In this case we apply the Noerr-Penning-ton doctrine in the context of an administrative proceeding. Specifically, we must determine whether the scope of the “sham” exception is different in an administrative proceeding than in litigation.
I. Background 1
In 1979, the State of Washington enacted the Health Planning and Resource Development Act (the “Act”). RCW 70.38. The Act declares that it is the “public policy of this state” to engage in health planning and encourage both consumers and providers throughout the state to be involved so as to control “excessive increases in costs.” RCW 70.38.015(1). The Act authorizes the Department of Health (the “Department”) to administer a Certificate of Need (“CON”) program to allocate health care resources. RCW 70.38.105(1). Under the CON program, the establishment of a new health care facility is subject to approval by the Department. RCW 70.38.105(4)(a). A kidney dialysis treatment center is such a health care facility subject to approval. WAC 246-310-010(18).
After receiving a CON application, the Department may conduct a public hearing. RCW 70.38.115(9). At the hearing, any person may appeal’ and be represented by counsel and may present oral and written argument and evidence. An “affected” person may also appear and “conduct reasonable questioning of persons who make relevant factual allegations.” WAC 246-310-180(5). Any health care facility that provides services similar to those sought to be provided by the applicant is considered an “affected person.” WAC 246-310-010(2)(b). Following the hearing, the Department must issue written findings. WAC 246-310-490(1). An applicant who has been denied a CON has the right to appeal the Department’s decision to an adjudicative proceeding governed by the Washington Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”). RCW 70.38.115(10); WAC 246-310-610.
Plaintiff-appellant Sheldon P. Kottle is a physician specializing in nephrology and transplant medicine. Kottle is the sole officer and shareholder of King County Kidney Center (“KCKC”). In 1991, Kottle filed CON applications with the Department seeking approval to build two kidney dialysis centers under the name KCKC. At that time, defendant Northwest Kidney Centers (“NWK”) was the only provider of kidney dialysis services in King County. Perceiving Kottle to be a threat to its monopoly, NWK began a hostile campaign to prevent Kottle from establishing KCKC within NWK’s market. NWK undermined Kottle’s business negotiations and aggressively opposed Kottle’s CON applications using methods and means which were improper and unlawful. NWK made false statements of fact and misrepresentations about Kottle and KCKC and encouraged others to do so. NWK’s false statements and misrepresentations included the need for kidney dialysis services in King County. Influenced by NWK’s statements, the Department rejected Kottle’s CON applications on March 30, 1992. 2 At all times, NWK acted with the intent of eliminating competition and preserving its monopoly in the kidney dialysis market in King County. In 1995, NWK filed its own CON application for a similar dialysis facility at the same location. Contrary to its own statements opposing Kottle’s CON application in 1992, the data presented by NWK in 1995 show that it knew of the need for kidney dialysis services in King County over the past 15 years.
In this action, Kottle alleged that NWK has unreasonably restrained trade and attempted to monopolize the market for kidney dialysis services in violation of §§ 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2. The complaint also alleged supplemental state law claims for violation of Washington’s antitrust law, RCW 19.86.030 et seq. The district court dismissed the action for failure to state *1059 a claim upon which relief can be granted. It held that NWK’s activities were protected by the Noerr-Pennington doctrine. Kottle appeals, and we affirm.
II. The Noerr-Pennington Doctrine
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the right “to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” U.S. Const, amend. I, cl. 6. The Supreme Court has long recognized that for the Petition Clause to be a meaningful protection of the democratic process, citizens must be immune from some forms of liability for their efforts to persuade government officials to adopt policy or perform their functions in a certain way. In
Eastern RR Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc.,
The Court subsequently expanded the holding of
Noerr
to include activities aimed at the executive and judicial branches of government.
United Mine Workers v. Pennington,
This circuit has clarified that the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine is not merely a narrow interpretation of the Sherman Act in order to avoid a statutory clash with First Amendment “values.” Rather, the doctrine is a direct application of the Petition Clause, and we have used it to set aside antitrust actions premised on state law, as well as those based on federal law.
E.g., Amarel v. Connell,
Given the sweep of the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine, we have no difficulty in joining our sister circuits to conclude that a lobbying effort designed to influence a state administrative agency’s decision to issue a CON is within the ambit of the doctrine.
See Tarabishi v. McAlester Regional Hosp.,
III. The Sham Exception
The more difficult question is whether NWK’s activities fall within the “sham” exception to the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine. In
Noerr,
the Court acknowledged that “[t]here may be situations in which a publicity campaign, ostensibly directed toward influencing governmental action, is a mere sham to cover what is actually nothing more than an attempt to interfere with the business relationships of a competitor, and the application of the Sherman Act would be justified.”
The “sham” exception to Noerr encompasses situations in which persons use the governmental process — as opposed to the outcome of that process — as an anticom-petitive weapon. A classic example is the filing of frivolous objections to the license application of a competitor, with no expectation of achieving denial of the license but simply in order to impose expense and delay. A “sham” situation involves a defendant whose activities are not genuinely aimed a procuring favorable government action at all, not one who genuinely seeks to achieve his governmental result, but does so through improper means.
Id.
at 380,
Although the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine applies to activities directed at any branch of government, the scope of the sham exception depends on the type of governmental entity involved.
See California Motor Transp.,
Second, if the alleged anticompetitive behavior is the filing of a series of lawsuits, “the question is not whether any one of them has merit — some may turn out to, just as a matter of chance — but whether they are brought pursuant to a policy of starting legal proceedings without regard to the merits and for the purpose of injuring a market rival.”
Id.
at 811 (citing
California Motor Transp.,
Finally, in the context of a judicial proceeding, if the alleged anticompetitive behavior consists of making intentional misrepresentations to the court, litigation can be deemed a sham if “a party’s knowing fraud upon, or its intentional misrepresentations to, the court deprive the litigation of its legitimacy.”
Liberty Lake Inv., Inc. v. Magnuson,
*1061 It is obvious that these three ways in which litigation might be a sham do not necessarily extend beyond the litigation context. For instance, if the alleged anticompet-itive behavior consisted of lobbying a state legislature (as in Noerr), rather than filing a suit in state court, it would seem quite pointless to ask whether the lobbying effort was “objectively baseless.” To decide objective baselessness, we would need objective standards, of which there are few, if any, in the political realm of legislation, against which to measure the defendant’s conduct.
Similarly, the second and third variants of the litigation sham exception do not make sense in the legislative realm. Subjecting a defendant to antitrust liability because it pursued a pattern of baseless legal claims does not generate the same collateral consequences as subjecting the same defendant to antitrust liability because it engaged in numerous unsuccessful attempts to lobby a state legislature — the latter would eviscerate the Petition Clause. And the sham exception for intentional fraud on a court cannot lightly be taken to apply in a legislative context because, as the Supreme Court has observed, the political arena has a higher tolerance for outright lies than the judicial arena does.
California Motor Transp.,
Thus, the scope of the sham exception to the Noerr-Pennington doctrine depends on the branch of government involved. If it is the legislature, the sham exception is extraordinarily narrow. But if it is the judicial branch, this circuit recognizes three categories of anticompetitive behavior that can amount to a sham and, therefore, outside the protection of the Noerr-Pennington doctrine.
The present case, however, involves neither a court nor a legislature. Here we deal with asserted anticompetitive behavior directed at an administrative agency, and the question we must decide is what the scope of the sham exception is when the executive branch of the government is involved. Complicating our inquiry is the fact that the executive branch is radically diverse. At the federal level, it encompasses everything from formal hearings before independent administrative agencies, which are bound, both procedurally and substantively, by statutes and regulations, to the unapologetically political decisions of trade negotiators and other Presidential advisers. At the state level, executive officials can likewise be elected or appointed, and they also have greatly varying levels of discretion and independence.
It seems clear that for some kinds of executive entities, the sham exception to the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine should be the same as it is for judicial bodies,
5
but for others such a sham exception would be far too broad. In recognition of the vastly different types of executive entities that exist, this circuit has generally shaped the sham exception according to our estimation of whether the executive entity in question more resembled a judicial body, or more resembled a political entity. In
Amarel,
for example, we analyzed the putatively sham litigation under the “objectively baseless” inquiry established by
Professional Real Estate.
By contrast, we have applied the judicial sham exception to proceedings before the Federal Maritime Administration,
Assigned Container,
If the exact scope of the sham exception to the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine has not always been clear in the administrative context, our cases at least stand for the general proposition that “the scope of immunity depends on the degree of political discretion exercised by the government agency.”
Forro Precision,
IV. Kottle’s Case
With this framework in mind, we now apply the sham exception to Kottle’s case. The anticompetitive behavior that Kottle alleges consists of NWK’s lobbying the Department against issuing a CON for KCKC’s kidney dialysis center. Allegedly, NWK made numerous intentional misrepresentations to the Department and it engaged in improper and unlawful lobbying efforts.
If we thought that the Department was an essentially political entity, like the San Francisco Board of Permit Appeals,
see Franchise Realty,
We conclude, however, that the Department exercises a sufficiently circumscribed form of administrative authority that it is appropriate to apply the same sham exception here that we do in the litigation context. Heeding our own observation that executive entities come in many shapes and sizes, we will not list any single factor, or combination of factors, as decisive in determining whether the Department operates in a sufficiently non-political way to warrant application of the judicial sham exception. Rather, we look to the totality of the circumstances.
The CON determination by the Department bears many indicia of a true adjudicatory proceeding. The Department conducts public hearings, accepts written and oral arguments, permits representation by counsel, and allows affected persons to question witnesses. The Department must issue written findings after its hearing. Its decision is appealable, and that appeal is governed by APA procedures and statutory standards. In all, we believe that this combination of facts makes the application of the judicial sham exception appropriate in this case.
Thus, Kottle can get around the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine only if his allegations
*1063
show one of three things: (1) NWK’s advocacy before the Department was objectively baseless and merely an attempt to stifle competition; (2) NWK engaged in a pattern of petitions before the Department without regard to the merit of the petitions; or (3) NWK’s misrepresentations before the Department deprived the entire CON proceeding of its legitimacy. We can easily dispense with the second of these grounds because Kottle’s complaint alleges interference with only two CON applications.
See Amarel,
We can also dispense with the first of these grounds. NWK’s advocacy before the Department was not objectively baseless because NWK prevailed. In the litigation context, the Supreme Court has reminded us that a winning lawsuit is, by definition, not objectively baseless.
Professional Real Estate,
This leaves Kottle with only the third of the sham exception possibilities. Notwithstanding Noerr-Pennington, Kottle can overcome a 12(b)(6) motion if his allegations demonstrate that NWK so misrepresented the truth to the Department that the entire CON proceeding was deprived of its legitimacy. Kottle’s complaint, however, falls far short of adequately alleging this variant of the sham exception. He alleges in very general terms that NWK engaged in a hostile campaign to oppose the CON applications; that it used “means which were improper and/or unlawful”; that it conspired with other unnamed entities to oppose Kottle’s CON applications; that it made misrepresentations about Kottle and the need for a kidney dialysis center, and encouraged others to do so; and that these statements influenced the Department’s decision.
From Kottle’s complaint, we do not know exactly what representations NWK made, or to whom; with whom NWK conspired; what exactly its “improper and/or unlawful” methods of advocacy were; or what other testimony the Department may have had that could have influenced its decision to deny Kottle’s CON application. Normally, we would be willing to give Kottle the benefit of the doubt, because in reviewing a dismissal for failure to state a claim, we usually ask ourselves whether the plaintiff could prove
any
set of facts that would entitle him to relief.
6
Franchise Realty,
In such cases, we employ a heightened pleading standard, and that standard “would have no force if in order to satisfy it, a party could simply recast disputed issues from the underlying litigation as ‘misrepresentations’ by the other party.”
Mohla,
*1064 We conclude, that Kottle’s vague allegations of misrepresentation “are therefore insufficient to overcome Noerr-Pennington protection.” Id. 7
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Because this is an appeal from a dismissal for failure to state a claim, we take Kottle’s factual allegations as true.
Federation of African American Contractors v. City of Oakland,
. Tl^record does not indicate whether Kottie exercised his right to appeal the Department's decision to an adjudicatoiy hearing.
. Of course, since the Petition Clause mentions only the right "to petition the
Government
for a redress of grievances,” U.S. Const, amend. I, cl. 6 (emphasis added), the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine does not protect lobbying efforts directed at private organizations.
Allied Tube & Conduit Corp. v. Indian Head, Inc.,
. The present case is also analogous to
Assigned Container Ship Claims, Inc. v. American President Lines, Ltd.,
. The Supreme Court suggested as much in
California Motor Transp.
when it lumped together courts and certain administrative agencies, and referred to them collectively as “adjudicatory tribunals” for purposes of the sham exception.
. It also appears that Kottle has taken his "best shot.” The record does not disclose that he requested leave to amend his complaint.
. In addition to his challenge to NWK’s
Noerr-Pennington
immunity, Kottle contends that the district court erred in not striking an affidavit attached to NWK's reply memorandum in support of its motion to dismiss. The affidavit's sole purpose was to put before the court certain public records of the Department. We agree with the district court that these records were properly the subject of judicial notice; therefore, reliance on them did not convert the motion to dismiss into a summary judgment motion.
Barron v. Reich,
