4 relief, because § 16 is viewed as a more adaptable tool for enforcing the antitrust laws.
Hawaii v. Standard Oil Co.,
However, very few courts have addressed § 16 in light of
Brunswick.
Despite the broader application of standing requirements under § 16, there is reason for extending the “antitrust injury” requirement of
Brunswick
to § 16 claims. In
Brunswick
the Supreme Court found the need for antitrust injury in the § 4 language requiring injury “by reason of anything forbidden in the antitrust laws.”
We agree with the above decisions of the Third and Eighth Circuits. A plaintiff seeking equitable relief under § 16 of the Clayton Act should be no less representative of the interests of the antitrust “victims” than those seeking damages under § 4. See
Shoenkopf
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, we affirm the summary judgment granted to defendant Lamaur by the district court.
Notes
. Plaintiff failed to cite either § 16 or § 4 of the Clayton Act in Count IV of its complaint. But since it seeks treble damages and injunctivе relief for violations of the antitrust laws we may . assume for purposes of appeal from summary judgment that it had done so.
. The validity and legality of manufacturers’ prevention of free riding by requiring payments or advertising and accounting of sales in territories has been settled by the Supreme Court in
Monsanto,
. Ohio also claimed as damages $170,000 in "pass-over payments” made to Sealy in furtherance of the antitrust violation. We need not address the correctness of the holding that the mix of damages was sufficient to meet the Brunswick test because here the plaintiff has failed to show any compensable antitrust injury.
