MEMORANDUM OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
Plaintiffs S & M Brands, Inc. (“S & M”) and International Tobacco Partners, Ltd. (“ITP”) (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) filed their Complaint on January 19, 2005 in the Eastern District of Tennessee, Greeneville Division, seeking injunctive and declaratory relief. The case was transferred to the Middle District of Tennessee on February 28, 2005. Defendant Paul G. Summers, in his official capacity as Attorney General of the State of Tennessee (“Defendant”), filed his Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted and Memorandum of Law in support thereof (Doc. Nos. 35 and 36) on March 21, 2005. Plaintiffs filed their response in opposition to Defendant’s motion on April 6, 2005 (Doc. No. 52). With the Court’s permission, Defendant has filed a Reply (Doc. No. 82).
On April 15, 2005, the Court granted Plaintiffs’ motion for a stay of adjudication of the motion to dismiss and stayed these proceedings entirely pending a decision by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (the “Panel”) whether to transfer this action, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1407, for coordinated pretrial proceedings with four other basically identical actions filed in the Southern District of New York, the Eastern District of Kentucky, and the Northern District of Oklahoma. The Panel issued its Order Denying Transfer on June 16, 2005. Accordingly, the stay of these proceedings has been lifted and the Court is now prepared to issue its ruling on Defendant’s Motion.
For the reasons set forth below, the Court will GRANT Defendant’s motion to dismiss counts I and III of the Complaint in their entirety, with prejudice, and will likewise GRANT the motion to dismiss Count II of the Complaint with prejudice except insofar as Count II relates to Plaintiffs’ claims that Defendant’s allegedly retroactive enforcement of the 2004 amendment to the so-called Allocable *610 Share Release provision originally contained in Tenn.Code Ann. § 47-31-103(a)(2)(B)(ii) violates their constitutional rights. That issue was not addressed in Defendant’s motion, though it is the subject of a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment recently filed by Plaintiffs (Doc. No. 85), which has not yet been fully briefed and is not ripe for consideration. The Court will address the retroactivity issue in the context of ruling on that motion. For now, Defendant’s motion as to that issue is DENIED.
II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROÚND
Plaintiffs’ claims arise in connection with the Master Settlement Agreement (“MSA”) executed in November 1998 by and among forty-six states and six territories 1 on the one hand (the “Settling States”) and, on the other, the four largest domestic cigarette manufacturers (Philip Morris USA, Inc., R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Company, and Lorillard Tobacco Company (collectively referenced herein as the “Original Participating Manufacturers” (“OPMs”) or the “Majors”)). Plaintiffs are tobacco manufacturers or importers who did not join in the MSA, and they challenge the validity of certain statutes enacted by the State of Tennessee pursuant to the terms of the MSA, including the Tennessee Tobacco Manufacturers’ Escrow Fund Act of 1999, Tenn.Code Ann. § 47-31-101 et seq. (“Escrow Act”), as amended effective April 20, 2004 by 2004 Pub. Acts. ch. 535, § 1, to repeal the “Allocable Share Release Provision” contained in the original version of TenmCode Ann. § 47-31 — 103(a)(2)(B)(ii) (“ASR Amendment”), and the tax laws passed to aid in the enforcement of the Escrow Act, TenmCode Ann. § 67-4-2601 et seq. (“Contraband Statute”) (collectively referenced herein as the “Tobacco Statutes”).
More specifically, Plaintiffs purport to assert three separate causes of action relating to the Tobacco Statutes. First, Plaintiffs claim that the enactment and enforcement of the Tobacco Statutes have the effect of implementing an illegal combination or “output cartel” created by the Settling States and the participating manufacturers in the MSA, and that said implementation constitutes a per se restraint of trade in violation of the Sherman Act, to Plaintiffs’ injury. 2 On those grounds, Plaintiffs request a declaration that the Tobacco Statutes are illegal and void under the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, and that they are preempted by federal law. 3 Second, Plaintiffs contend that enactment and enforcement of the Tobacco Statutes, together with the retroactive application of the ASR Amendment “without any notice by the defendant that he was intending to exercise a purported right to make a retroactive application thereof’ (ComplJ 95), violates Plaintiffs’ procedural and substantive due process rights in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Finally, Plaintiffs *611 claim that the enforcement of the Tobacco Statutes violates Plaintiffs’ rights under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment in that it constitutes discrimination against those cigarette manufacturers such as Plaintiffs who are not party to the MSA but who seek to do business in Tennessee. As part of their third claim for relief, Plaintiffs also allege that enforcement of the Tobacco Statutes “burdens [their] First Amendment rights of freedom of speech and freedom to petition.” (Comply 98.) In addition, based upon the language contained in Plaintiffs’ “Prayer for Relief,” it appears that Plaintiffs may also seek a declaration that the MSA itself, or the “output cartel formed under the MSA, which includes Tennessee,” violates the Sherman Act and the Clayton Act. Although it is not entirely clear whether Plaintiffs have in fact stated a legitimate claim for injunctive relief as to the MSA, the Court will nonetheless address that issue below.
In response to Plaintiffs’ Complaint, the Defendant filed his Rule 12(b)(6) Motion to Dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. In addition to arguing that Plaintiffs are not entitled to relief under any theory, Defendant also asserts that because ITP is a cigarette importer rather than a manufacturer, it is not directly affected by the MSA or the Tobacco Statutes and therefore lacks standing to bring any of the claims asserted in the Complaint. Defendant also asserts that he is not a proper defendant to this action by virtue of the Eleventh Amendment.
As mentioned in Part I, above, Defendant’s motion and initial memorandum in support thereof do not address Plaintiffs’ allegations regarding the retroactive application of the ASR Amendment, though Defendant does raise the issue in his Reply To Plaintiffs’ Response To Motion To Dismiss (Doc. No. 82). Because the issue was not raised until the reply brief, the Court will not consider it here.
See Wright v. Holbrook,
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Under Rule 12 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a defendant may move to dismiss the plaintiffs complaint “for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). When considering a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, a court must treat all of the well pleaded allegations of the complaint as true,
Saylor v. Parker Seal Co.,
A 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss is directed solely to the complaint,
Roth Steel Prods. v. Sharon Steel Corp.,
IV. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
In accordance with the standard of review referenced above, the Court will assume for purposes of reviewing Defendant’s motion that the well pleaded facts as alleged by Plaintiffs are true. The Court will also take into consideration the actual text of the MSA, which is incorporated by reference into the Complaint; however, the Court does not base its ruling on this motion upon any statements in the text of the MSA that are at odds with Plaintiffs’ allegations. 4
According to the recitals set forth in the MSA, by 1998 more than forty states had commenced litigation against the tobacco companies, alleging a wide range of deceptive and fraudulent practices by the tobacco companies over decades of sales, and seeking equitable and injunctive relief as well as monetary relief to cover the burgeoning costs of tobacco-related healthcare. Those states that had not yet filed suit against the tobacco companies had the potential to do so. See MSA § I, at 1. The MSA documents a global settlement of all of those lawsuits among the Settling States, including those that had already filed suit as well as those that had indicated an intention to do so, and the participating tobacco product manufacturers, including the OPMs as well as other tobacco product manufacturers who chose to enter into the agreement subsequent to its original execution. See MSA § II(tt). In fact, approximately forty-five other tobacco manufacturers — “Subsequent Participating Manufacturers” (or “SPMs”) (collectively with the OPMs, Participating Manufacturers or “PMs”) — joined in the settlement sometime after its execution by the OPMs. 5
Pursuant to the MSA, the signatory states agreed to dismiss their pending lawsuits against the PMs in exchange for yearly payments, see MSA § IX, which the states would use to defray healthcare costs arising from smoking-related illnesses and to fund smoking-prevention programs, id § VI. In addition to making payments, the PMs also agreed to significant restrictions on their advertising and promotional activities. See generally MSA § III.
All payments made pursuant to the MSA are deposited into an escrow account and disbursed annually among the Settling States. Generally speaking, each state receives its “Allocable Share” under the MSA, which is based upon the percentage agreed to by and among the states. See MSA § 11(f) (defining “Allocable Share”) and § 11(g) (defining “Allocable Payment”). Tennessee’s Allocable Share is 2.4408945%. MSA, Ex. A. In other words, Tennessee receives approximately 2.44% of the payments made by all the PMs into the escrow account annually, regardless of *613 whether all or none of any PM’s cigarettes are sold in Tennessee. 6
For their part, the SPMs, like the OPMs, are bound by the MSA’s public health provisions and may be required to make settlement payments to the Settling States depending upon their sales volumes. The MSA provides that an SPM only incurs a payment obligation to the extent its Market Share (as defined by the MSA) in any calendar year exceeds the greater of its 1998 Market Share or 125% of its 1997 Market Share. MSA § IX(i)(l). That provision, however, only benefits SPMs who joined the MSA within sixty days of its original execution date in November 1998, since the MSA further stipulates that the 1997 or 1998 Market Share for any SPM who joins the MSA outside that sixty-day window is considered to equal zero for purposes of § IX(i)(l). See MSA § IX(i)(4).
The MSA also contemplates the passage of “Qualifying Statutes” (or “Escrow Statutes”) by each Settling State for the stated purpose of “effectively and fully neutralizing] the cost disadvantages that the Participating Manufacturers experience vis-á-vis Non-Participating Manufacturers [‘NPMs’] within such Settling State as a result of the provisions of this Agreement.” MSA § IX(d)(2)(E). More particularly, the MSA provides that any state that enacted legislation patterned after the “Model Statute” attached as Exhibit T to the MSA, without material modification or addition, would be exempt from the “NPM Adjustment” that would otherwise be permitted pursuant to MSA § IX(d)(l), to account for market share lost by the PMs to the NPMs as a result of the former group’s participation in the MSA.
Encouraged by that financial incentive, all of the Settling States have enacted an escrow statute based upon the Model Statute. Most Settling States, including Tennessee, have also enacted “complementary legislation,” to which Plaintiffs refer as the “Contraband Statutes” for the purpose of assisting the states in enforcing the escrow statutes. See Tenn.Code Ann. § 67-4-2601 et seq. The Contraband Statute as enacted in Tennessee does not impose any substantive obligations upon Plaintiffs or any other tobacco product manufacturers. Instead, it simply requires all tobacco product manufacturers to certify their compliance with the MSA or the Escrow Act before being included on a directory of tobacco product manufacturers authorized to sell cigarettes in Tennessee. Id. § 67-4-2602. The Contraband Statute also prohibits anyone from selling, possessing or affixing tax stamps to cigarettes sold by any manufacturer or importer not included on the directory. Id. § 67-4-2602(c).
According to the terms of the Model Statute, NPMs had the ability to use a cost advantage enjoyed as a result of their decision not to join in the MSA to “derive large, short-term profits in the years before liability may arise without ensuring that the State will have an eventual source of recovery from them if they are proven to have acted culpably.” MSA, Ex. T. In order to “[p]rotect the public health gains achieved by [the MSA],” MSA § IX(d)(l), and to prevent the NPMs from deriving the anticipated windfall profits resulting from their NPM status and then becoming judgment-proof before liability might arise, the Model Statute requires each NPM either to become a participating manufacturer as defined by the MSA or to deposit into a qualified escrow fund, on an annual basis, a certain amount of money per cigarette sold each year in each state *614 in which it sells cigarettes and in which the Model Statute has been enacted. The Model Statute provides for interest on the escrow payments, and further allows for the release of the funds in escrow after twenty-five years unless they are released before that to pay a judgment or settlement of any claim brought against the NPM by the state or any individual within the state. Most importantly for purposes of the present motion, however, the Model Statute as originally drafted — and the Tennessee Escrow Act that was modeled after it — provide that, if “the amount [any NPM] was required to place into escrow in a particular year was greater than the State’s allocable share of the total payments that such manufacturer would have been required to make in that year under the [MSA] ... the excess shall be released from escrow and revert back to such [NPM].” MSA, Ex. T. Plaintiffs refer to this provision as the “Allocable Share Release” provision (or “ASR provision”).
According to the Defendant, the ASR provision was “intended to create a rough equivalence between an NPM’s escrow obligation under the [Escrow Act] and its hypothetical payment obligation under the MSA had it been a PM.” (Def.’s Mem. (Doc. No. 36) at 6.) Such equivalence allegedly was not achieved because, under the Escrow Act as originally drafted, some NPMs “have taken advantage of this provision as a loophole to frustrate the fundamental purposes of the [Escrow] Act [by obtaining] releases of virtually all their escrow funds, leaving Tennessee with no effective security for future claims and creating widely varying escrow obligations among the NPMs.” (Doc. No. 36, at 6.) For example,
an NPM that made all of its 2003 sales — say, 2 million packs of cigarettes — in Tennessee ... would [under the original Escrow Act] have had to make an initial escrow deposition ... of approximately forty (40) cents per pack, for a total deposit of $800,000. As the allocable share provision operated ..., the NPM could ... receive[ ] a release of [all but 2.44% — Tennessee’s allocable share — of that amount].
(Doc. No. 36, at 7.) NPMs that distributed their products nationwide rather than regionally were not similarly advantaged by this provision, since they would also be making escrow payments in all states which they sold cigarettes. 7
In response to this perceived flaw in the statutory scheme, Tennessee, along with most of the other Settling States, 8 enacted an amendment to the Escrow Act that effectively repealed the ASR provision, much to the chagrin of Plaintiffs and other regional NPMs that benefitted from the statute as originally drafted. As amended, the ASR provision no longer allows a refund of all amounts in excess of the state’s allocable share percentage. Instead, it simply permits a refund of any amount paid into escrow that the tobacco product manufacturer establishes was in excess of *615 the amount it would have had to pay under the MSA. See 2004 Pub. Acts. ch. 535, § 1 (the “ASR Amendment”), codified at Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-3l-103(a)(2)(B)(ii) (2005).
Notwithstanding Defendant’s explanation and the various recitations contained within the text of the MSA, Plaintiffs maintain that the true purpose of the MSA itself was to set up a “cartel ... to control the output of cigarettes made by the companies in the cartel ... and penalize [the NPMs], thereby creating supracompetitive prices and splitting the proceeds of that output cartel between them and the Settling States.” (Compl. at 1 — 2.) Also according to Plaintiffs, the purpose of the Escrow Statutes enacted by the Settling States was “to preclude entrance into the cigarette market and price competition in that market by NPMs.... Because of the MSA and these statutes, NPMs must pay penalties into an escrow fund equivalent to what they would have paid if they were [SPMs].... These penalties are more severe than the annual contributions made by [PMs].” (Compl. at 2.)
Plaintiffs further claim that the ASR as originally drafted was
a crucial element in the decision making process of the small manufacturers who had the opportunity to join the MSA from the period following its execution in late November 1998 through March of 1999....
The presence of the ASR ... presented the small regional NPMs with an opportunity to exist competitively, ... because those escrow payments would not approach the full MSA payment until a regional SPM became national in scope. In reaching the decision not to become an SPM and to remain a regional NPM in the meetings held during the first part of 1999 in New York with the attorneys for the Settling States as well as the attorneys for the Majors, the NPMs were assured that the release provisions of the Escrow Statute would not be changed and, indeed, the MSA prohibits such changes unless all of the parties to the MSA, i.e., all of the Settling States and all of the Participating Manufacturers agreed to such changes.... Finally, the MSA stated that the original Escrow Statute, with the release for overpayments, “fully and effectively” neutralized the cost disadvantages that the MSA signatories suffered from the NPMs.
(Compl.1HI28, 30.) In other words, it is clear that Plaintiffs — as regional rather than national NPMs — were not actually penalized by the ASR provision as originally drafted. In fact, where Defendant maintains that the “loophole” in the original ASR had unintended consequences, Plaintiffs contend that the intent of the original ASR provision was “[t]o lessen the serious antitrust and constitutional problems inherent in a nationwide cartel created by the States and the Majors that penalizes the NPMs” (Compl. at 2), by imposing a lighter burden upon the regional NPMs than upon national NPMs or PMs, thereby permitting them to compete with the PMs. Now, however, “at the behest of the [Majors], states are now changing the escrow rules to force [regional] NPMs to pay escrow as if they were operating in the entire United States.” (Compl. at 2 — 3.)
Thus, according to Plaintiffs, the OPMs changed their minds about permitting regional NPMs to compete, and the real purpose of the ASR Amendment is “to effectively wipe out NPM competition” (Comply 39) and “to preserve the supra-competitive revenues realized by the Majors at the expense of victimizing the consumers through enforcing the output cartel [created by the MSA]” (Comply 44). Further, Plaintiffs allege that the “amount of MSA annual settle *616 ment payments depends upon the amount of continuing sales of cigarettes by the Majors,” and that the Defendant therefore “has a vested interest in assuring that the Majors sell enough cigarettes” to sustain their market shares and thus maintain the level of payments coming to Tennessee under the MSA. (See Compl. ¶ 45.)
Clearly, while Plaintiffs allege that the ASR provision, as originally enacted, and the Contraband Statute both serve to implement and enforce the illegal output cartel that was put into place through the execution of the MSA, the primary focus of their arguments is on the ASR Amendment. In a nutshell, Plaintiffs allege that there is no public health benefit served by the ASR Amendment, and that the repeal was enacted solely at the urging of the Majors and for the purpose of preserving the Majors’ market dominance, thereby protecting the payments made by them to the state of Tennessee under the MSA.
Plaintiffs’ other issue regarding the ASR Amendment is that the Defendant allegedly adopted the position, after its effective date, that the ASR Amendment would be applied retroactively, despite the fact that the statute itself does not state that it would be applied retroactively and the legislative history does not reveal an intent to apply it retroactively. Plaintiffs claim to be significantly harmed by this allegedly illegal and unconstitutional retroactive application of the amendment. (See Compl. ¶¶ 49, 50, 95.)
Having set forth these background facts, the Court will now consider the Defendant’s arguments in support of its motion to dismiss.
V. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. Whether ITP Has Standing to Bring Claims In the Complaint
Defendant argues that because Plaintiff ITP is a cigarette importer and not a cigarette manufacturer, it does not have standing to challenge the enactment or enforcement of the Tobacco Statutes. See Tenn.Code Ann. § 47-31-102(9)(A) (defining the terms “tobacco product manufacturer”) and § 47-31-103 (by its terms, applying only to “any tobacco product manufacturer”). Plaintiffs respond that (1) Defendant misconstrues the requirements for standing, particularly under the liberal standing provisions of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 26; and (2) the “NAAG [National Association of Attorneys General] routinely accepts importers of cigarettes as de jure SPMs as well as NPMs” (Pis.’ Resp. Opp. to M. Dism. (Doc. No. 51) at 21 — 22). The Court finds that Plaintiffs’ arguments in support of ITP’s standing largely miss the point, but nonetheless holds that the allegations in the Complaint are sufficient to establish that ITP has standing.
(1) The Doctrine of Standing
The doctrine of standing is directed at ensuring that any plaintiff before the court “is a proper party to request an adjudication of a particular issue.”
Flast v. Cohen,
In the context of a challenge to a state statute on the grounds of preemption or unconstitutionality, the party seeking relief for past or reasonably likely prospective injury must demonstrate some causal connection between the past or prospective injury and the challenged statute in order to establish standing.
NUI Corp. v. Kimmelman,
In light of these principles, Defendant does not contest the premise that a party directly affected by a statute has standing to challenge it as a person who has sustained or is “in danger of sustaining some direct injury as a result” of the enforcement of that statute.
Ferro Corp.,
(2) Whether ITP Is a “Tobacco Product Manufacturer” As Defined By the Escrow Act
The Escrow Act defines a “tobacco product manufacturer” as an entity that (1) “directly ... [mjanufactures cigarettes anywhere that such manufacturer intends to be sold in the United States,” or (2) “[i]s the first purchaser anywhere for resale in the United States of cigarettes manufactured anywhere that the manufacturer does not intend to be sold in the United States.” Tenn.Code Ann. § 47-31-102(9)(A)(i) and (ii). 9 The Contraband Statute expressly adopts this same definition, see TenmCode Ann. § 67-4-2601(9). In other words, under certain circumstances, the Tobacco Statutes by their terms may include purchasers or importers within the definition of “tobacco product manufacturer.”
Plaintiffs do not contest Defendant’s characterization of ITP as an importer. However, neither Plaintiffs’ Complaint nor any of their filings in opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss contains any specific factual allegations regarding whether ITP is “the first purchaser anywhere” for the cigarettes it imports and sells. There is likewise no information in the pleadings to indicate from whom ITP purchases cigarettes and whether those manufacturers intend their tobacco prod *618 ucts to be sold in the United States. Notwithstanding, in their Complaint, Plaintiffs do allege that they are “manufacturers or importers that do not participate in the MSA output cartel, ie., NPMs, as defined by the MSA.” (Compl. at 3.) 10 Plaintiffs further allege that they “resell” cigarettes in Tennessee “to direct-buying wholesalers (‘DPWs’X, who] are wholesalers licensed to place state excise tax stamps on cigarettes” in Tennessee, without which stamps the cigarettes are not legally sale-able in Tennessee. (Compl. at 3.) Further, Plaintiffs allege that, as NPMs, they are directly affected by the “penalties” imposed by the Escrow Act and ASR Amendment (Compl. at 2), which they claim were “intended to and are putting the NPMs out of business” (ComplJ 9).
In other words, Plaintiffs allege that ITP is directly affected by enforcement of the statutes at issue. For purposes of withstanding Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, these allegations are sufficient to establish that ITP has standing to challenge enforcement of those statutes.
Cf. Lujan,
B. Eleventh Amendment Considerations
(1) Whether Attorney General Summers Is a Proper Defendant In This Action
Defendant argues that Plaintiffs’ claims are subject to dismissal because he is entitled to immunity under the Eleventh Amendment and that the exception stated in
Ex Parte Young,
The Eleventh Amendment provides:
The Judicial Power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.
U.S. Const, amend. XI. Although the amendment does not expressly address the federal courts’ jurisdiction over suits against a state by one of its own citizens, it has been interpreted to preclude such suits as well.
See Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman,
*619
However, the suit will be barred by the Eleventh Amendment, even if a state official rather than the state itself is the named party to the action, if the action is “in essence one for the recovery of money from the state” and “the state is the real, substantial party in interest.”
Edelman v. Jordan,
Under an exception to the exception, however, if the injunctive relief sought by the plaintiff is truly prospective non-monetary relief, sovereign immunity will not bar the suit simply because the state may be required to make incidental expenditures in complying with the injunction.
Milliken v. Bradley,
Plaintiffs in this case have couched their claims entirely in prospective language, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief: They seek judicial declarations that the MSA and Tennessee Tobacco Statutes, including the repeal of the original ASR provision, are preempted by federal antitrust law and that they violate Plaintiffs’ rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. They seek injunctive relief “temporarily, preliminarily and permanently restraining and enjoining the defendant and his agents and all those acting in concert with Tennessee from administering and enforcing the [Tobacco Statutes].” (Compl., Prayer for Relief, at 39.) This type of relief falls squarely within the ambit of
Ex Parte Young,
since the state Attorney General is named as a defendant and Plaintiffs request an injunction prohibiting him from enforcing or continuing to enforce state statutes that are allegedly unconstitutional or preempted by federal law. These claims are therefore not barred by the Eleventh Amendment.
Cf. Barton,
(2) Whether the “Alternative Relief’ Plaintiffs Seek Is Barred By the Eleventh Amendment
More problematically, Plaintiffs here also include in their Prayer for Relief a request for an injunction “in the alternative” prohibiting Defendant “from enforcing a retroactive application of the repeal of the ASR.” (Compl., Prayer for Relief, at 39.) In case their point is not entirely clear, Plaintiffs, in their recently filed Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, request that the Court “enjoin retroactive application of the ASR repealer and order the Attorney General to release plaintiffs’ funds.” (Doc. No. 86, at 9 (emphasis added).) As indicated above, the Eleventh Amendment completely bars suits against sovereign states (or state officials named in their official capacities) seeking retrospective monetary relief.
In
Edelman,
for example, the plaintiff brought suit against various Illinois state officials on the grounds that they were administering the federal-state programs of Aid to the Aged, Blind, or Disabled (AABD) in a manner inconsistent with various federal regulations and with the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. The plaintiff requested declaratory and in-junctive relief, and specifically requested “a permanent injunction enjoining the defendants to award to the entire class of plaintiffs all AABD benefits wrongfully withheld.”
Edelman,
In reaching its decision, the Court rejected the appellate court’s reasoning that the Eleventh Amendment and
Ex Parte Young
did not bar the award of retroactive payments of the wrongfully withheld statutory benefits because the grant of such a monetary award was “in the nature of equitable restitution.”
See id.
at 664,
Likewise, in the earlier
Ford Motor Co.
case, a taxpayer who had paid certain taxes to the State of Indiana, under protest, sought a refund of those taxes from the Indiana state officials who were charged with their collection. The taxpayer
*621
claimed that imposition of the tax violated the United States Constitution.
Ford Motor Co.,
Thus, on the basis of
Ford Motor Co., Edelman
and the cases cited therein, it is clear that a monetary award to be paid from “public funds in the state treasury,”
Edelman,
Moreover, the relief requested is an injunction effectively prohibiting Defendant from continuing to hold, in the future, funds that belong to Plaintiffs and which the law allows them eventually to recover. In other words, the issue, according to Plaintiffs, is not whether the state may be required to pay monetary damages from the state treasury for wrongfully refusing to release funds in the past, but whether the state may be permitted to continue to prevent the release of the same funds in the future, despite alleged constitutional violations in doing so. Prospective injunc-tive relief in the form of a declaration that retroactive application of the ASR Amendment violates Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, and an injunction prohibiting the state from continued adherence to that position, would have the ancillary effect of requiring the release of funds from Plaintiffs’ escrow account.
The Court therefore concludes that an award of this type would not constitute an impermissible award of retroactive monetary relief from state funds. It would not affect the sovereignty of the state, nor would it result in a reallocation of funds to the detriment of the public trust or anything of that nature. The Eleventh Amendment therefore does not bar this form of relief. 12 Accordingly, the Court will proceed with analysis of the substantive aspects of Defendant’s motion.
C. Whether the MSA and the Tobacco Statutes Violate the Sherman Act
As indicated above, Plaintiffs claim in their Complaint, first, that the MSA itself *622 is in violation of federal antitrust laws because it serves to implement an output cartel that is illegal per se, and that the enforcement of the Tennessee Tobacco Statutes likewise serves to implement an illegal restraint in violation of the Sherman Act. Plaintiffs therefore seek a declaration that the Tobacco Statutes are preempted by federal antitrust law, and they appear to seek a declaration that the MSA is preempted as well.
In his Motion to Dismiss, Defendant argues that actions taken by the Tennessee Legislature, including the passage of the Escrow Act, the amendment thereto, and the Contraband Statute, are “state actions” that are immune from challenges on antitrust grounds. (Doc. No. 36, at 13 (citing
Hoover v. Ronwin,
Plaintiffs, in response, refer the court to a memorandum filed in support of a prior motion in this case (Doc. No. 49), in which they argue that a “state statute that creates an anticompetitive restraint empowering private actors to raise prices is defined as a hybrid restraint” (Doc. No. 49, at 8), and that the Escrow Act, as a so-called “hybrid” restraint, is not automatically subject to state-action immunity. More specifically, Plaintiffs argue that “Supreme Court authority unequivocally holds that to qualify for state action immunity, [hybrid] restraints ... require active State supervision of the pricing activity of the private actors.” (Doc. No. 49 at 8 (citing
Freedom Holdings, Inc. v. Spitzer,
As discussed below, this Court concludes that the MSA (to the extent Plaintiffs intend to challenge it directly) and the Tennessee Tobacco Statutes are immune from challenge on antitrast grounds under the state-action doctrine, and that the Defendant, in his official capacity, is immune from liability for enforcing or threatening to enforce them on antitrust grounds. The Court expressly rejects the reasoning applied by the Second Circuit in Freedom Holdings, as well as the Third Circuit’s holdings regarding the applicability of state-action immunity in Mariana v. Fisher and A.D. Bedell to the extent the latter case may be construed as inconsistent with the holding herein. The Court begins its analysis with a review of these earlier decisions addressing this issue.
(1) A.D. Bedell and Its Progeny
In AD. Bedell, wholesalers of tobacco products brought suit against the four major cigarette manufacturers, alleging Sherman Act violations arising from the execution and implementation of the MSA itself. Importantly, plaintiffs in that case did not challenge the implementing statutes nor name any state official as a defendant in *623 any capacity. Instead, they alleged that the MSA primarily furthered the interests of private tobacco companies and not those of the States, and empowered the tobacco companies to make anticompetitive decisions with no regulatory oversight by the States. Id. at 260.
The district court granted defendants’ motions to dismiss plaintiffs’ antitrust claims on the alternative grounds that the acts in question — the negotiation and execution of the MSA — were exempt from liability under the
Parker
doctrine of state-action immunity,
see Parker v. Brown,
On appeal, the Third Circuit affirmed dismissal of the antitrust challenge to the MSA on the grounds of the Noerr-Pen-nington doctrine. Then, while acknowledging that it did not need to reach the question of Parker immunity because it had affirmed on the basis of Noerr-Pen-nington, it did so anyway and concluded that immunity under Parker was not appropriate under the circumstances presented there.
In conducting its analysis of the applicability of
Parker,
the Third Circuit made several important observations: First, it noted that, under
Parker,
“[ajntitrust laws do not bar anticompetitive restraints that sovereign states impose ‘as an act of government,’ ”
id.
at 254 (quoting
Parker,
Parker,
however, only applies to actions by a
state
acting in its sovereign capacity.
13
According to the Third Circuit, “[ojnly an affirmative decision by the state itself, acting in its sovereign capacity ... can immunize otherwise anticompetitive activity.”
A.D. Bedell,
As the Third Circuit acknowledged, however, “[a]pplying
Midcal
is unnecessary if the alleged antitrust injury was the direct result of a clear sovereign state act.”
A.D. Bedell,
Having made this observation, the Third Circuit concluded that, while the MSA itself was arguably the direct result of state government action, the anticompetitive injury at issue allegedly “resulted from tobacco companies’ conduct after implementation of the [MSA], and not from any further positive action by the state.”
AD. Bedell,
Subsequently, in
Mariana v. Fisher,
individual smokers in the State of Pennsylvania brought suit against Pennsylvania’s Secretary of Revenue and Attorney General in their official capacities, challenging the implementation and enforcement of the MSA on the grounds that it violated the Sherman Act.
14
The district court dismissed the antitrust claims and the Third Circuit affirmed, following Bedell,
15
on the basis that the Noerr-Pennington doctrine extended immunity to the state actors as well as to private actors involved in the negotiation and execution of the MSA.
Mariana,
The Second Circuit likewise purported to apply Bedell in the recent case of Freedom Holdings, Inc. v. Spitzer. There, plaintiffs were cigarette importers 17 who brought suit against the Attorney General and the Commissioner of Taxation and Finance for the State of New York. Rather than attacking the MSA itself or New York’s version of the Escrow Statute, however, plaintiffs challenged New York’s so-called “Contraband Statutes,” 18 passed in connection with the MSA, on the grounds that they conflicted with federal antitrust law and violated plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.
The district court granted defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss in part based on its finding that the statutes at issue constituted unilateral state action and therefore were exempt from federal antitrust laws under
Parker.
The Second Circuit reversed the dismissal of the antitrust claims. In reaching its conclusion, the court first reviewed the history of the execution of the MSA, and accepted as true, for purposes of the 12(b)(6) motion, plaintiffs’ allegations that the “market-share provisions [of the MSA] constitute an ‘output cartel’ that prevents price competition, leads to monopoly prices, and encourages Settling States to protect the cartel in order to preserve the revenue flow to the States [and that] the effect of the market-share provisions is to deter competition among and between OPMs and SPMs.”
Freedom Holdings,
In conducting its antitrust analysis, the Second Circuit first stated its opinion that the question of whether a state statute that restrains competition among private firms is preempted by the Sherman Act “is determined by a two-step analysis.” Id. at 222. First, the plaintiff must show that
the scheme of market control created by the statute would constitute a per se violation of the Sherman Act if brought about by an agreement among private parties. A statute will be preempted by *626 the Sherman Act only if it ‘mandates or authorizes conduct that necessarily constitutes a violation of the antitrust laws in all cases, or if it places irresistible pressure on a private party to comply with the statute.’ For a statute to be preempted, the conduct contemplated by the statute must be ‘in all cases a per se violation’ of the federal antitrust laws.
Id.
at 222-23 (internal citations omitted). If the plaintiff makes the requisite showing, then the court must consider whether the alleged anticompetitive scheme is nonetheless immunized under
Parker.
“A statute that permits or compels private parties to engage in
per se
violations of the antitrust laws will be saved from preemption if: (i) the restraint in question is ‘clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed as state policy,’ and (ii) the policy is ‘actively supervised’ by the state itself.”
Id.
at 223 (internal citations omitted; quoting, among others,
Midcal,
In setting forth the standards according to which it would analyze the legislation at issue, the Second Circuit expressly rejected the defendants’ argument that the statutes were a product of “unilateral state action” and therefore could not constitute a
per se
violation of the Sherman Act, since the Act, by its terms, applied only to private “contract[s], combination^] or conspiracies].”
Id.
at 223. To the contrary, the court found that “where the anticom-petitive effects of a state statute obviate the need for private parties to act on then-own to create an anticompetitive scheme, the statute may be attacked as a ‘hybrid’ restraint on trade.”
Id.
(quoting
324 Liquor Corp. v. Duffy,
In that light, the court found that the “Contraband Statutes allegedly enforce an express market-sharing agreement among private tobacco manufacturers [e.g., the MSA],” and therefore, even if a “contract among private parties [were] required in the first step of preemption analysis,” it existed in that case as a hybrid restraint, at a minimum.
Accordingly, the Second Circuit went on to apply the
Midcal
test to the state statutes at issue and determined that, while the MSA as well as passage of the Escrow Act and Contraband Statutes were “express acts of the State of New York,” the alleged anticompetitive scheme was not sufficiently supervised by the state and therefore the second
Midcal
prong was not met.
Freedom Holdings,
*627
The decision in
Freedom Holdings,
however, has not been universally followed outside the Second Circuit. For example, in
Sanders v. Lockyer,
In considering whether California’s ratification of the MSA and subsequent passage of the complementary legislation were subject to challenge on the grounds that they violated the Sherman Act, the district court in
Sanders
considered whether state-action immunity applied. The court noted that the state action doctrine provides that when a state exercises its authority and enacts a statute or regulation with anticompetitive effects, the state and private parties acting at its direction are not liable for antitrust violations.
Id.
at 1098 (citing
Parker v. Brown,
The
Sanders
court also recognized the two-prong test created by the Supreme Court in
Midcal,
but pointed out that subsequent to
Midcal,
the Supreme Court has held that “when a state legislature adopts legislation, its actions constitute those of the State, and
ipso facto
are exempt from the operation of the antitrust laws.”
Hoover v. Ronwin,
In cases involving the anticompetitive conduct of a nonsovereign state representative the Court has required a showing that the conduct is pursuant to a “clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed state policy” to replace competition with regulation. The Court has also found the degree to which the state legislature or supreme court supervises its representative to be relevant to the inquiry. When the conduct is that of the sovereign itself, on the other hand, the danger of unauthorized restraint of trade does not arise. Where the conduct *628 at issue is in fact that of the state legislature or supreme court, we need not address the issues of “clear articulation” and “active supervision. ”
Hoover,
Thus, the
Sanders
court considered
Midcal
to be tempered by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Hoover
and concluded that “the threshold inquiry is whether the challenged action is a sovereign act by the state or the conduct of private persons.”
Sanders,
Having determined that the Attorney General could not be held liable for antitrust violations, the
Sanders
court also went on to consider whether the legislation at issue was preempted by the Sherman Act. If a challenged scheme constitutes a
per se
violation of the Sherman Act, then state-action immunity would not necessarily apply, and preemption may exist.
See Sanders,
Last, because the plaintiff in Sanders appeared to challenge the MSA itself and not only the state legislation implementing it, the court went on to consider whether such a challenge was barred by the Noerr-Pennington doctrine. As the court noted, the issue was whether Noerr-Pennington “applies only to the acts of petitioning themselves or whether it extends to the resulting government action, including a litigation settlement like the MSA.” Id. at 1102. Citing Bedell as well as other courts considering the same issue, the court concluded that Noerr-Pennington immunity applied to the MSA as the direct result of protected petitioning activity. Id. 20
*629 (2) Application Of Antitrust Law To the Facts Of This Case
This Court finds the reasoning of
Sanders v. Lockyer
to be persuasive and therefore holds that the enforcement and application of both the Escrow Act, as amended by the ASR Amendment, and the Contraband Statute, as express actions of the sovereign state of Tennessee,
“ipso facto
are exempt from the operation of the antitrust laws.”
Hoover v. Ronwin,
Moreover, the legislative scheme at issue is not preempted by the Sherman Act as a
“per se’’
violation thereof, because it neither “mandates [nor] authorizes conduct that necessarily constitutes a violation of the antitrust laws in all cases,” nor “places irresistible pressure on private parties to violate the antitrust laws in order to comply with the statute.”
Cf. Sanders,
Further, to the extent Plaintiffs’ Complaint can be construed as including a challenge to the MSA itself, the Court finds the MSA is likewise not preempted by the Sherman Act. As stated in Sanders:
The key allegation of plaintiffs Sherman Act claim is that the MSA creates an incentive for the manufacturer defendants to raise prices in parallel fashion, since a price increase by one OPM alone would increase market share for the others as well as for the SPMs, resulting in their having to make higher payments under the settlement. This scenario presents a “hypothetical” or “potential” conflict with the Sherman Act, but not the “irreconcilable” conflict required for preemption.... Taking all of plaintiffs allegations as true, the Court cannot conclude that the MSA authorizes collusive or concerted action on the part of the manufacturers to raise prices to monopolistic levels.
Sanders,
Even if the MSA could be challenged as a
per se
Sherman Act violation, however, such a challenge would be barred by the Noerr-Pennington doctrine. As did the
Sanders
court and the Third Circuit before it in
Bedell,
this Court concludes that the Noerr-Pennington doctrine does not only apply “to the acts of petitioning themselves,” but also “extends to the resulting government action, including a litigation settlement like the MSA.”
Sanders,
Finally, to the extent Plaintiffs challenge the subject legislation and the MSA as “hybrid” restraints calling for analysis under
Midcal,
this Court again concurs with the
Sanders
court in finding that a hybrid restraint is a government action delegating regulatory power to private parties so that they can enforce their own private market decisions.
Sanders,
at 1104 (citing
Rice,
Accordingly, the Court grants Defendant Summer’s motion to dismiss the antitrust claims asserted in Plaintiffs’ Complaint.
D. Plaintiffs’ Constitutional Claims
(1) Due Process Under the Fourteenth Amendment
Plaintiffs contend that retroactive application of the ASR Amendment and the enforcement of the Tobacco Statutes violates their substantive and procedural due process rights. In their response in opposition to summary judgment, Plaintiffs contend more specifically that Tennessee’s Tobacco Statutes violate substantive due process because they are arbitrary and not rationally related to any legitimate state objective; rather, their only purpose is “to destroy NPM competition.” (See Doc. No. 52, at 23.) Plaintiffs claim the Statutes violate procedural due process requirements because they “constitute a prejudgment deprivation of property without the procedural protections required by the Due Process Clause.” (Doc. No. 52, at 24.) Defendant, on the other hand, argues simply that Plaintiffs cannot carry their burden of proving the statutes are arbitrary and irrational, and that a general legislative directive cannot violate due process. (Doc. No. 36, at 18,19.)
(a) Substantive Due Process and Enforcement of the Tobacco Statutes
The Supreme Court has held that the Due Process Clause includes a substantive component that provides some protection against economic legislation interfering with property interests.
See, e.g., Concrete Pipe & Prods. of Cal., Inc. v. Constr. Laborers Pension Trust for So. Cal.,
Economic legislation is not unconstitutional under the Due Process Clause “solely because it upsets otherwise settled expectations” or because it “impose[s] a new duty or liability based on past acts.”
Concrete Pipe,
Faced with this extremely high standard, Plaintiffs argue that the only possible purpose of the Tobacco Statutes is an improper one, that is, “to destroy NPM competition.” (Doc. No. 52, referencing Compl. ¶¶ 34, 37, 43.) The maintenance of the funds in escrow for twenty-five years allegedly puts NPMs at “a severe competitive disadvantage” because such payments are not tax deductible while PMs’ payments under the MSA are tax deductible. 0See Doc. No. 52, at 24.) Further, Plaintiffs argue that Tennessee’s asserted rational basis for the legislation, proffered in the form of “unsworn statements in [the Defendant’s] Memo of Law,” fails because Tennessee has never sued any NPM for cigarette-related health costs and is expressly preempted from doing so by the Federal Cigarette Labeling & Advertising Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1331 et seq. (“FCLAA”). (Doc. No. 52, at 24.)
In fact, without performing an in-depth analysis of the FCLAA, the Court finds that, contrary to Plaintiffs’ unsupported representation, that Act only preempts states from requiring additional statements on cigarette packaging other than those required by federal law, and also, bars additional state law “prohibitions based on smoking and health ... with respect to the advertising or promotion” of cigarettes labeled in conformity with federal law. 15 U.S.C. § 1334. Plaintiffs’ argument in that regard clearly fails as the Tennessee Tobacco Statutes does not im *632 pose any requirements upon Plaintiffs pertaining to labeling or promotion, much less any that conflict with federal law.
Moreover, under the deferential standard referenced above, the Defendant clearly succeeds in positing a conceivable, constitutionally permissible purpose for the Tobacco Statutes. Defendant argues that the Escrow Act was enacted “to protect Tennessee’s citizens by ensuring that sufficient funds are available to compensate Tennessee for its expenses in covering the costs caused by an NPM’s tobacco products and to prevent NPMs from taking a free ride on the costs their products impose on Tennessee.” (Doc. No. 36, at 18.) Further, Defendant argues that the Escrow Act is “directly related to the physical health and fiscal well-being of the citizens of Tennessee.” (Id.) The Defendant points out that PMs pay similar per-cigarette amounts, with added restrictions on their ability to market their products, to which NPMs are not subject, which “demonstrates conclusively that Tennessee’s statutes are not arbitrary or irrational.” (Id.) In addition, each NPM’s obligation under the Escrow Act depends on the number of cigarettes it sells in Tennessee, and the Act minimizes an NPM’s obligation because it provides for interest payments to the NPM on the amounts in escrow and for reversion of the funds to the NPM after twenty-five years if there are no health claims in Tennessee related to the NPM’s products in the interim. Further, the NPM can obtain a release of any amount it establishes it paid in excess of what it would have had to pay if it had become a PM. (Id. at 18 — 19.) Defendant also argues that the ASR Amendment “merely levels the playing field to prevent some NPMs from obtaining an unfair competitive advantage by concentrating their sales in a small geographic area.” (Id. at 19.) The Contraband Statute, considered as distinct from the Escrow Act, does not impose any substantive requirements upon NPMs at all. It simply functions as a mechanism for control over the entry of cigarette manufacturers and importers into the market in Tennessee and the enforcement of the Escrow Act with respect to each such manufacturer or importer. Further, if the Escrow Act itself is deemed to pass constitutional muster, the Contraband Statute necessarily does so as well, since it poses no additional obstacles.
In addition to the rationale posited by Defendant, the “Findings and Purpose” section set forth in the Model Act proposed by the MSA, also articulates a conceivable rational purpose behind the challenged legislation: The Model Act sets forth the basis for execution of the MSA in the first place, and further provides that “[i]t would be contrary to the policy of the State if tobacco product manufacturers who determine not to enter into [the MSA] could use a resulting cost advantage to derive large, short-term profits in the years before liability may arise without ensuring that the State will have an eventual source of recovery from them if they are proven to have acted culpably. It is thus in the interest of the State to require that such manufacturers establish a reserve fund to guarantee a source of compensation and to prevent such manufacturers from deriving large, short-term profits and then becoming judgment-proof before liability may arise.” (MSA, Ex. T.) This explanation also gives credence to the purpose of the ASR Amendment as articulated by the Defendant: To the extent NPMs such as Plaintiffs who sell in limited geographic areas were able to obtain a refund of the vast majority of the funds deposited into escrow under the Escrow Act as originally drafted, the Act was not achieving its presumed purpose of requiring NPMs to establish significant reserve funds from which damages judgments might be paid.
*633
Thus, while the Court recognizes (1) the significant financial burden that the escrow payments — and the loss of use of a significant amount of money for twenty-five years — create for any NPM; and (2) that Tennessee could likely accomplish the same end through less burdensome means, it is equally true that Tennessee could have enacted even more burdensome legislation — such as imposing a tax on NPMs while allowing a tax credit to the PMs.
Cf. Star Scientific,
The Court therefore cannot conclude that the Tennessee legislature “acted in an arbitrary and irrational way” when it passed the Escrow Act, the Contraband Statute or the ASR Amendment. Defendant’s motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ substantive due process claim is therefore granted. To be clear, Defendant’s motion does not address the issue of the alleged retroactive application of the ASR Amendment and this ruling should not be construed to dismiss Plaintiffs’ claim that such retroactive application violates their substantive due process rights. That claim is the subject of Plaintiffs’ pending Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and will be addressed in the Court’s eventual ruling on that motion.
(b) Procedural Due Process
As indicated above, Plaintiffs claim that the Tobacco Statutes, including the ASR Amendment, “constitute a prejudgment deprivation of property without the procedural protections required by the Due Process Clause.” (Doc. No. 52 at 24.) In his motion to dismiss, Defendant argues that Plaintiffs suffer no actual deprivation of property, so their procedural due process claim must fail. Alternatively, Defendant argues that a generally applicable legislative directive affords Plaintiffs no procedural due process rights, citing
County Line Joint Venture v. City of Grand Prairie,
Plaintiffs are, in fact, correct that “it is now well settled that a temporary, nonfinal deprivation of property is nonetheless a ‘deprivation’ in the terms of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Fuentes,
Contrary to Plaintiffs’ contention, however, the Tobacco Statutes apply equally to all cigarette manufacturers or importers that sell cigarettes within Tennessee: They are all required either to join the MSA or to abide by the terms of the Escrow Act. “Governmental determinations of a general nature that affect all equally do not give rise to a due process right to be heard.”
Nasierowski Bros. Inv. Co. v. City of Sterling Heights,
*635 Accordingly, because procedural due process does not require a pre-deprivation hearing in this context, the Court grants Defendant’s motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ claim that the enactment and enforcement of the Tobacco Statutes violates their due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. 22 Again, this ruling should not be construed to dismiss Plaintiffs’ claim that retroactive application of the ASR Amendment violates their procedural due process rights.
(2) Equal Protection Under the Fourteenth Amendment
Plaintiffs complain that enforcement of the Tobacco Statutes “violates [their] rights under the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution in that it constitutes discrimination against NPMs seeking to do business in Tennessee.” (ComplA 98.) Plaintiffs do not contend that they are a suspect class entitled to heightened scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause. Instead, they argue that the Tobacco Statutes are not rationally related to any legitimate government objective and that the reasoning behind the Statutes as suggested by the Defendant is “spurious.” (Doc. No. 52, at 29.)
When no suspect classification nor infringement of a fundamental constitutional right is involved, equal protection challenges to economic legislation are subject to the highly deferential “rational basis” test, which simply asks whether the subject legislation is rationally related to a legitimate government interest. Under that test, a party challenging a statute on equal protection grounds “cannot prevail so long as ... the question [of rationality] is at least debatable.”
PTI,
As have most other courts to consider this issue in relation to similar or identical legislative schemes, we conclude that Plaintiffs here cannot meet this extremely difficult burden.
23
While it is true that the Escrow Act distinguishes among tobacco product manufacturers on the basis of whether they have or have not chosen to enter into the MSA, that distinction is rationally related to Tennessee’s legitimate purpose of ensuring a source of recovery from
all
manufacturers for Tennessee’s potential future costs related to cigarette smoking.
Cf. Star Scientific,
Plaintiffs argue that the different-and supposedly harsher — obligations imposed upon them are unjustified because (1) Plaintiffs have never been alleged to have participated in the OPMs’ “decades-long cover-up regarding the health effects of smoking”; (2) NPMs do not direct billions of dollars to advertising at cigarette smokers, including minors; and (3) NPMs are exempt from future liability anyway as suits against them are preempted by the FCLAA.
(See
Doc. No. 52, at 28 — 29.) Even accepting as true Plaintiffs’ factual allegations regarding the real reasons behind the passage of these Statutes and the actual impact of the obligations upon them, Plaintiffs’ arguments are unavailing. First, as indicated above, the FCLAA simply preempts suits against cigarette manufacturers related to packaging and labeling that meet federal standards. Second, regardless of what type of marketing and advertising Plaintiffs have historically conducted, the simple reality is that they are selling a product in Tennessee that the legislature has deemed to be potentially harmful. Thus, even if they, as NPMs, are not treated the same under Tennessee’s statutory scheme as PMs, that does not mean that the distinctions are irrational or so unrelated to a legitimate purpose that they must be struck down under the Equal Protection Clause.
Cf. Xcaliber v. Ieyoub,
*637
The distinctions are rationally related to Tennessee’s legitimate interest in assuring a future source for covering the social costs of cigarette smoking within the state from
all
manufacturers who might be held liable for such costs. The discrimination here is not “invidious” nor a “wholly arbitrary act.”
Dukes,
(3) First Amendment Claims
Finally, Plaintiffs allege that the enactment and enforcement of the Tobacco Statutes burdens their First Amendment rights of freedom of speech and freedom to petition. (ComplJ 98.) They do not provide any further clarification in their Complaint as to how exactly their rights are curtailed, but in their response to Defendant’s motion they claim that the Statutes violate Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights by “forcing NPMs to either attempt to join the MSA (thereby accepting its free speech restrictions) or do business under the onerous requirements of the Escrow Statute and ASR [Amendment].” (Doc. No. 52, at 29.). Essentially, Plaintiffs assert that the state is prohibited by the First Amendment from conditioning their choice to exercise their First Amendment rights upon their making escrow deposits.
Plaintiffs’ arguments here are likewise unavailing. The Supreme Court has applied the “unconstitutional conditions” doctrine to analysis of restrictions on political and commercial speech rights.
See, e.g., Perry v. Sindermann,
For the last quarter-century, this Court has made clear that even though a person has no “right” to a valuable government benefit and even though the government may deny him the benefit for any number of reasons, there are some reasons upon which the government may not rely. It may not deny a benefit to a person on a basis that infringes his constitutionally protected interests — especially, his interest in freedom of speech. For if the government could deny a benefit to a person because of his constitutionally protected speech or associations, his exercise of those freedoms would in effect be penalized and inhibited. This would allow the government to produce a result which [it] could not command directly. Such inference with constitutional rights is impermissible.
Perry,
Thus, the focus of the unconstitutional conditions doctrine is on whether a governmental entity is denying a benefit to Plaintiffs that they could obtain by giving up their freedom of speech, or is penalizing them for refusing to give up their First Amendment rights. The Court finds that
*638
no such conditions are imposed upon Plaintiffs under Tennessee’s legislative scheme.
Cf. Xcaliber v. Ieyoub,
VI. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above and for good cause shown, the Court hereby grants Defendant’s motion to dismiss and dismisses all claims set forth in Plaintiffs’ complaint except insofar as Plaintiffs state a claim relating to the alleged retroactive enforcement of the ASR Amendment, which issue was not raised in Defendant’s motion and has not been addressed herein. Defendant’s Motion is denied as to that issue.
An appropriate Order will enter.
Notes
. Four states — Florida, Minnesota, Mississippi and Texas — entered into prior separate agreements with the tobacco companies and therefore are not signatories to the MSA. The six additional United States jurisdictions that did sign the MSA include the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands. See MSA § II(qq);
PTI, Inc. v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
. Plaintiffs also purport to state a class action but have not yet sought class certification.
. Plaintiffs mention the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 16, only in their "Prayer for Relief,” but the Court presumes that Plaintiffs as private individuals intended to bring a cause of action for damages as authorized by the Clayton Act.
. The MSA may be accessed on-line at <www.naag.org/upload/1032468605-dgm-sa.pdf>.
. See <http://www.n aag.org/up-load/1124980695-PM-list-as-of-August J25-D5.pdf >.
. This is somewhat of a simplification, as the payments made are subject to various offsets and adjustments. See MSA §§ 11(f) and (g), and IX (passim).
. More specifically, the ASR provision in Tennessee's Escrow Act originally read as follows:
To the extent that a tobacco product manufacturer establishes that the amount it was required to place into escrow in a particular year was greater than the state’s allocable share of the total payments that such manufacturer would have been required to make in that year under the master settlement agreement (as determined pursuant to § IX(i)(2) of the master settlement agreement ...) had it been a participating manufacturer, the excess shall be released from escrow and revert back to such tobacco product manufacturer....
Tenn.Code Ann. § 47-31-103(a)(2)(B)(ii) (2003) (repealed) (emphasis added).
. As of April 2005, 42 states had repealed the ASR provision. See http://www.naag.org.
. A successor of an entity described in Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-31-102(9)(A)(i) or (ii) also is defined as a tobacco product manufacturer. Tenn.Code Ann. § 47-31-102(9)(A)(iii).
. The MSA’s definitions of "tobacco product manufacturer" and "non-participating manufacturer” are identical to those contained in the Tennessee statutes. See MSA § II(cc) and (uu).
. Two other exceptions have been recognized, neither of which appears to apply in this instance: (1) States may consent to suit,
see Alden v. Maine,
. It bears emphasis that this is not a case in which the plaintiffs seek an injunction from a federal court simply requiring state officials to comply with state law. That form of relief clearly would be barred by the Eleventh Amendment.
Pennhurst,
. While
Parker
immunizes state action only, private parties affected by the state action must also be immune in order to give effect to
Parker
immunity.
See A.D. Bedell,
. Plaintiffs also alleged violations of the Commerce Clause and Compact Clause.
. The
Mañana
court noted that the four major tobacco companies were not named as defendants there as a result of its decision in
A.D. Bedell
that the "Majors” were immune from antitrust liability under the
Noeir-Pen-nington
doctrine.
. This Court is not persuaded that
Bedell
required the conclusion reached in
Manana,
as
Bedell
expressly recognized that direct state action was exempt from antitrust challenges and that the anticompetitive injury at issue in
Bedell
allegedly "resulted from tobacco companies' conduct after implementation of the [MSA], and not from any further positive action by the state.”
A.D. Bedell,
. ITP was one of the plaintiffs in that case and was represented by the same counsel as Plaintiffs here.
.New York’s Contraband Statutes served to "bolster the State's ability to enforce” the Escrow Act, by requiring each cigarette manufacturer to certify annually that such manufacturer is either a PM making payments under the MSA or an NPM making payments under the Escrow Act; barring tax stamp agents from affixing tax stamps to cigarettes if the manufacturer has not provided the required certification; and rendering any cigarettes imported into the state in violation of the Escrow Act or Contraband Statutes subject to seizure and forfeiture.
See Freedom Holdings,
. In analyzing the first
Midcal
prong— whether the restraint in question is “clearly
*627
articulated and affirmatively expressed as state policy” — the Second Circuit recognized that the statutes at issue were direct legislative activity, but nonetheless found that the "ancillary purpose of this
Midcal
prong ... is to reveal the State's purposes in agreeing to, and enforcing, the MSA's market-share provisions. These purposes must be known to ensure that the State's policy goals are sufficient to qualify for the
Parker
immunity— simply protecting private parties from competition is not a sufficient goal.”
Id.
at 227 (citing
Parker,
. Other courts have reached similar conclusions.
See, e.g., PTI, Inc. v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
.
Fuentes
involved prejudgment replevin statutes that permitted creditors to take chattels from their possessor without allowing the putative debtor a prior opportunity to be heard,
In
Bell,
a statute provided that the motor vehicle registration and driver’s license of an uninsured motorist involved in an accident would be suspended unless he posted security to cover the amount of damages claimed by aggrieved parties in reports of the accident.
. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana recently reached the same conclusion, in a virtually identical lawsuit, but on different grounds.
See Xcaliber Int'l Ltd. v. Ieyoub,
.
See, e.g., Star Scientific,
