*184 OPINION OF THE COURT
This is fundаmentally an action for declaratory judgment. Plaintiff Ransomes America Corporation (“RAC”) seeks declaration that the February 1995 termination of its dealer agreement with defendant Spartan Distributors, Inc. (“Spartan”) was lawful. Spartan has responded with a three-count counterclaim. Now before the Court is RAC’s motion to dismiss and for summary judgment challenging counts I and II of the counterclaim.
I.
RAC manufactures and/or sells Ransomes, Cushman and Ryan professional lawn maintenance products. For many years, Spartan, a retail distributor and dealer of lawn and turf care products, had sold RAC products in Western Michigan; in particular, Cushman and Ryan products. Spartan is also a Toro distributor, selling a сomplete line of Toro turf maintenance products. The relationship between RAC and Spartan had been governed most recently by a Master Dealer Agreement entered into in February 1993. In December 1994, RAC gave notice of its unilateral decision to terminate the relationship in accordance with the agreement’s termination provisions, effective February 2, 1995. An undisputed reason for RAC’s decision was Spartan’s refusal to sell Ransomes reel and rotary mowers. It appears RAC had wanted Spartan to sell Ransomes products, in addition to the Cushman and Ryan products it had been selling, so as to market a full range of RAC turf maintenance and utility products, and enable RAC to bеtter compete with its main competitors, Toro and Jacobsen. When Spartan objected to the termination and threatened to sue, RAC commenced this action for declaratory judgment.
In count I of its counterclaim, Spartan alleges the termination violates Michigan’s statute regulating dealings between motor vehicle manufаcturers, dealers and distributors, M.C.L. § 445.1561 et seq., in that it was not based upon good cause and was not attended by proper notice. Count II asserts an antitrust claim alleging the termination is premised on an agreement, combination or conspiracy in restraint of trade, in violation of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. In count III, Spartan alleges that even if the relationship is deemed to have been terminable at will, it is entitled to recoup overhead costs incurred in handling distribution of the RAC product line.
II.
RAC challenges the count II antitrust claim under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), contending it fails to state a valid claim. The Court is obliged to construe the complaint liberally in Spartan’s favor and accept as true all well-pleaded fаctual allegations.
Gazette v. City of Pontiac,
Spartan alleges RAC’s requirement that it purchase Ransomes mowers in order to be able to purchase other RAC products affects a substantial volumе of interstate traffic, adversely affects competition, and is an unlawful restraint of trade. RAC characterizes Spartan’s claim as one alleging an illegal “tying arrangement,” that is, “an agreement by a party to sell one product but only on the condition that the buyer also purchases a different (or tied) product.”
Smith Machinery Co., Inc. v. Hesston Corp., 878
F.2d 1290, 1294 (10th Cir.1989),
cert. denied,
Tying arrangements that constrain only dealеrs are not presumptively illegal because they pose little danger to competition, as long as consumers may purchase the two goods separately.
Id.
Such tying arrangements may be illegal under § 1 of the Sherman Act, but they are not presumptively so, and it is incumbent upon the plaintiff, under “the Rule of Reason,” to plead and show that the challenged arrangement has an “actual adverse effect on competition.”
Smith Machinery,
at 1298, quoting
Jefferson Parish, supra,
Spartan has failed to persuasively rebut the above arguments. In support of its position that a tying arrangement imposed by a manufacturer upon a dealer is properly subject to “per se analysis,” Spartan relies on an unpublished opinion from the Ninth Circuit,
Western Power Sports, Inc. v. Polaris Industries Partners, L.P.,
Accordingly, the Court concludes count II does not set forth a cause of action giving rise to a presumption that trade and competition have been unlawfully restrained by the alleged tying arrangement. In the absence of such a presumption, Spartan must affirmatively plead anticompetitive effect as an essential element of a rule of reason claim.
Spartan maintains that its general allegations are sufficient to withstand Rule 12(b)(6) scrutiny. Yet, while Spartan has alleged that RAC’s arrangement adversely affects competition, such a bald, eonclusory allegation is insufficient. “The essential elements of a private antitrust claim must be аlleged in more than vague and eonclusory terms to prevent dismissal of the complaint on a defendant’s 12(b)(6) motion.”
Crane & Shovel Sales, supra,
The allegations of count II thus fail to state either a valid “per se” claim or a valid “rule of reason” claim. RAC’s motion to dismiss will be granted. 1
III.
With respect to Spartan’s count I claim, asserting violations of Michigan’s motor vehicle dealer protection statute, RAC moves for summary judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. The motion requires the Court to look beyond the pleadings and evaluate the facts to determine whether there is a genuine issue of material fact that warrants a trial. See generally
Barnhart v. Pickrel, Schaeffer & Ebeling Co.,
RAC contends there is no genuine issue of material fact and that it is entitled to summary judgment because Spartan is not a motor vehicle dealer subject to the Michigan statute’s protections. Spartan disagrees.
Among the RAC products sold by Spartan were utility vehicles known as the Cushman Turf-Truckster. Spartan sold several modеls of the Turf-Truckster; three- and four-wheel versions, gasoline and electric powered. Spartan contends the Turf-Truckster is a “self-propelled device in, upon or by which any person or property is or may be transported or drawn upon a highway,” and thus satisfies the definition of a motor vehicle under the Michigan Vehicle Code, M.C.L. §§ 257.33, 257.79. Inasmuch as this definition is expressly incorporated into the motor vehicle dealer protection statute, M.C.L. § 445.1564(3), and Spartan is engaged in the business of purchasing, selling, exchanging or dealing in such new motor vehicles, Spartan contends it is, under the plain language of the statute, a motor vehicle dealer entitled to the statute’s protectiоns. See M.C.L. § 445.1565(2).
It is axiomatic that when construing statutes, courts are obliged to ascertain and give effect to legislative intent.
Mull v. Equitable Life Assurance Society,
In
Mull,
the Michigan Supreme Court construed the above definition of motor vehicle broadly in accordance with its plain language and concluded that a front-end loader is a motor vehicle becausе it is self-propelled and capable of transporting people or property upon a highway.
The
Mull
court was careful to restrict the breadth of its ruling to the context in which the question arose.
“[UJnder the owner’s liability statute,”
the court held, “every machinе that is self-propelled and could be used to transport people or property on a highway, is a motor vehicle.”
In so ruling, the majority opinion conspicuously avoided even mentioning the two published opinions which had, for purposes of the motor vehicle dealer protection statute, construed “motor vehiclе” more narrowly,
General Aviation, Inc. v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,
Mull
expressly rejected two court of appeals decisions upon which the
General Aviation
rulings relied. In
Jones v. Cloverdale Equip. Co.,
In reasoning that “motor vehicle” should be broadly construеd, the Mull court did not rely solely on the broad definitional language in the Michigan Vehicle Code, but also considered the history and purposes of the owner’s liability statute. The Mull court thus adhered to its duty to effectuate the legislative intent underlying the owner’s liability statute. Observing that same duty in this case, the Court remains unpersuaded that the Michigan Legislature intended to extend the protections of the motor vehicle dealer protection statute to dealers of vehicles like the Turf-Truckster, which though capable of operation on a highway, are not normally intended or designed for such use.
A common sense reading of the statute and review of the legislative history 2 indicate the Lеgislature was concerned primarily with relationships between automobile manufacturers and dealers. The Legislature sought to provide automobile dealers with certain protections against manufacturers’ arbitrary or abusive exercise of their superior power. The protections are afforded not only to automоbile dealers, but to motor vehicle dealers. Yet, though Spartan has bought and sold products that may come within that broad definition, it does not necessarily follow that Spartan is a new motor vehicle dealer within the contemplation of the statute.
Though not all of the statute’s protections are expressly so limited, several prоvisions suggest they are meant to apply only to licensed motor vehicle dealers. For instance, the revocation of a license that a new motor vehicle dealer is required to have is a circumstance justifying a shorter period of notice by the manufacturer of its decision to terminate the dealer agreement. M.C.L. § 445.1570(c)(iv). The statute prohibits manufacturers from unreasonably withholding consent to sell, transfer or exchange a dealership to a qualified buyer only if the buyer is capable of being licensed as a new motor vehicle dealer in Michigan. M.C.L. § 445.1574(1)(i). The manufacturer is required to advise each licensed new motor vehicle dealer of the dealer’s obligations for preparation, delivery, and warranty service on its products. M.C.L. § 445.1577(1). Finally, the manufacturer is required to compensate licensed new motor vehicle dealers for repairs effected by factory recalls. M.C.L. § 445.1577(3)(e).
Licensure by the Secretary of State is required of all motor vehicle dealers who deal in vehicles required tо be titled. M.C.L. § 257.248(10). All motor vehicles that are driven or moved upon a highway are subject to the registration and titling requirements, with several enumerated exceptions. M.C.L. § 257.216. Thus, the several references to licensure suggest a legislative understanding that the relationships being regulated are those between manufacturers and dealers of motor vehicles operated on the highways.
State licensure is not made an explicit prerequisite to enjoyment of each of the protections afforded by the motor vehicle dealer protection statute. However, in the opinion of the Court, the frequency and apparent randomness with which licensure is mentioned in the statute rеflects legislative in-tendment to limit the scope of the statute’s protections to licensed motor vehicle dealers.
*188 This construction admittedly adds a wrinkle to the statute’s definition of motor vehicle dealer. It is a construction, however, that gives effect to the legislative intent reflected in the legislative history. It is a construction that harmonizes all of the statute’s provisions, giving coherent meaning to the regulatory scheme established thereby. It permits recognition of the broad definition of motor vehicle adopted in Mull, while simultaneously permitting a result consistent with the General Aviation rulings. And, not least importantly, it is a construction that makes sense. To adopt the construction urged by Spartan, — thаt the statute regulates relationships between manufacturers and dealers of all self-propelled devices that are or may be made capable of operation on a highway, lawfully or not — would lead to absurd results, undermining the very stability and predictability of business relationships that the statute is designed to promote.
Accordingly, thе Court holds that the motor vehicle dealer protection statute applies only to relationships between motor vehicle manufacturers and licensed motor vehicle dealers. Spartan concedes that the Turf-Truckster is not required to be titled and that it is not a licensed motor vehicle dealer. It follows that Spartan is not entitled to the protections of the motor vehicle dealer protection statute. On this point, there is no genuine issue of material fact. RAC is therefore entitled to summary judgment on count I of Spartan’s counterclaim.
IV.
In sum, the court concludes that RAC’s motion to dismiss and for summary judgment must be granted in both respects. Count II of the counterclaim will bе dismissed for failure to state a valid claim. RAC will be awarded judgment as a matter of law on the claims contained in count I of the counterclaim. A partial judgment order consistent with this opinion shall issue forthwith.
PARTIAL JUDGMENT ORDER
In accordance with the Court’s written opinion of even date,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the motion of Ransomes America Corporation to dismiss and for summary judgment is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that count II of the counterclaim of Spartan Distributors, Inc., is DISMISSED for failure to state a valid claim.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Ran-somes America Corporation is AWARDED JUDGMENT as a matter of law on the claim contained in count I of the counterclaim.
Notes
. Dismissal of the antitrust claim is without prejudice to Spartan's right to move for leave to amend so as to augment the deficient allegations not later than January 24, 1996.
. At the conclusion of oral arguments on RAC’s motion on November 20, 1995, the Court invited both parties to submit any legislative history they had gathered in researching legislative intent. Both parties responded appropriately and timely. However, RAC also submitted the affidavit of Raymond J. Foresman, Jr., legal counsel for the Michigan Automobile Association, who participated in the drafting of the motor vehicle dealer protection statute. Spartan promptly moved to strike the affidavit as inappropriate. Indeed, the affidavit is beyond the scope of the court's solicitation of supplemental materials and is given no consideration by the Court.
