PACE INDUSTRIES, INC., аn Arizona Corp., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
THREE PHOENIX CO., an Arizona corp., Wabash Computer Corp.,
a Delaware corp., Donald E. Oglesby, husband, and
Beverly Oglesby, wife, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 85-1754.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Feb. 12, 1986.
Decided March 24, 1987.
Brian K. Stanley, Phoenix, Ariz., for plaintiff-appellant.
Andrew S. Gordon, Robert C. Houser, Casceil C. Medlin, Phoenix, Ariz., for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Arizona.
Before BROWNING, TANG and BEEZER, Circuit Judges.
TANG, Circuit Judge:
Pace Industries, Inc. ("Pace") appeals from a grant of summary judgment for Three Phoenix Co. ("Three Phoenix"), Donald Oglesby ("Oglesby") and Beverly Oglesby, and Wabash Computer Corporation ("Wabash") on Pace's antitrust action for treble damages under 15 U.S.C. Sec. 15. The district court held that thе action was barred by the four-year statute of limitations. We affirm.
FACTS
Appellee Wabash manufactured and sold two lines of disc testing equipment: single disc testers and multiple disc testers. In 1973, Wabash sold its single disc tester line to appellee Three Phoenix, and its multiple disc tester line to Pace. The contract of sale between Wabash and Pace contained a covenant wherein Pace agreed not to compete with Three Phoеnix in the manufacture and sale of single disc testing equipment. Three Phoenix was not a signatory to the Wabash/Pace Contract, but is a third party beneficiary.
Appellee Donald Oglesby founded Three Phoenix in 1973 and was its original president. Before the founding of Three Phoenix, Oglesby was the Vice President and General Manager of Wabash.
In 1978, Pace prepared to market single disc testing equipment. Single disc testing equipment is a machine designed for testing the quality of a single disc surface or the two surfaces of a single disc. Three Phoenix filed a state court injunction and accounting action to enforce the restrictive covenant in the Wabash/Pace contract as a third-party beneficiary. In its defense, Pace filed a motion to dismiss, and argued that the restrictive covenant was unenforceable because it violates federal and state antitrust laws. Pace prevailed in superior court. Three Phoenix then appealed the decision to the Arizona Court of Appeals which reversed in 1981. Three Phoenix Co. v. Pace Industries,
Wabash was not a party to the state court suit. Three Phoenix acted to enforce its own rights, and the Arizona Supreme Court ruled "Wabash retained no interest capable of being protected by the covenant with Pace." Id.,
On May 3, 1983, four months after the Arizona Supreme Court decision, Pace filed this treble damages action under 15 U.S.C. Sec. 15 in United States District Court. Pace alleged Sherman Act and Arizona Antitrust Act violations by the defendants contracting, combining and conspiring to prevent it from entering the single disc testing equipment market as a manufacturer and/or distributor of such equipment. Wabash and Three Phoenix moved for summary judgment, asserting that Pace's claim was barred by the applicable four-year statute of limitations. They also argued that they had committed no act subsequent to the filing of the Three Phoenix v. Pace state court enforcement suit which could give rise to a cause of action for purposes of the "last overt act" rule. Pace asserted various exceptions to the statute of limitations.
The court granted defendants' motion for summary judgment on April 2, 1984, and again upon rehearing on March 7, 1985. In both instances, the district court held that the limitations period for Pace's antitrust claim had begun in 1978 and expired in 1982. Pace timely appealed on March 8, 1985.
DISCUSSION
"The granting of a summary judgment is reviewable de novo." Haluapo v. Akashi Kaiun, K.K.,
The Sherman Antitrust Act requires a person to sue within four years to enforce a cause of action claiming treble damages for antitrust injury.1 Pace alleges that the covenant in the 1973 contract prevented it from competing with Three Phoenix in the market for single disc testing equipment. The district court held that a federal cause of action accrued to Pace in 1978 when Three Phoenix filed suit in state court, but rejected Pace's contentions that the statute of limitations was tolled pending the outcome of the state court litigation.
Pace argues that the statute of limitations does not bar this action because: (a) the four-and-one-half-year state court action was a continuing antitrust violation; (b) the publication of an article in the Phoenix Business Journal in 1981 was an overt act which restarted the statute of limitations; (c) the statute was tolled because Pace's damages were speculative and unascertainable in 1978; and (d) there was equitable tolling of the statute pending the outcome of the state court suit. We reject each of these contentions.
A. State Court Action: Continuing Violation or Last Overt Act?
A cause of action in antitrust accrues each time a plaintiff is injured by an act of the defendant and the statute of limitations runs from the commission of the act. Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc.,
Pace argues that each phase of the state court action from the filing of Three Phoenix's complaint through resolution of the final appeal constituted discrete overt acts which restarted the statute of limitations. Three Phoenix counters that the commencement of the lawsuit on September 14, 1978 constituted the last overt act upon which Pace could base a claim. We hold that where the alleged antitrust violation is the attempted enforcement of an illegal contract through judicial process, the initiation of judicial proceedings is the last overt act for purposes of the statute of limitations.
We have held that active enforcement of an illegal contract may, under certain circumstances, constitute an overt act which will restart the statute of limitations. Airweld, Inc. v. Airco, Inс.,
Our contract enforcement cases have not reached the issue of whether each phase of an enforcement action is an overt act. In Sportservice,
Most of our discussion of continuing violations and last overt acts arises in refusаl to deal cases. In In re Multidistrict Vehicle Air Pollution,
We reached a different conclusion in Hennegan v. Pacifico Creative Service, Inc.,
These cases establish that two elements characterize an overt act which will restart the statute of limitations: 1) It must be a new and independent act that is not merely a reaffirmation of a previous act; and 2) it must inflict new and accumulating injury on the plaintiff.
The initiation of a lawsuit is the final, immutable act of enforcement of an allegedly illegal contract. At that point in time the lawsuit assumes an existence separate from the contract. All subsequent acts are controlled by the exigencies of litigation, not enforcement of the contract. The complaint puts the aggrieved party on notice that there is a possible antitrust violation. In every lawsuit, a party has a right, and an attorney has a duty, to prosecute or defend vigorously. Furthermore, no new injury results from the act of aрpealing that the defendant does not already endure as a result of the act of filing the action initially. This is true because the reasonable expectation from the commencement of a lawsuit is that the plaintiff will pursue the litigation until it prevails or the last appeal is exhausted.
Normally, the aggrieved party will counterclaim in the enforcement action, see, e.g., Sportservice,
We hold that the last overt act in the enforcement of this contract was the initiation of the lawsuit in state court. Any injury to Pace resulting from continued prosecution through thе normal course of the appellate process relates back to the initial decision to file. See Hennegan,
The issue before thе court on this appeal is simply whether prosecution of a contract enforcement suit is a single overt act or a continuing antitrust violation. In concluding that it is a single overt act, we do not decide whether particularly vexatious and unjustified trial tactics can give rise to separate antitrust actions or whether they support only a motion for sanctions pursuant to FRCP 11.
B. Article in Business Journal as Last Overt Act
Pace argues that the publication of an article in the Phoеnix Business Journal on July 6, 1981 gave rise to a separate cause of action. The article, "Fast-growing Three Phoenix Co. Plans to Take Disc Test Industry Lead," was based on interviews given by defendant Oglesby, president of Three Phoenix Co., and Stephen T. Meadow, Three Phoenix's attorney. It reported the state court of appeals decision. Pace contends that this article harmed its competitive designs because it "would naturally lead actual and potential customers, investors, co-venturers and employees to infer that Pace's planned introduction of single disc testing products had already been halted."
We find no authority for Pace's contention that publicity of an unfavorable court ruling can constitute an overt act for restarting the statute of limitations. Pace cites only one case, Handgards, Inc. v. Johnson & Johnson,
C. Speculative Damages Exception to the Statutе of Limitations
Pace argues that its cause of action was tolled during the state court action until the final decision of the Arizona Supreme Court when its damages first became fixed and ascertainable. In Zenith Radio Corp.,
if a plaintiff feels the adverse impact of an antitrust conspiracy on a particular date, a cause of action immediately accrues to him to recover all damages incurred by that date and all provable damages that will flow in the future from the acts of the conspirators on that date....
[T]he cause of action for future damages ... will accrue only on the date they are suffered; thereafter the plaintiff may sue to recover them at any date within four years from the date they were inflicted.
Pace alleges damages of lost profits from delay in entering the single disc testing equipment market and expenses from defending the state court lаw suit. These damages, it argues, were too speculative to be ascertainable at the time of the filing and during the pendency of Three Phoenix's law suit.
Zenith, however, "did not establish new standards for determining whether damages are ascertainable as of a particular date." Air Pollution,
"The principal cases explaining the criteria for ascertaining whether damages are speculative remain Bigelow v. RKO Pictures, Inc.,
Id.,
We find unpersuasive Pace's claim that lost profits for a business that was delayed in entering the market or that never entered the market bеcause of Three Phoenix's state court action constituted speculative damages. In Air Pollution, we determined that because the size of the market for 1966 model year cars could be estimated with reasonable accuracy, "[n]o difficulties with projecting market share existed in late 1964 that do not exist today." Thus, we held that the uncertain extent of such damage was neither too speculative nor its amount or nature unprovable. Id. at 74. Similarly, in Charlotte Telecasters, the Fourth Circuit held that future profits of a cable television system were not too speculative to be subject to proof.
Pace's claim that the statute of limitations was tolled because attorneys fees were uncertain until the conclusion of the litigation is also unpersuasive. We find thаt this claim falls within the uncertain extent of damages category set out in Air Pollution,
D. Equitable Tolling During the State Court Proceeding
Finally, Pace argues that the statute of limitations was suspended pending the outcome of the state court action.
Prior judicial actions, however, "do not toll the statute of limitations, no matter how close their relationship to the one at bar." Ramirez de Arellano v. Alvаrez de Choudens,
Mt. Hood Stages, Inc. v. Greyhound Corp.,
CONCLUSION
We affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment for Three Phoenix, Oglesby and Wabash. Pace's antitrust counterclaim matured at the filing of the state court suit in 1978 and expired in 1982; its federal claim is time barred.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
See 15 U.S.C. Sec. 15, "[a]ny person who shall be injured in his business or property by anything forbidden in the antitrust laws may sue thеrefor in any district court ... and shall recover threefold the damages by him sustained;" and 15 U.S.C. Sec. 15b, "[a]ny action to enforce any cause of action under sections 15 or 15a of this title shall be forever barred unless commenced within four years after the cause of action accrued."
The decisions of other courts that antitrust counterclaims mature at the time of the filing of the lawsuit is further support for our holding. In Chest Hill Co. v. Guttman, 1981-2 Trade Cases, Para. 64,417 (S.D.Ohio 1981), thе Court held that the antitrust counterclaim for enforcement of an illegal contract accrues when the first steps are taken judicially to enforce the contract. Similarly, in National Dairy Products Corp. v. Borden Co.,
