Southern Disposal sued the City of Hugo, Oklahoma (“Hugo” or “the City”) and Texas Waste Management (collectively “Defendants”) alleging violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1 and 2, the Commerce Clause, Due Process and Equal Protection violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and various state law provisions. The district court granted the Defendants’ motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim with regard to the federal questions, and refused to exercise jurisdiction over the remaining state law claims. Southern Disposal appeals, claiming the district court erred in dismissing the suit. We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirm.
BACKGROUND
In late 1995, the City of Hugo decided to change the way it handled trash collection. Instead of providing the service as a government function, the City sought competitive bids from private companies for an exclusive contract to provide waste disposal services for the City. Southern Disposal, a company previously under contract with the City to provide commercial waste disposal, and Texas Waste Management, both submitted bids to the City Council. On December 19, 1995, at a City Council meeting, a selection committee recommended Texas Waste Management receive the contract. Southern Disposal objected, and the City Council tabled the recommendation. The City then issued another written request for bids for the exclusive waste disposal contract. Both Southern Disposal and Texas Waste Management again submitted sealed bids and made oral presentations of their bid proposals to the selection committee. On January 16, 1996, the Hugo City Council awarded the contract to Texas Waste Management and later signed an exclusive contract with Texas Waste Management for a period of ten years, effective April 1, 1996. The contract provided for the hauling, collection, and disposal of solid waste of any residential, commercial, or industrial customer located within the city limits of Hugo. It also provided for an extension of the contract for an additional year at the end of each year. After signing the new contract, the City notified Southern Disposal it was no longer authorized to collect trash within the city limits after March 31, 1996. Following these events, Southern Disposal filed suit.
The district court first addressed the federal questions involved to determine if federal jurisdiction was appropriate. It dismissed the federal antitrust claims, relying on both the immunity protections of the state action doctrine and Southern Disposal’s failure to articulate a relevant geographic market for an antitrust claim under the Sherman Act. 2 It also ruled Southern Disposal failed to state a Commerce Clause claim because the burden on interstate commerce, if any, did not outweigh the local benefit. 3 Finally, the district court decided Southern Disposal made no valid claim of Due Process or Equal Protection violations by either Defendant, because no property right was implicated and both parties were granted fair and equal opportunity to participate in the competitive bidding process.
Appellant argues on appeal: (1) the district court erroneously ruled that Southern Disposal’s complaint fails to state any antitrust violation pertaining to the solid waste disposal market for Choctaw County, Oklahoma; (2) the actions of the Defendants are not exempt from antitrust scrutiny becaúse the Oklahoma legislature is constitutionally prohibited from articulating a state policy to permit displacement of all competition in the solid waste management business, and (3) the City’s arbitrary and irrational actions denied Southern Disposal due process and equal protection.
DISCUSSION
Southern Disposal appeals the district court’s grant of the Defendants’ Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. The standard of review is
de novo. See Chemical Weapons Working Group, Inc. v. United States Dep’t of the Army,
A. Applicability of State Action Immunity
We first address whether Southern Disposal alleges a federal antitrust violation sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss. Section 1 of the Sherman Act states “[e]very contract ... in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States ... is hereby declared to be illegal.” Similarly, 15 U.S.C. § 2 makes unlawful any act to “monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States.” This general rule against monopolies and restraints of trade is inapplicable to certain state action. Consequently, before deciding if Appellant sufficiently alleges the waste disposal contract invalidly restrains trade and monopolizes the City’s waste disposal service, we must determine whether the state action immunity doctrine applies and shields Defendants from the application of federal antitrust laws altogether.
1. State Action Immunity Overview
The concept of state action immunity was first articulated in
Parker v. Brown,
Parker
clearly sets out the rule of state action immunity for the state as sovereign. However, in the present case, the challenged conduct is not directly attributable to the state legislature. Consequently, we must determine whether this state action antitrust immunity is available for parties to municipal contracts entered pursuant to state legislative authorization. In
California Retail Liquor Dealers Ass’n v. Midcal Aluminum, Inc.,
2. The Present Case
The district court concluded the Oklahoma legislature authorized the contract en *1263 tered between the City and Texas Waste Management under a “clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed” state policy. Oklahoma's policy is embodied in the Solid Waste Management Act, an enabling statute that provides:
All incorporated cities and towns may directly or through a public trust of which it is a beneficiary develop a plan, subject to the approval of the Department, to provide a solid waste management system and shall adequately provide for the collection and disposal of solid waste generated or existing within the incorporated limits of such city or town or in the area to be served thereby at one or more disposal sites. The governing body of the city or town may enter into agreements with a county or counties, with one or more other incorporated towns or cities, with persons or trusts, or with any combination thereof, to provide a disposal site or implement a solid waste management system for the incorporated city or town.
Okla. Stat. 27A § 2-10-901(A).
We agree with the district court’s construction of this statute. The Oklahoma State legislature established a clear state policy to allow regulation instead of competition in the area of waste disposal services.
The Eighth Circuit in
L & H Sanitation, Inc. v. Lake City Sanitation, Inc.,
Appellant attempts to distinguish L & H Sanitation, Hattie, and other state action immunity cases, arguing state action immunity should not apply because those cases, although factually similar, do not consider any state laws analogous to Oklahoma’s unique anti-monopoly constitutional provisions. See Oklahoma Constitution Art. 2, § 32; Art. 5, §§ 44 and 51; Art. 9, § 45; Art. 18, §§ 5(a) and 7. Southern Disposal admits the Solid Waste Management Act permits municipalities to contract with private companies for waste removal services, but argues state action immunity does not apply to remove the waste disposal contract from the scope of the Sherman Act, because under Oklahoma’s constitutional anti-monopoly provisions, the legislature did not and cannot express a state policy to replace competition with regulation in the area of solid waste disposal.
We are unpersuaded by Appellant’s arguments. The Oklahoma legislature clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed a state policy to replace competition with regulation through the Solid Waste Management Act. This policy allows exclusive contracts like the one between the City and Texas Waste Management and does not violate Oklahoma’s constitutional anti-monopoly provisions.
As a threshold matter, we follow
Hattie
and
L & H Sanitation,
finding that although the enabling statute does not explicitly authorize exclusive contracts, such agreements are “a foreseeable result” of the general statutory authorization to contract.
Hallie,
However, in response to Appellant’s arguments, we must still reconcile the alleged conflict between this express statutory authorization and Oklahoma’s constitutional prohibitions against exclusive franchises, anti-competitive perpetuities, and monopolies. See Okla. Const. Art. 2, § 32; Art. 5, § 44; Art. 18, §§ 5(a) and 7.
Oklahoma cases reveal, in the area of solid waste disposal service contracts, the state legislature can express a policy to displace competition with regulation without transgressing the state’s constitution.
See Burns v. City of Enid,
Appellant argues the Oklahoma Supreme Court did not follow the rule from
Bums
and
Bishop
when deciding a more recent case,
Meder v. Oklahoma City,
A recent Oklahoma Attorney General Opinion also reinforces our conclusion. The opinion addressed the precise issue before us, concluding Okla. Const. Art. 18, §§ 5(a) and 7, which prohibit the grant of an exclusive franchise unless approved by a majority of qualified electors, does not place any limits on the ability of a municipality to contract with a private company for solid waste disposal. Okla. Att’y Gen. Op., No. 97-47 (1997). Although not dispositive, the Attorney General Opinion is the most recent non-statutory indication of Oklahoma’s policy with regard to solid waste disposal contracts in more than thirty years. It reiterates and justifies Oklahoma’s state policy displacing *1265 competition with regulation in the area of solid waste disposal, and suggests the state’s policy does not conflict with Oklahoma’s anti-monopoly constitutional provisions. We accord it some deference to the extent it reinforces our conclusion in this matter. ■
We find the Solid Waste Management Act is a valid expression of municipal authority to enter exclusive contracts for waste disposal, and a sufficient statement of state policy displacing competition with regulation. The contract between the City and Texas Waste Management meets the requirements for state action immunity without transgressing the Oklahoma constitution, and therefore presents no federal question under the Sherman Act.
B. Failure to Properly Allege Sherman Act Violation
Since we have decided the state action immunity doctrine removes this case from the scope of the Sherman Act, we need not determine whether Southern Disposal properly alleged antitrust claims for the relevant geographic market outside the City of Hugo. Accordingly, we now consider Southern Disposal’s civil rights claims against the Defendants.
C. Civil Rights Claims
We examine Southern Disposal’s civil rights claims to determine whether Defendants’ conduct violated Appellant’s due process and equal protection rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. In order to successfully “state a cause of action under section 1983, [Southern Disposal] must allege both the deprivation of a federal right and that the alleged action was taken under color of state law.”
Buckley Constr., Inc. v. Shawnee Civic & Cultural Dev. Auth.,
1. Due Process
In order to state a claim for a due process violation, Defendants, acting under color of state law, must have deprived Southern Disposal of some “definite liberty or property interest ... without appropriate process.”
See Curtis Ambulance v. Shawnee Bd. of County Comm’rs,
We also note that when the City sought competitive bids for the waste disposal contract, it did not thereby create a protected property interest or a “legitimate claim of entitlement” in the bidders.
Roth,
2. Equal Protection
Southern Disposal’s Equal Protection claim is equally unavailing. The Equal Protection clause is triggered only when the government treats someone differently than another who is similarly situated.
City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr.,
Normally, the goal in making a competitive bid is to present a more appealing proposal than the competition — through lower cost or other incentives — while still trying to profit from the bargain. Southern Disposal lost the waste disposal contract because it did not present a bid to the City as appealing as its competitor’s proposal. Both Texas Waste Management and Southern Disposal received equal opportunity to present sealed bids, not once, but twice. Southern Disposal cannot successfully claim, after the fact, that the City should have given it notice regarding every possible incentive to include in the bid that would make a difference in the selection process or cause the City to choose a particular bid. Forcing municipalities and other governmental entities seeking competitive bids to notify all bidders about every factor they will consider when making decisions on competitive bids is an absurd, impossible, and unnecessary rule. If behind-the-scenes collusion occurred between the City and Texas Waste Management that gave Texas Waste Management a superior bargaining position or made it privy to inside information, a valid claim might arise. However, Appellant alleges no facts establishing any collusion or favoritism. Accordingly, we find Southern Disposal makes no tenable equal protection claim. 6
CONCLUSION
Southern Disposal fails to state a claim for violation of federal antitrust laws or Fourteenth Amendment Due Process and Equal Protection. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
Notes
. Southern Disposal alleges Defendants monopolized waste disposal in Choctaw County, but the contract at issue applied only to the City. The City of Hugo is the county seat of Choctaw County, Oklahoma.
. Southern Disposal does not pursue any Commerce Clause claims on appeal.
. Interestingly, the Meder opinion also never specifically addresses or overrules Bums and Bishop. We do not believe the Oklahoma Supreme Court would overrule these prior decisions sub silentio.
. For purposes of our Fourteenth Amendment analysis, we assume Southern Disposal’s claims are made only against the City as a "state actor." Appellant makes no attempt to show Texas Waste Management qualifies as a state actor and/or acted under color of state law.
. Even if we assume
arguendo
that Southern Disposal's pleadings did adequately state both Due Process and Equal Protection violations, we believe its claim would still fail constitutional scrutiny. Since no suspect class or fundamental right is involved in this instance, the City need only have a rational basis for its actions.
See Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs,
