This is an appeal from a partial final judgment and order of the District Court for the Southern District of New York, Conner, granting the motion of Robert and Scott Bogan (“the Bogans” or “plaintiffs”) to reconsider its prior opinion,
Bogan v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
Plaintiff-appellаnts contend that the District Court erred in granting partial summary judgment dismissing their antitrust claims against Hodgkins. 1 Defendant-appel-lees defend the District Court’s grant of summary judgment but argue that the District Court erred in finding that defendants had the capacity to conspire and that the dispute was not exempt from antitrust enforcement under the McCarran-Ferguson Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1013 (1994).
Jurisdiction
This court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1994).
Standard of Review
This court reviews a grant of summary judgment
de novo. Aslanidis v. United States Lines, Inc.,
Background
The Insurance Company
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company operates in the New York metropolitan area through a multi-tiered structure of independent contractor insurance agents with exclusive contracts; agents have the exclusive NML policy franchise and may sell policies for other carriers only after granting NML a right of first refusal. NML contracts with six General Agents, who in turn contract with Special Agents and with District Agents, who contract with Soliciting Agents. 2 General Agents for NML usually have exclusive territories, but six General Agents share the New York area.
Agents are compensated by commission on policy writings and renewals according to their structural position in the NML hierarchy. Thus, General and District Agents receive an override commission on the commissions paid to Sales Agents contracted to them. The rates of compensation are incorporated into the agents’ contracts and reflect a uniform commission and fee schedule used by all NML agents in each tier. Actual policy terms and premiums are established by NML. General Agents pay for recruiting and training their own District and Sales Agents.
The Metropolitan Agreement and NML Transfеr Restriction Policy
What plaintiffs refer to as the “Metropolitan Agreement” (“the Agreement”) is an agreement among NML General Agents not to recruit and hire each others’ existing District or Sales Agents without the consent of the agent’s current General Agent. According to Hodgkins, agent transfer restrictions initially were determined by “whatever the general agents agreed upon.” A senior NML vice president characterized the Agreement as “among the general agents.” At some point, the Agreement was reduced to a writing entitled the “Agreement for Open Territory for Both Solicitation and Development of the New York Metropolitan Area,” providing that “[tjransfer of agents between the General Agents will not be permitted.”
NML literature referred to “friendly agreements” between NML General Agents which “restrict Agents from transferring from one agency to another within [a] metropolitan area,” adding that exceptions are
In November 1989, NML met with the General Agents to discuss the transfer restriction policy, issuing a memo regarding the meeting entitled “New York Metropoli- . tan Agreement.” By December 1989, NML was referring to the Agreement as “Company Policy.” NML viewed its own potential participation in the Agreement as arbitrating disputes over transfers.
The Bogans
Robert Bogan began his relationship with NML as a Sales Agent in 1976. In 1987, he bеcame a District Agent, under Hodgkins’ General Agency. Robert Bogan claims to have been a very successful District Agent, ranked fourth out of 300 nationwide. He also purports to have invested $1.5 million in the development and improvement of his District Agency. He asserts that during his tenure as District Agent, the District Agency increased from three to fifteen agents, while annual sales increased from $11 to $120 million.
Scott Bogan, Robert’s brother, became a Sales Agеnt in 1985 under Robert’s predecessor District Agent. After working briefly under Hodgkins, in 1987 he signed a Sales Agent’s contract with Robert Bogan.
The Bogans’ Termination
Robert Bogan and Hodgkins were involved in a long-running dispute concerning two Sales Agents whom Bogan accused of writing policies with other carriers in violation of the exclusive dealing clause in their NML contract. 3 Bogan claims Hodgkins told him not to interfere, as part of a plot to take over his District Agency and to give it to the twо Sales Agents, who were Hodgkins’ friends.
As the culmination of this dispute, on May 29, 1990, Robert Bogan was terminated by Hodgkins with thirty days notice, effective June 30, 1990. Upon Robert Bogan’s termination, all Sales Agent contracts under him, including Scott Bogan’s, were automatically terminated. In accordance with Bogan’s District Agent contract, Hodgkins requested the records of the two Sales Agents. When Robert Bogan stalled and refused to comply with this request, on June 4, 1990, Hodgkins terminated him for cause, allegedly as a pretext to trigger the agent transfer restrictions.
During the dispute, Hodgkins had cited the transfer restriction, warning Bogan in writing shortly before his termination that “recontracting/transferring to another Metro/NYC office is NOT an option,” and verbally that he could “either work for [Hodgkins] or get out of the business.” Following his termination, Robert Bogan signed a Sales Agent contract with Gerald Gilbert, another of the six NML New York General Agents. On June 11,1990, Scоtt Bogan allegedly tried to contract as a Sales Agent under Robert Bogan acting as a District Agent under Gilbert as General Agent. NML refused to approve Robert Bogan’s contract with Gilbert.
Robert and Scott Bogan then contracted as agents for Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, also in the New York area, retaining the offices they occupied as NML agents.
Issues on Appeal
On appeal, the Bogans raise several arguments tо support then* contention that the District Court erred in granting summary judgment to Hodgkins on their antitrust claim pursuant to the so-called “rule of
DISCUSSION
The parties disagree as to the origin and character of the transfer restriction policy. The Bogans’ antitrust case depends on their allegation that the Agreement was primarily and initially a horizontal аgreement between the General Agents rather than an NML policy. 5 The company’s publication of the Agreement and later recharacterization of it as a company policy, however, indicate the existence of vertical elements. Whether the Agreement is purely horizontal, a mixture of horizontal and vertical, or purely vertical determines at least in part whether the Agreement is per se illegal or analyzed under the rule of reason.
In deciding what kind of antitrust anаlysis it should apply, the District Court stated that “[i]n resolving these issues [it had to] first determine the proper characterization of the Metropolitan Policy under the Sherman Act.” In making this determination, the District Court resolved issues of fact at summary judgment as to the nature of the alleged agreement in restraint of trade. This was error. But because the Bogans could not prevail at trial under any characterization of the Agreement, we affirm the District Cоurt’s grant of summary judgment. For the present analysis, we accept arguendo the facts as alleged by the Bogans as non-movants at summary judgment. Thus, we assume plaintiffs’ view of the Agreement as primarily horizontal, rather than vertical.
The language of the Sherman Act is broad, prohibiting every contract, combination, or conspiracy in restraint of trade.
See
15 U.S.C. § 1. Applying the rule of reason, the Supreme Court has read the Act to forbid only “unreasonable” restrаints, as a literal reading would absurdly bar all contracts.
See Standard Oil Co. v. United States,
Certain practices, however, are so obviously anticompetitive that courts consider these to be •per se violations of the Sherman Act. The Supreme Court has recognized
certain agreements or practices which because of their pernicious effect on competition and lack of any redeeming virtue are сonclusively presumed to be unreasonable and therefore illegal without elaborate inquiry as to the precise harm they have caused or the business excuse for their use. This principle of per se unreasonableness ... avoids the necessity for an incredibly complicated and prolonged economic investigation into the entire history of the industry involved, as well as related industries, in an effort to determine at large whether a particular restraint has been unreasonable — an inquiry so often wholly fruitless when undertaken.
Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. United States,
Examples of
per se
illegal conduct include group boycotts, division of markets, and tying arrangements.
See id.
These categories reflect judicial experience with the rule of reason.
See Arizona v. Maricopa County Med. Soc’y,
Only “manifestly anticompetitive” conduct, however, is appropriately designated
per se
illegal.
See Continental T.V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania, Inc.,
Courts have been reluctant to expand the categories of
per se
illegality.
See Bunker Ramo Corp. v. United Business Forms, Inc.,
The Agreement is clearly not a territorial or customer allocation because the record reveals no geographic or market division. The Bogans suggest that the Agreement may be a supplier allocation, but the facts do not bear this interpretation; the Agreement permits transfers, and experienced NML agents do not comprise the entire set of suppliers of their services. Thus, while the Agreement may constrain General Agents to some degree, it does not allocate the market for agents to any meaningful extent.
The Bogans’ strongest argument is that the Agreement may be a group boycott in restraint of the market for insuranсe sales agents. Generally, group boycotts are illegal
per se. See Klor’s, Inc. v. Broadway-Hale Stores, Inc.,
The categories of
per se
illegal practices are an approximation, a shortcut to reach conduct that courts can safely assume would surely have an anticompetitive effect. Thus, it is an element of a
per se
case to describe the relevant market in which we may presume the anticompetitive effect would occur.
See, e.g., Belfiore v. New York Times Co.,
The Bogans allege that the General Agents conspired to restrain trade in the market for experienced NML sales agents. The Agreement is, therefore, not a classic interfirm horizontal restraint of trade in insurance sales agents. Rather it is akin to an
intra
firm agreement, one between General Agents of the same company to restrain trade only in experienced sales agents of that company. No-switching restriction cases typically involve multiple companies.
See, e.g., Quinonez v. National Ass’n of Securities Dealers,
Even if the Agreement were interfirm, we still would not afford it
per se
illegal treatment. We have previously identified inter-agency no-switching agreements as “distinguishable from those boycotts that have been held illegal
per se.” Union Circulation Co. v. Federal Trade Comm’n,
The Bogan’s antitrust case might have been redeemed by their allegation that the Agreement restrains not the entire mar
such practical indicia as industry or public recognition of the submarket as a separate economic entity, the product’s peculiar characteristics and uses, unique production facilities, distinct customers, distinct prices, sensitivity to price changes, and specialized vendors.
Brown Shoe Co. v. United States,
The Supreme Court has explained that the parameters of a market are defined by the cross-elasticity of demand between the product and its substitutes.
See Brown Shoe,
The Bogans argue that the specialized training and expertise of experienced NML agents creates a submarket distinct from the market for all NML sales agents (both new and experienced) and from the general market for insurance sales agents in New York. But they have introduced no factual evidence regarding the demographics of the New York insurance market. In the end, the problem with the Bogans’ proposed submarket is that other insurance companies compete for the services of experienced NML agents, as is clearly evidenced by the Bogans having found other work after being terminated from NML. 7
Plaintiffs have failed to show the allegedly relevant market to be a cognizable submark-et. To the contrary, on these facts, the market for experienced NML agents is no more distinct than a market for the fоrmer employees of any single company.
See Disenos Artisticos E Industriales, S.A. v. Work,
Conclusion
We affirm the District Court’s grant of partial summary judgment for defendants on plaintiffs’ Sherman Act § 1 antitrust claim. Plaintiffs fail to establish a threshold ease for per se treatment for failure to specify the relevant market in which the horizontal agreement they allege could have an obvious anticompetitive effect.
Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. This appeal concerns only plaintiffs' antitrust claims, and they made none against NML. Thus Hodgkins is the sole respondent on appeal.
. For simplicity, we will refer to both Special and Soliciting Agents as Sales Agents.
. The facts relating to the Bogans’ termination are highly contested but relate only to their state law claims, not the antitrust claim at issue on appeal. Plaintiffs need not show enforcement of the alleged agreement in restraint of trade to prove their antitrust claim.
See American Tobacco Co. v. United States,
. The rule of reason directs the trier of fact to "decide whether the questioned practice imposes an unreasonable restraint on competition, taking into account a variety of factors, including specific information about the relevant business, its condition before and after the restraint was imposed, and the restraint's history, nature, and effect.”
State Oil Co. v. Khan,
. The Bogans are not estopped from alleging in this case that the Agreement was not NML policy, despite having characterized the restraint as such in state court. Generally, a party may not take a position inconsistent with that taken in a prior legal proceeding, where that party prevailed in the first case.
See Davis v. Wakelee,
. Plaintiffs conceded at oral argument that they cannot succeed under the rule of reason, so the issue on appeal is only whether the Agreement is
per se
illegal. To avoid examining the relevant market, market power, and anticompetitive effect in all cases in which conduct does not clearly fit within a
per se
category, the Supreme Court has sanctioned an intermediate inquiry, known as "quick look,” if the conduct at issue is a "naked restriction.”
See NCAA v. Board of Regents,
Here, Hodgkins has countered the Bogans’ characterization of the Agreement as a "naked restriction” with sound allegаtions of procompet-itive benefit. Thus, at best the inquiry returns to the rule of reason, under which the plaintiffs concede they lose.
. Furthermore, the Bogans’ submarket definition is inconsistent with their claim to antitrust injury. Given that NML is only one of many carriers in the New York area, any alleged conspiracy by General Agents to restrict intra-NML transfers would only encourage other insurers’ entry into a hypothetically distinct market for experienced NML agents, increasing competition.
