MCM Partners, Incorporated (“MCM”) alleged that two exhibition contractors who staged conventions and trade shows at Chicago’s McCormick Place violated the Sherman
Antitrust Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, and the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1962(c) & (d), when they refused to rent forklifts and other material handling and personnel moving equipment from MCM. The district court dismissed MCM’s antitrust claim with prejudice, and after permitting MCM to replead its RICO claims, found that MCM also had failed to state a claim under that statute. The district court found from the allegations in MCM’s complaint that the exhibition contractors had been coerced by O.G. Service Corporation (“OG”), a competing rental equipment company, and individuals acting on its behalf into refusing to deal with MCM. The court concluded that, as coerced parties, neither of the contractors could be considered conspirators under section 1 of the Sherman Act or section 1962(d) of RICO. The court also dismissed MCM’s claim under section 1962(e) because neither defendant met the test for liability set out in
Reves v. Ernst & Young,
— U.S. -,
I. BACKGROUND
Because we are reviewing a dismissal at the pleading stage, we take MCM’s allegations at face value.
See Land v. Chicago Truck Drivers, Helpers and Warehouse Workers Union (Independent) Health and Welfare Fund,
*970 MCM brought its initial complaint against not only the exhibition contractors — Andrews-Bartlett & Associates, Incorporated (“A-B”) and Freeman Decorating Company (“FDC”) — and their principals, but also against OG and its principal, Nick Boscarino. The two complaints are a bit convoluted, but the essence of both the antitrust and RICO claims is simple enough — that OG conspired with A-B and FDC to monopolize the market for the rental of forklifts and material handling and personnel moving equipment at McCormick Place, thereby excluding MCM as a competitor in that market. MCM alleges in that regard that the conspiracy enabled OG to procure 100 percent of the McCormick Place rental market. The facts leading to the creation of this monopoly are alleged to be the following.
Prior to April 1991, only OG and AIM Industrial Lift Truck (“AIM”) were in the business of providing forklifts and other material handling and personnel moving equipment to exhibition contractors at McCormick Place. In April 1991, however, MCM began to compete with OG and AIM for this exhibition business. 3 MCM alleged that at that point it procured an order from A-B for the rental of forklifts and other heavy machinery for one of A-B’s upcoming McCormick Place shows. Boscarino learned of this order in May 1991, and he contacted National Lift Truck (“NLT”), whom he knew would be leasing certain equipment to MCM to be used at the A-B show. Boscarino told an NLT principal that unless NLT terminated any relationship with MCM in relation to the buildings and facilities at McCormick Place, NLT’s property would be in jeopardy. MCM also alleged that another OG employee, Cliff Larson, made a call to NLT the following day, threatening that the NLT forklifts rented by MCM would be damaged unless the business relationship was terminated. Indeed, on the day following Larson’s threat, one of the rented forklifts was damaged when it was rammed in the side by another forklift.
By letter dated January 17, 1992, A-B committed to utilize MCM equipment for a number of its shows throughout the year. For instance, A-B agreed that MCM would serve as its primary supplier of gas scooters at McCormick Place for the entire calendar year, and that MCM would provide either 50 or 100 percent of A-B’s forklift requirements for designated trade shows. The letter noted that A-B “look[ed] forward to this working relationship and the possibility of maintaining and expanding our relationship throughout the year.” (R. 1, Ex. A.) In accordance with this letter, A-B’s equipment manager delivered two purchase orders for forklifts and gas scooters to MCM on April 14, 1992. Less than one week later, however, A-B sent to MCM the following notice canceling those purchase orders:
We regret to inform you that due to an advance agreement between O.G. Service and Andrews-Bartlett Exposition Services Corporate office, we must cancel [the April 14, 1992] purchase orders.... I have been informed by my corporate office that any and all equipment required by our Chicago operation will be provided by O.G. Services.
(R. 1, Ex. D.) MGM alleged that prior to AB’s cancellation of the two purchase orders, Boscarino met with two A-B managers, who informed him of A-B’s ongoing relationship with MCM. Boscarino told the managers that Bill Hogan, who was president of the local branch of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (the “Teamsters”), was “not going to like” the fact that A-B was doing business with MCM. Upon learning of the A-B/MCM agreement, Hogan met with A-B’s president, Harold Bartlett, on April 17, 1992, and agreed to grant A-B certain work rule concessions. It was after this meeting that Bartlett directed his Chicago managers to cancel the MCM purchase orders and to terminate any business relationship with MCM at McCormick Place.
Consistent with these specific allegations, MCM generally alleged that both A-B and FDC proceeded, at the direction of Hogan, to *971 lease forklifts and other material and personnel handling equipment at McCormick Place only from OG, whose principal (Boscarino) was a steward of the Teamsters’ local branch. According to MCM, whenever either exhibition contractor took any steps that were inconsistent with Hogan’s directive in this regard, the contractor was subject to discipline by the Teamsters, including threats of labor strikes and damage to property. As a result, since August 1992, A-B and FDC have exclusively used OG for their rental equipment needs at McCormick Place. Because the effect of defendants’ actions was to provide OG with a virtual monopoly at the convention center, defendants paid rates for OG’s rental equipment that were higher than the prevailing market rates. 4
From these factual allegations, MCM advanced claims under two federal statutes. First, MCM maintained that defendants had violated section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, by conspiring to monopolize the market for the rental of forklifts and other material handling and personnel moving equipment at McCormick Place. The conspiracy’s purpose, the complaint alleged, was to raise or stabilize the price of rental equipment either by excluding MCM from the market or by substantially limiting its ability to compete with OG. MCM was successfully excluded because Boscarino procured agreements from both A-B and FDC not to deal with MCM and to instead use OG for all of their rental equipment needs. MCM therefore alleged that actual and potential competition in the relevant market was restrained or eliminated altogether. MCM asked that the Sherman Act violation be enjoined and that it recover treble the damages it incurred.
MCM alleged, in addition, that defendants’ conduct also violated RICO sections 1962(c) & (d). The predicate acts allegedly constituting a pattern of racketeering activity were defendants’ payments to OG for the rental of equipment at McCormick Place at higher than market rates. MCM alleged that these payments violated section 302 of the Taft-Hartley Act, 29 U.S.C. § 186, as they were payments by an employer to a union representative of its employees. 5 In its RICO count, MCM also prayed for treble damages and injunctive relief.
After filing its original complaint, MCM voluntarily dismissed OG and Boscarino,
6
and the remaining defendants then moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim. The district court permitted MCM to replead its RICO claims but dismissed the antitrust claim with prejudice.
See MCM Partners, Inc. v. Boscarino,
II. DISCUSSION
We review the dismissal of MCM’s complaint de novo, accepting as true the complaint’s well-pleaded factual allegations and drawing all reasonable inferences from those allegations in MCM’s favor.
Leatherman v. Tarrant County Narcotics Unit,
— U.S. -, -,
A. Sherman Act Claim
1. Contract, Combination, or Conspiracy
The district court viewed MCM’s claim under section 1 of the Sherman Act 7 as somewhat unique:
Instead of a conspiracy of sellers to raise prices, we have a conspiracy of buyers to raise prices by entering into exclusive dealing arrangements, coerced by threats of labor disruption by a union official in cahoots with the would-be monopolist. As a consequence, [MCM] is unable to compete and prices for rental equipment at McCormick Place have allegedly been artificially inflated. But what makes this suit truly extraordinary is that [MCM] is not suing the would-be monopolist but the victims forced to deal with it.
If A-B or FDC had independently exercised its business judgment to refuse to rent equipment from MCM at McCormick Place, that decision would not be actionable under section 1 of the Sherman Act.
See Monsanto v. Spray-Rite Serv. Corp.,
A-B and FDC argue, however, and the district court found, that their acquiescence did not establish a combination or conspiracy for purposes of section 1 because the complaint itself indicated that A-B and FDC acted only at the direction of and in response to pressure applied by OG and its principals — that is, that they were coerced victims of OG’s scheme. But the district court’s holding in that regard is without support in the case law interpreting section 1. In
United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc.,
There is some suggestion ... that large exhibitors with whom defendants dealt fathered the illegal practices and forced them onto the defendants. But as the District Court observed, that circumstance if true does not help the defendants. For acquiescence in an illegal scheme is as much a violation of the Sherman Act as the creation and promotion of one.
Later courts have applied this principle in a variety of settings, concluding that the “combination or conspiracy” element of a section 1 violation is not negated by the fact that one or more of the co-conspirators acted unwillingly, reluctantly, or only in response to coercion.
See, e.g., Perma Life Mufflers, Inc. v. International Parts Corp.,
A-B and FDC acknowledge that courts traditionally have found concerted action even where at least one of the alleged conspirators may have been coerced, but they argue that the purpose of finding a conspiracy in that instance is to provide the coerced party or an injured third party with a remedy against the coercer. Defendants maintain that a combination or conspiracy should not be found when a third party seeks recovery from the coerced paHy itself. Under defendants’ theory, then, treatment of the identical conduct would vary under section 1 based upon the identity of the defendant. Yet nothing in the text of the Sherman Act or in the Supreme Court’s interpretation of that statute suggests to us that the defendant’s identity is at all relevant to whether or not there was an actionable contract, combination, or conspiracy. Moreover, it would be logically inconsistent to find a conspiracy only when the coercing party is sued, as the conduct relevant to the conspiracy determination is the same if only the coerced party is targeted.
Defendants, however, find some support for their theory in Professor Areeda’s treatise.
See
VI P.E. Areeda,
Antitrust Law
¶ 1408 (1978 & 1994). There, the author explains that a judicial desire to protect “the coerced party has often been the impulse behind proclaiming coerced compliance to be a conspiracy,” and he therefore argues that courts should be “wary of extending the same proclamation to cases in which the coerced party is the defendant.”
Id.
at 45. Areeda concedes, however, that “judicial declarations on the matter provide little comfort for coerced parties” because “the legal convention of treating express promises in the vertical context as [section] 1 contracts or conspiracies is well established notwithstanding an unwilling dealer.”
Id.
at 45, 48. Indeed, neither A-B nor FDC can cite a single case which holds that a section 1 conspiracy exists only where the coerced party or an injured third party seeks a remedy against the coercer.
9
Professor Areeda acknowl
*975
edges, moreover, that courts have found conspiracies even where the coerced party is the defendant.
Id.
at 48 (citing
Calnetics Corp.,
Even given the legitimacy of Professor Areeda’s concerns, however, we do not find this an appropriate case to depart from the traditional rule, as MCM’s allegations permit the inference that A-B and FDC must have realized that the “persuasion” applied by OG and its principals was unlawful. MCM alleged that both A-B and FDC were induced by threats of labor disruption and of damage to property to rent all of their forklifts and other material handling and personnel moving equipment from OG. At the time these threats were made, A-B had already committed some of its rental business to MCM, but it canceled those commitments after being threatened by Bosearino and Hogan. Taking these allegations as true, A-B and FDC knew or should have known that OG’s attempt by such means to procure and to further exclusive dealing relationships would have the effect of excluding MCM from McCormick Place and eliminating competition in that venue. A-B and FDC must have realized, then, that OG’s conduct was probably unlawful under the antitrust laws.
Cf. C & W Constr. Co.,
Although the evidence itself may establish that A-B and FDC made independent business decisions in renting equipment only from OG, MCM’s conspiracy allegations were sufficient to survive á motion to dismiss.
2. Relevant Market
The district court alternatively found that MCM had failed to plead facts supporting its definition of the market where competition allegedly had been restrained. MCM defined the market as “the rental of forklifts, material handling and personnel moving-equipment to the convention and trade show industry in Chicago, Illinois.” (R. 1, ¶ 72.) It alleged that the “vast majority” of Chicago’s convention and trade -show business is conducted at McCormick Place and that the consumers in that market are the “exhibition contractors who set up, install, and disassemble the booths and other physical items” used in the industry.
(Id.
at ¶ 72(a).) The district court believed that these allegations defined the market too narrowly because the com
*976
plaint did not include facts establishing that the market for MCM’s equipment was limited to exhibition contractors. In the absence of such allegations, the court took judicial notice of the fact that forklifts and material handling and personnel moving equipment are subject to widespread industrial use, and it therefore found MCM’s narrowly-defined market “so improbable” that the suit should not proceed.
MCM Partners,
To state a claim for relief under section 1, a plaintiff must allege either that the contract, combination, or conspiracy resulted in a
per se
violation of the Sherman Act or that it unreasonably restrained competition in a relevant market.
See Denny’s Marina, Inc. v. Renfro Prods., Inc.,
The district court found it highly improbable, however, that the market could be limited to exhibition contractors in the convention and trade show industry because the equipment rented by MCM had a number of alternative uses.
Having rejected the alternative bases relied on by the district court for dismissing MCM’s claim under section 1 of the Sherman Act, we reverse that dismissal and remand for further proceedings.
B. RICO Claims
MCM also alleged claims for treble damages and injunctive relief under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1962(c) & (d), but the district court dismissed both claims pursuant to
Reves v. Ernst & Young,
— U.S. -,
1. Section 1962(c)
Section 1962(c) makes it unlawful for “any person employed by or associated with [an] enterprise ... to conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). The question in
Reves
was whether an outside accounting firm could be liable under this provision for incorrectly valuing a farm cooperative’s assets on the cooperative’s financial statements. The Supreme Court held that it could not because the accounting firm had not “conducted], or participated, directly or indirectly, in the conduct” of the cooperative’s affairs. — U.S. at -,
In the instant case, MCM defined the RICO enterprise as “an association-in-fact” comprised of OG, Boscarino, Hogan, the Teamsters, A-B, and FDC. (R. 94, at *978 ¶ 23.) 12 The enterprise’s purpose, according to the complaint, was to make OG “the exclusive provider of forklift and material handling and personnel moving equipment for all exhibition contractors at McCormick Place.” (Id. at ¶ 25.) All activities of A-B and FDC in relation to that enterprise are alleged to have been undertaken “at the direction of’ one or more of the other members of the enterprise, and whenever A-B or FDC disobeyed such directions, it was “subject to discipline, including threats of strikes and damage to property.” (Id. at ¶ 26.) The Taft-Hartley Act violations (the underlying predicate acts of racketeering) were therefore all undertaken by A-B and FDC at the direction of others. Indeed, MCM’s counsel conceded at oral argument that his client has not alleged any conduct by these defendants that was not “directed by” OG, Boscarino, or Hogan. The district court determined on the basis of these allegations that neither defendant had played any part in directing the affairs of the enterprise under Reves, and it accordingly dismissed the claim.
MCM argues that the dismissal was erroneous because
Reves
itself observes that lower-rung participants under the direction of upper management may “operate” a racketeering enterprise.
See Reves,
— U.S. at -,
Reves is a case about the liability of outsiders who may assist the enterprise’s affairs. Special care is required in translating Reves’ concern with “horizontal” connections — focusing on the liability of an outside adviser — -into the “vertical” question of how far RICO liability may extend within the enterprise but down the organizational ladder. In our view, the reason the accountants were not liable in Reves is that, while they were undeniably involved in the enterprise’s decisions, they neither made those decisions nor carried them out; in other words, the accountants were outside the chain of command through which the enterprise’s affairs were conducted.
Id.
at 750 (emphasis in
Oreto); see also Reves,
- U.S. at -,
Although the question is not an easy one under the facts alleged here, we think these defendants are properly characterized as “lower-rung participants who are under the direction of upper management.”
See Reves,
— U.S. at -,
2. Section 1962(d)
It should be plain from our discussion of MCM’s section 1962(c) claim that MCM also has stated a claim against A-B and FDC for a conspiracy to violate that section. RICO’s conspiracy provision makes it unlawful “for any person to conspire to violate” section 1962(a), (b), or (c). 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d). As we observed in
United States v. Quintanilla,
Our cases explain that a defendant may conspire to violate section 1962(c) if it agreed “to conduct or participate in the affairs of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity,” and “it is only necessary that the defendant agree to the commission of [at least] two predicate acts on behalf of the conspiracy.”
Neapolitan,
In the instant case, MCM alleged that A-B and FDC agreed to commit, on behalf of the enterprise, the Taft-Hartley Act violations comprising the pattern of racketeering activity. Defendants maintain, however, that this allegation must be read in conjunction with the remaining allegations in the complaint, which establish that they acted only at the direction of and in response to threats by OG, Boscarino, and Hogan. In essence, then, defendants advance the same argument here that we rejected under section 1 of the Sherman Act—that their actions were coerced and that a coerced party cannot be said to have joined an illegal conspiracy.
The argument is easily answered with respect to A-B, for the allegations in MCM’s second amended complaint support the inference that A-B was able to extract work rule concessions from Hogan in return for its agreement to stop doing business with MCM. (See R. 94, at ¶ 39.) The complaint suggests, then, that A-B was not entirely a coerced party, but that it voluntarily agreed to participate in OG’s scheme. Accepting those allegations as true, we may infer that A-B agreed to participate in the affairs of the alleged enterprise through a pattern of Taft-Hartley Act violations.
The question is potentially more difficult with respect to FDC, which apparently received nothing of value in return for dealing exclusively with OG at McCormick Place. Any illegal “agreement,” then, may well have been thrust upon FDC by the threats and other pressure utilized by OG, Boscarino, and Hogan. We are reluctant to conclude, however, that the allegations in the complaint establish that FDC was coerced into violating the Taft-Hartley Act as a matter of law.
Cf. United States v. Sanders,
FDC alternatively argues that MCM failed to allege the existence of a RICO enterprise or of a pattern of racketeering activity. 14 The district court did not address these issues in dismissing MCM’s RICO claims, but we of course may affirm the dismissal on any ground finding support in the record. Indemnified Capital Inv., SA v. R.J. O’Brien & Assoc., Inc., 12 F.3d 1406, 1410 (7th Cir.1993). We think it more efficient here, however, to leave those additional matters to the district court in the first instance, as the resolution of those issues in defendants’ favor would not obviate the need for a remand. See supra, at 977 (remanding Sherman Act claim).
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the dismissal of MCM’s claims under section 1 of the Sherman Act and sections 1962(c) & (d) of the RICO statute and remand to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Vacated AND Remanded.
Notes
. The district court also dismissed MCM’s claims under section 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 2, and section 3 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 14. MCM has not challenged the dismissal of those claims in this appeal.
. The second amended complaint addressed only MCM’s RICO claims, as the district court had *970 dismissed the Sherman Act claim in MCM’s initial complaint with prejudice.
. In the fall of 1991, OG purchased the assets of AIM, leaving MCM as OG’s sole competitor at McCormick Place.
. MCM alleged that A-B and FDC controlled 75 percent of the convention and trade show business at McCormick Place in 1992 and that the remaining 25 percent was divided between United Exposition Services and several smaller exposition contractors. These contractors also refused to rent from MCM at McCormick Place, as they allegedly had been told that problems would develop with the Teamsters if they used a rental equipment company other than OG.
. Section 186 provides, inter alia, that:
(a) It shall be unlawful for any employer or association of employers ... to pay, lend, or deliver, or agree to pay, lend, or deliver, any money or other thing of value—
(1) to any representative of any of his employees who are employed in an industry affecting commerce; or
(2) to any labor organization or any officer or employee thereof, which represents, seeks to represent, or would admit to membership, any of the employees of such employer who are employed in an industry affecting commerce.
.The record does not reveal MCM's reason for dismissing these defendants, although it apparently relates to the fact that MCM previously had sued OG and Boscarino but had settled its claims in that case.
. Section 1 provides in pertinent part that:
Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, is declared to be illegal....
15 U.S.C. § 1. In order to state a claim under that section, a plaintiff must allege: "(1) a contract, combination, or conspiracy; (2) a resultant unreasonable restraint of trade in the relevant market; and (3) an accompanying injuiy.”
Denny's Marina, Inc. v. Renfro Prods., Inc.,
. In its second amended complaint filed after the dismissal with prejudice of its section 1 claim, MCM also alleged that Hogan, on April 17, 1992, agreed to grant A-B certain work rule concessions if it terminated its business relationship with MCM and rented equipment at McCormick Place only from OG. Although the district court had no opportunity to consider this allegation in connection with MCM’s antitrust claim, it suggests that A-B’s actions may not have been entirely coerced, as A-B was able to negotiate concessions from the Teamsters in return for conduct in conformance with Hogan’s wishes. Because the allegation was not before the district court, however, and because MCM does not allege that FDC received similar concessions, we will disregard that additional allegation when considering MCM's antitrust claim and will treat A-B and FDC both as coerced parties. On remand, however, MCM should be afforded the opportunity to include this potentially significant allegation in an amended complaint.
. FDC maintains that two more recent decisions "buttress” its argument (FDC Br. at 14-15 (citing
Fineman
v.
Armstrong World Indus., Inc.,
In
Garshman,
the court also discussed Professor Areeda's treatise and was reluctant to find a conspiracy where such a finding would subject a possible victim of coercion to liability for treble damages.
. The court did not provide MCM with the opportunity to amend its complaint to attempt to allege facts supporting, its market definition but dismissed the section 1 claim with prejudice.
. The Court found it clear, however, "that Arthur Young was not acting under the direction of the Co-op’s officers or board."
Id.
at - n. 9,
. An "enterprise” for RICO purposes may include “any individual, partnership, corporation, association, or other legal entity, and any union or group of individuals associated in fact although not a legal entity." 18 U.S.C. § 1961(4).
.
See also United States v. Starrett,
. A-B has not advanced similar arguments in this appeal.
