PSKS, Inc. (“PSKS”), sued for alleged violations of § 1 of the Sherman Act and obtained a substantial judgment. This court affirmed.
PSKS, Inc. v. Leegin Creative Leather Prods., Inc.,
I.
A. Factual Background.
Leegin Creative Leather Products, Inc. (“Leegin”), manufactures and distributes handbags, belts, jewelry, and other products under the “Brighton” brand. PSKS operated Kay’s Kloset, a retail fashion and accessories store in Lewisville, Texas, that sold Brighton products and goods from other manufacturers to consumers in the greater Dallas area.
Leegin utilizes a “dual distribution system” for its Brighton products. It distributes Brighton goods at the wholesale level
To harmonize and control the price of Brighton goods, Leegin imposed a resale price maintenance policy. PSKS violated that policy by offering Brighton products at a discount through Kay’s Kloset. When PSKS refused to stop discounting Brighton goods, Leegin ceased to sell Brighton goods to it.
PSKS sued Leegin, alleging that it had entered into vertical resale price maintenance (“RPM”) agreements. The jury awarded $3,975,000 to PSKS, and this court affirmed pursuant to
Dr. Miles. PSKS, Inc. v. Leegin Creative Leather Prods., Inc.,
B. The Supreme Court’s Decision.
The Supreme Court granted certiorari to reexamine the
per se
rule of
Dr. Miles. Leegin,
The Court reasoned that RPM arrangements can have important procompetitive effects, such as encouraging retailers to invest in services and promotions and eliminating free riding by discounting retailers.
Id.
at 890-91,
The opinion addressed the common criticism, raised again by PSKS and amicus in this appeal, that the rule of reason is tantamount to a rule of per se legality. Id. at 897-98. The Court overruled Dr. Miles and adopted the rule of reason precisely because that standard allows lower courts to weed out anticompetitive RPM without subjecting countless procompetitive uses to drawn out judicial scrutiny. Id. at 898-99.
The
Leegin
decision also tore down the artificial doctrinal wall between vertical price and nonprice restraints that had received much criticism after
Continental T.V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania Inc.,
C. PSKS’s claims on remand and the district court’s opinion.
On remand, PSKS filed a second amended complaint alleging that independent retailers were involved in the enforcement of Leegiris RPM policy. Specifically, it alleged that at a meeting, more than one hundred of Leegiris most successful retailers had reached a consensus regarding special occasion discounts and enticements and that that consensus was then adopted and announced as company policy by Leegiris president, Jerry Kohl. It further alleged that Leegin was the hub in a hub- and-spoke conspiracy, because it would intervene to resolve pricing disputes between and among competing Brighton retailers. At the same time, PSKS alleged that Leegin is “the largest single retailer of Brighton products.”
PSKS finally claimed that Leegin, acting at the retail level, agreed with other retailers on the price at which Brighton goods would be sold to consumers. It therefore alleged that Leegin was involved in a horizontal price-fixing conspiracy. PSKS did not allege that retailers were the “source” of the RPM policy or that Leegin established the policy at retailers’ behest. Nor did it allege any agreement among retailers or between Leegin and competing manufacturers. The second amended complaint alleged four anticompetitive effects: (1) that consumers were made to pay an artificially high price for Brighton products; (2) that consumers were “deprived of free and open competition in the purchase of Brighton-brand products”; (3) that PSKS was hindered in its efforts to buy “competing products”; and (4) that consumers were “forced” to pay artificially high and anticompetitive prices for Brighton products.
PSKS also urged that the rule of reason is inapplicable to Leegiris conduct, because Leegin is a dual distributor. PSKS consistently alleged that RPM arrangements must be analyzed differently in dual distribution settings from how they are analyzed in the more common instance in which the manufacturer does not participate at the retail level.
PSKS alleged the relevant product markets as: (1) the “retail market for Brighton’s women’s accessories” and (2) the “wholesale sale of brand-name women’s accessories to independent retailers.” It additionally claimed that Leegin had market power based on its “highly differentiated products,” its large showroom at the Dallas trade show, and its alleged position as the largest among an unspecified number of manufacturers in the proposed wholesale market.
The district court dismissed PSKS’s second amended complaint, holding that it had failed to plead a plausible relevant market as required under the rule of reason; that its new horizontal restraint allegations were barred by the mandate rule; and that the horizontal claims failed as a matter of law, even if they were not barred. The court did not accept the “retail market for Brighton’s women’s accessories” as the relevant market, because that definition ignored the innumerable other brands that are “reasonably interchangeable in use” with Brighton products. It rejected Brighton’s attempt to define Brighton as a single-brand market and held that PSKS had failed to plead a unique submarket for Brighton goods, because it had failed to first plead a “tenable dominant market.” The court also refused PSKS’s second proposed market definition, which consisted of four characteristics: wholesale sale; brand-name; women’s accessories; and independent retailers.
We review a dismissal under rule 12(b)(6)
de novo. Apani Sw., Inc. v. Coca-Cola Enters., Inc.,
A. Vertical price restraint claims after Leegin.
“To prove a Section 1 violation under rule of reason analysis, [plaintiffs] must show that the defendants’ activities caused an injury to competition.”
Doctor’s Hosp., Inc. v. Se. Med. Alliance, Inc.,
PSKS argues that the Supreme Court announced a rule-of-reason standard for vertical price restraint cases that is different from the standard that has applied to vertical non-price restraint cases since GTE Sylvania. Specifically, PSKS claims that under Leegin, a plaintiff sufficiently pleads a vertical price-fixing claim just by pleading “the existence of the agreement and the scope of its operation.” We need not address that contention, because, as explained in part II.B., PSKS’s claim fails anyway as a matter of market definition. For the same reason, we do not need to address the argument of amicus American Antitrust Institute that RPM arrangements should carry a presumption of illegality; that RPM arrangements should be treated as “inherently suspect” because they lead to higher prices or reduced output; that dual distribution systems should be presumptively illegal; and that without a presumption of illegality, the rule of reason amounts to a rule of per se legality for RPM.
B. The relevant market for Brighton goods and market power.
To state an antitrust claim for anticompetitive RPM, PSKS’s complaint must plausibly define the relevant product and geographic markets.
See Apani,
Where the plaintiff fails to define its proposed relevant market with reference to the rule of reasonable interchangeability and cross-elasticity of demand, or alleges a proposed relevant market that clearly does not encompass all interchangeable substitute products even when all factual inferences are granted in plaintiffs favor, the relevant market is legally insufficient, and a motion to dismiss may be granted.
Apani,
PSKS alleged two alternative product markets, neither of which encompasses interchangeable substitute products or recognizes the cross-elasticity of demand for Brighton goods. The district court properly rejected the “retail market for Brighton’s women’s accessories” and the “wholesale sale of brand-name women’s accessories to independent retailers.”
The court also correctly rejected the claim that Brighton products constitute their own market. In rare circumstances, a single brand of a product or service can constitute a relevant market for antitrust purposes.
Eastman Kodak v. Image Tech. Servs.,
Nor does Brighton constitute its own submarket. Although a recognized submarket doctrine exists, 1 such markets must exist within broader economic markets. And the requirements for pleading a submarket are no different from those for pleading a relevant broader market. 2
The second proposed market definition is similarly legally insufficient. “Wholesale sale” does not adequately define the relevant market, because the relevant market definition must focus on the product rather than the distribution level. PSKS has likewise failed sufficiently to allege why Brighton goods are not interchangeable with non-brand name products. 3 Nor is there any relevance to “independent retailers” to the market definition, because PSKS has not alleged facts that could establish why independent retailers do not compete with larger chain stores in the distribution of Brighton products.
Lastly, “women’s accessories” is too broad and vague a definition to constitute a market. Indeed, it is impossible to imagine that Leegin could have power over such a market. As the
Leegin
court points out,
C. The alleged anticompetitive harm.
PSKS alleged that the RPM program forced consumers to pay “artificially” high prices for Brighton products. That claim defies the basic laws of economics. Absent market power, an artificial price hike by Leegin would merely cause it to lose sales to its competitors.
PSKS also alleged that the RPM policy deprived consumers of “free and open competition in the purchase of Brighton-brand products,” because RPM limits price competition among retailers. One problem with that argument is that it ignores interbrand competition, which forces Brighton retailers to offer a combination of price and service that attracts consumers away from competing products. It also fails to recognize that retailers will cease carrying Brighton goods if Leegin imposes onerous requirements that make Brighton products difficult to sell. Moreover, robust competition can exist even in the absence of price competition.
Leegin,
Nor is the termination of PSKS as a retailer an anticompetitive effect. It has been the rule since
United States v. Colgate,
PSKS has further failed to allege any relevant factors that would indicate a plausible anticompetitive effect. Namely, PSKS has never asserted that a cartel of retailers or one dominant retailer is the “source” of Leegin’s RPM program.
See H&B Equip. Co. v. Int’l Harvester Co.,
Even accepting PSKS’s factual allegations as true, nothing in its complaint plausibly alleges a harm to interbrand competition. In
Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat,
D. The horizontal-restraint claims.
PSKS argues that the district court erred in holding that its horizontal-restraint claims are barred by the mandate rule, which precludes litigation of waived issues on remand because they were never raised in district court.
United States v. Lee,
In any event, PSKS has not properly alleged its horizontal-restraint claims, and, irrespective of the mandate rule, the claims must be dismissed on the pleadings. As already discussed, PSKS has failed to allege that retailers were the source of the price restraint, an allegation that would have been potentially inconsistent with the complaint’s factual assertion that Leegin is the largest single retailer of Brighton goods.
PSKS claims that Leegin entered into a horizontal price-fixing conspiracy by discussing special occasion discounts with its retailers in Hawaii. PSKS essentially argues that manufacturers implementing RPM cannot calibrate prices through discussions with their retailers. We cannot agree. Such a rule “can lead, and has led, manufacturers to take wasteful measures .... The increased cost these burdensome measures generate flow to consumers in the form of higher prices.”
Leegin,
PSKS’s reliance on Toys “R” Us for its hub-and-spoke conspiracy claim is also misguided. PSKS has not alleged that any dominant retailer imposed the RPM policy on Leegin, nor has it alleged an agreement among retailers to implement the RPM policy. In the absence of an assertion that retailers agreed to RPM among themselves, there is no wheel and therefore no hub-and-spoke conspiracy, and that allegation was therefore properly dismissed. 7
PSKS further argues that because Leegin is a dual distributor, operating as both a manufacturer and retailer of Brighton goods, the RPM policy is a horizontal restraint. It claims that Leegin’s retail presence gives it an incentive to raise re
Leegin participates in the retail market with nearly 5000 other stores. It must share any profit increase at the retail level with those other retailers. If Leegin sought only to raise its margins, it would raise the price of Brighton goods at the wholesale level, where it could capture all the gains. Leegin is thus no different from a manufacturer that does not have retail stores
8
; it would normally seek to minimize retailer margins as much as possible, including at its own retail stores.
9
See Leegin,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
See Brown Shoe Co. v. United States,
.
See H.J., Inc. v. Int'l Tel. & Tel. Corp.,
. We agree with the district court that allowing PSKS to amend its complaint to correct that deficiency would be futile in light of the complaint’s other flaws.
.
See Muenster Butane, Inc. v. Stewart Co.,
.
See, e.g., Digital Equip. Corp. v. Uniq Digital Techs., Inc.,
.
See Cont’l T.V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania Inc.,
. Similarly off the mark is PSKS’s reliance on
United States v. McKesson & Robbins, Inc.,
. As the district court noted, eight other circuits have applied the traditional rule of reason to dual distribution systems.
See AT&T Corp. v. JMC Telecom, LLC,
. "A manufacturer that helps dealers form a cartel is doing itself in. It will sell less, and dealers will get the monopoly profits.” Easterbrook, Vertical Restraints and the Rule of Reason, 53 Antitrust L.J. 135, 142 (1984).
