MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Thе plaintiffs to this action are Mission Hills Condominium Association M-l, Mission Hills Condominium Association M-2, Mission Hills Condominium Association M-3 and Mission Hills Condominium Association M-4 (“Associations”), and they have sued on behalf of their members who purchased condominium units in the Mission Hills Country Club Village (“Development”). The defendants are Eugene R. Corley, individually and d/b/a Eugene R. Corley Builders, The Corley Companies, Inc., Corley, Inc., (“Corley”), and Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co. (“Phoenix”). Jurisdiction over the plaintiffs’ two federal claims is conferred by 28 U.S.C. § 1337, and the plаintiffs ask the Court to assert pendent *456 jurisdiction over their twelve state law claims.
Presently before the Court is defendants’ motion to dismiss the amended complaint. For the reasons set forth below, defendants’ motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part. Also before the Court is the petition of'six individuals, owners of units in the Development, to intervene as plaintiffs. That motion is granted.
FACTS
On a motion to dismiss, the court must accept as true the allegations pled by the plaintiffs. The amended complaint and briefs filed relative to the instant motion reveal thе following. The Development is a residential development located in North-field, Illinois. Constructed and developed by Corley and Phoenix, the Development comprises approximately thirteen condominium properties, a private country club and other various amenities.
On or about August 8, 1973, a Blanket Declaration governing the Development was recorded. The Declaration, the legal instrument by which condominium property is created, imposed certain obligatiоns and requirements with respect to the ownership and operation of the Development. Pursuant to the Development’s Blanket Declaration, Corley and Phoenix retained three votes in the Mission Hills Homeowners Association (“Homeowners Association”) for every unsold condominium unit. Approximately one year later, the Homeowners Association’s By-laws were amended, giving Corley and Phoenix the authority to continue to administer the Homeowners Association and to disregard any vоte of the unit owners until 60 days after the last condominium unit was sold. In their capacity as administrators of the Homeowners Association, Corley and Phoenix have entered into management, maintenance, and other property-related service contracts, for work on the Development’s common areas, with business entities affiliated with either Corley or Phoenix. The services include snow removal, general maintenance, and landscaping. These service contracts were worth approximately $2 million in the four years preceding this action.
On March 24, 1982, the plaintiff Associations (they claim to represent the interests of , all unit owners in four of the Development’s thirteen condominium properties) filed an amended complaint. In their fourteen count amended complaint, plaintiffs charge that defendants’ conduct violates Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, the Illinois Antitrust Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38 § 60-1 et seq., the Illinois Condominium Property Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 30, § 301, et seq., and the common law of Illinois.
First, plaintiffs charge that as a result of сontrolling the Homeowners Association, Corley and Phoenix are able to require unit owners to accept property-related services from entities controlled by Corley and Phoenix. They claim that but for the defendants’ actions, the plaintiffs could purchase these services from various other independent and more competent concerns on more favorable terms. They state that the defendants have conspired to reject lower bids from potential сompetitors, and that the plaintiffs have paid $750,000 more to defendants than plaintiffs would have paid to others. Plaintiffs allege that this constitutes an illegal tying arrangement violative of federal and Illinois antitrust laws (Counts I-IV).
Second, plaintiffs allege that provisions of the Declaration and By-laws, giving Corley and Phoenix allegedly total authority over the administration of the Homeowners Association, are unconscionable and therefore invalid (Count V). In this connection, plaintiffs further allege that dеfendants’ continued control over the Homeowners Association and defendants’ behavior violate the Illinois Condominium Property Act (Counts VI, X, XIV). Third, plaintiffs charge that during the course of their administration of the Homeowners Association, Corley and Phoenix have breached various common law duties owed to the unit owners, and in the process have committed fraud and conversion (Counts VII-IX, XI— XIII).
*457 Defendants have filed a motion to dismiss the entire amended complaint. In support of their motion, defеndants argue that plaintiffs, as associations, lack standing to bring Counts I-IV. Second, defendants argue that Counts I-IV of the amended complaint fail to state claims under the antitrust laws, and that Counts VI and XIV fail to state claims under the Illinois Condominium Property Act. Third, defendants argue that the Declaration and By-laws are valid and enforceable contracts and are not unconscionable (Count V). Finally, defendants argue that since the amended complaint fails to state claims cognizable under fedеral law, the Court should dismiss the entire amended complaint (including the pendent claims) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
STANDING
Counts I, II, III and IV of the amended complaint allege violations of federal and Illinois antitrust laws. Specifically, Count I seeks to recover treble damages, in the amount of $2,250,000, pursuant to Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15, for defendants’ alleged violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. Count II, incorporating by reference the allegations of Count I and brought under Section 16 оf the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 26, seeks to enjoin defendants from exercising any control over the Homeowners Association and taking any action for which the unit owners would incur a cost. Count III seeks to recover treble damages for defendants’ alleged violations of the Illinois Antitrust Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, §§ 60-1 et seq., and Count IV, incorporating by reference the allegations of Counts II and III, also seeks injunctive relief.
Defendants move to dismiss all four counts on the ground that plaintiffs, as associations, lack standing to bring these claims. Asserting that these counts allege violations of antitrust laws arising from purchase agreements to which plaintiffs were not parties, defendants argue that plaintiffs have not been injured by defendants’ conduct. Furthermore, defendants argue that plaintiffs should not be granted representative standing because plaintiffs have failed to satisfy the necessary requirements for such. Defendants claim that representative standing is inappropriate in the instant action due to a conflict of interest between the plaintiff associations and their members regarding the decision to bring the instant action.
The Supreme Court has recognized that an association has standing to bring suit on behalf of its members when: (1) its members would have standing to sue in their own right; (2) the interests it seeks to protect are germane to the association’s purpose; and (3) neither the claim asserted or relief sought requires the individual participation of the members in the lawsuit.
Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Commission,
Relying upon these Supreme Court decisions, courts have upheld associational standing in federal antitrust actions seeking injunctive relief pursuant to Section 16 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 26.
Associated General Contractors of North Dakota v. Otter Tail Power Company,
*458 This Court concurs with the decisions reached by these courts and concludes that an association’s right to bring a claim under Section 16 shall be scrutinized the same as in any other action brought by an association on behalf of its members. Applying the criteria set forth in Hunt, supra, the Court finds that plaintiffs have standing to seek injunctive relief against defendants for alleged antitrust violations. First, the individual members of the associations would have standing to bring this action since the injury claimed is to the members’ condominium propеrty. Second, given that plaintiffs are seeking to protect their members’ property and to prevent their members from paying assessments derived from allegedly noncompetitive fees, the interests plaintiffs seek to protect are germane to the associations’ purposes. Third, neither the relief requested nor the claim asserted require the participation of the association members. Plaintiffs allege that defendants have engaged in conduct resulting in an illegal tying arrаngement. Proof of these allegations would not require member participation.
Defendants cite two Fifth Circuit cases holding that condominium associations lack standing to bring antitrust claims on behalf of their members.
Buckley Towers Condominium, Inc. v. Buchwald,
The Court in Warth held that an association may have standing as the representative of its members even in the absence of injury to itself, but the association must allege that its members are suffering or threatened with injury as a result of the challenged action of the sort that would make out a justiciable case had the members themselves been parties to the suit.
The plaintiff associations have here alleged what the Buckley court apparently there found lacking (¶ 18, Amended Complaint). The Fifth Circuit in Chatham followed its earlier decision in Buckley in addressing a question of associational standing, without citing or discussing any other cases.
The Court believes
Buckley
is distinguishable, since the
Warth
test, apparently not met in
Buckley,
has been met here. However, even if it were not so distinguishable, this Court would not follow
Buckley
because it seems not to follow Supreme Court precedent. Furthermore, it is against the overwhelming weight of other аuthority on the issue of associational standing. In addition to the cases cited above
(Hunt, Warth, Otter Tail,
and
Monroe, The Calculator Co.), see also National Collegiate Athletic Ass’n. v. Califano,
The Court also finds that plaintiffs have standing to seek injunctive relief against defendants for alleged violations of the Illinois Antitrust Act. Claims for injunctive relief do not require the members’ individual participation and there is every reason to expect that, if granted, the relief sought will benefit all of the members equally. Further, Illinois law explicitly allows an association to bring suit on behalf of its members. The Illinois Condominium Property Act, Ill.Rev.Stat.1978, ch. 30, § 309.1, states in relevant part: “The board of managers [of the condominium association] shall have standing to act in a representative capacity in relation to matters involving the common elements of more than one unit, on behalf of the unit ownеrs, as their interests may appear.” The Illinois courts have construed this statute to allow a condominium association to sue on behalf of its members.
Tassan v. United Development Co.,
Defendants argue that plaintiffs should be denied standing here due to an alleged conflict among the members regarding the decision to institute the instant action. Defendants’ argument is unpersuasive. Contrary to the naked assertion in defendants’ brief, there is no allegation in plaintiffs’ amended complaint indicating any conflict among the associations’ members. The Court will not deny plaintiffs standing to seek injunctive relief simply on the basis of a vague and unsubstantiated allegation.
Plaintiffs, however, lack standing to bring a claim for damages pursuant to Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15. Unlike the injunctive provision of Section 16, the damage provision of Section 4 expressly restricts suit to “[a]ny person who shall be injured in his business or property by reason of anything forbidden in the antitrust laws .... ” The Court interprets this language as precluding an association—as distinct from its individual members—from bringing a claim for treble damages for alleged antitrust violations, where the association has not been injured in its “business or property.”
The Supreme Court has noted that standing to sue for damages under Section 4 is more limited than standing to sue for injunctive relief under Section 16.
Hawaii v. Standard Oil Co.,
Similarly, the Court finds that the plaintiffs lack standing to bring a claim for treble damages against defendants for alleged violation of the Illinois antitrust laws. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, § 60-7(2), uses the same words (“business or property”) as Section 4 of the Clayton Act. The legal analysis is the same as recited above.
In summary, the Court concludes that plaintiffs have standing to seek injunctive relief against defendants for alleged violations of federal and Illinois antitrust laws. However, plaintiffs do not have standing to seek monetary damages for the aforementioned allegations. Accordingly, Counts I and III of the amended complaint (both of which seek money damages), are dismissed, while Counts II and IV (seeking injunctive relief) remain.
FEDERAL ANTITRUST CLAIMS
Defendants move to dismiss Count II of the amended complaint, claiming violations of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, asserting that this count does not allege the substantive elements necessary to support a “tying action” under Section 1. Characterizing Count II as constituting a claim solely for per se violations of Section 1, defendants argue that Count II is defective because it fails to allege the existence of two distinct products and defendants’ “sufficient economic power.” In opposing the motion, plaintiffs argue that Count II sets forth the essential elements to maintain an action for a per se violation of Section 1. Further *460 more, plaintiffs argue that, even if Count II does not support a claim for a per se violation of the Sherman Act, their allegations state a claim under a Rule of Reason theory-
1. PER SE VIOLATIONS OF SECTION
1
Section 1 of the Sherman Act provides that any restraint of trade or commerce among the several states is illegal. It is well established that tying arrangements comprise conduct that is illegal
per se
under Section 1 of the Sherman Act.
Kentucky Fried Chicken Corporation v. Diversified Packaging Corporation,
To maintain an action for damages due to an allegedly illegal tying arrangement, a plaintiff must show: (1) separate tying and tied products; (2) evidence of actual coercion by the seller that forced the buyer to accept the tied product; (3) sufficient economic power held by the seller in the tying product to coerce purchaser acceptance of the tied product; (4) anticompetitive еffects in the tied market; and (5) a not insubstantial effect on interstate commerce.
Yentsch v. Texaco, Inc.,
Defendants argue that plaintiffs have failed to set forth the necessary allegations, since in defendants’ view the instant action involves only one product, i.e., a “leisure living package.” The Court rejects this argument, however, and finds (at this pleading juncture, at least) that this case involves two distinct products.
The instant action involves both the sale of condominium units and property-related service contrаcts. Management services and the sale of condominium units are generically different and are not the same product.
Jones v. 247 E. Chestnut Properties,
[1975-2]
In
Johnson v. Nationwide Industries, Inc.,
Further, the reasoning of
Chatham Condominium Ass’n., supra,
Defendants also claim that plaintiffs have failed to allege that defendants have “sufficient economic power” in the tying product, i.e., the condominium real estate market. Therefore, defendants argue that plaintiffs have failed to state a claim for a per se violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act.
The Court finds defendants’ argument unpersuasive. A fair reading of plaintiffs’ amended complaint reveals that plaintiffs have alleged that defendants maintained such an economic рosition so as to have “the power to exact extraordinary nonprice concessions from the purchasers over and above the premium price.” Amended Complaint, Count I ¶ 7A. Since on a motion to dismiss the Court must construe allegations in the plaintiffs’ complaint as being true, the Court concludes that plaintiffs have set forth the necessary allegations to maintain an action for a per se violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act.
The defendants’ request that the Court take judicial notice that the Chicago condominium market was “hot” in the 1970’s, so that defendants cannot be said to have had “sufficient economic power,” is disregarded. This is a matter for proof, not pleading. Cf. Levinson v. Maison Grande, supra (jury finds defendants did not have sufficient economic power in market).
2. RULE OF REASON
Even if unsuccessful in demonstrating all of the essential elements of a tying arrangement, plaintiffs may nevertheless prevail by showing that defendants’ conduct unreasonably restrains competition.
See Fortner Enterprises, Inc. v. United States Steel Corp.,
ILLINOIS CONDOMINIUM PROPERTY ACT
Counts VI and XIV of the amended complaint allege violations of the Illinois Condominium Property Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 30 § 318.2, due to defendants’ continued control over the Homeowners Association. Defendants move to dismiss these counts on the ground that the Homeowners Association is not subject to the Illinois Condominium Property Act.
The Court finds that Counts VI and XIV state claims upon which relief may be granted. Section 318.2 provides, in pertinent part, that the election of the board of directors of an association of condominium unit owners shall be held no later than sixty days after seventy-five percent of the units have been sold or three years after recording of the Declaration, whichever is earlier. The Declаration was recorded approximately ten years ago and no such election has taken place. The plaintiffs have alleged that the defendants adopted provisions of the Blanket Declaration and By-laws which violate the express terms of § 318.2, and that it is defendants who have refused to abide by the requirements of § 318.2. Defendants’ position (obscure at best) is unsupported by case law. The Court cannot say that defendants have shown that plaintiffs cannot recover undеr § 318.2 as a matter of law. The motion to dismiss Counts VI and XIV is denied.
UNCONSCIONABILITY OF THE DECLARATION AND BY-LAWS
Similarly, the Court denies defendants’ motion to dismiss Count V of the amended complaint, alleging the invalidity of certain provisions of the Declaration and By-laws. The term “unconscionability” is used to describe a contract that is “improvident, totally one-sided or oppressive.”
Neal v. Lacob,
CONCLUSION ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS
Since the defendants’ motion to dismiss the federal cause of action is denied, the Court has subject matter jurisdiction to hear the federal claim. By virtue of the doctrine of pendent jurisdiction, the Court will assert (at this juncture) jurisdiction over the remaining state law causes of action brought by the plaintiffs.
United Mine Workers v.
Gibbs,
PETITION TO INTERVENE
Six individuals who were residents and owners of units in the Development have sought leave to intervene in this action, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(a), as party plaintiffs. They have attached a copy of their proposed сomplaint. This complaint sets forth the same basic facts and legal theories of the plaintiff Associations’ amended complaint. In addition, the potential intervenors seek leave to represent a class of all persons who owned units in the Development during the period between May 18, 1978, and May 18, 1982. They allege that the class consists of more than 600 unit owners.
The defendants oppose the petition to intervene and present a curious argument. They say that the intervenors nеed not appear here because their interests are adequately represented by the plaintiff Associations. Yet in their motion to dismiss, they have argued that the Associations lack standing to bring the amended complaint, because “any rights of recovery lie with the individual unit owners, not with plaintiff Condominium Associations...” (Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, at 1-2). The inconsistency of the defendants’ positions is apparent.
In any case, for the reasons stated above the plaintiff Associations lack standing under the antitrust laws to sue for money damages. However, the individuals themselves are not so disabled. They can fill the gap left open by the Court’s ruling on defendants’ motion to dismiss Counts I and III. Further, they meet the criteria set forth in Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(a), for intervention as of right. The petition to intervene is granted, and the intervening plaintiffs are granted leave to file their complaint. Of course, the Court has not yet ruled upon whether the intervening plaintiffs may represent a class.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that
(1) Defendants’ motion to dismiss is granted as to Counts I and III of the amended complaint, and is denied in all other respects.
(2) The petition to intervene is granted, and the intervening plaintiffs are granted leave to file their complaint.
(3) Defendants are to answer the plaintiffs’ amended complaint and the intervening plaintiffs’ complaint within 21 days.
(4) A status hearing is set for September 16,1983, at 9:45 a.m. Parties are to present a proposed discovery schedule at that time, specifying dates for the exchange of documents, the propounding of interrogatories, and the taking of depositions.
