The NASSAU COUNTY ASSOCIATION OF INSURANCE AGENTS, INC., et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. AETNA LIFE & CASUALTY CO., et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 890, Docket 73-2359
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit
Argued April 23, 1974. Decided May 29, 1974.
497 F.2d 1151
Henry L. King, New York City (Davis Polk & Wardwell, New York City, on the brief), on behalf of Steering Committee for defendants-appellees.
LUMBARD, Circuit Judge:
Seeking to recover over $3,750,000,000 in treble damages from 164 insurance companies, four unincorporated associations of insurance agents, the Nassau County Association of Insurance Agents, the Suffolk County Association of Insurance Agents, the Independent Insurance Agents Association of Queens, and the Richmond County Association of Insurance Agents, commenced this class action on behalf of member and independent insurance agents and their policyholders in the Southern District on November 3, 1972, alleging that the defendants had terminated or threatened to terminate thousands of agency contracts with the insurance agents on grounds violative of the federal antitrust laws.1 Specifically, it was alleged that agents were required regularly to sell new lines of insurance, meet higher minimum volume requirements, and maintain a low pay-out ratio on policies sold or face termination. Plaintiffs contended that enforcement of these requirements by the defendant insurance companies represented “illegal coercion, illegal intimidation, illegal restraints of trade, all of which are in violation of the
On July 24, 1973, Judge Stewart dismissed the action on the ground that the plaintiff associations lacked standing to sue under the antitrust laws in either their own or a representative capacity, 361 F.Supp. 967. He emphasized that under
I.
Section 4 of the
“The statutory requirement that treble damage suits be based on injuries which occur ‘by reason of’ antitrust violations expressly restricts the right to sue under this section . . . . [A] plaintiff must allege a causative link to his injury which is ‘direct’ rather than ‘incidental’ or which indicates that his business or property was in the ‘target area’ of the defendant‘s illegal act.”
Plaintiffs here have pointed to no direct injury suffered as a result of the practices engaged in by defendants. Nor have they shown that they were in the target area of the actions by the defendants. Plaintiffs neither do business with the defendant insurance companies nor compete with them. Indeed the only loss alleged by plaintiffs is a decrease in membership and dues as a result of the termination of contracts with certain agents by defendants. This injury is too remote, however, to confer standing under the
The Ninth Circuit had previously adopted the same position in a case closely resembling the present one. In Conference of Studio Unions v. Loew‘s Inc., 193 F.2d 51 (9th Cir. 1951), cert. denied, 342 U.S. 919, 72 S.Ct. 367, 96 L.Ed. 687 (1952), the court of appeals affirmed the district court‘s dismissal of a complaint by a conference of trade unions which alleged that as a result of illegal anticompetitive practices engaged in by major motion picture producers and a rival union aimed at lessening competition from independent producers, members of its member unions had lost their jobs and withdrawn from the unions with a resultant loss in the conference‘s revenues. The court rejected this claim, finding the damage alleged too incidental to confer standing.
Plaintiffs, nevertheless, argue that they should be afforded standing since their members fear “reprisal and retaliatory action” should they be named individually in a suit against the defendant insurance companies. Plaintiffs maintain that the
There is no merit whatever to this argument. As Judge Weinfeld emphasized in Free World Foreign Cars, Inc. v. Alfa Romeo S.p.A., 55 F.R.D. 26 (S.D.N.Y. 1972) in rejecting a similar argument:
“The history of antitrust litigation records instance after instance where small dealers have not hesitated to take on giant corporations in antitrust litigation, and there is no basis to assume that if any dealer for whom plaintiff professes to speak believes the franchise agreement violative of our antitrust laws, he is not capable or would not hesitate to bring suit to vindicate his rights.” 55 F.R.D. at 29.
II.
Not only do plaintiffs lack standing to bring this antitrust action, but by joining the 164 defendant companies in one action they have failed to comply with
“All persons . . . may be joined in one action as defendants if there is asserted against them jointly, severally, or in the alternative, any right to relief in respect of or arising out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences and if any question of law or fact common to all defendants will arise in the action.”
Here there has been no showing of a right to relief arising from the same transaction or series of transactions. No allegation of conspiracy or other concert of action has been asserted. No connection at all between the practices engaged in by each of the 164 defendants has been alleged. Their actions as charged were separate and unrelated, with terminations occurring at different times for different reasons with regard to different agents.
Kenvin v. Newburger, Loeb & Co., 37 F.R.D. 473 (S.D.N.Y.1965) involved a similar, though less extreme situation. There, plaintiff joined four stockholders, who, he alleged, had extended credit to him in violation of Federal Reserve Board Regulations and the Securities Exchange Act. The wrongdoing of each defendant was identical, but the loans and securities involved and the dates on which the transactions were entered into differed. The court held that defendants had been misjoined since plaintiff had merely “alleged against each of the four defendants distinct and unrelated acts which happened to involve violations of the same statutory duty” and the “operative facts” of each transaction were unrelated to those of any other.
Here, unrelated transactions running into the thousands are asserted as the basis of joinder. Indeed, plaintiffs have not limited joinder of insurance companies on the basis of insurance agents whose contracts have been terminated or who have been threatened with termination, but have also sought to join defendants on the basis of policyholders whose policies were cancelled or not renewed because of the termination of the agency contract with their particular agent by one of the defendant insurance companies.
The misjoinder here, resting on thousands of unrelated transactions, is such a gross abuse of procedure that dismissal under
Affirmed.
HAYS, Circuit Judge (concurring in the result):
I concur in the result and in Part II of the opinion.
