The petitioner, a retailer of burial monuments and bronze grave markers, brought this action for damages and injunctive relief under §§ 4 and 16 of the Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 731, 737, as amended, 15 U. S. C. §§ 15, 26,
*701
alleging that the respondents had violated §§ 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, 26 Stat. 209, as amended, 15 U. S. C. §§ 1, 2, by conspiring to monopolize and monopolizing the manufacture and sale of bronze grave markers. The respondents — Matthews, a manufacturer of such markers, and five operators of cemeteries (called “memorial parks”) that sell the markers — were charged with having jointly adopted various restrictive devices to prevent, restrict, and discourage sales of markers by the petitioner for installation in the cemeteries. After extensive pretrial discovery, the District Court granted the respondents’ motion for summary judgment, concluding that there was no material issue of fact and no evidence of conspiracy.
We cannot agree that on the record before the District Court a jury could not have found that the respondents had conspired to exclude the petitioner from and monopolize the market for bronze grave markers. As Circuit Judge Craven pointed out in his dissenting opinion, the record disclosed the following conduct on the part of the respondents:
“(1) Despite the unskilled nature of the work, all of the memorial parks refuse to permit the plaintiff to install markers sold by it; all of them insist that the work be done by the cemeteries themselves.
“(2) None of the memorial parks charges lot owners a separate installation fee in the case of markers purchased from the cemeteries.
“(3) All of the memorial parks require the payment of an installation fee by the plaintiff for installing markers purchased from the plaintiff. The plaintiff plausibly maintains that the actual cost of installation comes to about $3. Yet, enormous installation fees are charged plaintiff ....
*702 “(4) All of the memorial parks require a specific alloy content in the bronze markers installed, and reserve the right to reject non-conforming markers. The alloy content requirement happens to be the same as manufacturer Matthews’ markers and the same as is implicitly suggested in a pamphlet (‘Modern Cemeteries’) distributed by Matthews to its customers. All of the memorial parks except Roosevelt are customers of Matthews.
“(5) There is evidence that Greenlawn, Wood-lawn and Princess Anne have attempted to dissuade lot owners from purchasing markers from the plaintiff. The affidavit of plaintiff’s president states that numerous other incidents of this nature have occurred.
“(6) Defendant Matthews, in its pamphlet ‘Modern Cemeteries,’ suggests a number of practices which in effect erect competitive barriers to retailers other than the cemeteries themselves.
“(7) Many of these practices have been adopted by the memorial park defendants, as evidenced by affidavits in the record, and by the ‘rule books’ of Rosewood, Princess Anne and Greenlawn.
“(8) There is evidence of numerous visits to and conferences with the memorial parks by sales representatives of Matthews.”404 F. 2d, at 1012-1014 .
The District Court found that the rules relating to the alloy content and installation of the markers were reasonable “[i]n view of the continuing obligation of perpetual care imposed upon the cemeteries, in [their] contracts with lot owners . . . .”
Nor do the other findings of the District Court necessarily dispel the inferences which the jury would be asked by the petitioner to draw. The District Court found, for example, that there was “a wide divergence of prices” charged for installation “which would completely negative any systematic scheming or conscious parallelism.”
We express no opinion, of course, on the strength or weakness of the petitioner’s case, but hold only that the alleged conspiracy had not been conclusively disproved by pretrial discovery and that there remained material issues of fact which could only be resolved by the jury after a plenary trial. As we have cautioned before, “summary procedures should be used sparingly in complex antitrust litigation where motive and intent play leading roles, the proof is largely in the hands of the alleged conspirators, and hostile witnesses thicken the plot.”
Poller
v.
Columbia Broadcasting System,
The writ of certiorari is granted. The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings in the District Court consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
Judge Craven noted that the reason for the disclaimer is that “Matthews is under an injunction prohibiting it from making any suggestions to memorial parks as to the quality of markers installed in the parks.”
