This appeal presents important questions regarding the extraterritorial reach of U.S. antitrust law. The plaintiff, a Taiwanese electronics manufacturing company with facilities in China, alleges that the defendants, a group of five competing electronics firms, have attempted to leverage their ownership of certain key patents to gain control of a new technological standard for USB connectors and, by extension, to gain monopoly power over the entire USB connector industry. In considering whether these allegations suffice to state a viable claim under the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2, we must decide whether the restrictions Congress has imposed on antitrust claims based on foreign conduct under the Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act (“FTAIA”), 15 U.S.C. § 6a, are jurisdictional in nature; whether the defendants in this case have waived the requirements of the FTAIA by contract; whether the defendants’ alleged anticompetitive conduct has a “direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect” on U.S. domestic or import commerce under the FTAIA, id. § 6a(l); and whether any such effect “gives rise to” the plaintiffs claims, id. § 6a(2).
We hold that, under the principles articulated in a line of recent Supreme Court decisions extending from Arbaugh v. Y & H Corp.,
We further hold that foreign anticom-petitive conduct can have a statutorily required “direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect” on U.S. domestic or import commerce even if the effect does not follow as an immediate consequence of the defendant’s conduct, so long as there is a reasonably proximate causal nexus between the conduct and the effect. We thus reject the interpretation of “direct ... effect” advanced by the Ninth Circuit in United States v. LSL Biotechnologies,
We need not decide, however, whether the plaintiff here has plausibly alleged the requisite “direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect” under the proper standard. That is because the FTAIA contains a second limitation, under which the aforementioned domestic effect must “give[] rise to” the plaintiffs claim. 15 U.S.C. § 6a(2). Here, regardless of what effect the defendants’ conduct has on U.S. domestic or import commerce, any such effect did not “give[ ] rise to” the plaintiffs claim. To the contrary, in the causal chain the plaintiff alleges, the plaintiffs exclusion from the relevant market actually precedes the alleged domestic effect.
BACKGROUND
1. Factual Background,
The pertinent facts, resolving all ambiguities and drawing all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs favor, are as follows.
Plaintiff-Appellant Lotes Co., Ltd. (“Lotes”) is a Taiwanese corporation specializing in the design and manufacture of electronic components for notebook computers, including Universal Serial Bus (“USB”) connectors. USB connectors are used primarily to connect computer peripherals, such as printers, keyboards, and external hard drives, to personal computers, smart phones, and other electronic devices. USB connectors are among the most successful connéctors in the history of personal computing, having achieved near-universal adoption from device and peripheral makers.
Lotes manufactures USB connectors in factories located in China. From there, it typically sells the connectors to other Taiwanese firms with facilities in China known as Original Design Manufacturers (“ODMs”). ODMs make and assemble computer products incorporating USB connectors for many well-known computer brands, such as Acer, Dell, HP, and Apple. Those name-brand computer products, in turn, make their way into the hands of consumers and businesses around the world, including in the United States. “According to industry sources and press reports, as of 2011[,] roughly 94% of global notebook computers were assembled by a small number of Taiwanese vendors, primarily [ODMs] maintaining production facilities in China.” J.A. 36.
The defendants are a group of companies that compete with Lotes in making and selling USB connectors. They also are involved in making, assembling, and distributing electronic components and devices that incorporate USB connectors. Defendant-Appellee Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd. (“Hon Hai”) is a Taiwanese corporation that is one of the world’s largest manufacturers of electronic components, including USB connectors. Defendant-Appellee Foxconn International Holdings, Ltd. is a Cayman Islands corporation specializing in the design and manufacture of components for consumer electronics products, and is one of the largest exporters from China. Defendant-Appel-lee Foxconn International, Inc. is a California corporation that receives products from other Foxconn companies for distribution within the United States. Defen-dani>-Appellee Foxconn Electronics, Inc. is another California corporation that designs and manufactures components for consumer electronics. Defendant Foxconn (Kun-shan) Computer Connector Co., Ltd. (“Foxconn Kunshan”) is a Chinese ODM.
The dispute in this case arises out of the development of the latest industry standard for USB connectors, known as USB 3.0. This standard represents a major technological advance over prior standards, including a significant increase in data transmission speeds. When Lotes filed its complaint in this case in late 2012, USB 3.0 connectors were expected to re
Common technological standards like USB 3.0 carry pro-competitive benefits and anticompetitive risks. On the pro-competitive side, common standards enable different firms to produce products that are compatible with one another, promoting innovation and competition. Because standards-compliant products can interop-erate with many other products, they can be more valuable, providing greater benefits to consumers and simulating increased investment from manufacturers. Standardized products also reduce the need for customization, which facilitates economies of scale and enables downstream manufacturers to switch suppliers more easily. These effects promote price competition and drive down costs.
At the same time, “[t]here is no doubt that the members of [standard-setting] associations often have economic incentives to restrain competition and that the product standards set by such associations have a serious potential for anticompetitive harm.” Allied Tube & Conduit Corp. v. Indian Head, Inc.,
[A standard-setting organization] may complete its lengthy process of evaluating technologies and adopting a new standard, only to discover that certain technologies essential to implementing the standard are patented. When this occurs, the patent holder is in a position to “hold up” industry participants from implementing the standard. Industry participants who have invested significant resources developing products and technologies that conform to the standard will find it prohibitively expensive to abandon their investment and switch to another standard. They will have become “locked in” to the standard. In this unique position of bargaining power, the patent holder may be able to extract supracompetitive royalties from the industry participants.
Broadcom Corp. v. Qualcomm Inc.,
To guard against these risks, standard-setting organizations restrain the behavior of parties participating in the standard by contract. Of particular relevance here, standard-setting organizations typically secure agreements wherein parties who contribute proprietary technology to the standard promise to license that technology on reasonable and nondiscriminatory (“RAND”) terms. Absent such an agreement, the standard-setting organization will omit the technology in question from the standard. RAND licenses are thus part of a quid pro quo, representing the consideration contributing parties give to standard-setting organizations in exchange for the competitive benefits they will receive from gaining industry-wide acceptance of their preferred technologies.
The standard-setting organization responsible for developing standards for USB connectors is the USB Implemented Forum, Inc. (“USB-IF”), a non-profit organization founded by Intel in 1995. To protect against anticompetitive risks, the USB-IF required parties contributing to the USB 3.0 standard to sign the USB 3.0 Contributors Agreement (the “Contributors Agreement”). Lotes and the defendants have signed this agreement. Lotes and the defendants also signed USB 3.0 Adopters Agreement within the required
As relevant here, paragraph 3.4 of the Contributors Agreement, entitled “Limited Patent Licensing Obligations in Contributions,” obligates “Contributor[s]” to grant to any “Adopter” a “non-exclusive worldwide license under any Necessary Claim of a patent or patent application ... on a royalty-free basis and under otherwise reasonable and nondiscriminatory (‘RAND-Zero’) terms.... ” J.A. 79 (emphasis omitted). Under this provision, the defendants are obligated to provide RAND-Zero licenses to Lotes for all patent claims needed to practice the USB 3.0 standard.
In addition to this RAND-Zero provision, the Contributors Agreement also contains other provisions designed to prevent the USB-IF from becoming a forum for antitrust violations. Paragraph 2 provides in pertinent part:
Contributor[s] ... understand that in certain lines of business they are or may be direct competitors and that it is imperative that they and their representatives act in a manner which does not violate any state, federal or international antitrust laws and regulations. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, Contributor^] ... acknowledge that this Agreement prohibits any communications regarding ... exclusion of competitors or any other topic that may be construed as a violation of antitrust laws.
J.A. 78. Similarly, paragraph 6.12 provides: “Anything in this Agreement to the contrary notwithstanding, the obligations of the parties hereto shall be subject to all laws, present and future, of any government having jurisdiction over the parties hereto....” J.A. 81. The agreement also contains a New York choice-of-law clause, as well as an exclusive choice-of-forum clause providing that “all disputes arising in any way out of this Agreement shall be heard exclusively in, and all parties irrevocably consent to jurisdiction and venue in, the state and Federal courts of New York, New York.” J.A. 81.
The crux of Lotes’s complaint is its claim that the defendants have brazenly flouted their obligations under the Contributors Agreement to provide RAND-Zero licenses to adopters of the USB 3.0 standard. To begin with, Lotes alleges that “Hon Hai and Foxconn have contacted the customers and distributors of Lotes to allege that they have the sole patent rights on USB 3.0 connectors and would sue them if they did not buy from Fox-conn.” J.A. 49-50. Hon Hai and Foxconn have also refused to provide RAND-Zero licenses to other manufacturers similarly situated to Lotes “and have sent out warning letters threatening those manufacturers with patent litigation.” J.A. 50.
Foxconn has also allegedly disseminated its plans to monopolize the USB connector industry through the press. In a February 23, 2010 article, a Taiwanese trade press publication reported that Foxconn was “the first to obtain patents related to USB 3.0 products,” which would enable it “initially [to] enjoy a monopolistic position.” J.A. 106. The article also indicated — ominously, according to Lotes — that Foxconn would “definitely take note of whether its competitors’ USB 3.0 products infringe its patents.” Id.
Despite these worrisome signs, Lotes attempted to secure a RAND-Zero license from Hon Hai. On March 25, 2011, at Hon Hai’s request, Lotes executed and returned a non-disclosure agreement to enable licensing negotiations to proceed. On April 20, 2011, Hon Hai’s U.S. outside counsel informed Lotes that it was in the process of developing licensing agree
On February 10, 2012, in an effort to quell concern about Hon Hai and Fox-conn’s commitment to their licensing obligations, in-house counsel for Foxconn Electronics sent a letter, on Hon Hai letterhead, to the USB-IF’s President and Chief Operating Officer. The letter stated that Hon Hai and Foxconn were “pleased to be active contributors of the USB 3.0 project and early signers of the USB Contributors Agreement.” J.A. 47. The letter then “unequivocally affirm[ed]” Fox-conn’s commitment to license patent claims necessary to practice the USB 3.0 standard on RAND-Zero terms as required by the Contributors Agreement. Id. In addition, the letter also “unequivocally affirm[ed]” that Foxconn would provide RAND licenses for other intellectual property that is not strictly necessary to practice the USB 3.0 standard but that would be required to practice certain “optional features.” Id.
These assurances notwithstanding, on July 9, 2012, Foxconn Kunshan filed patent infringement suits in China against two Chinese subsidiaries of Lotes. In their prayers for relief, these suits request orders enjoining two key Lotes factories from making and selling certain USB 3.0 connectors, as well as orders for the destruction of all existing infringing inventory and specialized manufacturing equipment. The patents asserted in these suits are jointly owned by Foxconn Kunshan and Hon Hai, and are derived from earlier patents filed in the United States. According to Lotes, the asserted claims of these two patents fall within the defendants’ licensing obligations under the Contributors Agreement, and therefore must be licensed to Lotes on RAND-Zero terms.
Lotes alleges that the defendants’ actions have “resulted in confusion and uncertainty that has complicated and endangered all of Lotes’[s] existing and prospective business relationships.” J.A. 57. If allowed to continue, the defendants’ scheme will allegedly force Lotes to close its factories, eliminate it as a major competitor, and enable the defendants to become the dominant supplier in the market for USB 3.0 connectors. Moreover, other firms will take note of Lotes’s fate, and thus the defendants’ “willingness to bring suit against Lotes in contravention of the USB-IF RAND-Zero terms has an in terrorem effect capable of curbing competitive manufacture ... across the full range of products incorporating USB 3.0 connectors.” J.A. 58.
Given the central role Chinese manufacturing plays in the global electronics supply chain, moreover, Lotes alleges that curbing competition in China will have downstream effects worldwide, including in the United States. In Lotes’s view, because any price increases in USB 3.0 connectors will “inevitably” be passed on through each stage in the production process to consumers in the United States, J.A. 55, “[ajnything that affects the price, quantity, or competitive nature of the production market for USB 3.0 connectors will ... have a direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect on U.S. commerce,” J.A. 48. In this way, Lotes contends that its lost sales and potential elimination as a competitor in China will “damage competition, increase prices, and harm consumers in the United States.” J.A. 55.
Lotes filed suit against the defendants on October 4, 2012. On December 21, 2012, Lotes filed the operative First Amended Complaint, which asserts federal claims for violations of sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2, and state-law claims for breach of contract, promissory estoppel, tortious interference with contracts and prospective business relations, a declaration of waiver, and a declaration of a license for all necessary patent claims. On January 11, 2013, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which Lotes duly opposed.
On May 14, 2013, the district court issued an Opinion and Order dismissing the First Amended Complaint in its entirety with prejudice under Rule 12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Following this Court’s decision in Filetech,
The clerk entered final judgment on May 20, 2013. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
“When reviewing the dismissal of a complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, we review factual findings for clear error and legal conclusions de novo, accepting all material facts alleged in the complaint as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs favor.” Liranzo v. United States,
I. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
As a threshold matter, we must address whether the limitations on antitrust claims set forth in the FTAIA are jurisdictional or substantive.
*404 Sections 1 to 7 of this title shall not apply to conduct involving trade or commerce (other than import trade or import commerce) with foreign nations unless—
(1) such conduct has a direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect—
(A) on trade or commerce which is not trade or commerce with foreign nations, or on import trade or import commerce with foreign nations; or
(B) on export trade or export commerce with foreign nations, of a person engaged in such trade or commerce in the United States; and
(2) such effect gives rise to a claim under the provisions of sections 1 to 7 of this title, other than this section.
If sections 1 to 7 of this title apply to such conduct only because of the operation of paragraph (1)(B), then sections 1 to 7 of this title shall apply to such conduct only for injury to export business in the United States.
15 U.S.C. § 6a.
This technical language initially lays down a general rule placing all (nonim-port) activity involving foreign commerce outside the Sherman Act’s reach. It then brings such conduct back within the Sherman Act’s reach provided that the conduct both (1) sufficiently affects American commerce, ie., it has a “direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect” on American domestic, import, or (certain) export commerce, and (2) has an effect of a kind that antitrust law considers harmful, ie., the “effect” must “giv[e] rise to a [Sherman Act] claim.”
F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. v. Empagran S.A.,
Congress enacted this statute with two principal purposes in mind. First, the statute seeks to boost American exports by “mak[ing] clear to American exporters (and to firms doing business abroad) that the Sherman Act does not prevent them from entering into business arrangements (say, joint-selling arrangements), however anticompetitive, as long as those arrangements adversely affect only foreign markets.” Empagran,
In Filetech, this Court held that the FTAIA’s limitations on antitrust claims involving foreign commerce are jurisdictional. See Filetech,
In Arbaugh, the Supreme Court confronted the question of whether a particular requirement in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 affects federal courts’ subject matter jurisdiction or is instead a substantive element of a claim on the merits. See
If the Legislature clearly states that a threshold limitation on a statute’s scope shall count as jurisdictional, then courts and litigants will be duly instructed and will not be left to wrestle with the issue. But when Congress does not rank a statutory limitation on coverage as jurisdictional, courts should treat the restriction as nonjurisdictional in character.
Id. at 515-16,
In general, a panel of this Court is “bound by the decisions of prior panels until such time as they are overruled either by an en banc panel of our Court or by the Supreme Court.” In re Zarnel,
Applying the teaching of the Arbaugh line of cases, we have little difficulty concluding that the requirements of the FTAIA go to the merits of an antitrust claim rather than to subject matter jurisdiction. Nothing in the statute “speak[s] in jurisdictional terms or refer[s] in any way to the jurisdiction of the district courts.” Arbaugh,
In urging a contrary conclusion, the defendants point to the structure of the Sherman Act, certain statements in the FTAIA’s legislative history, principles of international comity, and dicta from the Supreme Court’s decision interpreting the FTAIA in Empagran. None of these considerations is sufficient to overcome the teaching of Arbaugh and the clear text of the statute.
With respect to statutory structure, the defendants note that the FTAIA imposes a unique, separately codified threshold requirement on antitrust claims involving foreign conduct. Unlike claims involving purely domestic conduct, the FTAIA bars claims based on foreign conduct from proceeding unless the foreign conduct has a cognizable effect on the United States. Only if that prerequisite is satisfied may the plaintiff pursue a claim “under the provisions of section 1 to 7 of [the Sherman Act], other than [the FTAIA].” 15 U.S.C. § 6a(2).
But it is hardly uncommon for Congress to impose threshold requirements or to codify those requirements in separate provisions. In the Copyright Act, for exam-pie, the threshold requirement for a plaintiff to register his or her copyright before filing an infringement action is codified at 17 U.S.C. § 411(a), separately from the general provisions governing infringement claims at 17 U.S.C. §§ 501-505. But that statutory structure did not prevent the Supreme Court in Reed from finding the registration requirement nonjurisdictional. See Reed, 559 U.S. at 160-66, 130 S.Ct. 1237. Here, the FTAIA unmistakably imposes unique threshold requirements on antitrust claims involving foreign conduct, but nothing in the statute even suggests— much less “clearly states,” Arbaugh,
The defendants’ reliance on the FTAIA’s legislative history fares no better. The statutory text plainly uses “the language of elements, not jurisdiction,” Minn-Chem,
Furthermore, while the defendants point out that portions of the legislative history employ jurisdictional language, other portions speak in merits terms.
Similarly unpersuasive is the defendants’ invocation of the canon of statutory interpretation whereby courts “ordinarily construe[ ] ambiguous statutes to avoid unreasonable interference with the sovereign authority of other nations.” Empagran,
Finally, the defendants point to two arguably jurisdictional statements from the Supreme Court’s decision in Empagran. First, the Court quoted a statement from the FTAIA’s legislative history to the effect that “there should be no American antitrust jurisdiction absent a direct, substantial and reasonably foreseeable effect on domestic commerce or a domestic competitor.”
But again, “^jurisdiction ... is a word of many, too many meanings.” Arbaugh,
Accordingly, notwithstanding our contrary prior decision in Filetech, we are compelled under Arbaugh and its progeny to conclude that the requirements of the FTAIA are substantive and nonjurisdic-tional.
II. Waiver of the FTAIA
Because we hold the requirements of the FTAIA to be nonjurisdictional, we must address Lotes’s argument that the defendants have waived those requirements by contract in this case.
In this regard, Lotes points to five provisions of the Contributors Agreement. First, paragraph 2 recites the contributors’ understanding “that it is imperative that they and their representatives act in a manner which does not violate any state, federal or international antitrust laws and regulations.” J.A. 78. Second, this paragraph also “prohibits any communications regarding ... exclusion of competitors or any other topic that may be construed as a violation of antitrust laws.” Id. Third, paragraph 6.6 provides that the Agreement is to be “construed and controlled” by New York law. J.A. 81. Fourth, paragraph 6.7 provides that “all disputes arising in any way out of this Agreement shall be heard in, and all parties irrevocably consent to jurisdiction and venue in, the state and Federal courts of New York, New York.” Id. And finally, paragraph 6.12 provides that “the obligations of the parties hereto shall be subject to all laws, present and future, of any government having jurisdiction over the parties hereto.” Id. According to Lotes, these provisions establish that the defendants “have agreed to subject their conduct to U.S. antitrust scrutiny.” Appellant’s Br. at 25.
There are two fundamental problems with this argument. First and foremost, Lotes did not raise this issue before the district court, and “[i]t is a well-established general rule that an appellate court will not consider an issue raised for the first time on appeal.” Bogle-Assegai v. Connecticut,
Second, even if we were to exercise our discretion to consider this forfeited issue, see id., Lotes’s argument is meritless. Even assuming arguendo that the substantive requirements of the FTAIA are waiva-ble, but see New York v. Hill,
III. “Direct, Stibstantial, and Reasonably Foreseeable Effect” under the FTAIA
We now turn to the issue of whether Lotes has plausibly alleged that the defendants’ anticompetitive conduct has a “direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect” on U.S. domestic or import commerce under the FTAIA. The district court answered this question in the negative. Lotes and amici contend that the district court erred by misinterpreting the FTAIA and applying the wrong legal standard. We agree.
In dismissing Lotes’s antitrust claims for failure to satisfy the FTAIA’s domestic effects exception, the district court relied heavily on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in LSL, which construed the statutory requirement of a “direct ... effect.” See LSL,
The district court also expressed doubts about the substantiality of any domestic effects. Distinguishing a decision of the Northern District of California in In re TFT-LCD (Flat Panel) Antitrust Litigation,
In applying the interpretation of “direct ... effect” set forth in LSL, whereby an effect is “direct” if it follows as an immediate consequence, the district court appears not to have considered the alternative approach advocated by the United States and the FTC and adopted by the Seventh Circuit in its en banc decision in Minm-Chem. Under that approach, “the term ‘direct’ means only ‘a reasonably proximate causal nexus.’ ” Minn-Chem,
The court in LSL relied on two interpretive sources for its contrary holding. First, it quoted Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, which defines “direct” as “proceeding from one point to another in time or space without deviation or interruption.” LSL,
The court in LSL also relied upon the Supreme Court’s interpretation of a “nearly identical term” in the FSIA in Weltover. LSL,
Here, both the purpose and the language of the FSIA and FTAIA differ in critical respects. With respect to purpose, the FSIA codifies foreign nations’ sovereign immunity from suit, and “provides the sole basis for obtaining jurisdiction over a foreign state in the courts of this country.” Argentine Republic v. Amerada Hess Shipping Corp.,
Textually, moreover, Weltover construed the FSIA’s phrase “direct effect,” while the FTAIA contains the fuller phrase “direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect.” Even more to the point, the Supreme Court in Weltover arrived at its understanding of “direct effect” in the FSIA only after refusing to import from the statute’s legislative history any notion that an effect is “direct” only if it is also both “substantial” and “foreseeable.” See Weltover,
This textual difference between the FSIA and FTAIA is critically important. As Minn-Chem succinctly explains,
No one needs to read the words “substantial” and “foreseeable” into the FTAIA. Congress put them there, and in so doing, it signaled that the word “direct” used along with them had to be interpreted as part of an integrated phrase. Superimposing the idea of “immediate consequence” on top of the full phrase results in a stricter test than the complete text of the statute can bear.
Interpreting “direct” to require only a reasonably proximate causal nexus, by contrast, avoids these problems while still addressing antitrust law’s classic aversion to remote injuries. Indeed, “directness” is one of the traditional formulations courts have used to talk about the common-law concept of proximate causation. See, e.g., Holmes v. Sec. Investor Prot. Corp., 503
Of course, proximate causation is a notoriously slippery doctrine. “In a philosophical sense, the consequences of an act go forward to eternity, and the causes of an event go back to the dawn of human events, and beyond.” CSX Transp., Inc. v. McBride, — U.S. -,
While Minn-Chem’s “reasonably proximate causal nexus” standard incorporates all of this useful judicial experience, LSL’s “immediate consequence” standard focuses narrowly on a single factor — the spatial and temporal separation between the defendant’s conduct and the relevant effect. Herein lies the error of the decision below, which placed near-dispositive weight on the fact that USB 3.0 connectors are manufactured and assembled into finished computer products “in China ” before being sold in the United States. J.A. 264. This kind of complex manufacturing process is increasingly common in our modern global economy, and antitrust law has long recognized that anticompetitive injuries can be transmitted through multi-layered supply chains. Indeed, the Supreme Court has held that claims by indirect purchasers are “consistent with the broad purposes of the federal antitrust laws: deterring anticompetitive conduct and ensuring the compensation of victims of that
There is nothing inherent in the nature of outsourcing or international supply-chains that necessarily prevents the transmission of anticompetitive harms or renders any and all domestic effects imper-missibly remote and indirect. Indeed, given the important role that American firms and consumers play in the global economy, we expect that some perpetrators will design foreign anticompetitive schemes for the very purpose of causing harmful downstream effects in the United States. Whether the causal nexus between foreign conduct and a domestic effect is sufficiently “direct” under the FTAIA in a particular case will depend on many factors, including the structure of the market and the nature of the commercial relationships at each link in the causal chain. Courts confronting claims under the FTAIA will have to consider all of the relevant facts, using all of the traditional tools courts have used to analyze questions of proximate causation.
In this case, however, we need not decide the rather difficult question of whether the defendants’ foreign anticompetitive conduct has a “direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect” on U.S. domestic or’ import commerce, as that phrase is properly understood. That is because even assuming that Lotes has plausibly alleged a domestic effect, that effect did not “give[] Use to” Lotes’s claims. 15 U.S.C. § 6a(2).
TV. “Gives Rise to a Claim” under the FTAIA
It is well settled that this Court “may affirm on any basis for which there is sufficient support in the record, including grounds not relied on by the district court.” Bruh v. Bessemer Venture Partners III L.P.,
To review the statutory framework, the FTAIA generally excludes wholly foreign conduct from the reach of the Sherman Act, but brings such conduct back within the statute’s scope where two requirements are met: (1) the foreign conduct has a “direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect” on U.S. domestic, import,
Under this second inquiry, in the wake of Empagmn, three courts of appeals have considered what kind of causal connection is necessary for a domestic effect to “give[ ] rise to” a plaintiffs claim. Consistent with the comity canon and general antitrust principles, these courts have held that the domestic effect must proximately cause the plaintiffs injury. See In re Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) Antitrust Litig.,
We thus must determine whether any domestic effect resulting from the defendants’ anticompetitive conduct proximately caused Lotes’s injury. We conclude that it did not. Lotes alleges that the defendants’ foreign conduct had the effect of driving up the prices of consumer electronics devices incorporating USB 3.0 connectors in the United States. But those higher prices did not cause Lotes’s injury of being excluded from the market for USB 3.0 connectors — that injury flowed directly from the defendant’s exclusionary foreign conduct. Lotes’s complaint thus seeks redress for precisely the type of “independently caused foreign injury” that Empagmn held falls outside of Congress’s intent. Empagran,
Indeed, to the extent there is any causal connection between Lotes’s injury and an effect on U.S. commerce, the direction of causation runs the wrong way. Lotes alleges that the defendants’ patent hold-up has excluded Lotes from the market, which reduces competition and raises prices, which are then passed on to U.S. consumers. Lotes’s injury thus precedes any domestic effect in the causal chain. And “[a]n effect never precedes its cause.” Am. Home Prods. Corp. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
Attempting to evade this problem, Lotes argues that higher prices for U.S. consumers are not the only domestic effect of the defendants’ conduct. According to Lotes, while higher U.S. prices may be the only domestic effect resulting from the defendants’ patent infringement suits in China, the defendants’ scheme is broader than that. Lotes contends that the defendants have also failed to license the necessary claims of certain U.S. patents, which has had the effect of foreclosing competition in the United States. That domestic effect, Lotes maintains, has proximately caused Lotes’s injury.
In any event, any domestic effect resulting from the defendants’ failure to license their U.S. patents did not proximately cause Lotes’s injury. Indeed, any such effect is not even a factual, “but for” cause of Lotes’s injury. Even if the defendants had granted Lotes a U.S. license, Lotes would still be excluded from the USB 3.0 market by virtue of the defendants’ independent infringement suits in China. But for the failure to license, Lotes would have suffered the same harm.
Nor is this one of those rare cases in which an injurious event is “overdetermined” by multiple sufficient causes. See Restatement (Third) of Torts: Phys. & Emot. Harm § 27 (2010) (“If multiple acts occur, each of which ... alone would have been a factual cause of the physical harm at the same time in the absence of the other act(s), each act is regarded as a factual cause of the harm.”). Nothing in the complaint suggests that the defendants’ failure to license U.S. patents, standing alone, would have been sufficient to exclude Lotes from the market. Indeed, the U.S. patents are so incidental to the alleged scheme that the complaint does not even bother to mention them except as part of the background of the relevant Chinese patents. See J.A. at 51 (explaining that the Chinese patents “claim priority to” the U.S. patents, and thus “the specifications of these U.S. patents must support all claims in the corresponding Chinese patents”); J.A. 54 (similarly discussing the U.S. patents as background). Read as a whole, the complaint makes perfectly clear that the true source of Lotes’s injury is the “[defendants’ willingness to bring suit against Lotes in contravention of the USB-IF RAND-Zero terms.” J.A. 58.
Accordingly, even assuming that the defendants’ anticompetitive conduct caused a “direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect” in the United States, any such effect did not “give[ ] rise to” Lotes’s claim. We therefore affirm the decision below on alternative grounds.
V Leave to Amend
Finally, Lotes argues that the district court abused its discretion in denying it a
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Lotes never effected service on Foxconn Kunshan under the Hague Convention, and Foxconn Kunshan has not entered an appearance, either below or on appeal.
. The defendants contend that we may avoid deciding this question because the district court correctly dismissed Lotes's antitrust claims under the FTAIA, and nothing turns on whether or not that dismissal was properly jurisdictional. But jurisdiction is an issue distinct from and logically prior to the merits of a claim, and the Supreme Court has held that "the nonexistence of a cause of action [i]s no proper basis for a jurisdictional dismissal.” Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
. The FTAIA is also codified in similar language in section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act. See 15 U.S.C. § 45(a)(3).
. Compare, e.g., H.R.Rep. No. 97-686, at 13 (1982), 1982 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2487, 2498 (explaining that the statute "address[es] only the subject matter jurisdiction of United States antitrust law,” rather than "the legal standards for determining whether conduct violates the antitrust laws”), with id. at 7 (explaining that the statute amends the Sherman Act "to more clearly establish when antitrust liability attaches to international business activities” (emphasis added)), and id. at 7-8 (explaining that the statute clarifies when "restraints on export trade ... violate the Sherman Act” (emphasis added)).
. We recognize that Webster's Third has not garnered universal respect among the Justices of the Supreme Court. See, e.g., Taniguchi v. Kan Pac. Saipan, Ltd., - U.S. -,
. We recognize that in Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois,
. To the extent Lotes intends to frame the defendants’ failure to license U.S. patents as the basis of a separate claim based on purely domestic conduct, which would not be subject to the limitations of the FTAIA, such a claim would fail for the same reasons. “[L]ack of causation in fact is fatal to the merits of any antitrust claim.” Argus Inc. v. Eastman Kodak Co.,
