This is an appeal from the dismissal of a complaint alleging that the defendant, a firm that issues credit cards to truckers for use at participating truckstops, violated federal antitrust law by prohibiting the plaintiff truckstop from exacting a surcharge of more than five percent on purchases made with defendant’s credit cards. We conclude that the plaintiff has alleged no injury of the sort that the antitrust laws were designed to redress, and we shall affirm the judgment of dismissal.
I
The plaintiff, Tennessean Truckstop, Inc., is a Tennessee corporation that sells petroleum products, food, lodging and repair services to truckers and motorists. Tennessean’s principal place of business is a truckstop located in Comersville, Tennessee, at Interstate Highway 65.
The defendant, NTS, Inc., is a Texas corporation that operates a nationwide credit card system under which truckers can make purchases on credit at any of a number of participating independent truck-stops. The truckstops enter into contracts with NTS committing them to honor NTS cards presented by carriers enrolled in the system. NTS pays participating truck-stops directly on all NTS credit card invoices, whether or not the enrolled carriers honor their obligations to NTS.
Since 1982 NTS has followed a policy of prohibiting truckstops from charging NTS credit card users more than 105% of the prices paid by the truckstops’ cash customers. Because it refused to adhere to this cap on credit card surcharges, Tennessean’s status as a participating truckstop was terminated and Tennessean’s name was removed from the NTS truckstop directory. NTS cards may no longer be used to make purchases at Tennessean, although NTS cardholders remain free, of course, to make purchases there using cash or any other credit card honored by Tennessean.
Tennessean sued NTS in federal district court under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. The complaint alleged the existence of “a combination and conspiracy in unreasonable restraint of ... interstate trade and commerce in the sale of motor and diesel fuels in the Middle Tennessee area and elsewhere....” This alleged combination and conspiracy was said to consist of
“a continuing agreement, understanding and concert of action among the defendant and co-conspirators the substantial terms of which have been to fix and stabilize the price of motor and diesel fuel in the Middle Tennessee area and elsewhere by limiting the credit card price of motor and diesel fuel to no more than 105% of the cash price for sales of motor and diesel fuel.”
The effects the agreed limit were alleged to have included the following:
“(a) Price competition in the sale of motor and diesel fuel in the Middle Tennessee area and elsewhere has been restrained and suppressed.
“(b) Plaintiff and other truckstops have been deprived of the opportunity to sell motor and diesel fuels in an open and competitive market; and
(c) Competition generally between truck-stop operators, including plaintiff, has been restrained and suppressed.”
*88 Tennessean sought treble damages under Section 4 of the Clayton Act (15 U.S.C. § 15) and injunctive relief under Section 16 of the Clayton Act (15 U.S.C. § 26). Tennessean also sought damages under a Tennessee antitrust statute, Tenn.Code Ann. § 47-25-101.
NTS moved to dismiss the complaint under Rule 12(b)(6), Fed.R.Civ.P. The district court (Thomas A. Wiseman, Jr., C.J.) granted the motion to dismiss, holding that the plaintiff lacked antitrust standing under Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15. The state antitrust claim was dismissed as a matter of discretion. The latter ruling has not been assigned as error on appeal; the question presented to us is whether the district court erred in dismissing the Sherman Act claim.
II
In
Associated General Contractors v. California State Council of Carpenters,
Ill
Like the district court, we think that the plaintiff in the case at bar has not alleged an “antitrust injury” sufficient to confer standing under Section 4 of the Clayton Act. The plaintiff is not, in truth, complaining of a reduction in overall competition in middle Tennessee or elsewhere; the plaintiff does not and cannot, on the facts stated in the complaint, allege an injury of the type the Sherman Act was intended to forestall.
If NTS had not terminated its connection with Tennessean, to be sure, Tennessean might have enjoyed more business than it now receives from truckers belonging to the NTS system. But this does not necessarily constitute an antitrust injury; the fact that a particular competitor in a particular market has lost profits does not inevitably mean that competition as a whole is lessened. “The Antitrust laws ... were enacted for the ‘protection of
competition,
not
competitors.’
”
Brunswick,
Tennessean argues that by prohibiting member firms from imposing a surcharge of more than 5% on credit card purchases, NTS is engaging in a form of price-fixing that has been held to be anti-competitive. The principal case relied on in this connection is
Mandeville Island Farms v. American Crystal Sugar Co.,
Plaintiff also relies upon
National Macaroni Manufacturers Association v. Federal Trade Commission,
Any such holding by the F.T.C. would have been in conflict with that agency’s decision in
In re Associated Greeting Card Distributors,
50 FTC 631 (1954). There the F.T.C. dismissed a complaint brought against an association of wholesale distributors that were alleged to have used their combined purchasing power to obtain favorable prices on greeting cards and related products. The F.T.C. emphasized that the association members, whose total annual sales amounted to only $3 million, did not occupy a dominant position in an industry that had sales of around $250 million annually.
Id.
at 632. See also
G & P Amusement Co. v. Regent Theater Co.,
The most significant court decision of this type was handed down in a case brought by a plaintiff whose name (Kartell) sounds as though it had been invented by some whimsical law professor for an examination question. In that case,
Kartell v. Blue Shield of Massachusetts, Inc.,
Holding that the district court erred as a matter of law in finding an unreasonable restraint of trade, the Court of Appeals, speaking through Judge Breyer, said this:
“To find an unlawful restraint, one would have to look at Blue Shield as if it were a ‘third force,’ intervening in the marketplace in a manner that prevents willing buyers and sellers from independently coming together to strike price quality bargains. Antitrust law typically frowns upon behavior that impedes the striking of such independent bargains. The persuasive power of the district court’s analysis disappears, however, once one looks at Blue Shield, not as an inhibitory ‘third force,’ but as itself the purchaser of the doctor’s services. [Citation omitted.] Antitrust law rarely stops the buyer of a service from trying to determine the price or characteristics of the product that will be sold. Thus, the more closely Blue Shield’s activities resemble, in essence, those of a purchaser, the less likely that they are unlawful.”
* # * * * *
*90 “Once one accepts the fact that, from a commercial perspective, Blue Shield in essence ‘buys’ medical services for the account of others, the reasoning underlying the Second, Third, and Seventh Circuit view [Medical Arts Pharmacy of Stamford, Inc. v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Connecticut, Inc.,675 F.2d 502 (2d Cir.1982); Travelers Insurance Co. v. Blue Cross of Western Pennsylvania,481 F.2d 80 (3d Cir.), cert. denied,414 U.S. 1093 ,94 S.Ct. 724 ,38 L.Ed.2d 550 (1973); Quality Auto Body, Inc. v. Allstate Insurance Co.,660 F.2d 1195 (7th Cir.1981), cert. denied,455 U.S. 1020 ,102 S.Ct. 1717 ,72 L.Ed.2d 138 (1982)] indicates that the ban on balance billing is permissible.”
Id. at 924-25.
The Kartell opinion distinguished Mandeville Island Farms, National Macaroni, and Socony-Vacuum as “cases in which the buyer was typically a ‘sham’ organization seeking only to combine otherwise independent buyers in order to suppress their otherwise competitive instinct to bid up price.” Id. at 925. Blue Shield, by contrast, existed for a legitimate business purpose, namely the provision of medical insurance. The court also mentioned as a significant factor that the prices at issue were low prices, not high prices: “[T]he Congress that enacted the Sherman Act saw it as a way of protecting consumers against prices that, were too high, not too low.” Id. at 931, citing R. Bork, The Antitrust Paradox 61-62 (1978).
A provider of health insurance belongs to a different economic genus than a provider of credit card services, perhaps, but from an economic standpoint the functions they perform are similar. NTS pays truck stops for gasoline, just as Blue Shield pays doctors for medical services. The fact that NTS — which bears the credit risk — expects to be paid by the end user does not make it a “sham” organization, any more than the fact that Blue Shield is paid by its subscribers makes Blue Shield a “sham” organization. If individual truckers had refused to purchase goods on credit for more than 105% of the cash price, the truckers would merely have been exercising their right, inherent in a free market, to reject a bad bargain. The fact that NTS is doing the bargaining for them does not alter matters, even if NTS has market power and individual truckers, acting atomistically, do not. See
Kartell,
Two other considerations bolster our conclusion that Tennessean suffered no “antitrust injury.” First, NTS merely sought to limit the differential between the prices quoted to its customers and the prices quoted to customers paying cash; NTS (unlike Blue Shield in the First Circuit case) is not alleged to have made any attempt to influence the base price. In this respect the present case is a stronger one for the defendant than
Kartell
was. Second, the interest of Tennessean is not congruent with the interests of consumers generally. “Whenever the plaintiff and consumers have divergent rather than congruent interests, there is a potential problem in finding ‘antitrust injury.’ ”
Ball Memorial Hospital, Inc. v. Mutual Hospital Insurance, Inc.,
Finally, Tennessean argues that it should be accorded standing so that it may investigate, through discovery, an asserted conspiracy between Texaco, Inc., and NTS. (According to Tennessean’s brief, NTS administers Texaco’s truck card program as well as its own.) The complaint itself does not mention the NTS-Texaco connection. No antitrust injury having been alleged in the complaint as filed, we are not prepared to pretend that it has been. Like the dis *91 trict court, we express no opinion as to the legality or illegality of any agreement between Texaco and defendant — and the dismissal of the claim that was pleaded would not bar a new action asserting a totally different claim.
The dismissal of the complaint does mean that there will be no discovery as to the credit card surcharge cap; but no such discovery is needed. Sometimes, as in the Brunswick case, it is not until after a full-blown trial that there is determined to have been no antitrust injury. If this determination can be made with confidence on the basis of the complaint, it is better to cut the string before the substantial costs of litigating an antitrust case have been incurred.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
