Psychiatrists Rafael Sanjuan and Marcello A. Maviglia passed written examinations and became eligible for certification by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology. Each took an oral examination administered by a panel of specialists under the Board’s regulations; each faded. The Board will review a panel’s conclusions if the applicant pays an appeal fee. Dissatisfied with the Board’s procedures for internal appeals, San-juan and Maviglia filed this suit, which the
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district court dismissed under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). 1994 U.S. Dist. Lexis 2449,
When applying to the Board for certification, plaintiffs undertook to resolve any disagreements through the Board’s internal processes:
I hereby release, discharge and exonerate the Board, its directors, officers, members, examiners, representatives and agents from any actions, suits, obligations, damages, claims or demands arising out of, or in connection with, this application, the grade or grades given with respect to the oral or written examinations or the failure of the Board to issue me [a] certificate. It is understood that the decision as to whether my examinations qualify me for a certificate vest solely and exclusively in the Board and that its decision is final.
Plaintiffs went back on their word, suing instead of accepting the outcome of the internal appeals. They complain about the high cost of the appeal (and of the application itself) without recognizing that costs would be higher still if disputes were resolved by the courts. The Board has spent far more than their application fees in defending this suit, which did not get past the pleadings stage. To fulfill its mission of identifying excellent specialists, the Board must disappoint others — for “when everyone is somebody, then no-one’s anybody.” W.S. Gilbert, in The Gondoliers (1889). The need to turn down many applicants implies a substantial risk of retaliatory litigation by physicians who esteem their abilities more highly than does the Board. Thus there may be substantial savings from bringing disputes back in house, and these savings redound to all applicants’ benefits through lower fees.
Because the Board’s headquarters are in Illinois, it submits — and plaintiffs agree — that Illinois law governs the validity of this release. Illinois enforces covenants not to sue (with an exception discussed at the end of this opinion). E.g.,
Harris v. Walker,
Perhaps, however, the Board lacks authority to set its admissions criteria. If so, the release, as one requirement of making an application, would be in jeopardy. Illinois does not permit professional associations full sway over admissions criteria if membership is an “economic necessity.”
Treister v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
One is that the Board is not a private association at all. According to plaintiffs, the Board is a “state actor,” and the Constitution entitles them to more elaborate procedures than the Board provides. We agree with the district court, however, that the Board is a private association. It does not issue licenses to practice; it simply certifies achievement of a standard of excellence. It does not wield any state power and therefore need not use the procedures the due process clause requires of the government.
NCAA v. Tarkanian,
Antitrust is a different matter. It is designed to regulate how private parties arrange their affairs — to protect the public
from,
how private producers regulate their affairs. A bylaw of the Hardwood Manufacturers’ Association committing the members to resolve all differences by appeal to the board of governors would not be effective in antitrust law, which is based on a suspicion that agreements among producers undermine the interests of consumers. Cf.
American Column & Lumber Co. v. United States,
Seeking to block the antitrust claim at the threshold, the Board invokes the rule that agreements between corporations and their employees, divisions, or subsidiaries are not the kind of “conspiracies” against which the antitrust laws are directed.
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp.,
What sinks plaintiffs’ antitrust claim is not the skimpiness of their complaint but the information they provided in response to the district judge’s probing. He asked counsel to specify what consumers, in what market, were injured by the Board’s practices. Substantial market power is an essential ingredient of every antitrust case under the Rule of Reason.
Hardy v. City Optical, Inc.,
When challenged, plaintiffs revealed that they want to show injury
to producers.
According to plaintiffs’ brief, the Board’s oral examination is especially hard on physicians born outside the United States (and for whom English is not their native language), with the result that these physicians’ earnings fall short of their colleagues who were born in the United States. The claim that a practice reduces (particular) producers’ incomes has nothing to do with the antitrust laws, which are designed to drive producers’ prices down rather than up.
Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.,
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One final subject requires a brief examination. Illinois does not enforce contracts exculpating persons from the consequences of their wilful and wanton acts.
Downing v. United Auto Racing Association,
Affirmed.
