MEMORANDUM OPINION
Priоr to January 1, 1971, the plaintiff, Tire Sales Corporation, was a distributor for the defendant, Cities Service Corporation (hereinafter sometimes called “Citgo”) of automotive tires, batteries and accessories (“TBA”) for resale to Citgo dealers on the south side of Chicago. This treble damage antitrust action arises from the termination of the dis *1225 tributorship agreement by Cities Service and the alleged subsequent elimination of Tire Sales from the market of wholesale sales to Citgo dealers.
Tire Sales filed its complaint under Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 15, alleging a tying arrangement, group boycott, allocation of markets, exclusive dealing and reciprocal dealing in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, and Section 3 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. See. 14. In addition, Tire Sales alleges that Cities Service monopolized, attempted to monopolize and conspired to monopolize the sale of TBA to Citgo dealers in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 2. Cities Service denies the alleged violation and counterclaims against Tire Sales for the purchase рrice of certain goods. Individual counterdefendants are two shareholder officers of Tire Sales, George Nordstrom and Edward Laughlin, alleged guarantors of payment.
The parties have each filed motions for summary judgment, supported by various depositions, affidavits, answers to interrogatories, and other documents. 1
An understanding of this case requires a description of the distribution of petroleum and TBA to Citgo dealers. Citgo dealers are independent businessmen who enter into separate agreements with Cities Service to lease service stаtions and to buy petroleum products. The agreements are for terms varying from one month to one year, and are terminable upon notice of from one month to 90 days.
In its sales of TBA to its dealers, Cities Service uses what is called the “purchase-resale” system. Under this method, it purchases the products from manufacturers and resells them to a distributor, which, in turn, resells to the dealer. The products are shipped directly from the manufacturer to the distributor, with Cities Service being billed. Cities Service makes its profit by charging the distributor a higher price than it pays the manufacturer. The defendant does not explicitly require its dealers to purchase TBA from its distributor; according to Cities Service, its dealers are free to purchase whatever brands of TBA they choose from whatever distributors they choose.
The purchase-resale method of TBA distribution was first used in late 1965. Until then, Cities Service, along with other major oil companies, used the “sales-commission” system, in which the oil company agreed to “sponsor” the sale of a certain manufacturer’s TBA to its dealers in exchange for a commission from the manufacturer. This differed from the purchase-resale method in that the oil company did not purchase the product itself, but instead acted as a sales agent. Cities Service abandoned the sales-commission method after the Federal Trade Commission successfully challenged its use by other companies. As will be more fully explained below, the sales-commission plan was held to be a violation of Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 45, in
Atlantic Refining Co. v. F. T. C,
The amount of business involved in Citgo’s TBA sales is considerable. Cities Service’s records show that in 1972 its purchases of TBA for direct or indirect resale to its dealers in the Chicago area totaled over $900,000.00.
Under both the sales-commission and purchase-resale systems, the tire company whose products Cities Service sponsored on the south side of Chicago was, until January 1, 1971, Uniroyal, Inc. 2 *1226 Because it was then a Uniroyal distributor, Tire Sales was used by Cities Service as its distributor. Cities Service terminated its agreement with Uniroyal in late 1970 and entered into contracts with Firestone and Goodyear instead, allegedly because of the declining public acceptance of Unirоyal tires. (It should be noted, however, that Tife Sales’ purchases of Uniroyal tires under Cities Service’s purchase-resale plan increased dramatically in 1970 over the previous two years. 3 ).
Cities Service, apparently reluctant to lose Tire Sales as a distributor, attempted to aid Tire Sales in efforts to obtain a Goodyear or Firestone distributorship. These efforts proving fruitless, Cities Service replaced Tire Sales with Berry Tire Company, a Goodyear and Firestone distributor.
Although Cities Service asserts that its dealers are not required to buy its TBA, Tire Salеs’ business among Citgo dealers was destroyed after the termination of its distributorship contract. In 1971, its sales to Citgo dealers were less than a tenth of what they had been the previous year, and the following year they fell to zero.
The parties sharply dispute the reason for the capture of the Citgo wholesale market by Berry. Cities Service contends that it was the result of legitimate sales efforts directed by it and Berry at the dealers. It denies that any coercion was used. Its salesmen, often in the company of Berry personnel, made weekly trips to the stаtions to discuss TBA sales. Defendant also provided TBA advertising and display material for the stations. In addition, Cities Service several times a year helped sponsor “TBA Fairs,” at which Citgo dealers, generally after being treated to drinks, dinner and door prizes, were solicited for TBA products available through the “approved” distributor. One of these Fairs, called a “Spring Fling,” was held by Cities Service and Berry at Berry’s warehouse on March 31, 1971, for the purpose of acquainting the dealers with Berry.
According to depositions of several present and former Citgo dealеrs, Cities Service engaged in more than mere salesmenship. For example, dealers testified that if they failed to buy from Berry, they were threatened with cancellation of their leases, and one dealer testified that Cities Service refused to make needed repairs of the station premises. Several dealers who refused to buy from Berry had their leases terminated or changed to shorter terms shortly thereafter. One such dealer terminated the lease himself after his yearly lease was replaced with a monthly one. There is no direct evidеnce in the record, however, that the failure to buy from Berry was the cause of termination of a lease.
In its counterclaim, Cities Service asserts, and the counterdefendants do not dispute, that Tire Sales has failed to pay for goods received from Citgo during 1970-71 and that Nordstrom and Laughlin have failed to pay under their personal guarantee. The counterdefendants’ only defense is that the claim arose in the course of Citgo’s violations of the antitrust laws.
In disposing of the cross motions for summary judgment, we observe at the outset that summary judgment is frequently inaрpropriate in antitrust cases, “where motive and intent play leading roles, the proof is largely in the hands of the alleged conspirators, and hostile witnesses thicken the plot.”
Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting Systems, Inc.,
*1227 TYING ARRANGEMENT
When the evidence is so viewed, we must deny both parties’ motions as they pertain to the tying-arrangement aspect of this case. A tying arrangement is “an agreement by a party to sell one product but only on the condition that the buyer also purchases a diffеrent (or tied) product, or at least agrees that he will not purchase that product from any other supplier.”
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. United States,
The law looks at tying arrangements with such disfavor that, if certain threshold elements are prеsent, they are regarded as
per se
illegal, despite any possible defenses on grounds of reasonableness that may be offered.
Northern Pacific, supra,
We find a genuine disputе as to whether the first of these elements is present. The plaintiff has produced evidence that the defendant coerced its dealers into buying TBA from Berry. Such coercion included threats to cancel service station leases and refusal to perform repairs. If the defendant proves these allegations at trial, a tie-in would clearly be established.
5
Even in the absence of overt coercion, dealers may have been induced to purchase from Berry Tire because of the inherent power which the defendant possessed as the company upon which the dealers depended in almost every aspect of their business. In
F.T.C. v. Texaco, Inc.,
The defendant, however, has disputed the evidence presented by the plaintiff and has produced evidence that during 1970 it was disturbed by what it perceived to be a declining public acceptance of Uniroyal Tires, and therefore transferred its business tо Goodyear and Firestone. On the evidence before us, it is conceivable that the Citgo dealers, either on their own or because of salesmanship efforts limited to this one selling point, came to the same conclusion.
Osborn v. Sinclair Refining Co.,
Because of the necessity of a trial in this case, we find it advisable to outline what we do not regard as disputed issues of material fact. We think that the undisputed facts show clearly that the last two of the three еlements of a
per se
illegal tying arrangement are present. It has been demonstrated beyond dispute that the market-power element is present; the defendant’s position in relation to its dealers clearly gives it the power to impose the tie-in on an appreciable number of buyers in the market. Indeed, a year after the defendant allegedly began tying purchases of Berry’s TBA to its petroleum sales and service station leases, the plaintiff could find no Citgo dealer who would buy from it.
Fortner Enterprises, Inc. v. United States Steel Corp.,
We hold one other contention of the defendant irrelevant in this case. The defendant has asserted that it acted in good faith by attempting to obtain a Goodyear or Firestone distributorship for the plaintiff so that it could continue to sell to the Citgo dealers. This would not be a defense. Antitrust liability cannot be avoided by proof that the defendant would have employed the plaintiff in its illegal scheme if only it could have.
OTHER ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF SECTION 1 OF THE SHERMAN ACT AND SECTION 3 OF THE CLAYTON ACT
The plaintiff has alleged that the same practices which it has asserted constitute a tying arrangement also constitute an illegal group boycott, allocation of territory, exclusive dealing and reciprocal dealing. In our view, the defendant’s alleged acts can be most closely characterized as a tying arrangement.
Standard Oil Co. of Cal. and Standard Stations v. United States,
It is, therefore, proper for Tire Sales to proceed to trial on several theories.
Robertson v. National Basketball Association, Inc.,
Our reading of the facts in this case, however, fails to reveal any basis for the allegation of reciprocal dealing, which is an agreement to buy only if the seller in turn agrees to purchase a different product from the buyer. Therefore, we will grant the motion as it relates to this allegation.
MONOPOLIZATION, ATTEMPT TO MONOPOLIZE AND CONSPIRACY TO MONOPOLIZE
This case illustrates Professor Handler’s astute observation that “(m)ost Sherman Act litigation arises under Section 1, with a Section 2 charge thrown in as a mere make-weight.” Handler, Some Misadventures in Antitrust Policy-making — Nineteenth Annual Review, 76 Yale L.J. 92, 109 (1966) (footnotes omitted). Tire Sales has alleged that the same activity which violates Section 1 of the Sherman Act and Section 3 of the Clayton Act also violates Section 2 of the Sherman Act as monopolization, an attempt to monopolize and a conspiracy to monopоlize. We will grant the defendant’s motion for summary judgment as it relates to monopolization and attempt to monopolize, but deny both motions as they relate to a conspiracy to monopolize.
In
United States v. Grinnell Corp.,
*1230 The offense of monopoly under § 2 of the Sherman Act has two elements: (1) the possession of monopoly power in the relevant market and (2) the willful acquisition or maintenance of that power as distinguished from growth or development as a consequence of a superior product, business acumen, or historic accident.
Thus, to establish a claim of monopolization, the plaintiff must define the relevant market, which is the geographic market “composed of products that have reasonable interchangeability for the purposes for which they are produced— price, use and qualities considered.”
United States v. E. I. duPont de Nemours & Co.,
The plaintiff has asserted that the relevant market is that of wholesale sales of TBA to Citgo dealers. This definition is far too narrow. Although it is conceivable that in certain cases, Section 2 could be violated by monopolizing the distribution of a single product or the purchases of a single buyer, this is not such a case.
See duPont, supra,
The plaintiff has tried'~to circumvent this problem by adding an allegation of attempt to monopolize and asserting that to support such an allegation the relevant market need not be defined. The Ninth Circuit in a series of cases beginning with
Lessig v. Tidewater Oil Co.,
We cannot, however, grant the defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the conspiracy-to-monopolize allegation. In
United States v. National City Lines,
We have serious reservations about the
City Lines
holding. The decision is contrary to the thrust of the law as interpreted by other courts, which hold
*1232
that the relevant market is an element of a vertical conspiracy as well as other violations of Section 2.
12
American Football League v. National Football League,
Nevertheless, City Lines is still the law in this Circuit, and we must deny the defendant’s motion regarding the conspiracy allegation.
The plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment is also denied for the same reasons that it was denied under Section 1 of the Sherman Act and Section 3 of the Clayton Act.
THE COUNTERCLAIM
Tire Sales and its officers who guaranteed payment do not dispute that they failed to pay the defendant for goods received. The counterdefendants’ only defense is that the contract is illegal under the antitrust laws. It is unclear whether the illegality that is the defense was committed before or after the plaintiff’s distributorship was terminated, but, in any event, we disagree that this defense is valid. Accordingly, we grant summary judgment for Cities Service on the counterclaim.
The limited use of an antitrust defense to an action on a contract was established in
Kelly v. Kosuga,
Where, as here, a lawful sale for a fair consideration constitutes an intelligible economic transaction in itself, we do not think it inappropriate or violative of the intent of the parties to give it effect even though it furnished the occasion for a restrictive agreement of the sort here in question. (358 U.S. at 521 ,79 S.Ct. at 432 ,3 L.Ed.2d at 479 .)
The plaintiff’s remedy for the alleged antitrust violation is limited to the treble damages provided by the Clayton Act. It does not include as well the privilege of not paying for goods received.
Because there is no just reason for delay, we will enter judgment for the defendant on the counterclaim under Rule 54(b), Fed.R.Civ.P. In view of the possibility that the counterclaim will be offset by recovery under the plaintiff’s complaint, however, we will stay enforcement of this judgment until entry of judgment on the other aspects of this case.
See Emerson Radio & Phonograph Corp. v. Hendrix,
Accordingly, the defendant’s motion is granted insofar as it relates to the allegations of reciprocal dealing, monopolization and attempted monopolization, and judgment is entered in favor of the Cities Service Oil Company and against Tire Sales Corporation, George Nordstrom and Edward Laughlin in the amount of FORTY-TWO THOUSAND *1233 FIVE HUNDRED EIGHTY AND 03/100 DOLLARS ($42,580.03) on the counterclaim. Judgment on the counterclaim is stayed until judgment is entered on the other aspects of this case. In all other respects, the motions of both parties are denied.
Notes
. Tire Sales’ motion is for summary judgment on the issue of liability alone.
. Although during part of the relevant time periоd the company was known as United States Rubber Co., we will, for convenience, refer to it only as Uniroyal.
. In response to an interrogatory, Cities Service reported that sales of tires to Tire Sales increased from $88,359.00 in 1968, and $83,568.00 in 1969, to $143,175.00 in 1970.
. The plaintiff in a private tying-arrangement case is usually a party upon whom the tie-in has been imposed, rather than the defendant’s competitor, as here. However, because the plaintiff alleges a direct injury by the restraint, it has standing to sue. For another tie-in suit brought by a competitor, see
Advance Business Systems & Supply Co. v. SCM Corp.,
.
Osborn v. Sinclair Refining Co.,
. Several post
-Texaco
cases, none from this Circuit, have held that the sales-commission plan is not a
per se
violation of the Sherman and Clayton Acts.
Abercrombie v. Lum’s, Inc.,
. In an attempt to avoid liability, Cities Service has argued this motion as though the case concerned only a termination of a distributоrship contract. If that were truly all that were involved here, there would be no antitrust violation.
Burdett Sound, Inc. v. Altec Corp.,
. It would not avail the defendant that some dealers continued to stock a certain amount of competitive TBA; the free market mandated by the Sherman and Clayton Acts is distorted whenever a buyer is inducеd to buy any amount of a tied good because of a tie-in. See
United States v. Sun Oil Co.,
. We reach this conclusion despite some misleading statistics presented to the Court by Cities Service. In its brief, it asserts, “Exhibit C reveals that Citgo’s share of the TBA market in relation to other gasoline outlets has diminished from 5.1 per cent in 1970 to 4.7 per cent in 1974.” Exhibit C, however, reveals nothing of the sort. The numbers mentioned actually represent the percentage of Citgo TBA sales to Citgo gasoline sales in the Chicago metropolitan area, not to total service station TBA sales. They were derived by dividing the dollar amounts of Citgo TBA sales in the Chicago area into the dollar amounts of total Citgo gasoline sales in that area. Cities Service also purported to show that its share of the Chicago area gasoline market varied between one and one-and-a-half per cent between 1970 and 1974. A close examination of its statistics, however, reveals that these percentages were derived by dividing Citgo Chicago area sales into the total highway gasoline consumption in Illinois.
However, it is clear that defendant’s share of the south side TBA market is extremely small and nowhere near the requisite control needed to violate Section 2. In
South End Oil Co. v. Texaco, Inc.,
. Recently, the Ninth Circuit reversed a district court’s decision that the defendant was guilty of attempting to monopolize on the ground that the court had misdefined the relevant market. The court held that the relevant market was important in determining whether a restraint of trade is substantial enough to rise to a Section 2 violation.
Twin City Sportservice, Inc. v. Charles O. Finley & Co.,
.
Lessig
was specifically disapproved in
George R. Whitten, Jr., Inc. v. Paddock Pool Builders, Inc.,
. The rule may be different as regards horizontal conspiracies to monopolize.
United States v. Consolidated Laundries Corp.,
