SBC Communications and Ameritech— two of the Baby Bells created by the breakup of AT & T in 1983 — merged in 1999 after receiving approval from the Federal Communications Commission and several state regulators. The Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice declined to file suit. But this did not deter the plaintiffs in this case, which have sued twice. The first suit, filed before SBC and Ameritech had obtained the necessary administrative approvals, was dismissed as premature.
When the local-service subsidiaries of AT & T were spun off in the 1980s, most people assumed that local phone service is a natural monopoly. This was a premise of the divestiture, and each Baby Bell was constituted as a monopoly in its service area. By the time of the merger the technological basis of this natural-monopoly assumption had come into serious question, and the legal barriers to competition also were in the process of being dismantled. Thus the antitrust objection to the merger was based on potential rather than ongoing competition. The agencies were concerned — and in this suit the plaintiffs contend — that, had SBC and Ameritech not merged, each would have entered the other’s core markets and created extra competition to consumers’ benefit. The complaint alleges, for example, that but for the merger SBC would have begun to offer local phone service in Chicago (part of Ameritech’s original territory), and Ameri-tech would be offering local service in St. Louis, an area assigned to SBC in the AT & T divestiture. The FCC and the Antitrust Division concluded that, even if this is so, many other rivals remain — and that as a practical matter there is effective competition between land lines and cellular service, so that competition prevails even in markets that have a single land-line local-service provider. But official approval does not immunize a phone merger against private antitrust challenge; § 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18, confers immunizing power on the Surface Transportation Board, the Federal Power Commission, and several other bodies, but not on the FCC or the Antitrust Division. So private plaintiffs are free to seek divestiture. See
California v. American Stores Co.,
Plaintiffs allege that the merger has reduced long-run competition. This implies not only injury-in-fact (the core of the Article III standing requirement) but also “antitrust injury.” That is to say, these plaintiffs complain about the kind of injury (reduced output and higher prices) against which the antitrust laws are directed. See
Atlantic Richfield Co. v. USA Petroleum Co.,
That is not correct. A pleading is sufficient if it contains
(1) a short and plain statement of the grounds upon which the court’s jurisdiction depends, unless the court already has jurisdiction and the claim needs no new grounds of jurisdiction to support it,
(2) a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief, and (3) a demand for judgment for the relief the pleader seeks.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a). Plaintiffs’ complaint does all of these things and may not be dismissed just because it does not do more. Rule 9 sets out special pleading requirements for some matters, such as fraud and admiralty, but it does not require extra detail for antitrust suits — and the Supreme Court insists that courts not add to the requirements of Rule 8. See, e.g.,
Leatherman v. Tarrant County,
Still, a pleader may volunteer enough to show that the claim cannot succeed, and then dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) follows. See
American Nurses’ Association v. Illinois,
Nor shall anything herein contained be construed to prohibit any common carrier subject to the laws to regulate commerce from aiding in the construction of branches or short lines so located as to become feeders to the main line of the company so aiding in such construction or from acquiring or owning all or any part of the stock of such branch lines, nor to prevent any such common carrier from acquiring and owning all or any part of the stock of a branch or short line constructed by an independent company where there is no substantial competition between the company owning the branch line so constructed and the company owning the main line acquiring the property or an interest therein, nor to prevent such common carrier from extending any of its lines through the medium of the acquisition of stock or otherwise of any other common carrier where there is no substantial competition between the company extending its lines and the company whose stock, property, or an interest therein is so acquired.
15 U.S.C. § 18. Both SBC and Ameritech were common carriers. The last clause of this sentence allows “such common carrier” to “extend” its lines by merger, provided that “there is no substantial competition between the company extending its lines and the company whose stock, property, or an interest therein is so acquired.” “[S]uch common carrier” must refer back to the introductory clause — a “common carrier subject to the laws to regulate commerce”. Do telecommunications earners meet that description? They are subject to many laws regulating interstate commerce, but the context of this phrase, with its reference to “branches or short lines,” coupled with the date of its enactment (1914), raises the possibility that it covers only railroads subject to the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission (now morphed into the Surface Transportation Board). But that would not be the right reading, as we concluded in
Navajo Terminals, Inc. v. United States,
What plaintiffs do argue is that the world has changed since 1914. When § 7 was enacted, regulated common carriers rarely competed, and then did so only by sufferance of the agencies after securing certificates of public interest, convenience, and necessity. Today most regulated industries, including telecommunications, have been deregulated in whole or in substantial part; the Telecommunications Act of 1996 plus the advent of wireless phone technology have brought competition to the local phone market, and plaintiffs argue that we should not read the exceptions
This leaves plaintiffs’ argument that potential competition should be treated as “substantial competition between the company extending its lines and the company whose stock, property, or an interest therein is so acquired” for purposes of § 7. Yet this would leave no work for the exemption to do. It would rewrite § 7 so that mergers of common carriers are exempt from scrutiny if and only if the merger would not violate § 7 in the first place. The only function of this exemption must be to distinguish potential-competition from actual-competition cases. If the merging common carriers do not compete actually
or
potentially, they face no antitrust risk. If they currently (and substantially) compete, then the exemption is inapplicable by its terms. Only potential competition remains to be affected by the exemption; this is the respect in which common carriers differ from, say, manufacturers or financial intermediaries. If two banks merge, the court must consider any reduction in potential competition as well as the reduction in ongoing competition. See, e.g.,
United States v. Marine Bancorporation, Inc.,
Plaintiffs’ complaint concerns potential competition, for it acknowledges that SBC and Ameritech had lawful monopolies in local land-line service at the time of the merger. What plaintiffs want the district court to examine is the economic effect of eliminating each Baby Bell as a potential entrant into the other’s territory. That is exactly the line of inquiry that the common-carrier exemption to § 7 forecloses. Thus although we do not agree with the district court’s opinion, its judgment may be sustained on other grounds. The judgment is modified to dismiss the complaint
AFFIRMED.
