MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plаintiff Richard Hoffman Corporation (“Hoffman”) sued Integrated Building Systems, Inc. (“Integrated”) and the Village of Glendale Heights (“Village”) for violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1
et seq.,
the Illinois Antitrust Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, § 60-3, and for breach of the duty of good faith. On February 15, 1984, this Court granted the Village’s motion to dismiss under the doctrine of “state action immunity.”
The following material facts are undisputed. In early 1983, the Village, without taking competitive bids, contracted with Integrated to draw up architectural specifications for the construction and remodelling of a Village recreational center. Integrated and the City signed this contract even though Integrated employed no registered architects. Integrated sub-contracted with Pence and Schwartz, an architectural firm, which then prepared the specifications. Pence and Schwartz’s plan specified the use of a pre-engineered building system, manufactured by Kirby Building Systems (“Kirby”). Integrated is the solе local distributor of Kirby systems.
After the specifications were finished, the Village solicited bids for the construction of the project. The reports about the bids appeared from May 18 through May 25, 1983, in a trade publication, the “Dodge Construction News Report.” The reports did not disсlose that Integrated, which had drawn up the plans, was also bidding on the construction project. On May 26, 1983, Integrated’s role as both designer and bidder was first revealed.
Three firms, including Hoffman and Integrated, submitted bids by May 31,1983, the due date. The two firms other than Integrated did not include a Kirby system in their bids. The Village did not reject the bids because of that, however. Hoffman bid $816,500, the third firm bid $818,751, and Integrated bid $777,705. The Village accepted Integrated’s bid, the lowest one offered.
Hoffman claims that the above practices of Integrated and the Village unreasonably restrained trade in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act. Its theory can be summarized as follows. Because Integrated received the specification contract on March 25, 1983, it had at least nine weeks to prepare its construction bid. 1 In contrast, Hoffman had but 12 days to prepare its bid whеn the City went public about the project in May 1983. This difference in preparation time gave Integrated an unfair advantage, argues Hoffman. Moreover, Integrated also derived an unfair advantage by drawing up the architectural plans and then bidding on the construction cоntract. This practice violated an industry custom. Finally, Integrated enjoyed an unfair advantage because the architectural plans specified the use of Kirby products, which Integrated distributes. In sum, argues Integrated, the above facts show that the bidding process was a sham; thаt the process inherently and unfairly favored Integrated in a way which unlawfully re *22 strained trade. Integrated counters in its motion for summary judgment that its practices, even if considered unfair, did not violate the Sherman Act.
In considering Integrated’s motion, we are aware that summary judgment is ordinаrily inappropriate in antitrust cases because the cases often turn on hidden motive and intent.
See Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting Co.,
Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, provides in relevant part, “[ejvery contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspirаcy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, is declared to be illegal.” To prevail on a Section 1 claim, Hoffman must allege and prove a “conspiracy in restraint of trade,” resulting anticompetitive effects and “antitrust injury,” that is, injury of a type that antitrust laws were designed to prevent.
See, e.g., Independence Tube Corp. v. Cooperweld Corp.,
The parties agree that Hoffman cannot prove a
per se
violation of the Sherman Act. Instead, the usual test, “the rule of reason,” controls our analysis of whether Integrated’s acts violated Section 1.
See Continental T.V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania, Inc.,
Hoffman’s most significant argument, we think, was that Integrated’s specification of Kirby pre-engineered materials, which it distributed, eliminated competition from the bidding process. This concern in large part motivated our denial of Integrated’s motion to dismiss.
See
The Village hereby reserves the right to approve as an equal, or reject as not being equal, any article the bidder proposes to furnish which contains major or minor variations from specification requirements.
Moreover, Hoffman had attached to its bid more than a hundred pages of materials “touting the virtues” of the Mitchell system. Thus,
Security Fire Door Co. v. County of Los Angeles,
Hoffman also argues that the additional time Integrated had to prepare its bid supports its antitrust claim. Looked at in the light most favorable to Hoffman, the facts reveal that Integrated had perhaps as much as four months to prepare its bid, while Hoffman had less than two weeks to do so. Integrated gained this advantage because it had known it was going to bid on the construction contract after рreparing the specifications. According to Hoffman, industry custom forbids this practice of a firm bidding on a project for which it had prepared specifications. The purpose of this custom is apparently to prevent collusion or the appearance of collusion. Hoffman relies heavily on the fact of the violation of industry custom. However, as
*24
we noted in our opinion last year, we have found no support in case law for the proposition that a violation of industry custom amounts to a violation of antitrust law.
In sum, we conclude that Hoffman cannot prove on this record that Integrated’s practices had significant anticompetitive effects. As such, Integrated is entitled to summary judgment on Hoffman’s Section 1 claim. Although we express no opinion on the issue, it could be that Integrated’s conduct was tortious under some state law theory. However, the antitrust laws did not federalize the field of unfair competition.
Otherwise the mere fact that one party bid successfully against another party for a contract would be equivalent to an anticompetitive effect аnd would raise the specter of an antitrust action being used as a remedy for any tortious conduct during the course of the competition. This would be contrary to the repeated view of the Supreme Court that the antitrust laws do “not purport to afford remedies for all tоrts committed by or against persons engaged in interstate commerce.” Hunt v. Crumboch,325 U.S. 821 , 826,65 S.Ct. 1545 , 1548,89 L.Ed. 1954 [ (1945) ].
Havoco,
The rest of Hoffman’s complaint alleges only statе law claims. Our dismissal of the Sherman antitrust claim dissolves our pendent jurisdiction over those state law claims.
See United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
Notes
. Hoffman presented some evidence that Intеgrated might have had as much as four months to prepare its bid. In our discussion below, we assumed that this longer number is correct.
. Integrated is correct that no direct evidence supports the conspiracy claim. However, it ignores the fact that bits of circumstantial evidence support a finding of collusion, and that circumstantial evidence can suffice to render summary judgment improper.
See, e.g., Independence Tube Corp.,
. Security Fire Door, held that plaintiff had failed to state a Sherman Act claim where it had alleged that architects and county representatives had drawn up specifications to exclude all dumbwaiters manufactured by firms other than one of the defendants. The Court observed:
There is nothing alleged in the complaint to suggest that this choice was made other than in an atmosphere of free competition among suppliers. So far as the complaint alleges, each supplier was perfectly free to tout the virtues of his particular dumbwaiter system in an effort to secure favorable specifications. It would appear thаt the architects simply favored the Guilbert system. In doing so they and their principals can hardly be charged with an antitrust conspiracy.
. In light of this holding, we need not consider Integrated's alternative summary judgment motion on the issue of damages.
