POTTERS MEDICAL CENTER, a corporation; the Neurosurgical
Clinic and Allied Health Specialties, Inc., a professional
corporation; Beaver Creek Bio- Medical, Inc., a
corporation, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
The CITY HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION d/b/a East Liverpool City
Hospital, a corporation; Jackman S. Vodrey; J.W.
Schoolnic, M.D., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 85-3182.
United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.
Argued Jan. 31, 1986.
Decided Sept. 4, 1986.
Douglas J. Colton (argued), Albert J. Angel, Wood, Lucksinger & Epstein, Washington, D.C., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Jackman S. Vodrey, East Liverpool, Ohio, David J. Young, Murphey, Young & Smith, Columbus, Ohio, Steven Tigges (argued), Steven E. Sigalow, Akron, Ohio, for defendants-appellees.
Before CONTIE, Circuit Judge, PECK, Senior Circuit Judge, and GIBSON*, District Judge.
JOHN W. PECK, Senior Circuit Judge.
Plaintiffs Potters Medical Center ("Potters"), Neurosurgical Clinic and Allied Health Specialties, Inc. ("NCA"), and Beaver Creek Bio-Medical, Inc. ("BCB") appeal the summary judgment entered in this antitrust action by the district court in favor of defendants East Liverpool City Hospital ("City Hospital"), Jackman Vodrey, and J.W. Schoolnic, M.D.1 Plaintiffs' complaint alleged that defendants violated Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Secs. 1, 2, and sought injunctive relief as well as treble damages under Sec. 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 15. The complaint also alleged a pendent state claim for violation of Ohio's antitrust law, the Valentine Act, Ohio Rev.Code Sec. 1331.01 et seq. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the judgment of the district court in part, reverse in part, and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I.
Potters is a 39-bed general acute care hospital in operation since 1977 in East Liverpool, Ohio. Potters also provides pathology services. NCA is a professional corporation which owns and operates a nearby diagnostic imaging facility. BCB is a corporation formed in connection with the construction of a physician office building and minor emergency clinic adjacent to Potters. Although NCA and BCB are separately incorporated, there are indications in the record that they are affiliated with Potters.
City Hospital, a 275-bed general acute care hospital, is the only other hospital in East Liverpool, Ohio, and is located one block away from Potters. City Hospital also provides pathology services and minor emergency care. Vodrey is an attorney for City Hospital and a member of its Board of Trustees. Schoolnic is a senior member of City Hospital's medical staff and serves as the chairman of City Hospital's Department of Internal Medicine.
In their complaint filed October 17, 1983, Potters, NCA, and BCB alleged Sherman Act violations with respect to four relevant markets. In Count One, they alleged that City Hospital had a monopoly in the provision of hospital inpatient services and violated Secs. 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act with respect to that market by: (1) refusing to grant staff privileges to doctors with Potters' privileges, thereby depriving Potters of admissions and referrals; (2) pressuring doctors with City Hospital staff privileges not to seek staff privileges at Potters, thus depriving Potters of admissions and referrals; (3) opposing Potters' efforts to obtain the certification under Sec. 1122 of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1320a-1, necessary for reimbursement of certain capital expenditures; (4) conspiring with the Hospital Care Corporation to prevent Potters from obtaining a Blue Cross participating hospital contract, thereby depriving Potters of admissions and reimbursements; (5) engaging in sham proceedings against Potters regarding BCB's alleged lack of compliance with "certificate of need" laws prior to building an emergency care clinic; and (6) entering restrictive contracts with City Hospital staff physicians which prohibit their dealings with Potters. They further alleged that Vodrey and Schoolnic conspired with City Hospital with respect to these acts.
Count Two alleged that City Hospital had a monopoly over the provision of minor emergency services and sought illegally to maintain its monopoly and suppress competition in this market through: (1) intimidation and coercion of a City Hospital staff physician who voiced an intent to operate a competing minor emergency services facility, and (2) instigation of and participation in sham proceedings against Potters to suppress BCB's competition. Count Two also alleged that defendants conspired to monopolize and to restrain trade in this market.
Count Three alleged that defendants illegally conspired and sought to maintain City Hospital's monopoly over outpatient pathology services by (1) coercing physicians not to direct patients to Potters' outpatient pathology services, and (2) by offering improper incentives to doctors to refer such business to City Hospital.
Count Four alleged that City Hospital sought to destroy NCA's diagnostic imaging services, monopolized radiology services in this market, and attempted to monopolize CT-scanning services by: (1) refusing doctors employed by NCA access to staff privileges at City Hospital, thereby depriving NCA and Potters of patient referrals and revenues; (2) harassing physicians to prevent them from referring patients to NCA and Potters, and coercing them to refer CT-scan patients to providers other than NCA; (3) restricting the ability of NCA doctors to consult or provide services to patients admitted to City Hospital; and (4) seeking its own certificate of need for installation of a CT-scanner at City Hospital through use of materially false statements about Potters and NCA. Vodrey and Schoolnic were alleged to have conspired with City Hospital in regard to these acts.
City Hospital sought a stay of this action pending the outcome of some relevant Ohio state court litigation (discussed infra in connection with our disposition of Potters' claims of sham activity). The request was denied on February 21, 1984, and each side began the discovery process with preparation of document production demands and interrogatories. However, Potters, NCA and BCB maintain that at an in-chambers status conference on March 9, 1984, which was unreported, the district court suspended discovery pending resolution of summary judgment motions which were to be submitted twenty days after the conference with the response due twenty days later. Although the precise nature of the order made by the district court is not clear from the record, some understanding to suspend discovery apparently existed because neither side thereafter responded to pending discovery requests nor sought compliance with its own requests. Defendants filed motions for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56, Fed.R.Civ.P., on March 29, 1984, with extensive supporting memoranda and affidavits. Plaintiffs responded in opposition with an extensive supporting memorandum and affidavits on April 23, 1984. On January 28, 1985, the district court granted summary judgment for City Hospital, Vodrey, and Schoolnic with respect to all counts of the complaint. Potters, NCA and BCB now appeal the district court's judgment in its entirety.
II.
Summary judgment should be entered only when "the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." Rule 56(c), Fed.R.Civ.P. Both the Supreme Court and this circuit have stressed their reluctance to dispose of antitrust litigation on motions for summary judgment. See Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.,
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.
This is not to say, however, that summary judgment should never be granted.
While we recognize the importance of preserving litigants' rights to a trial on their claims, we are not prepared to extend those rights to the point of requiring that anyone who files an antitrust complaint setting forth a valid cause of action be entitled to a full-dress trial notwithstanding the absence of any significant probative evidence tending to support the complaint.
First National Bank of Arizona v. Cities Service Co.,
Section 1 Claims
Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, provides: "Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States ... is declared to be illegal." A necessary element of establishing a Sec. 1 violation is proof of conspiracy or concerted activity. Section 1 does not reach unilateral conduct; only Sec. 2 governs conduct by a single actor. Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp.,
We agree with the district court that as a matter of law Vodrey and Schoolnic lack the capacity to conspire with City Hospital. It is well settled that "officers or employees of the same firm do not provide the plurality of actors imperative for a Sec. 1 conspiracy." Copperweld,
The only remaining Sec. 1 claim was City Hospital's alleged conspiracy with the Hospital Care Corporation (not a party to this action) to prevent Potters from obtaining a Blue Cross participating hospital contract, thereby limiting Potters' reimbursement from Blue Cross and discouraging hospital inpatient admissions. City Hospital expressly denied this allegation by way of sworn affidavit, stating that it had never to its knowledge communicated with the Hospital Care Corporation regarding Potters, and also introduced evidence that the Hospital Care Corporation denied Potters a contract due to its failure to meet statutory cost control objectives. The record reflects that Potters did not rebut City Hospital's affidavit nor provide any factual basis from which one could reasonably infer that a conspiracy existed; indeed, Potters did not even allude to this issue in its opposing memorandum. Under these circumstances, summary judgment was proper as to this last Sec. 1 claim. See Rule 56(e), Fed.R.Civ.P.; Celotex, --- U.S. at ----,
Section 2 Claims
Section 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 2, provides: "[e]very person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States ... shall be deemed guilty of a felony...." The offenses of monopolization, attempt to monopolize, and conspiracy to monopolize are distinct and require different proofs.
Because Sec. 2 conspiracy to monopolize claims require proof of concerted activity, just as Sec. 1 conspiracy claims do, "[t]he claim of a conspiracy to monopolize fails for the same reason as did the appellants' section 1 claims...." Smith,
To establish the offense of monopolization a plaintiff must show that a defendant either unfairly attained or maintained monopoly power. United States v. Grinnell Corp.,
An attempted monopolization occurs when a competitor, with a "dangerous probability of success," engages in anticompetitive practices the specific design of which are, to build a monopoly or exclude or destroy competition. See Times-Picayune Publishing Co. v. United States,
In order to succeed on either a monopolization or attempt to monopolize claim plaintiffs must establish the relevant product and geographic markets in which they compete with the alleged monopolizers. See, e.g., United States v. Grinnell Corp.,
Thus, before reaching the merits of an antitrust claim, it is necessary to identify the relevant markets, Smith,
Despite the necessity of remand on this basis, we will review the district court's disposition of the Sec. 2 monopolization and attempt to monopolize claims in each of the alleged relevant markets2 in order to assist the district court on remand, and because we can affirm summary judgment with respect to the claims of "sham" proceedings.
Hospital Inpatient Services
Potters argued that City Hospital's alleged refusal to grant staff privileges to doctors with Potters' staff privileges was a Sec. 2 violation. The district court applied Southhaven Land Co., Inc. v. Malone & Hyde, Inc.,
(1) the causal connection between the antitrust violation and harm to the plaintiff and whether that harm was intended to be caused; (2) the nature of the plaintiff's alleged injury including the status of the plaintiff as consumer or competitor in the relevant market; (3) the directness or indirectness of the injury, and the related inquiry of whether the damages are speculative; (4) the potential for duplicative recovery or complex apportionment of damages; and (5) the existence of more direct victims of the alleged antitrust violation.
Under the Southhaven analysis, the district court found that Potters lacked standing because the only competition directly restrained was that between doctors, not hospitals; that Potters' claimed injuries of "lost admissions" and "lost revenues" were indirect; and that Potters' damages were speculative.
We believe that the district court erred in so finding. It is necessary to ascertain first whether City Hospital's alleged efforts to restrict staff privileges could constitute an act of monopolization; i.e. "the use of monopoly power to foreclose competition or gain a competitive advantage that is unlawful." Borden, Inc. v. FTC,
Under the first Southaven factor, there would be a causal connection between the alleged antitrust violation--restriction of staff privileges--and the harm--corresponding reduction of Potters' staff physicians, admissions and revenue--to Potters. In addition, Potters alleged that City Hospital intended to harm Potters through this practice and submitted doctors' affidavits which indicated that City Hospital was hostile and "at all-out war with Potters." Under the second Southaven factor, Potters is clearly a competitor in the alleged relevant market of hospital inpatient services. As to the third factor, we disagree with the district court's conclusion that Potters' alleged injuries of lost admissions and revenues are indirect. If, as City Hospital stated, patients can only be admitted by a doctor with staff privileges, then lost admissions and revenues could be a direct result of a policy which seeks to limit the number of doctors with privileges at Potters. It is true that physicians may be directly injured by such a policy, as the district court found, but this does not mean that Potters' injury is necessarily less direct or is not "inextricably intertwined with the injury" City Hospital allegedly sought to inflict. See Associated General Contractors,
The district court disposed of Potters' claim that City Hospital threatened and intimidated its own staff physicians not to seek privileges at Potters on the same ground of lack of standing. The concerns articulated above apply with equal force here. In addition, Potters submitted affidavits of doctors which supported its allegation that City Hospital sought primarily to harm Potters, not doctors, by restricting privileges.
Potters further alleged that City Hospital required restrictive contracts with some staff physicians that unfairly and unnecessarily prevented them from dealing with Potters or admitting patients at Potters. City Hospital has a "physician recruitment" program to attract physicians to the East Liverpool area. In exchange for certain bonuses and salary guarantees, the recruited physicians must agree to admit patients only to City Hospital and to be on staff only at City Hospital for a period of three years. The district court granted summary judgment for City Hospital on this claim, concluding that the contracts in question "did not impose an unreasonable restraint on trade." Such "restraint of trade" language is relevant only to Sec. 1 Sherman Act violations; it appears therefore that the district court never fully analyzed this claim under Sec. 2 standards. In addition, the district court's conclusion rested heavily on Robinson v. Magovern,
Appellants finally alleged that City Hospital monopolized or attempted to monopolize certain markets by opposing Potters' Sec. 1122 application and by participating in other sham activity. Shortly after opening its facility, Potters applied to the Ohio Department of Health (ODH) for reimbursement of certain capital expenditures. Section 1122 of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1320a-1, required hospitals to obtain approval for such reimbursement from the state's health systems agency. This was to assure that Federal funds were "not used to support unnecessary capital expenditures made by or on behalf of health care facilities...." 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1320a-1(a). ODH forwarded a copy of Potters' application to the Health Systems Agency of Eastern Ohio (HSAEO) for its recommendation. HSAEO, as part of its review process, requested eastern Ohio hospitals to comment on Potters' application. Seven, including City Hospital, suggested that Potters was duplicating available health care services. Thereafter, HSAEO recommended denial of the application; ODH adopted the recommendation.
As a result of this decision the Hospital Care Corporation rejected Potters' separate efforts to receive a Blue Cross participating hospital contract. Under Ohio Rev. Code Sec. 1739.06, then in effect, a hospital service organization, such as Blue Cross, could not contract with a hospital which failed to comply with statutory cost control objectives, one of which was the "[e]limination of duplicative or unnecessary services...." See Ohio Rev. Code Sec. 1739.01(M)(1). Potters appealed the denial to the Ohio Superintendent of Insurance; the Superintendent affirmed, as did the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas and the Ohio Court of Appeals. However, the Ohio Supreme Court reversed, holding that Blue Cross and the Superintendent of Insurance had to make independent determinations regarding cost containment objectives and could not simply rely on HSAEO's action. Potters Medical Center, Inc. v. Ratchford,
In 1982 NCA acquired a CT-scanner and BCB began construction of an emergency care facility. Under Ohio "certificate of need" (CON) laws, a "health care facility" (e.g. a hospital) cannot undertake major capital expenditures, such as purchase of a CT-scanner or a building program, without first obtaining a CON. Ohio Rev. Code Sec. 3702.63(A), (B). The purpose of the CON laws is cost containment and prevention of duplicative services. The City Hospital Executive Committee was concerned that this expansion would duplicate existing and underutilized facilities at City Hospital. City Hospital wrote ODH expressing its belief that Potters was using its alleged affiliates, BCB and NCA, to circumvent CON laws. ODH requested the Ohio Attorney General's action on the matter. In 1983 the Attorney General filed suit in the Columbiana County Common Pleas Court against Potters; City Hospital was granted leave to intervene as a plaintiff. On May 2, 1983, the common pleas court, finding that Potters had attempted to circumvent CON laws, entered a preliminary injunction stopping BCB's emergency care facility construction until it complied with CON laws. The Ohio Court of Appeals, Seventh District, stayed the injunction. The injunction was temporarily suspended pursuant to a writ of supersedeas by the Ohio Supreme Court, which subsequently dismissed the appeal for lack of a final order. The record does not indicate the current status of this litigation.
Potters has contended that the district court erred in finding that City Hospital's involvement and/or instigation of such activity was insulated from antitrust liability by the Noerr-Pennington doctrine. Eastern Railroad Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc.,
Potters has argued that City Hospital's conduct falls within the sham exception, and that the district court impermissibly weighed issues of fact in granting summary judgment for City Hospital on this issue. We disagree. Our careful review of the entire record shows that City Hospital's activities were precisely the type of conduct intended to be insulated by Noerr-Pennington.
With regard to Potters' Sec. 1122 application, we observe that City Hospital's comments were solicited by the HSAEO, the governmental agency responsible for local health planning. The Sec. 1122 scheme anticipates such participation by private health care providers. Hospital Building Co. v. Trustees of Rex Hospital,
Similarly, we find no merit in Potters' allegation that a material fact issue existed as to whether City Hospital's participation in the CON litigation was sham activity. Potters argued that City Hospital's own evidence submitted with its summary judgment motion raised inferences of sham activity. The affidavit of Bruce Nielsen, City Hospital's president and chief executive officer, accompanied by copies of Board of Trustees meetings and correspondence with ODH reveals that City Hospital was concerned that BCB's and NCA's proposed expansions would unnecessarily duplicate existing facilities and that Potters was trying to circumvent Ohio CON laws through BCB and NCA. As a result, by City Hospital's own admission, it filed a formal protest with ODH regarding the expansion and requested ODH to determine whether Potters had to obtain a CON for BCB's expansion, citing news articles and other information in which BCB was represented as an affiliate of Potters and that the expansion was part of Potters' growth. Thereafter, ODH, which twice previously had requested Potters to clarify its relationship with BCB, requested the Ohio Attorney General to commence legal action against Potters. The Board minutes also reflect that City Hospital representatives planned to meet with the Ohio Attorney General to express their concerns and to request injunctive relief pending CON review and approval. As noted above, the Ohio Attorney General was successful in obtaining a preliminary injunction. Although the Ohio Court of Appeals for the Seventh District stayed the injunction as it pertained to construction of the emergency facility, use or occupancy of the facility was prohibited pending a final determination or further order of the Court. Thereafter, Potters did request CON review of both the CT-scanner and emergency center project. ODH found that the CT-scanner was purchased on Potters' behalf and subject to CON requirements. It found the emergency center project to be non-reviewable, but attached specific conditions which had to be followed to preclude future review.
On these undisputed facts, City Hospital's conduct did not rise to "a pattern of baseless, repetitive claims" or "abuse of processes" necessary to constitute sham activity, California Motor Transport,
Without a doubt, the intention to harm a competitor is not sufficient to make litigation or administrative proceedings a sham. That anticompetitive motive is the very matter protected under Noerr-Pennington. Rather, the requisite motive for the sham exception is the intent to harm one's competitors not by the result of the litigation but by the simple fact of the institution of litigation.
MCI Communications Corp. v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
Minor Emergency Services
Aside from the allegation that City Hospital engaged in sham activity in this market in order to suppress competition by BCB, which must fail for the reasons stated above, Potters alleged that City Hospital intimidated and coerced Dr. Castillo who stated his intent to open and operate the competing minor emergency services facility. Such conduct, if established, could indicate exclusionary motives; however, Nielsen's affidavit submitted on behalf of City Hospital attests that City Hospital had no knowledge of Castillo's intent until after his resignation. Castillo's letter of resignation and his affidavit are silent on this particular point. Because Potters put forth no evidence relating to this claim, summary judgment was proper. See First National Bank,
Outpatient Pathology Services
Potters alleged that City Hospital possessed a legal monopoly, but unlawfully sought to maintain the monopoly and foreclose competition by coercing and intimidating doctors not to refer outpatient pathology services business to Potters and by offering improper incentives to refer such work to City Hospital. The district court granted summary judgment for City Hospital on the basis that City Hospital's restrictive contract with its chairman of pathology services, which guaranteed his full-time commitment to quality pathology services at City Hospital, did not constitute an unreasonable restraint of trade. "Restraint of trade" analysis relates to a Sec. 1 violation and is not responsive to the Sec. 2 violation alleged. Second, the district court's cursory disposition of this claim totally ignored Potters' distinct allegations that City Hospital coerced physicians not to direct outpatient pathology business to Potters and offered improper incentives for referrals to City Hospital. City Hospital never responded to this allegation, but only noted the reasons for its restrictive contracts with the pathology services chairman. In view of this and Potters' evidence of City Hospital's alleged pressuring tactics, summary judgment was improper as to this claim.
Diagnostic Imaging Services
Appellants alleged that City Hospital unlawfully sought to maintain its monopoly over radiology services, and attempted to monopolize CT-scanning services. First, they asserted that City Hospital unreasonably refused NCA physicians staff privileges, thereby depriving NCA and Potters of patient referrals and revenues. The district court found that Potters and NCA lacked standing to bring this claim. For the same reasons set forth in our discussion of standing to bring claims relating to hospital inpatient services, this finding was erroneous. Appellants also alleged that City Hospital coerced and harassed physicians not to refer patients to Potters and NCA, compelled CT-scanning patient referrals to providers other than NCA, and unfairly restricted the ability of NCA physicians to consult with, or provide services to, patients admitted to City Hospital. The district court also disposed of these claims on the basis that Potters lacked proper standing to assert them. We disagree for the same reasons set forth in our discussion of the similar claims made with respect to the outpatient pathology services market. In addition, we note that Potters' affidavits presented evidence and raised inferences that City Hospital pressured doctors with the intent to harm Potters and NCA. Summary judgment was thus premature with respect to this claim.
Finally, appellants charged that the district court erroneously entered summary judgment with regard to the allegation that City Hospital's CON application for its own CT-scanner contained materially false statements about Potters and NCA. As the district court stated, the knowing and willful submission of false facts to a government agency falls within the sham exception to the Noerr-Pennington doctrine. Rex Hospital,
III.
Although the district court correctly found that Vodrey and Schoolnic could not conspire as a matter of law, that summary judgment was warranted in the Blue Cross conspiracy claim, and that City Hospital's involvement in litigation and administrative proceedings was insulated by the Noerr-Pennington doctrine, the district court erred in its analysis of the remaining Sec. 2 claims. The district court failed to identify the relevant markets and whether City Hospital was, indeed, a monopolist in certain markets as alleged by Potters. Moreover, in analyzing the items of conduct alleged to evidence City Hospital's exclusionary intent the district court either disregarded genuine issues of material fact raised thereby or erroneously disposed of the claims by applying an overly restrictive view of standing. This case, like most antitrust cases, is one in which "motive and intent play leading roles," Poller,
Notes
The Honorable Benjamin F. Gibson, United States District Judge for the Western District of Michigan, sitting by designation
Alexander Fisher, M.D., a physician with staff privileges at City Hospital, was also named as a defendant; however, he died shortly after initiation of this action and plaintiffs did not oppose a motion by Fisher's estate to dismiss claims against him
We note that City Hospital has not challenged Potters' characterization of the relevant markets, City Hospital's monopoly in some of the markets, and that Potters competes in those markets. We also acknowledge that due to the state of the record we have little information regarding the particular market forces at work in the health care services industry and the markets in issue
